Lots to learn, try at Harbor Sweep
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Christine Carrillo
In a one-day clean sweep Saturday, the Newport Beach Harbor got a new
look -- one that was much cleaner.
Thanks to the hands of more than 160 people who volunteered their
time, the 23rd annual Clean Harbor Day Celebration turned into yet
another success.
Boats quickly filled up with garbage, as volunteers piled on piece
by piece at each of Newport’s beaches. Their efforts epitomizing the
event’s mantra “Don’t Trash Where You Splash.”
The event, sponsored by the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum, the
City of Newport Beach, the City Arts Commission and the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce, also served as a platform to teach
the community about various environmental concerns.
“I think the purpose is to bring the community together with a
common bond,” said Dan Hamilton, of Malarkey’s Pub, who donated about
250 hot dogs for the volunteers. “We’re all in this together.”
From fire fighting demonstration by the Orange County Sheriff
Department’s Harbor Patrol to a water coloring booth and a display of
fifth-grade art depicting pollution, children also got a few tidbits
on how to keep the harbor tidy.
I’m here because “it was a sunny day and I wanted [my son] to
learn about clean-up and the environment,” said Linda Langley, a
Newport Beach resident who attended the event with her two young
children and their grandparents. “I just want it to be a part of his
life for his whole life, so it’s never something he has to think
about, he just does it.”
Learning the importance of protecting the environment from
pollution isn’t just a lesson for the children. In fact, many adults
never learned how important keeping their surroundings clean.
“It’s always important and we’re always enforcing environmental
issues in the harbor,” said Sheriff Deputy Brad Lofland, an 11-year
Harbor Patrol officer. “Environmental problems are the biggest ones
we have in the harbor.... [Generally] what we do is more of an
informational service but we push prosecutions pretty hard.”
With awareness of how behaviors within the community affect the
community’s harbor increasing and resulting in a much cleaner harbor,
event organizers hope to have a slightly different focus next year.
“There are a few people that are dedicated to making the harbor
clean for everybody,” said Glenn Zagoren, the president and chief
executive for the museum. “The harbor is getting cleaner and [the
event’s] been very successful. Next year we hope to have more of a
celebration of how clean the harbor is.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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