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More than 40 Mass. beaches closed on Sunday, June 30

More than 40 Massachusetts beaches were closed for swimming on Sunday, June 30, due to the presence of dangerously high bacteria levels or cyanobacteria blooms, according to the state’s beach closure dashboard.

On the Cape, two beaches in Chatham — one on Buck’s Creek and one on Oyster Pond — were closed due to unsafe bacteria levels. Additionally, a beach on Clipper Lane in Dennis was closed for the same reason, and a beach on Pilgrim Lake in Orleans was closed due to a cyanobacteria bloom.

Many beaches on the North Shore were also closed on Sunday. Kings Beach in Lynn and in Swampscott were closed, the former due to high bacteria levels and the latter for “other” reasons. Three beaches in Salem were closed: one on Children’s Island and one on Ocean Avenue due to dangerous bacteria levels and one at Camp Naumkeag for “other” reasons. Donovans and Pico Beaches in Winthrop and Black Rock Beach in Nahant were also closed due to high bacteria levels.

Several beaches on the South Shore were also closed on Sunday. In Quincy, four parts of Wollaston Beach — at Channing, Milton and Sachem Streets and at Rice Road — we closed, all of them due to high bacteria levels. Smith Beach in Braintree and a beach on Houghton’s Pond in Milton were also closed due to unsafe bacteria levels.

Two different Nantucket beaches — one on Miacomet Pond and one on Washington Street — were closed on Sunday, the former for a cyanobacteria bloom and the latter due to dangerously high bacteria levels. In Boston, two Dorchester beaches — Malibu and Tenean — were closed due to unsafe bacteria levels.

Even if a beach is open on Sunday, beachgoers should be aware that scattered, severe thunderstorms are possible throughout Massachusetts in the afternoon and evening. Anyone leaving their house should prepare for such weather.

The state’s beach water quality dashboard is updated twice daily — once in the morning and once in the afternoon. It shows the results of recent water quality tests at beaches across Massachusetts. More than 1,100 public and semi-public beaches are regularly monitored.

State officials warn against swimming or entering the water at any beaches listed as closed on the dashboard, as doing so could cause illness. Other recreational activities are still safe to engage in at the closed beaches.

The full list of beach closures for Sunday, June 30, can be found below. If you can’t see the chart, click here.


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