Helping to clean up the harbor
Stefanie Frith
Tennis balls. A freezer door. Beer and Gatorade bottles. Oil
containers. Cigarette butts. Fishing line. Glass. Styrofoam. Meat trays.
Jack In The Box wrappers.
And the list goes on and on, said members of Junior Girl Scout Troupe
170. Seven members of the troupe were among the 230 volunteers who
participated Saturday morning in the 21st annual Clean Harbor Day in
Newport Beach.
“I think this is a good idea,” Megan Von Berg, a Newport Beach
resident, said. “It really helps. And it was fun.”
Megan, 11, added that she and her fellow Girl Scouts collected five
bags of trash.
The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum organizes the massive trash pickup
effort, which ran from 8 to 11 a.m. Marshall Steele, chairman of the
event, said he assigned certain parts of the harbor to groups like the
Newport Junior Chamber of Commerce, Fullerton and Irvine high schools,
the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts.
Residents of Lido Island also cleaned up their area, and kayakers went
into the Upper Back Bay to pick up debris. The Balboa Merchants Assn.
took over the Fun Zone area and a dozen boats also went out into the
harbor to catch floating debris. Organizers said that after every good
rain, the San Diego Creek overflows and everything settles into the bay.
After everyone was done collecting trash, the volunteers gathered at
the Nautical Museum for crafts, exhibits and hot dogs. Bill Hamilton,
owner of Malarky’s Irish Pub and founder of event, started the cleanup as
a way to get the community involved in the harbor. Now he said he just
cooks up the hot dogs with the rest of his family.
“The harbor just got so dirty and messy on the waterfront, we had to
do something,” said Hamilton, a Newport Beach resident who was once the
head of the Marine Division within the Chamber of Commerce. “This is
preventative medicine. Hopefully one day we won’t have to have these
cleanups. People need to know that even if they throw trash in the street
in Irvine, it’s going to end up in the Newport Harbor.”
Steele said that thanks to efforts such as the cleanup day and
education about keeping the waters clean, the harbor is much cleaner now
than in past years. He said a few years ago, word got out that the harbor
was cleaner and fewer people were coming out for the cleanup days.
“So we started using funds for educational purposes,” Steele said. “We
want to teach that there is a history in keeping the bay clean, and we
want a history of the bay down the road.”
Steele said that the state issued grants for the cleanup day, and the
city provided the bags. Collected trash went into dumpsters next to the
museum. He added that most of the trash collected is usually too wet to
separate into recycle bins.
“I had maybe four or five people come by who hadn’t participated and
said they felt guilty that there were all these kids out there with bags
and they weren’t,” Steele said. “Hey, if they won’t participate, then we
just make them feel guilty.”
Taylor Simpkins, 10, of Troupe 170 said people should participate in
the cleanup day because she and her friends had a really good time.
“It was really fun. We got lots of bags of trash,” Taylor said. “It
shows that you shouldn’t throw trash [in the ocean or street]. The more
you cleanup, the better.”
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