A May 5 WSJ piece by Jim Carlton documents what residents of Coronado, Imperial Beach, and the South Bay already know: Mexican sewage is destroying water quality on Southern California beaches and re-pricing some of the most desirable coastal real estate in the country. This is an estate-planning issue, not just an environmental one.
The basic facts
- ~30 million gallons per day of largely untreated sewage flow from Tijuana's San Antonio de los Buenos plant into the Pacific, ~5 miles south of the U.S. border.
- Silver Strand State Beach (next to the Navy SEAL training area) showed unsafe fecal-bacteria levels on 265 days last year.
- The Hotel del Coronado, one of California's landmark luxury properties, closed beach access on 129 days during peak summer 2025.
- The piece quotes Whitney David, a retired surgeon and lifelong surfer, leaving Coronado after decades: "It was heaven on earth and now I call it paradise lost."
Why this is a planning issue, not just a news story
For Capital Wealth clients who own coastal property in Coronado, Imperial Beach, Silver Strand, or south of Mission Bay — this is a five-decision planning question:
- Is the property still a long-term hold? If the sewage problem is structural (it is), water quality may not recover in your lifetime. The cap-rate math changes.
- Is your insurance adequate for a guest health-and-safety incident? Standard homeowner liability is unlikely to cover a guest who gets sick swimming.
- What's the right exit timing? If property values are declining 1–3% per year due to environmental drag, year-five sale is meaningfully different from year-fifteen sale.
- What are the tax implications of a forced sale? California capital-gains rates plus federal can run 33–37%. The $250K / $500K primary-residence exclusion is critical timing.
- Should this asset pass to your heirs? A coastal home with a declining environmental story is a different inheritance than the same home in 2005.
How we think about it
Coastal California real estate is still one of the best long-term inflation hedges in the world. We are not telling clients to sell. We are telling clients to price the environmental risk explicitly in their plan instead of assuming it's flat. That changes:
- The capital-gains-tax timing on a primary residence sale
- The right insurance riders (environmental liability)
- The structure of the asset in the estate plan (outright bequest vs. trust)
- Whether the basis-step-up at death is worth more than a current 1031 exchange into a different geography
We have a section on this in the new Estate Planning & Wealth Management Hub — specifically on how to handle real estate inside a California revocable trust when the underlying value trajectory is uncertain.
The investing read-through
No portfolio change. The publicly-traded names that overlap with this story:
- Hotel chains with California exposure (Hyatt H, Hilton HLT, Marriott MAR) — broadly diversified, this is one property of many.
- Pacific Gas & Electric (PCG) — not directly involved, but the broader infrastructure deficit story includes them.
- Water-utility ETFs (PHO, FIW) — if the U.S. response to the sewage crisis is federal water infrastructure, these benefit.
If you own coastal California real estate
This is exactly the kind of property where the estate plan should account for an explicit environmental-risk drag. We can run a 10-year scenario for your specific property and overlay it on the trust structure. Reach out.
Want to talk through this?
If you're a Capital Wealth client and any of this is relevant to your situation — reply to today's email or book a 15-minute review.
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