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Heal the Bay Blog

The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board voted 4-1 Thursday, November 4, to approve tough, new marine debris limits for Santa Monica Bay. The limits, based on 11 similar trash Total Maximum Daily Loads in the Los Angeles region, give Santa Monica Bay watershed cities, Los Angeles County and land management agencies like State Parks, eight years to reduce the amount of trash going into the Bay to zero. Compliance  can be met by installing full capture mechanisms like trash screens and inserts or other state-approved devices.  All devices must be adequately designed, operated and maintained to meet state requirements. Full adherence is mandated within eight years.

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Today’s post is from Seth Lawrence, aquarist at Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium. Seth recently got an unexpected opportunity to dive following an equipment accident. He was astonished by what he found lurking right in our backyard, below the Santa Monica Pier.

As part of my job, I spent a recent morning out in the beautiful water at Bluff Cove in Palos Verdes, free diving to collect kelp for our Aquarium exhibits. There was nothing I would rather do than get back into the water, I thought, as we headed back to the Aquarium.  It happened to be my lucky day, because when we returned, we learned that a group of students on a field trip that morning had lost a Van Dorn bottle, a piece of our equipment used to collect water samples, off the end of the Pier. The collecting device (retailing at about $300) consists of a clear tube with removable caps at both ends. The line used to lower it snapped while the students were trying to collect water off the end of the Pier. Whoops!

Staff members Jose Bacallao, Nick Fash and I had a general idea of where it had sunk, but due to current and swell action, it could have been anywhere. I was excited about diving under the Santa Monica Pier, as it was my first time. As we suited up and entered the water I envisioned finding the Van Dorn and lost treasures. I was sure people dropped things off the Pier accidentally all the time.

As we began to look for the bottle (and all the treasure I expected to find), I was horrified. Instead of animals swimming around and invertebrates clinging to the pier pilings, I saw trash, trash and more trash. I saw fish that appeared to have been caught but were not worth keeping, slashed and tossed back into the ocean as trash. We had no luck as we circled, looking for the Van Dorn that we now suspected was entangled by debris. We called the search off, hoping the swell would bring the lost equipment to the beach. I decided to take one more dive down in an area that we had already searched over and over. This time, there it was, in the barren sand. With the Van Dorn in tow we swam back to the beach talking about how, even with Heal the Bay’s presence here on the Pier, there is still an abundance of trash.

I felt deflated, but at the same time very proud to work for an organization that is making strides with the support of thousands of volunteers like you.





Election races outside of California yesterday either ignored environmental issues or focused on the scary specter of regulating greenhouse gases. In California, the oil industry’s efforts to overturn AB 32 failed in a landslide as voters embraced the potential of a green economy and bristled at the thought of Big Oil reversing environmental law.

Unfortunately, the environment suffered two big losses yesterday…

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For the past couple of years, the water testing that helps keep people safe from polluted water has been in serious jeopardy.  Monitoring agencies and dischargers all up and down the coast of California used to get state funds to test ocean water for bacteria. Heal the Bay takes the results of those tests and creates the Beach Report Card, translating hardcore science into usable information.  But in 2009, Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed the $1 Million in state funding, leaving agencies with no way to pay for monitoring.  They pieced together funding for the last couple years, but it was set to run out on Jan. 1, 2011.  Now, in good news for all the swimmers and surfers out there, the State Water Board just voted to continue funding the program for another year. That doesn’t mean we’re out of the woods yet, it just means we have one more year to find a permanent funding source before beach bacteria monitoring, and the Beach Report Card, disappear. Read more in this article from the LA Times.  http://lat.ms/c3lf12



Surf Story Project Art Show and Fundraiser

The Surf Story Project Art Show and Fundraiser, a H.E.A.L. LA event to be held on Friday, November 19, 2010, highlights an amazing collection of art and stories from some of surf culture’s most influential artists, writers, photographers, and 88 of the world’s most inspirational and creative surfers.

During the Surf Story Project Art Show and Fundraiser, guests can view and purchase beautiful art pieces by artists David Lloyd, Alex Weinstein, Damian Fulton, Robb Havassy, Jim Evans, David Pu’U, Ned Evans, Chris Pedersen, Andy Moses, Ben Brough, Timothy Williams, Ron Croci, Charlie Clingman and Peter Pierce, as well as the Surf Story book, while enjoying complimentary drinks, listening to live music and participating in the silent auction to benefit Heal the Bay.

Southern California surfer, artist and entrepreneur Robb Havassy’s  Surf Story book presents the depth of the eclectic and creative culture within the surfing community in a way that has never been captured and curated previously.  Continue the journey with Robb Havassy and H.E.A.L. Together and at this amazing surf art event.  To learn more, visit www.surfproject.com



The California Department of Fish and Game just released a warning to people who consume California rock crab and spiny lobster. People who eat spiny lobster should restrict what they eat to tail meat only. Elevated levels of domoic acid have been found in the internal organs of lobster sampled from waters by the northern Channel Islands. Elevated levels have also been found in rock crab. The meat of the lobster and crab isn’t affected by domoic acid, but all internal organs, including the roe, should not be eaten.

Domoic acid poisoning can cause symptoms within a half hour to a full day after eating toxic seafood. Symptoms include nausea or diarrhea, cramps, headache and dizziness. Severe symptoms can be life-threatening.

According to the Department of Fish and Game, there have been no known cases to date of domoic acid poisoning.

How does it get into your seafood? The acid is actually a naturally occurring toxin that can be found in tiny marine algae. Small fish, clams and mussels eat the algae and concentrate the toxin in their organs.

When the toxin is no longer detected in samples, Fish and Game will put out another news release.

For more information on how to stay healthy at the beach, visit our Staying Healthy page.



How cool is this? This vacuum cleaner (an Electrolux, in case you were wondering) has a surface covered entirely with bits of plastic trash picked up from beaches. There are actually 5 of them, each made of plastic from a different ocean (Pacific, Mediterranean, Baltic, North Sea, and the Indian Ocean).  The company worked with local groups who were already picking up trash, and is using the vacuums to continue the dialogue on plastic trash. The coolest part is how different each vacuum looks. Like the Pacific Ocean vacuum doesn’t have any red or orange, because those pieces of trash were mostly eaten by sea birds before they could be picked up.  The only bad news is that the vacuums aren’t for sale… for right now they’re just art. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39870080/ns/world_news-world_environment/



All public offices are now officially for sale — thanks to last year’s disastrous U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing corporations to buy elections with unlimited corporate donations. The corporatizing of Congress and state legislatures has been discussed forever.  But the upcoming Nov. 2 election is an eye-opening example of Big Business aiming to further its interests to the detriment of our environment.

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In the case of Kiribati, and most nations that set aside marine areas for conservation, they are restricting commercial fishing while allowing subsistence fishing and sustainable development.  The nation of Kiribati has created the Phoenix Islands Protected Area (PIPA) conserves, one of the world’s last intact corel reef archipelago ecosystems with eight coral reefs, two submerged reef systems and underwater mountains, over 415,000 square km of nearly unhinhabited islands with abundant marine and bird life. 

Learn more about the world’s largest Marine Protected Area (MPA) here and here.  To support MPAs off Palos Verdes’ Rocky Point, take action.