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Heal the Bay Blog

Category: More Ways to Give

On Sunday, July 22, Le Cellier Restaurant and Wine Bar in Marina Del Rey hosted DudaArt‘s “Blue Aquarium,” an artist reception to benefit Heal the Bay. Twenty percent of proceeds from instore sales went to Heal the Bay. Saxophonist Don Bell and singer Summer Rona performed while special French-Vietnamese food and drinks were served.

If you weren’t able to make the event, fear not. Gilcee’ prints are on sale online with 50 percent of proceeds after shipping/handling going to Heal the Bay. Don’t miss this chance to support local art and Heal the Bay.



Filling up blue bins definitely pays off, as more than 100 Glassell Park Elementary fifth graders recently discovered, having recycled their way to the beach and a seaside lunch at Duke’s Malibu.

The students won the Chivas USA Recycling Competition by filling 75 bins with recycling material during a two-week period, beating out Castelar Elementary.

Their recycling efforts also produced more long-term benefits for Glassell Park Elementary, which is near Atwater Village. According to fifth grade teacher Mrs. Shepherd, before the recycling competition the cafeteria staff didn’t recycle items, but they are continuing their efforts to fill up blue bins even now that the contest is complete.

Heal the Bay teamed with Major League Soccer team Chivas USA, the City’s Bureau of Sanitation, and the Aquarium of the Pacific to help get kids aware and excited about recycling. The grand prize was a Heal the Bay “Lunch and Learn” field trip, with the meal sponsored by Duke’s Malibu at its restaurant on PCH.

Heal the Bay provided the buses and the staff who led the students through games and beach activities all designed to teach ocean stewardship. The fifth graders learned how cigarette butts and Styrofoam end up on the beach, how trash harms animals and how they can help keep our local waters healthy and clean.

“This is the best field trip ever!” declared one student as he shook sand from his Van’s topsider. “I didn’t even realize this was the Pacific Ocean until today.”

Lunch afterwards at Duke’s was the icing on the Hula Pie.

Heal the Bay provides beach education through our Lunch and Learn program to 500 Title 1 students per year.

Read more about our science-based education resources.

Donate now to help us support our impactful education programs.



June 11, 2012

Today’s guest blogger is Susie Santilena, an environmental engineer and water quality scientist at Heal the Bay.

The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board Thursday made a positive decision (or lack of decision) involving one of California’s most valuable resources: the Santa Clara River. The Santa Clara River is a haven for 117 threatened, endangered, or sensitive wildlife species or communities. It is Southern California’s largest remaining free-flowing river, and one of the most endangered rivers thanks to developments such as the one considered by the Board last Thursday, the Newhall Ranch Development Plan. The development proposal, put forward by the the Newhall Land and Farming Co., spans across Los Angeles and Ventura counties and calls for building more than 20,000 homes in an environmentally sensitive area.

The Board was deciding whether to approve regulations called “waste discharge requirements” (WDRs) and certify that the project complies with the Clean Water Act. The board’s decision was simple but wise: hold off, get more information on the project and determine if additional provisions are needed in the regulation to ensure that water quality is maintained.

Poised to impact thousands of acres in and around this river, the Newhall Ranch is advertised as a “green city,” yet is sited in the perfect place to do the most devastation to the environment — in an endangered river. This project spans 14,000 acres in and around the Santa Clara River, replacing the soft natural sides of 14 miles of the river and its tributaries with concrete and other hardscape, adding 35 new stormwater outfalls into the Santa Clara River, and encroaching on an area prone to flooding.

A strong coalition of environmental organizations including Santa Clarita Organization for Planning and the Environment (SCOPE), Friends of the Santa Clara River, Ventura Coastkeeper, and Santa Monica Baykeeper, along with the Coastal Conservancy joined with Heal the Bay to voice concerns with the proposed regulations and the Newhall project itself. Some of the biggest concerns expressed included:

  • Problems with the project, such as the attempt to build houses in the 100-year floodplain and how the stream hardening and increased runoff from project will affect flow downstream
  • Misinformation and flaws in the analyses of the project,
  • Weaknesses and suggestions to strengthen the Regional Board staff’s proposed regulations, such as the need for stronger stormwater requirements, requirements to make sure design features effectively protect water quality, more mitigation for habitat losses, and numeric effluent limits for stormwater outfalls.

Common sense prevailed despite Newhall’s best efforts to sway the board to adopt the proposed weak requirements for the project The Board raised so many questions and concerns regarding the development that there wasn’t enough time in the hearing for staff members to answer and address all of them. In fact, some of these concerns may actually be “fatal flaws” with the project that require some of the design to literally go back to the drawing board. Board members elected to delay the decision on the regulations until they get more information and clarification and understand how the project can be modified to lessen impacts to water quality and beneficial uses..

Now the environmental coalition is prepping for round 2…so stay tuned!

Join Heal the Bay’s summer-long Take L.A. By Storm campaign to help preserve the Clean Water Act, which is being threatened here in Los Angeles.

Learn more.



At a time when most schools are focused on fundraising to support their own libraries and arts programs, one local school decided to share some of the money their families raised at a beach cleanup event to help further Heal the Bay’s mission.

Mariposa School of Global Education students donated $1,200 (out of more than $12,000 raised) from their 4th Annual Beach Clean-A-Thon to Heal the Bay. The Beach-Clean-A-Thon is a school-wide event that involves all grades. In April, kindergarten classes cleaned Malibu Lagoon, while other grades cleaned Malibu Creek State Park to learn how the creek flows into the ocean and affects local oceans and beaches.

“We must remember to model community partnerships and philanthropy towards those causes we wish to see furthered,” said Jeff Lough, principal of the Agoura Hills-based school in Las Virgenes Unified School District. “Our donation and partnership with Heal the Bay is an example of our commitment to this idea. Mariposa’s donation will come back to our children tenfold when they grow up and enjoy the coastline that Heal the Bay works so relentlessly to protect.”

When Mariposa sixth graders presented Heal the Bay Coastal Resources Director Sarah Sikich with the check on May 21 at their campus, she reminded the students that their contributions would pay dividends for all beach lovers. “The money you raised will go to keeping wildlife and the ocean healthy and clean,” she said.

Sarah also noted that the students will be supporting Heal the Bay’s beach cleanup programs, as well as our work to bring underserved kids — some of whom have never been to the beach before — to our Aquarium to learn about the ocean and the animals who live in Santa Monica Bay.

Mariposa formed a new partnership with Heal the Bay this year to help support student conservation efforts and as part of the school’s educational components. Students learn responsibility by participating in activities like the Beach Clean-A-Thon, which acts as both a fundraiser and educational event. The remainder of funds raised will go directly to programs, resources and services for Mariposa students.

Fundraising efforts by students included children sponsoring other children, start-up lemonade stands, kids’ video messages filmed at the beach and hand-written letters with ocean-themed art. Donations came in all shapes and sizes, from hand-picked coins from kid’s piggy banks to online donations from out-of-state friends and relatives.

Mariposa’s 2013 Beach Clean-A-Thon will be held near our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium location and will include an educational tour of our marine learning center.

Schedule a cleanup for your school.

Plan a visit or field trip to our Aquarium.

Help us bring our ocean education programs to Los Angeles students.



June 4, 2012

The California Travel Association (CTA) will bestow its annual Tourism Stewardship of the Year award this week to Heal the Bay, recognizing us for doing the most to “protect, preserve, restore, improve, expand, or otherwise enhance California’s natural, cultural, or historical treasures.”

In honoring Heal the Bay, the CTA noted our education and advocacy initiatives to protect oceans statewide and beautify beaches for the millions of people who visit California each year, including:

  • The Beach Report Card® that provides weekly water quality grades to more than 500 California beaches;
  • Our advocacy work to help create newly established Marine Protected Areas off the coast of Southern California;
  • The ongoing education of nearly 100,000 visitors to Heal the Bay’s Santa Monica Pier Aquarium and
  • Our contribution to ending the scourge of pollution on our shores by sponsoring a number of regional and statewide measures that have significantly reduced urban runoff and marine debris.

Heal the Bay’s Coastal Resources Director, Sarah Sikich, will accept the award on Heal the Bay’s behalf during an event organized by the state’s leading travel trade organization during its annual convention June 4-6 in Sacramento. Heal the Bay is among seven honorees designated by the CTA, including surf industry legend Jack O’Neill, the Francis Ford Coppola winery and Napa Valley chef Michael Chiarello.

“Protecting the California coastline isn’t just good for the environment,” said Sikich. “It’s good for the statewide economy. The millions of visitors who come to our beaches each year expect clean water and sand. We all have a duty to protect what we love.”

Read more.

Learn more about all the ways you can help Heal the Bay.

Full information on all the award winners here.



What better way to kick off a summer spent at the shore than with some family-friendly, crowd-pleasing ocean sport competition?

In the water on June 9, the Santa Monica Pier Paddleboard Race & Ocean Festival will feature SUP, paddleboard, ocean swim and dory competitions. While up on the pier deck, live music, hula dancing and a surfing, lifeguard and paddleboard museum will be found. The event will run from 8:30 a.m.- 3 p.m.

The paddleboard competition continues a Santa Monica tradition from the 1940s, when two paddleboard clubs were headquartered on the pier.

Heal the Bay will receive a portion of net proceeds from the event, which will directly benefit our marine education facility, the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.

Check out the vibe for yourself with this video.

For more information, visit www.pierpaddle.com



On May 17 Heal the Bay hosted nearly 1,000 of our closest friends and biggest supporters at our annual Bring Back the Beach gala. Themed “Sea of Love,” this year’s sold-out event celebrated eco-couple Danny Moder and Julia Roberts, as well as Amy Smart and Matthew Hart on the sand at the Jonathan Beach Club.

With such A-List honorees, Bring Back the Beach drew top government officials, including City of Long Beach Vice Mayor Suja Lowenthal, as well as Hollywood celebrities Peter Fonda and Ali Larter and sports luminary Michelle Kwan.

In addition, Heal the Bay board members Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Sharon Lawrence lent their voices to the upcoming vote in L.A. for a ban on single-use shopping bags and their all-star talent to the awards presentations.

The band Entourage provided high-energy, dance-along tunes that got partygoers out of their seats and up on stage to groove until late in the evening.

Earlier, guests were given a chance to bid on a new Toyota Prius c, generously donated by long-time Heal the Bay supporter and community member LAcarGuy.

To view photos from the event—including a shot of the evening’s amazing Technicolor sunset—visit our Flickr photo set.



In honor of dads and grads everywhere and in celebration of the male seahorse’s unique role in childbirth, through the month of June only, the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium’s seahorses are now available for Aquadoption for just $50.

Growing up to 12 inches in height, the Pacific seahorse, Hippocampus ingens, is among the largest of the world’s seahorses and the only one to be found along the California coast. In the seahorse family, the males give birth, carrying eggs in their brood pouch, which are deposited there by the female. The male can give birth to hundreds of babies – known as fry – at one time.

A yearlong aquadoption of a seahorse includes a personalized packet with an adoption certificate, photo, fact sheet and a full year’s membership to Heal the Bay – and free family admission. Consider this one-of-a-kind gift for the dad who has everything and to celebrate the graduate in the family.

Learn more about our Aquadoption animals.



Mother’s Day is right around the corner and what better way to celebrate motherhood than to adopt one of the swell sharks at our Santa Monica Pier Aquarium?

Adult female swell sharks, their developing swell shark pups still incubating in egg casings and newborn shark pups are all available for fostering through the Aquarium’s Aquadoption program. Aquadoption at the Aquarium is an important way to connect with the marine environment, support an animal on exhibit and gain a greater understanding of the amazing ocean habitat of the Santa Monica Bay.

An Aquadoption gift not only assists in the feeding and care of an animal, it also funds the maintenance of exhibits and the ongoing education and advocacy efforts core to Heal the Bay’s mission. Swell sharks are one of eight species available for adoption, ranging in price from $25 to $750, depending upon the animal. Whether you purchase a yearlong adoption for Mom, for a friend or for a child or grandparent – or foster an animal yourself – it is the gift that keeps on giving on behalf of marine life welfare.

Visit the Aquarium to get acquainted with prospective adoptees.

Swell Sharks at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium

Adopt a Swell Shark for Mother’s Day!


Today’s guest blogger is Nick Fash, an education specialist at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium.

What do you get when you share the underwater world and all of its amazing life to 75,000 visitors and 15,000 students a year? Lots of broken things.

At Heal the Bay’s public marine education facility, the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium, it’s a fact of life that the constant use of our projectors, DVD players, cameras and other items eventually leads to their demise. And while it is our passion and goal to show each and every visitor, child or adult, as much as we can about the amazing life just steps from our door in the Santa Monica Bay — there is only so much space our intimate facility offers to accomodate and house our local marine life. So, using photography, video and other interactive displays helps us share so much more of what is right in our back yard.

Having served as a valuable community resource for the past nine years, we are now turning to the community to ask our neighbors and fans to help us in replacing some of the critical equipment that keep our public education programs running. To see what items members in our community might be able to donate to us, we are starting a Heal the Bay Wishlist program.

That old iPad which you just upgraded? We would love it. The projector you no longer need at the office? Yes please!

To see if there is an item you no longer need that would help us run our programs better, take a look at our list below:

  • Web Cams (live feeds of exhibits and special tanks)
  • Windows or Apple Computers or Laptops (systems for use by interns and volunteers)
  • iPads (tablets for surveying, data collection, display of material and even sign usage)
  • Projectors
  • DVD players
  • Paint Supplies/Painting Services (new paint needed for Santa Monica Pier Aquarium’s exterior and interior)
  • New/Used Vehicles (a truck with 4-wheel drive for dive and facility equipment transport)
  • ROV (for underwater research)

To donate to the Heal the Bay Wishlist program, call Nick at 310.393.6149 x108 or send Nick an e-mail.

See where your donation goes, visit our Aquarium.