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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: Long Beach / Avalon

The Los Angeles City Council’s energy and environment committee today approved an action asking for a Chief Administrative Officer-Chief Legislative Analyst report on a single-use bag ban within 30 days. Also, the Bureau of Sanitation must implement a public outreach program over the next 60 days.

Immediately after the committee meeting, the city council met to celebrate outgoing president Eric Garcetti’s long-term leadership. After Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue and the rest of the festivities, the council heard the bag-ban item.

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If you’ve strolled down a Southern California  pier, you’ve probably seen the warning sign: “No Coma White Croaker” (Don’t Eat White Croaker”). The reason for the warning? The effects of widespread DDT and PCB contamination in our local waters from the 1940s-1980s that’s worked its way up the food chain.

The kinds of health problems that have been linked to DDT and PCBs include effects on the nervous, immune, endocrine, and reproductive systems, infant development, and cancer.

To spread the alert of this danger, members of our Pier Angler Outreach Program have educated nearly 100,000 anglers over the past eight years on the health risks of eating certain fish they’ve caught on their lines, most notably, white croaker, black croaker, barred sand bass, topsmelt and barracuda.

In addition, members of our team, employing languages from Spanish to Tagolog to English, suggest cooking methods if the anglers choose to eat any of their contaminated catch.

Our EPA-award winning efforts span eight different piers: Santa Monica, Venice, Hermosa, Redondo, Pier J, Rainbow Harbor, Belmont and Seal Beach.

Find out more en espanol.

Download a guide to eating fish caught in the bay.




A five-year grant is headed to scientists researching harmful algal bloom “hot spots”—aka “Red Tide”— in southern and central California.

In addition to investigating methods that could provide early warning detection of toxic blooms, the $4million project will boost the capabilities of California management agencies to safeguard living resources, public health and economies.

The study was funded through a national competition of the Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms (ECOHAB), a program run by the National  Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s National Ocean Service/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science.

According to a statement from the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), research will be carried out at the University of California Santa Cruz, the University of Southern California, Moss Landing Marine Laboratory, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, University of California Los Angeles, and NOAA’s Center for Coastal Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research.

Some species of red tides produce a toxin that when eaten can lead to potentially fatal human illness. The toxins can also cause illness and death in marine mammals and birds. To find out more about the hazards of algal blooms, visit the NOAA National Ocean Service Harmful Algal Blooms website: http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/hazards/hab/

Read Aquarium Director Vicki Wawerchak’s The Truth About Red Tides.



Make a difference for our coast and ocean!

Ever wonder what you can do to help take care of the beaches and ocean you love? Did you know there are tons of simple things you can do at home, at work, and at school that can have a huge, positive impact? The California Coastal Commission has created the Coastal Stewardship Pledge, with everyday tips you can use to help our environment. Show you care by taking the pledge today. There is a special pledge for classrooms and youth groups and a Spanish language pledge as well.

Some simple things you can start doing right now:

  • Refill a water bottle instead of buying a single-use one.
  • When packing food for your school lunch, put food in reusable containers rather than disposable plastic and paper bags.
  • Start a recycling program at your office.

You can read the stories of people like you who care for our coast.

Join the thousands of other Californians who have already become Coastal Stewards! Thank you for making a difference for our coast and ocean.

 

Organizations: Please consider becoming Coastal Stewardship Partners by linking to the pledge from your website or distributing shorter printed versions of the pledge to your participants. For details, please email coast4u@coastal.ca.gov.

 

Visit the California Coastal Commission’s Public Education Program at www.coastforyou.org


Become A Coastal Steward Logo




‘Tis the season to consider a meaningful gift for an ocean-loving family member, friend or co-worker.  Dedicate a contribution to Heal the Bay on behalf of a couple or an individual and help us educate the next generation of environmental stewards, train volunteers for community action and advocate on behalf of our rivers, beaches and ocean.

Gifts are fully tax-deductible, with 84 cents of every dollar you donate going directly to restore our coastal waters and watershed and protect the beaches we love.

From Aquadoptions to funding our beach cleanups, discover all of the different ways you can give



Ever wonder how the fish we eat gets from the ocean to our dinner plate? This complex process is thoroughly explained in a five-part series intended for students in grades 6-12.  Featured in The Seattle Times Newspapers in Education, the series provides a classroom guide (with a glossary and activities), as well as background information on the science behind maintaining a healthy fish population.  

Downloadable here: http://www.afsc.noaa.gov/Education/Activities/Seafood_intro.html

Find more seafood facts at fishwatch.gov.



In the Citizens United case last year, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that corporations have the same rights as citizens. The ruling already has changed the face of electoral politics in America, with unlimited campaign contributions by corporations for communications now apparently a First Amendment right. Presidential candidate Mitt Romney famously stated in Iowa last August that corporations are persons.  And the Occupy movement has continually spoken out about the disproportionate influence of Big Business in the United States.

In response to the corporate personhood issue, and the lack of progress statewide and nationally on a wide variety of environmental issues, the Santa Monica Task Force on the Environment worked with Global Exchange, Earthlaw and the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund to develop a draft Sustainability Bill of Rights.  The draft includes elements of the Rights of Nature ordinances that have passed in Pittsburgh and numerous towns concerned about the impacts of industry on local water supplies.

The draft also includes elements of Santa Monica’s renowned Sustainable City Plan, which was first approved by city council 17 years ago. And finally, the draft includes fundamental environmental rights that every person should have.  These are a modified version of the environmental bill of rights I recommended back in 2008 in this blog.

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Image courtesy mnn.com



Today’s guest blogger is Dana Roeber Murray, a Heal the Bay staff scientist who works on coastal resource protection issues. 

Cold, salty water hits my face as I begin to breathe through my regulator – tiny bubbles floating up to the surface as I exhale. As I descend, light filters through the amber-hued blades of kelp as a school of golden señoritas swim past me near Big Kelp Reef in Point Dume. Once I am hovering above the ocean floor, neutrally buoyant at about 40 feet, my neoprene-wrapped body has adjusted to the chilly water and I snugly affix the end of my transect line to the top of a giant kelp holdfast. Data sheet and dive slate in one hand, transect line and flashlight in the other, I give a nod to my dive buddy, consult my compass and begin to swim at a 180-degree heading.

We’re conducting research for Reef Check, which provides data to state marine managers to make informed decisions about Marine Protected Areas (MPAs).  The data we collect is used to assess the health of rocky reefs along the California coast, from species abundance and diversity to the sizes of individual fish.

I’ve been involved in scientific diving since 2003, and have logged hundreds of surveys underwater.  I am excited to continue researching our local reefs once the new network of MPAs take effect in Southern California on Jan. 1.  MPAs are essentially underwater parks in biologically important areas of the sea, where marine life can thrive because they are protected from consumptive pressures.  The data we collect will be used to compare marine life inside and outside MPAs, and contribute to the ongoing, adaptive management of these MPAs.

Back in Point Dume, a bright orange garibaldi, California’s state marine fish, curiously peeks out from a rock cave.  I estimate its size and make a note on my datasheet.  A school of shimmery purple blacksmith envelops me and I count dozens of fish in seconds as they swim by me. Taking hold of my flashlight, I illuminate the underside of a rock ledge – prime territory for a brightly-striped treefish or a snoozing horn shark.  Instead, I find a pair of active antennae attached to a vividly-colored red spiny lobster. I make a mental note that there are lobster to find along the transect line when I survey invertebrates on the way back.  After about 10 minutes of searching, identifying, counting and sizing, I’ve completed my first fish survey of the dive.

I go on to complete two more surveys – locating beautiful chestnut cowries and spiky red urchins along my invertebrate transect, and recording the myriad of algae species along my seaweed survey. After signaling my dive buddy, we ascend slowly to the surface, completed data sheets in hand. Once we break the surface, we chat enthusiastically with other scientific divers about the fascinating animals.  “Did you see that long sevengill shark?” “You wouldn’t believe how big that purple sunflower star was!” “I found three abalones on my survey!”

While contributing to marine conservation, volunteer divers benefit through friendships forged with other like-minded divers, amazing underwater experiences, and learning first-hand about our unique kelp forest and rocky reef ecosystems.  If you’re a diver, and want to get trained to collect underwater data on MPAs, get involved with Reef Check.

Non-divers can help on land by registering as a citizen scientist with Heal the Bay’s MPA Watch program.

Come join us.



Get the Beach Report Card app

APP UPDATE: We are currently experiencing some issues with the Beach Report Card App due to opperating system changes. In the meantime, please go directly to beachreportcard.org for all your healthy beach reporting needs!

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Today’s guest blogger is Amanda Griesbach, Heal the Bay’s beach water quality scientist

You wake up with a stomachache, your eye is goopy and you feel just plain blah. It bums you out to think it could be that you’d just gone swimming in the ocean. The more you think about it, you realize you went in the water just after a rain and chances are you were exposed to increased bacteria concentrations.

As part of our work to protect the public from these types of illnesses and more, this fall Heal the Bay took the opportunity to participate in a statewide Source Identification Protocol Project (SIPP), which focuses on understanding chronic pollution problems observed at some of the state’s most infamous beaches.

The state of California is required (under AB411, passed in 1997) to monitor fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) on a weekly basis at coastal beaches with more than 50,000 annual visitors and adjacent to a flowing storm drain. After beach water quality monitoring agencies collect and analyze samples, they post appropriate health warnings to protect public health.

Meanwhile, you’ve got that goopy eye and your stomach aches after swimming in sewage contaminated waters, so you know some of the health risks, which also include nausea, vomiting, skin rashes, and respiratory illness.

However, despite over $100 million of state Clean Beach Initiative (CBI) money spent towards implementing improvement projects at persistently polluted beaches, a handful of these locations such as Dockweiler Beach in Playa del Rey and Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro, keep us scratching our heads as to the cause of high bacteria levels. If we can identify the sources of fecal pollution at their origins, CBI funds could be spent more efficiently towards pollution abatement, and ultimately improve public health protection. Furthermore, there’s a need to demonstrate, and then transfer, the most effective source tracking techniques to beach water quality monitoring agencies.

The State Water Resources Control Board is funding the SIPP project through Prop. 84 capital funds, in hopes to remediate identified fecal pollution sources and thereby decrease the number of beach contamination events. The core SIPP project groups include:  Stanford University, the University of California Santa Barbara, the University of California Los Angeles, and the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project (SCCWRP).

Potential SIPP beaches are identified by exceedances rates greater than 15% during the AB411 criteria over the last three years. Beaches selected for the project will undergo rigorous sampling, as well as DNA analyses in order to identify potential pollution sources including humans, sea gulls, cows, and dogs.

Currently, Heal the Bay is working with Dr. Jenny Jay, the SIPP lead for Los Angeles at UCLA’s Civil and Environmental Engineering department, to investigate potential sources of bacteria at Topanga Beach, a location no stranger to receiving poor grades on Heal the Bay’s Beach Report Card (BRC). This is only one beach location being considered for the SIPP project. Other beaches being considered for the project include Baker Beach in San Francisco, Arroyo Burro in Santa Barbara, and Mother’s Beach in Marina del Rey.

Though the entire SIPP project isn’t scheduled for completion until 2013, Heal the Bay looks forward to supporting the SIPP team’s rigorous efforts in identifying persistent pollution sources in order to keep our beaches clean and improve public health.

Public health protection is central to Heal the Bay’s mission and is an issue members of the Heal the Bay staff are extremely passionate about. The reason is simple: A day at the beach should never make you sick.



The San Francisco Chronicle is now devoting a corner of its Sunday “Bay Area Almanac” pages to Heal the Bay’s beach water quality grades. Readers from Sonoma to Santa Cruz can now check if their local waters are safe for swimming or surfing.

Don’t live in the Bay Area? No problem. You can still “know before you go,”as we provide the latest water quality grades at 650+ West Coast beaches. Download our Beach Report Card app for iPhone or Android, or consult our online beach report card at www.beachreportcard.org.