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Heal the Bay Blog

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Spending time with some exceptional students at the 28th annual Coastal Cleanup Day serves as a real pick-me-up for Communications Director Matthew King.

After 10 years at Heal the Bay, I’ve become a bit jaded about our cleanups. I see the same mounds of trash every time I head to a site – cigarette butts, plastic water bottles, fast-food wrappers, you name it.

In the time I’ve worked here, our cleanup volunteers have removed more than 2.6 million items of man-made debris from L.A. County shorelines. That astounding figure stirs mixed emotions. It’s saddening to realize that we still treat our natural places as trash dumps, but it’s also reassuring to know so many Angelenos still care enough to donate a Saturday morning to protect what they love.

Coastal Cleanup Day 2017 was no different. Under pleasantly overcast skies, volunteers stretching from Compton to Malibu collected roughly 23,000 pounds of trash in just under three hours. To put that in perspective, that’s about the weight of two enormous T. Rex dinosaurs!

Beyond the usual suspects, we found a few oddball items this year – a drone that must have crash landed underneath the Redondo Pier, a whole set of unopened men’s dress shirts resting forlornly on the sand at Will Rogers State Beach, and a jock-strap and cup in Palos Verdes. (Props to whoever had the nerve to pick it up!)

It’s also revealing to see what we didn’t find. A veteran site captain at Sepulveda Basin Wildlife Reserve was astounded how few plastic bags they found at this L.A. River location, which has historically been visibly choked with plastic bags. It’s a good sign that the recently passed state ban is working!

In all, more than 9,600 volunteers joined us at 61 sites across the County today. We always mobilize a cross-section of greater L.A, both the famous and not-so-famous. I’ve met professional surfers, NBA centers, All-Star outfielders and Oscar-winning actors. But it’s usually the everyday folks like you and me who have interesting stories to tell.

Take the inspiring group of six students from Bell Gardens High School who served as site captains for our beach cleanup in Playa del Rey today, under the caring guidance of teacher Patty Jimenez.  The youth brigade — Angel Diaz, Christopher Linares, Heidi Lara, Kimberly Gonzalez, Otzara Villalobos and Vanexi Jaramillo — mobilized 342 volunteers, who collected 235 pounds of ocean-bound debris.

I first met four of these kids last Wednesday morning at a KTLA Channel 5 news shoot to promote today’s cleanup. They had all arisen at 3 a.m., clambered into Patty’s sedan and traveled 23 miles in darkness to do a series of live interviews at the Del Rey Lagoon. With the bright lights of the camera staring them down as dawn broke, they spoke passionately and endearingly on live TV about their desire to curb cigarette-related pollution. Patty beamed at each of her charges, nodding as they offered simple but powerful testimony.

But what really touched me that chilly morning had come a half hour earlier.  I had approached Patty’s car to give the group a heads-up and to share some media tips. A gaggle of kids sat quietly inside, dressed in their teen uniform of denim, hoodies and Vans tennis shoes.

And then I saw something beautiful that made me well up.

In the cramped back seat, two students scanned textbooks, using their mobile phones to illuminate the pages in the dark. They were doing their math homework — in an unfamiliar neighborhood, hours before their school day would start and hours before most of their peers would even be awake.

I told Patty how moving the sight had been and she shared that that these students’ work ethic and optimism keep her motivated when she faces obstacles at school. She shared that this same group of students played a lead role last month in convincing the Bell Gardens City Council to adopt its first ban on smoking in parks and recreation areas.

The simple scene in the car gave me a moment of hope about the public school system, and Patty’s story gave me hope about the next generation of environmental stewards. This is why I work at Heal the Bay, to help my colleagues create leadership opportunities for students like Patty’s, to connect people from all across our region to their watersheds and to each other.

That to me is the real gift of Coastal Cleanup Day.

You can find more images from the day on our Flickr album and at our Facebook Page (check out the new videos, too).

Thank you to all our site captains, volunteers, partners and staff. We couldn’t have done this without you! And a special thank you to this year’s organizers, sponsors and otherwise remarkable organizations: California Coastal Commission, California State Parks Division of Boating and Waterways, City of Santa Monica, Golden Road Brewing, Los Angeles County Department of Public Works, Schuchart/Dow, Union Bank, LAcarGUY, KIND Snacks and REI, as well as our photographers Nicola Buck, Cali Gilbert and Alvin Lam.

If you weren’t able to join us today, we have many volunteer opportunities throughout the year – out in the field, in our offices, or at our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium. Explore the various options and time commitments here.



Update (9/10/17): Bacteria levels remain very high in Sepulveda Basin. Most sites also exceed regulatory limits in Elysian Valley, although amounts of bacteria are lower than earlier this week. Based on these latest sampling results, we still recommend avoiding water contact with the L.A. River.

Heal the Bay is urging the general public to avoid the waters of the Los Angeles River this weekend because of alarmingly high levels of bacterial pollution.

Our staff scientists collect weekly water quality samples at four sites in the Sepulveda Basin and Elysian Valley, areas of the L.A. River that have become popular for kayaking, fishing and other recreational activities. The levels of bacteria are at the most worrying levels since Heal the Bay began monitoring L.A. River sites in 2015.

The results have a special urgency this weekend, as the fourth annual L.A. Boat Race is scheduled to take place at the Glendale Narrows (Elysian Valley). Dozens of kayakers are expected for the boat pageant and parade.

Samples taken on Sept. 6 in the Sepulveda Basin by the City of L.A. Sanitation Department showed very high levels of bacteria, well over accepted regulatory and health limits. The poor results are possibly related to runoff from recent thunderstorms and rains. A fish kill in the Balboa Boulevard area of the Basin has also likely degraded water quality. Low-oxygen levels, high turbidity and increased ammonia levels have been cited by city officials as contributing factors to the fish kill.

Additionally, Heal the Bay scientists and other monitoring groups recorded very high levels of bacteria on Sept. 1 and Sept. 4 in the Elysian Valley area. Rainstorms and poor upstream water quality likely led to the spike in such bacteria levels (the presence of which indicate an elevated risk for ear infections, respiratory illnesses and gastrointestinal illnesses for people who come in contact with the water).

Heal the Bay urges people to stay out of the water and to delay any planned kayaking trips until water quality results show marked improvement. Our staff scientists expect to get updated bacteria counts this weekend (please check our Twitter and Facebook pages on Sunday as we’ll be posting the results).

Unlike at the beach, there is not yet an official protocol for authorities to alert the general public or kayak outfitters when potentially dangerous levels of bacterial pollution are found at popular recreation zones at the L.A. River. The only way for the general public to know about potential threats to their health is to access water quality data on Heal the Bay’s River Report Card, which is updated weekly.

Heal the Bay looks forward to working with the City of Los Angeles and the L.A. County Department of Public Health to resolve jurisdictional conflicts about health oversight of the L.A. River. This effort should hopefully lead to formal protocol for proactively warning kayak operators and the general public as soon as they know bacteria levels exceed safety thresholds.

Every year thousands of people recreate in the L.A. River. In 2014, approximately 6,000 people utilized the recreation zones, according to the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority.

The L.A. River has been designated by state regulators as a bacteria-impaired waterbody. The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board has identified several conduits of bacteria to recreational zones along the river: urban runoff, leaks and flows from wastewater collection systems, illicit connections and failing septic systems. Bacteria sources include pets, horses and human waste.

Experiencing the L.A. River firsthand is an undeniable way to make a connection to a river that needs supporters and advocates; many Heal the Bay staff members and volunteers have kayaked the L.A. River over the years and will continue to do so. We also believe that the public has a right to know what the water quality of the river is and then to make an informed decision about how they want to experience the river.

If you are thinking about getting out on the water, please check out our FAQ about recreation and water quality issues along the L.A. River.



As California’s legislative session nears its end, an important water bill passed out of the Assembly last Thursday, giving us hope that cities will soon find it easier to finance much-needed stormwater projects. SB 231, led by state Sen. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), is now headed to the Governor’s desk. We believe it’s a great step to increase runoff capture, cleansing and reuse throughout the state.

What is SB 231?
SB 231 gives cities, counties and local water agencies broader authority to finance local projects to put stormwater to use. Cities currently charge residents for infrastructure like sewage treatment, but have been hamstrung by rules that prevent them from charging property owners for stormwater services. Cities need public funding measures to build enhanced runoff infrastructure that can augment local water supply while protecting against flooding. We need to treat stormwater as a resource instead of a nuisance.

What problem does it solve?
California suffers from an outdated water management system that has created serious long-term challenges that are intensified during times of drought and heavy rains. For example, an average 1-inch storm in Los Angeles County sends over 10 billion gallons of runoff to the Pacific Ocean, along with the pollutants picked up and carried with it. This wasteful and environmentally harmful practice could be improved by capturing, cleansing and reusing that stormwater. However, one of the biggest barriers to plumbing our cities has been confusion around the tools local government can use to finance new or updated infrastructure to put runoff to use. SB 231 helps address this problem by clarifying the definition of sewer service so that projects designed to capture and clean stormwater can be more easily financed, consistent with how municipalities support water, sewer and trash services.

I care about clean water, but what other benefits does it provide?
SB 231 will provide economic benefits by creating jobs through local infrastructure investments and upgrades. It will shield our communities from costly and devastating flood damage, and it would also help cities and counties invest in a more water-resilient future in the face of climate change – cleaning stormwater to help build local water supplies and reducing reliance on costly and uncertain imported water.

What will this allow greater L.A. to do?
Each day roughly 10 million gallons of water flows uselessly from the urban Los Angeles County area out to sea, even as we desperately need water. Up to 630,000 acre feet of water per year could be generated by better stormwater capture and reuse in the state. That volume is roughly equal to the amount of water used by the entire City of Los Angeles annually. Properly managing runoff and water supply is a critical responsibility of local government, and in L.A. it’s required by regulations set by the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board. If SB 231 is signed into law, it will provide L.A. region municipalities more options for funding these critical stormwater service investments, allowing us to modernize the way water is managed in the region.

What happens next?
SB 231 is now headed to the Governor’s desk. Gov. Brown has until Oct. 15 to sign the bill into law or reject it with a veto.

Follow @OurWaterLA to stay up to date with the latest news about building a more water-resilient region. You can also learn more and get involved at ourwaterla.org, a website created by a coalition of leading community groups including Heal the Bay.



Most people view Labor Day weekend as the last celebration of summer and a final opportunity to enjoy a relaxing water adventure either at the beach or the river. A last hurrah before settling into the fall season.  With that in mind, now is a good time to deliver a friendly reminder about water quality when heading to your favorite beach or stream.

First – let’s remember the basic safety tips.

These are some general rules to follow to lower your risk of getting sick when:

Going to the beach

  • Swim at least 100 yards from piers and flowing storm drains.
  • Because of poor circulation, water quality at enclosed beaches and harbors is often poorer than at open beaches.
  • Wait at least 3 days after a rainstorm before diving into the water (and wait at least 5 days before swimming at beaches near storm drains).

Going to the river

  • Do not drink the water.
  • After water contact, rinse off with soap and water.
  • Be aware of your swimming conditions (funny smells, homeless encampments, nearby drainages, posted signs) before entering the water.

Second – knowledge is power.

Heal the Bay has two great, if not awesome, sources of water quality information regardless of whether you are going to the beach or the river. In addition to practicing safe swimming, water enthusiasts should visit Heal the Bay’s Beach Report Card to get the latest information on all California beach conditions. (We publish the Beach Report Card on a weekly basis for the whole year, so can stay informed if you plan on swimming in the ocean beyond Labor Day Weekend.)

If you plan to visit a swimming hole in Los Angeles County this coming weekend, then see our River Report Card to see updated water quality information about these swimming holes.

Our motto has always been, and always will be: KNOW BEFORE YOU GO!

Have a great Labor Day Weekend!



Summer is coming to an end, but our #StrawlessSummer Campaign is a pledge you can keep all year round.

We are thrilled to be joined by local businesses like Pono Burger, The Misfit, Ingo’s Tasty Diner, Bareburger Organic, Laurel Tavern, Hermosa Beach Fish Shop, Beckers Bakery & Deli, Brother’s BurritosTallulas and Watermans Safehouse for our “Straws-Upon-Request” campaign. These businesses are leading the way to change consumer behavior across our region.

It’s estimated that Americans use roughly 500 million plastic straws daily – that’s enough to fill up 125 school buses and to wrap around the planet 2.5 times. Because they aren’t readily recyclable, most plastic straws end up in landfills, and the rest wind up polluting the environment. Plastic pollution is a major problem, in fact it’s estimated that by 2050 there will be more plastic in the sea by mass than fish. Skipping the straw is an easy way to make a big difference.

L.A. sucks at times, but we don’t have to! We just launched our new campaign microsite (thanks ZEHNERGROUP). You can take the pledge to go strawless, catch up on the latest straw-related news, share with your friends and find out which local restaurants and bars are going straws-upon-request. If you don’t need a plastic straw, don’t use one! Learn more at lasucks.org.



Participating in our biggest volunteer event is guaranteed to lift your spirits, writes aquarium staffer and veteran organizer Randi Parent.

This will be my 13th year as a Heal the Bay staff member rolling up my sleeves to organize our biggest volunteer event of the year — Coastal Cleanup Day — on Saturday Sept. 16. (I should be logging No. 14, but taking my daughter to college was the priority a few years back.)

It’s a day of big numbers: half a million people around the globe, volunteering to tidy up their favorite park, stream, lake or shoreline. Millions of pounds of debris picked up, documented, bagged and disposed of, all within a few hours on a Saturday morning by folks in 112 countries. Heal the Bay has historically organized coastal and inland sites in L.A. County, welcoming up to 20,000 volunteers spread out at cleanup locations from Malibu to Compton.

I usually help mobilize our biggest site, next to the Santa Monica Pier, where we’ve sent more than 2,000 people out along the beach. But I’ve also assisted at much smaller inland cleanups, where the power of a few community groups spreading out along a concrete-lined riverbed makes everyone feel mighty, as they weigh their garbage haul at the end of the morning.

For this year’s event – which runs from 9 a.m. to noon – it’s exciting to hear we’ll be including several locations around the county where active wetlands restoration is in progress.

Volunteers are removing invasive plants that choke waterways and they’re removing the trash that accumulates in the overgrowth too – a win-win for the native plants and animals that depend on these riparian habitats for their survival. These sites – LAX Dunes and Ballona Wetlands Ecological Reserve in Playa del Rey, Medea Creek in Agoura Hills and Alta Vicente Reserve in Rancho Palos Verde — all offer an opportunity to become involved with an ongoing restoration project.

But no matter the size, scope or location of the cleanup, there’s been one constant in my 13 Coastal Cleanup Days with Heal the Bay: the genuine feeling of satisfaction and connection I receive after spending a morning with community members, school groups, families and individuals who really care. In a world full of dysfunction and strife, we gather for a simple task that makes a world of difference. On one Saturday in September, we can all make a small corner of this planet that much cleaner and healthier. It may sound corny, but it’s a very powerful moment.

I look forward to meeting you at the Pier cleanup site this year. But there are many more to choose from! Please register today.



Queridos científicos y naturalistas ciudadanos, es hora de cargar los móviles. Katherine Pease, nuestra científica de las cuencas hidrográficas, les manda una invitación para hacer un BioBlitz con ella por algunas horas el sábado, 26 de agosto.     

El arroyo de Compton es una joya de verde y azul, dividido por dos autopistas ruidosas, estacionamientos decrépitos, y un casino de gran altura. Escondido entre una jungla urbana, una parte del arroyo vive y prospera.

Muchos ni saben que existe este arroyo, una media milla de tierra. Hay gente que no lo describiría como una joya, pero pensamos que el arroyo de Compton es una joya olvidada. Representa todo lo que eran las vías fluviales del interior y un símbolo de lo que queremos devolver a Los Ángeles.

Hay sauces, cañas, ranas, enjambres de libélulas, ardillas de tierras californianas, y hasta aves volando, sobre todo. Tiene mucha basura, pero mucha, y hay contaminantes que no se pueden ver con el ojo mismo: bacterias, metales y nutrientes. Sin embargo, tenemos esperanza. Las plantas y los animales siguen viviendo aquí, y ahora es nuestro deber de enterarnos de lo que existe aquí y cómo podemos protegerlo.

Entonces les invitamos a ser parte de la ofensiva. Un BioBlitz para salvar el arroyo de Compton.

 

El sábado 26 de agosto, se puede unir con científicos y expertos de Heal the Bay y el Natural History Museum de Los Angeles County en buscar la vida silvestre y documentarla en su móvil.

Pasaremos tres horas juntos tomando fotos de la fauna y la flora local, cargando todas las fotos a nuestro catálogo, que está cada vez más grande, de la vida silvestre de Los Ángeles a través del iNaturalist app.

Usted no tiene que ser científico para participar – solo hay que mirar a su alrededor. Además de tomarle fotos a la vida silvestre, estaremos recogiendo la basura que hay acerca del arroyo que llega hasta el mar pacífico.

Los datos que recogeremos nos ayudaran a informar la restauración y la revitalización de la cuenca hidrográfica del río Los Ángeles. El plan de la revitalización para el parte bajo del río L.A. está formulando por el Lower L.A. River Revitalization Plan Working Group. Como parte de este grupo, Heal the Bay está luchando para mejor acceso al río, una calidad de agua mejorada, y hábitats ecológicos restaurados en el parte bajo del río L.A. Queremos recoger datos de las condiciones actuales de la biodiversidad en al arroyo de Compton para establecer una base de donde podríamos lanzar nuestras metas para los años que vienen.

Este BioBlitz es la segunda parte de los esfuerzos de documentar, proteger, y mejorar la biodiversidad y los hábitats del área de Los Ángeles.

Primero, promovido por el concejal Paul Koretz, Los Angeles City Council acaba de aprobar una moción para proteger y aumentar la biodiversidad en Los Ángeles. Heal the Bay está implicado en este esfuerzo y el BioBlitz en el arroyo de Compton es una manera de entender la naturaleza que existe a nuestro alrededor por todo Los Angeles.

El segundo esfuerzo es la revitalización de Compton Creek Task Force por la ciudad de Compton. El grupo operativo se centrará en crear oportunidades de proteger el arroyo y de informar a los residentes y los visitantes de su importancia. Este grupo también ayudará en aplicar el Compton Creek Regional Garden Park Master Plan de la ciudad, lo cual incluye la restauración de la parte del arroyo que tiene un fondo de tierra.

Si usted ha pensado alguna vez de ser un científico ciudadano, el BioBlitz es un comienzo ideal. El año pasado, tuvimos eventos similares en los humedales de Ballona y la laguna de Malibu. Montones de voluntarios cambiaron nuestro trabajo para el mejor por documentar todo lo que vieron cada mañana.

Se puede registrar para el evento aqui.



Escrito por Steve Lopez de LA Times — translado del Inglés por Heal the Bay

Nelson Chabarria dice que su amor para la química empezó en una clase en la preparatoria de Los Ángeles, pero no tenía la oportunidad de seguir una carrera. Su familia necesitaba ayuda en pagar las facturas, y se puso a trabajar en el distrito de la costura, pero nunca dejó su sueño de ser químico.

No perdió las ganas de lograr su sueño, y ahora tiene 34 y está comenzando su segundo año de estudiar la tecnología química en L.A. Trade Tech. Su trabajo del verano lo ha convencido de seguir una carrera en la ciencia ambiental.

Un día de la semana pasada, Chris estaba de pie en el medio del río de Los Ángeles, cerca de Frogtown, el agua hasta la cima de sus botas. Llevaba puesto guantes de caucho, tenía un recipiente de vidrio, y pasaba con cuidado sobre piedras resbaladizas.

“¿Aquí?” Chris preguntó a Katherine Pease, la científica de las cuencas hidrográficas de Heal the Bay.

Chris llenó la botella con el agua del río, volvió para la orilla del río y dejó la muestra en hielo para prepararla para pruebas en el laboratorio.

 

 

Planes Grandes, Pero También Grandes Problemas.

Los Ángeles tiene planes grandes para revitalizar unas 11 millas del río en los siguientes años, el precio cual comenzó en unos mil millones ha aumentado ha 1.6 mil millones.

¿Pero está el agua suficiente limpia para el uso recreativo o para atraer a la gente que vive y trabaja en la orilla de lo que es nada más que un canal de drenaje para escorrentía urbana y de residuales tratados?

Heal the Bay es reconocido por ser una de las fuerzas impulsoras de mejorar la calidad del agua del mar en el golfo de Santa Monica, dando notas (A-B-C-D-F) a las playas. Durante los últimos tres años, la organización ha recogido muestras de la cuenca Sepúlveda y tres locales del uso recreativo en el río en el valle Elysian. El sistema que utiliza es una de tres colores, verde, amarillo, y rojo. El rojo significa las áreas que tienen las más bacterias dañinas. Los resultados cambian cada semana.

Pease dice que la calidad de agua ha mejorado un poco, pero sin coherencia y no por todo el río. Este verano la cuenca Sepúlveda tiene marcado muchas áreas rojas y en el valle Elysian, en las áreas de Frog Spot and Rattlesnake Park, tiene marcado amarillo. Pease, en un informe del año pasado, dijo que el nivel alto de las bacterias “indica un riesgo de infecciones del oído, enfermedades respiratorias y enfermedades gastrointestinales para la gente que tiene contacto con el agua.”

“No quiero decir que no debes hacer kayaking en el río — lo hice yo el año pasado y lo recomiendo. Tampoco no es de tener miedo de andar por las orillas del río y ver los animales y plantas que viven ahí. Solo hay una cosa que recordar– si esta en contacto con el agua se debe lavar las manos,” dice Pease.

“Yo realmente haría kayaking,” dice James Alamillo, quien ayuda a mantener la operación de monitorizar el río con Heal the Bay, “pero no nadaría o no vadearía en el agua.”

Aguas Peligrosos, No Aguas de Bañar

El equipo de monitorizar siempre ve a individuos indigentes utilizando las aguas del río como un área recreativa.

Especialmente no se debe entrar en el agua cerca de desagües que echan escorrentías contaminadas en el canal central. Puede ser que usted no espera cascadas ni gotas de los desagües en el medio de un verano seco en Los Ángeles, pero agua fluye todos los días y las noches en algunos lugares.

“El volumen de agua es increíble,” dijo Alamillo, mostrando una cascada cerca de Fletcher Street Bridge.

La cascada fluyó con mucha fuerza. El agua ha cambiado, de estar limpio, de estar jabonosa, y de estar marrón. Alamillo y los demás han comprobado las calles alrededor del río para encontrar el origen de la contaminación, pero en vano.

Pease dijo que el uso excesivo del agua es el primer sospechoso, tanto como el lavado de los coches. Se estima que 100 millones de galones de escorrentía contaminada pasa por los desagües del condado del LA por todos los días en el verano, llevando excrementos de animales, pesticidas, productos químicos, aceites y basura hasta el mar. Alamillo recogió un contenedor plástico de una prescripción para marihuana y me dijo que descartes así son tan comunes por el río LA como las bolsas de plástico eran por el arroyo de Compton cuando pasamos yo y ella hace muchos años.

 

 

En la semana pasada, en mi segundo día con el equipo de monitorizar, el equipo montaba en bicicleta por las riberas por el norte del río. Recogieron muestras de tres desagües entre Fletcher Drive y Harbor Freeway. Todas de aquellas muestras tenía E. coli y Enterococcus que son bacterias de fecales inductores, lo que no nos sorprendió.

En el primer desagüe había un carro de compras lleno de excrementos y papel higiénico. Un hombre sin casa, que vive en una ciudad campamento debajo de la carretera 2, y tiene cuatros gatos en correas, dijo que alguna de la gente que vive por ahí usa el desagüe como un baño.

Los otros dos desagües no parecían mejor, uno de ellos era una cascada que llegó hasta el río y sus riberas. Un joven sin casa, que se llama Abraham, acabó de bañarse en el río y estaba secando su ropa en la ribera. Hay gente sin casa muriéndose en las calles y bañándose en el río, es obvio que tenemos que hacer algo más.

La ciudad de Los Ángeles y los oficiales del condado tiene mucho que resolver en los meses y en los años que vienen. Tienen que entender lo que es el río, lo que podría y debería ser, como se debe limpiarlo y cómo lograr de pagar por su revitalización. Esas decisiones son cada vez más importantes porque está subiendo las estimaciones y no podemos esperar mucho ayuda de Washington. De hecho, el programa de monitorizar el río está pagado por un subsidio del EPA, lo cual es una agencia federal que está en peligro de recortes masivos.

LA River Kayaking

El potencial para un oasis urbano

El río, históricamente, estaba seco por nueve o diez meses del año, pero ahora fluye por todo el año porque millones de galones de residuales tratados son emitidos diariamente en el canal, y llegan hasta el mar.

Prefiramos de hacer kayaking todo el año en agua tratado y escorrentía, o invertir en proyectos de la recuperación del agua para afrontar mejor sequía, o diseñar un compromiso viable.

El potencial para un oasis urbano por el centro de Los Ángeles es grande, ¿pero incluirán o desplazaran a los cuales viven cerca del rio y el desarrollo comercial para la construcción?

No tengo todas las respuestas, pero puede ser que los estudiantes de L.A. Trade Tech, los cuales son los que están monitorizando el río, nos ayudarán a descubrirlas. Nelson Chabarria quiere ser un inspector normativo medioambiental. Los otros estudiantes, Vanessa Granados, Christopher Zamora, y John Silva me dijeron que quieren seguir carreras en Ciencias del medio ambiente, geoquímica o ámbitos relacionados.

Ellos saben, mejor que muchos otros, el gran potencial del río tanto como los desafíos de mantener y limpiarlo. El río nos precede y sigue aquí, navegando los cambios que hemos hechos.

LA River Monitoring Team



Attention citizen scientists and naturalists, it’s time to charge your mobile devices. Our watershed scientist Katherine Pease is inviting you to BioBlitz with her for a few hours on Saturday, Aug. 26.

Compton Creek is a small gem of green and blue, bisected by noisy freeways, crumbling parking lots, aging shopping malls and a high-rise casino. Amid all this urban scrabble, a soft-bottomed section of the creek thrives.

Most people don’t know this earthen-bottomed half-mile stretch even exists. And some might argue that “gem” is too generous a term for this L.A. River tributary. But we see it as a forgotten jewel – a glimpse of what greater L.A.’s inland waterways used to be and a symbol of what we can hopefully bring back on a larger scale.

There are drooping willow trees, reeds, frogs, swarms of dragonflies, California ground squirrels and even majestic kites (a type of bird) flying overhead. There is also trash, a lot of it, and pollutants that can’t be seen with the naked eye: bacteria, metals and nutrients. But there is that glimmer of hope. Plants and animals persist here, and now it’s our job to find out what’s there and to protect it.

So we’re inviting you to a blitz. A BioBlitz to be exact.

On Saturday, Aug. 26, you can join scientists and experts from Heal the Bay and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in searching for wildlife and documenting it with your smartphone.

We’ll be spending three hours snapping pictures of the local flora and fauna, uploading the images to our growing catalogue of L.A.’s wildlife via the iNaturalist app.

You don’t need to be a scientist to participate – you just have to observe what is around you! In addition to looking for plants and animals, we will be picking up trash in and around the creek, which ultimately drains into the Pacific Ocean near Long Beach.

The data we collect will better inform restoration and revitalization of the Los Angeles River watershed. A revitalization plan for the Lower L.A. River is being formulated by the Lower L.A. River Revitalization Plan Working Group. As a member of this effort, Heal the Bay is fighting for better access, improved water quality and restored ecological habitats in the Lower L.A. River. Having data on the current conditions of biodiversity in Compton Creek helps set a baseline so we can establish goals for what we would like to see in the coming years.

This BioBlitz is part of two greater efforts in the Los Angeles area to document, protect and improve biodiversity and habitats.

First, the Los Angeles City Council, championed by councilmember Paul Koretz, recently passed a motion to protect and improve biodiversity in Los Angeles. Heal the Bay has been involved in this effort and sees this BioBlitz in Compton Creek as a way to understand the nature that exists all around us in greater Los Angeles.

The second push is the city of Compton’s revival of the Compton Creek Task Force. The Task Force is focused on creating stewardship opportunities along the creek, educating residents and visitors about its importance. The group will also help implement the city’s Compton Creek Regional Garden Park Master Plan, which includes restoring the earthen-bottom portion of Compton Creek.

If you ever thought about becoming a citizen scientist, this is an ideal opportunity to get started. Last year, we hosted similar events in the Ballona Wetlands and Malibu Lagoon. Dozens of volunteers made a big difference in our ongoing restoration work by creating a record of what they saw each morning.

You can register with us for the event here.



Lo más importante aquí en Heal the Bay es la calidad de agua y la salud pública. Creemos que usted tiene el derecho de saber de la calidad de agua en las zonas recreativas de aguas dulces, antes de llegar, especialmente si usted tiene planes de visitarlas.

Nuestro nuevo programa del verano convierte lo que creemos en acción. Vamos a probar, analizar, e informar en la calidad de agua en dentro de las cuencas del río Los Ángeles, el arroyo de Malibu, y el río San Gabriel. Lo que queremos lograr es simple: facultar que ustedes puedan hacer decisiones informadas y reduzca el riesgo de enfermarse.

De momento, estamos monitorizando los niveles de las bacterias dañinas en varias locales de agua dulces cerca de zonas recreativas populares, en colaboración del L.A. County Department of Public Health, el Council of Watershed Health, el Los Angeles River Watershed Monitoring Program, el City of Los Angeles Department of Sanitation, y el San Gabriel Regional Watershed Monitoring Program. Las áreas de monitorizar el río de Los Ángeles están en zonas recreativas designadas en que algunas actividades son permitidas durante el verano (kayaking o pescar, pero no nadar); los otros locales son todos lugares populares para nadar.

Comprueba nuestro mapa para ver los últimos resultados de la calidad de agua:

¿Que significa tienen las pruebas?

La Agencia de Protección Ambiental de Estados Unidos y el Departamento Regional de Control de Calidad del Agua se han fijado el máximo para un nivel aceptable de bacterias dañinas en agua. Cada semana nuestro mapa está actualizado con los últimos resultados de prueba, incluyendo el número de veces el nivel de las bacterias supera el límite en las cuencas nuestras. Cuanto mayor es el número de excesos, cuanto mayor es el riesgo de enfermarse en aquello sitio. Entonces el verde significa el riesgo menor y el rojo significa en el riesgo mayor.

Un desglose

  • Si un sitio tiene zero excesos, tiene una marca verde, lo cual significa el riesgo menor.
  • Si un sitio es hasta la mitad o menos del límite de excesos, tiene una marca amarilla.
  • Si un sitio tiene más de la mitad permitida de excesos, tiene una marca roja, lo cual significa el riesgo mayor.
  • Las marcas grises no tienen datos.

Heal the Bay ha monitorizado la calidad del agua en el arroyo del Malibu desde 2014 y la calidad del río Los Ángeles desde 2015. En 2016, ganamos el subsidio del US EPA Urban Waters. Gracias a esto subsidio, hemos lanzado un programa único de monitorizar agua dulce en asociación con una universidad local. El programa está organizado por nuestra científica Katherine Pease y estamos formando a cinco estudiantes de Los Angeles Trade Technical College “LATTC” para monitorizar las condiciones del río Los Ángeles. También estamos trabajando con dos pasantes en el apoyo del arroyo Malibu.