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Heal the Bay Blog

Ecosystems are fragile. They depend on very intricate foodwebs (rather than the foodchains described in older biology books) that thrive on balance. Unfortunately, people can have very real, and unintentional, impacts on the environment around us. Today, we are starting to see the impacts on the world’s oceans when we overfish and don’t harvest fish sustainably.

In a new study released by scientists at the University of British Columbia, fish populations are spinning out of whack. As we remove popular eating fish like tuna, cod and grouper, smaller foraging fish populations increase. While these smaller fish, like sardines and anchovies, are useful in fishmeal and fish oil, we might be facing a future without fish filets and tuna sandwiches.

The good news is there’s still time. Read more about UBC’s research, and how you can help put an end to overfishing at seaweb.org.



Enough is enough.  Although Heal the Bay generally only uses litigation as a last resort, we do have our limits.  On Tuesday, Santa Barbara environmental group Heal the Oceans and Heal the Bay filed a lawsuit against the State Water Resources Control Board for its failure to implement Assembly Bill 885, which required the Board to develop regulations for on-site wastewater treatment systems. AB 885 was authored by former assembly member Hannah-Beth Jackson in 1999 and Gov. Davis signed it into law in 2000. The bill required the Board to develop regulations for the siting, permitting and operation of on-site wastewater treatment systems, or OWTS, by 2004.

The regulations took aim at septic systems, which pose a serious threat to water quality at several famous beaches up and down the coast.  After seven years of patience and a decade of regulatory negotiations with the state, county health agencies, OWTS experts and local government representatives, the environmental groups involved felt that they had no choice but to sue the state to ensure that the law would be implemented. Coast Law Group filed the suit on behalf of the organizations.

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We all have our favorite air travel gripe; tiny plane seats, lenthy lines, tired kids. Well, if your biggest complaint was the amount of plastic water bottles sold, or the difficulty of bringing your own water with the liquid requirements, traveling to or from San Francisco just got a little more tolerable. SFO has installed free water stations throughout the airport. Remember water fountains? Sort of like that, only better.

Learn more at Food and Water Watch.

Photo:JunCTionS vis Flickr



Early Monday about 700 gallons of diesel fuel were spilled into Long Beach Harbor at Tesoro Terminal. According to the US Coast Guard, the spill took place at Berth 84A and happened during a transfer from a tanker.
Floating booms surrounded the spill in an effort to contain the oil while crews planned a cleanup technique. The Coast Guard, the California Department of Fish and Game, and the vessel’s emergency response management company  banded together to begin to clean up the oil.
If you see wildlife covered in oil, call (877) 823-6926.
Photo: Rennett Stowe



About 15 years ago, I was invited to an advisory board meeting of a start-up pollution cleanup company called AbTech Industries. I didn’t go for the free trip to Santa Barbara, nor as an escape from my toddler sons for a desperately needed good night’s sleep. No, what drew me was a chance to meet famed ocean scientist Sylvia Earle.

When I walked into the advisory board meeting, the extraordinary petroleum-related experience of all of the Ph.Ds in the room awed me. That day I met many of the professors that would later be quoted so prominently after the Deepwater Horizon spill. Barely 10 years into the field by then, I was invited to talk about the stormwater regulatory arena and the potential needs under the Clean Water Act for pollution cleanup technologies. That’s where I met John Robinson.
 
John didn’t make a very good first impression on me. An obsessive smoker, he offered biting opinions on a wide variety of topics and people. He also seemed to downplay the potential environmental impacts of everyday operations in the petroleum industry. I didn’t understand until years later why he understated those impacts. Day-to-day operations paled to the environmental horrors he witnessed firsthand at the Amoco Cadiz spill in France, at Valdez and in the Persian Gulf.

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Take a minute to visit the Wall Street Journal and vote in today’s poll on whether or not plastic bags should be banned. The accompanying article talks about the numerous cities in California that have banned bags, and whether this city-by-city approach is working. The poll is running today only, so make your voice heard! Take the poll at Wall Street Journal (the poll is half-way down the page).



Every year, Heal the Bay throws a special party to honor all of our incredible volunteers. In addition to thanking those who do so much for us, the night is an opportunity to reflect on all the accomplishments of the previous year, things we could not have done without our crew.

This year, our party at Santa Monica’s V Lounge coincided with February’s Chinese New Year and volunteers were treated to Chinese food, desserts by La Monarca Bakery, arts and crafts, special drawing prizes, free week long passes to YogaWorks Studios, DJ entertainment, and a theme photo booth.

This night also gives us the chance to give out awards to a select group of volunteers who go well above and beyond the call of duty. To check who these amazing people are and what they do, visit our brand new Volunteer Honorees page.

We’d love to see you at our next volunteer party – learn about our volunteer opportunities!



There’s good news for beach goers in Venice. A new project is set to improve your beach water quality.  A City of Los Angeles Proposition O Clean Water Bond-funded 14 million dollar project is about to happen in your back yard. This month, the Penmar Water Quality Improvement Project begins construction. The overall goal is to reduce pollutants in stormwater runoff from the Rose Avenue storm drain. Right now, that drain goes straight to the ocean, but after the project is completed, the runoff will be diverted to Hyperian Wastewater Plant for treatment. Aging infrastructure will also be rehabilitated.

Learn more.

Photo Dr EG via Flickr



This post was guest-written by Aaron Kind, our education specialist at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium. Aaron runs our Aquarium’s lecture series. Here, he writes about an innovative new addition to that program.

Being a talented artist, whose works have hung on my mother’s refrigerator and graced a few bathroom stall walls, I was quite excited to host the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium’s first Artist Night.  The event was meant to reach out to the local artists in the community, and by keeping the RSVP list to a minimum the Aquarium had plenty of room for the artists to set up.  The event received some unexpected advertising; Traffic Queen and Shortcuts author Kajon Cermak of KCRW announced the night on her radio program and The Santa Monica Observer generously devoted an entire page in color to our Artists’ Night flyer. 

The Aquarium’s local species were the models for the night; moray eels, octopus, sharks and moon jellies took center stage for the evening’s festivities. Photographers, painters and even a couple of digital sculptors attended the two-hour event.  For the first hour, the Aquarium lights were dimmed to help photographers reduce glare from the tanks for their shots.  For the second hour, the lights were brought back up and sea stars, sea urchins and other denizens of the deep were placed in bins so painters and sketchers could get an up close look.  A little bit of 60’s beachy rock  ‘n’ roll set the mood for the artists and models alike.  After talking with the participants (the ones without the fins) the Aquarium staff is planning to set another artist night in approximately three months.

 “Tonight is about artists hanging out with other artists,” one woman was overheard saying, and we were excited to offer this great community with a venue to do just that. For further information on upcoming events, visit the Aquarium section on this site. Also, join us on Facebook to view pictures from the night.