Another Successful Coastal Cleanup Day!
Tens of thousands of Californians turned out Saturday to take part in the 40th annual California Coastal Cleanup Day — the state’s largest annual volunteer event. Participants scoured more than 750 cleanup sites, removing hundreds of thousands of pounds of trash before it could be washed out to sea during the rainy season.
In Santa Barbara County, with not all of the sites reporting yet, 1,022 volunteers at 32 sites covered 85 miles and picked up over 4,929 pounds of litter.
With 60% of the cleanup sites in California reporting, the statewide count stands at 28,751 volunteers who picked up a total of 254,772 pounds of trash and recycling or 127 tons.
Volunteers gathered at beaches, shorelines, and inland waterways, to clean up locations in nearly all of California’s 58 counties.
“Thanks to everyone who showed up at local parks, creeks, and beaches today! Your efforts resulted in nearly two and a half tons of litter being picked up in three hours time. We are so proud of the Santa Barbara County community right now! ” says Jill Cloutier, PR Director at Explore Ecology.
Volunteers kept track of all the items they removed on Coastal Cleanup Day, one of the world’s largest and longest-running community science projects. This data has over the last 40 years revealed a great deal about the extent and nature of the marine debris problem.
About 75% of the trash that volunteers have removed is plastic, a material that never completely biodegrades and has numerous harmful environmental consequences. For example, plastic debris can kill wildlife and leach toxic chemicals into the food chain.
The data has also shown that up to 80% of the trash collected on the California coast originates on land. Almost all water in California eventually drains to the sea, so volunteers, even in inland communities, help prevent enormous amounts of trash from fouling ocean waters.
Everyday debris and plastic items weren’t the only things found on Coastal Cleanup Day. Volunteers also picked up a number of “unusual” items during this year’s cleanup. The most unusual items found in Santa Barbara County were a toaster oven, working calculators, and a small (plastic) dinosaur. In Los Angeles County, a volunteer found cashier’s checks worth $68,000.
Coastal Cleanup Day Coordinator Ellie Cotter says, “We are so impressed with not only the number of volunteers this year, but also by the amount of litter they found. Thank you to everyone who showed up and cleaned up. We appreciate you!”
“Californians really turned out for our coast today,” said the Commission’s Executive Director Dr. Kate Huckelbridge. “All across the state volunteers rolled up their sleeves to protect our beautiful beaches, estuaries and waterways, just as they have for the past 40 years. They inspire all of us to remain vigilant in our work of protecting our coast and ocean for generations to come.”
Volunteers can go to www.coastalcleanupday.org to fill out the Coastal Cleanup Survey to be entered into a drawing for a fabulous Coastal Cleanup Day prize package
Explore Ecology extends its gratitude to everyone who made this event such a success.
Statewide, Coastal Cleanup Day is presented by the California Coastal Commission. In Santa Barbara County, the event is organized by Explore Ecology and the County of Santa Barbara Resource Recovery and Waste Management, with support from the Cities of Santa Barbara, Goleta, and Solvang. This event is made possible by the hard work of hundreds of local non-profits and government agencies throughout the state and tens of thousands of volunteers annually.
Explore Ecology
www.exploreecology.org
(805) 884-0459 ext. 4
Executive Director: Lindsay Johnson
Mission
The mission of Explore Ecology is to promote a greater understanding of the connections between people and their environment and to encourage creative thinking through hands-on environmental education and artistic expression. We empower our community to protect and preserve the environment through environmental education and creative exploration.
Begin to Build a Relationship
We know you care about where your money goes and how it is used. Connect with this organization’s leadership in order to begin to build this important relationship. Your email will be sent directly to this organization’s director of development and/or Executive Director.
What sets Explore Ecology apart is its dedication to hands-on participation. Students see presentations and read about the environment. With our programs, they’re actually going to the beach to learn about watersheds, or creating art with reuse materials, or checking on a plant that they grew. That’s what gets them super excited and engaged.
Help Plant the Seeds of Change
$50 – Cultivate Young Minds: Provide a year of school garden education for one child.
$250 – Fuel Field Trips: Sponsor a school bus for 60 students to take an Explore Ecology field trip and explore the wonders of nature firsthand.
$500 – Nurture Creativity: Fund five local artists to teach Makerspace art workshops.
$1,000 – Clean Our Coast: Sponsor a beach cleanup event, making our beaches safer and cleaner.
$2,500 – Equip Our Educators: Help purchase education materials for the Watershed Resource Center where students and the public learn about keeping our water clean!
Key Supporters
American Riviera Bank
Audacious Foundation
Brighten Solar
Coastal Fund at UCSB
Deckers Brands
Garden Club of Santa Barbara
Johnson Ohana Foundation
McGowan Guntermann
Mission Wealth
Montecito Bank & Trust
Natalie Orfalea Foundation
Rotary Club of Santa Barbara
Sunrise Charitable Foundation
Santa Barbara City College
Foundation
Santa Barbara Foundation
Santa Ynez Band
of Chumash Indians
Michel Saint-Sulpice
Teachers’ Fund
Village Properties
The Miller Family Fund
Tisha Weber Ford
Towbes Foundation
Laura and Geof Wyatt
Yardi Systems