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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: Venice Beach

The Water Replenishment District (WRD) will offer a series of free classes for water smart gardening.

Topics include drought-tolerant plants, irrigation basics, horticultural practices, and garden design concepts. Classes will be held monthly from Feb. 18 – June 9 at WRD Headquarters in Lakewood.

For a complete schedule and to sign up, call 562.275.4215 or visit  www.ecogardener.org.




Even if you live miles from the ocean, there are some simple steps you can take in your home to protect your favorite beach (as well as your local neighborhood, park or river).

Over the coming weeks, we will be sharing short, educational and fun videos with tips on 10 ways you can heal the Bay — so keep an eye on this page (or subscribe to our YouTube channel)!

Our first video comes from Melissa Aguayo, Heal the Bay’s Speakers Bureau Manager

Hold on to Your Balloons

10 Ways You Can Heal the Bay

1. Keep your Litter out of the Gutter

Keep trash, yard trimmings, and other litter off the street and out of the storm drains so they don’t end up in the ocean. Clean up after your dog, cat, or horse to keep the waste out of the storm drain and away from your favorite beach. Report full catch basins to the Dept. of Public Works: L.A. City: (800) 974- 9794 L.A. County: (800) 303- 0003. For non-L.A. County residents find your local city numbers.

2. Bag the Plastic Bags

Instead of accepting plastic bags from the grocery store, bring your own reusable bag. Single-use plastic bags create loads of unnecessary litter; they are easily blown by the wind, and they often end up in the ocean. Plastic takes hundreds of years to degrade, and creates hazards for marine life and other wildlife.

3. Hold on to Your Balloons

Released helium balloons eventually pop and fall back to land, ending up in the ocean where animals mistake them for food. Always pop balloons and put them in the trash.

4. Beware of Six-Pack Rings

Avoid buying them, and any other loop of plastic, or cut them up before you throw them out. Marine animals choke on garbage and get tangled in trash. Unlike people, birds and fish don’t have hands to remove items caught around their necks.

5. Don’t Be a Drip

Overwatering is wasteful and moves trash and toxins to the ocean. Turn off the faucet when you don’t need it. Fix leaky pipes and install low-flow shower heads and toilets. Help the sewage treatment plants do a better job by conserving water.

6. Go Non-Toxic

If you must use harsh chemical products, when you are through bring them to authorized household hazardous waste drop-off centers. For locations near you, call (800) CLEAN-UP. Instead, avoid buying products like liquid drain openers. Use pesticides as little as possible and look for non- toxic alternatives. Use compost instead of chemical fertilizers. Best of all, using simple recipes and ingredients, you can make your own environmentally-friendly cleaners.

7. Make a Clean Sweep

Use a broom, not a hose, to clean sidewalks and driveways. Watering the driveway won’t make it grow! Sweep trash into a dustpan, not the gutter, and use the garden clippings as mulch to fertilize your yard.

8. Recycle Used Motor Oil

You can recycle your used motor oil at gas stations, auto parts stores, and garages. Never pour it down the drain, in the gutter, or on the ground. Motor oil is extremely toxic.

9. Go to a Car Wash

Most car washes recycle their water. But if you clean your car at home, always wash it on your lawn to recapture lost water, use a bucket to conserve water and consider a ‘waterless’ car wash like Lucky Earth or Ecover.

10. Become a part of Heal the Bay

Help us continue to protect the Santa Monica Bay and all of California’s coastal waters; become an environmental advocate, volunteer or join as a member.



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.

Read more » 



The Los Angeles City Council heard testimony from over 60 people today on the long-awaited single-use plastic bag ban.  The environmental community was well represented and attired in natty green.  Other supporters included reusable bag manufacturers, the California Grocers Assn., the L.A. Chamber of Commerce, and 17 neighborhood councils!  Clearly, a life without single-use plastic bags is a popular movement that has grown well beyond L.A. County, Long Beach, Malibu, Santa Monica Calabasas and other SoCal cities.

Opposition was provided by bag man Stephen “This bag is more than a toy” Joseph and Crown Poly bag manufacturing staff.  Joseph tried to tie the city council vote to California’s ranking by industry titans as the place they’d least likely want to do business.  I’m not sure where the ranking came from, but Joseph did say that Texas was No. 1.  Enough said.

Thanks to a prior commitment to the environmental community from Council President Eric Garcetti, the City Council heard the testimony. However, members were uncomfortable taking action without the bag ban first going through the Energy and Environment Committee.

Read more » 



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




Today’s guest blogger is Nick Fash, a Heal the Bay education specialist who works with students at our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.

When the email came from Matt King, our Communications Director, asking if I was interested in filming a “Green is Universal” Subaru promo, I was intrigued.  Hey, it was something different and exciting and, yes, I really do drive a Subaru. Little did I know that for the next month I would be sending resumes, personal stories and pictures, answering phone calls and taking part in an on-camera interview at Universal.  Then, radio silence.  Welcome to Hollywood …
A few weeks passed before a phone call made it all seem very real.  Unbeknownst to me, I had been just one of a group of environmentally minded people from all over the country who were in the running for Subaru’s ad spot, highlighting what we do for our planet and why we do it.  I eventually got the nod for the role.
As the piece started to take shape, countless meetings, phone calls and visits from producers, cinematographers and directors who came to watch me work, helped to forge the final piece (Watch on Vimeo).  They loved the excitement from the children when I taught, and the thoughts of filming me underwater were all woven into their vision to highlight the work I do here at Heal the Bay.  Strangely enough, the hardest part was getting enough time away from teaching and sorting out how to film in the Aquarium without disrupting what we all do every day.
But once the filming got underway, it was a blast.  Being filmed underwater was new to me, but thankfully being a certified SCUBA instructor, I have underwater communications nailed.  Learning how to do precision driving (to avoid crashing into a camera truck and its film crew) was also something different.  But the best part was stepping out of the water into a warm robe, being handed a cup of coffee and asked what kind of panini I wanted.
  
If only Heal the Bay could work that in for my post-teaching routine…



‘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



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.

Read more of this post »

Image courtesy mnn.com