Cleanup day planned for beaches
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT-MESA -- The more than 46,000 pounds of trash lining the Back
Bay area one day last year amounted to good news: It was about 7,000
pounds less than Coastal Cleanup Day volunteers gathered the year before,
which in turn was about 7,000 pounds less than in 1998.
Organizers of this year’s beach cleanup effort hope to see another
drop in that amount of trash collected by volunteers when they begin
combing the beaches at 8 a.m. Saturday.
“It shows that education programs are working,” said Kathy Painter,
one of the organizers of the local event. “People are understanding that
litter from all over the watershed area ends up on the coast.”
Though they hope to see a reduction in the amounts of garbage they
find headed toward the ocean, they don’t expect that Tuesday’s East Coast
terrorist acts will reduce turnout.
Between 800 and 1,200 residents are expected to participate. In fact,
Newport Beach draws more volunteers and gathers more trash than any other
coastal cleanup site in Southern California during this annual event,
organizers said.
Now in its 11th year in Newport Beach, the event has been coordinated
by the county, Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends and other
environmental organizations to clean up about 750 acres.
“With everything going on in the world, it’s something you can do to
give back to your community and come together as a group,” said Candice
McIntyre, who volunteered last year and who’s helping to organize this
year’s cleanup as part of the county’s staff.
“It’s extremely satisfying,” she said. “When you see all the trash
you’ve collected, you say ‘Wow.”’
Volunteers will meet at the Newport Dunes Resort, 1131 Back Bay Drive,
off Jamboree Boulevard. From there, they’ll be transported to different
cleanup sites, including, for some, areas they might not get to visit
otherwise, such as salt dike.
And this year, volunteers will reach beyond the beach, venturing into
areas of the watershed where trash accumulates on its way to the ocean.
The Coastal Commission provides trash bags, gloves and other
equipment. Sponsors such as Mimi’s Cafe and Champagne’s Market will
provide muffins, juice, water and other refreshments.
“We think it’s a great cause,” said Tim Miller, general manager of
Mimi’s Newport Beach location. “We all live in the area and get to enjoy
the wetlands, so we should all do our best to pitch in and keep it
clean.”
FYI
* What: Coastal Cleanup Day
* When: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.; registration will close at 11:30 a.m.
* Where: Meet at cleanup headquarters, the Newport Dunes Resort, 1131
Back Bay Drive, located off Jamboree Boulevard in Newport Beach
* Why: Between 800 and 1,200 people are expected to help gather trash
in the Upper Newport Back Bay as part of the statewide Coastal Cleanup
Day
* Call: Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends, (714) 973-6825; the day
of the event, call (914) 448-2046.
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