CARSON, Calif.—Los Angeles County sanitation workers say the cleanup and repairs in the wake of last week’s sewer pipe collapse are making good progress. On Dec. 30, a 48-inch sewer pipe burst and sent an estimated 8.5 million tons of sewage through the Dominguez Channel into the Long Beach Harbor, and flooding the neighborhood of 212th Street and Moneta Street in Carson. In the days following the spill, the flow was restored to the damaged sewer pipe after sanitation workers installed eight bypass systems to stop the flow on 212th Street and redirect it toward the main sewage pipe, according to the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts. The segment of sewer pipe “failed during a record rainfall event while its replacement was under construction,” the sanitation agency’s General Manager Robert Ferrante said in a Jan. 5 statement. LA County Sanitation Districts’s spokesman Bryan Langpap told The Epoch Times that the …