It takes more than one day
“The great aim of education is not knowledge but action.”
-- Herbert Spencer,
English philosopher
(1820-1903)
Hundreds of volunteers, a vast majority of them children, sprang
into action last week, collecting trash from Newport beaches during
California’s 19th annual Coastal Cleanup Day.
Volunteers, including about 350 at Crystal Cove, found a vast
array of objects strewn across the state’s greatest natural resource
-- the usual soda cans, beer bottles and cigarettes but also
televisions, lawn and living room furniture. Little pieces of
Styrofoam and cigarette butts were among the most bothersome bits.
Globs of tar hardening in the sand and scrub also contribute to the
trash littering the stunning shoreline.
Simultaneously, volunteers picked up debris up and down
California’s coast.
As people become educated about the environment, the importance of
such days becomes clear. Children now learn these lessons at an early
age and will be the first to tell someone not to litter and why.
“It’s really gross. People swim in this water,” said Lauren Kraft,
13, an eighth-grader at Corona del Mar High School who cleaned up at
Crystal Cove State Park as part of the statewide effort.
So while the future of our natural resources may be safe in the
next generation’s hands, we still have the present to worry about.
With days such as California Coastal Cleanup Day, which is part of
an International Coastal Cleanup, we are taking steps toward
preserving our natural environment. But while such days go a long
way, it is an effort that needs to be kept up daily.
Many local groups, including a half-dozen environmental and
government agencies along the coast, hold regular beach and wetland
cleanup days. This is yet another step in the right direction, but it
must become an everyday action to pick up litter and trash. It must
become a mind-set not to drop wrappers or cigarette butts on the
ground.
Let’s try to make Coastal Cleanup Day unnecessary.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.