Billboard targets polluters
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June Casagrande
It’s just a drop in the bucket, and a little one at that, but every
drop counts.
The Newport Beach chapter of the Surfrider Foundation has lucked
its way into an opportunity to help spread the word about water
quality. Surfrider enthusiasts who happen to work at the site -- Mike
Boudreaux, partner in Morse-Boudreaux architects, Bill Thomas and Bob
Scott -- donated space on a small billboard next to their office
building at 1931 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa.
“We’re very lucky to get it. Billboard space is hideously
expensive otherwise,” Newport chapter chair Nancy Gardner said.
Though it’s a tiny billboard, “more like a big bumper-sticker,”
and dwarfed by the huge Banana Republic billboard above it, Gardner
and other Surfrider members seized the chance to spread the word
about keeping the ocean and bay clean.
“It was a good opportunity for us to use the sign to help out
Surfrider,” Thomas said.
They started by corralling some volunteers last fall to design the
water quality message that’s been on the billboard since September.
The sign shows black, oil-darkened water with the message, “Ocean
blue. As created by those who don’t care. Keep it clean.”
Unfortunately, Gardner said, the billboard is too small to
effectively convey the message of the design.
“At night, it looks OK, but in the daytime, it just looks like a
bunch of brown,” Gardner said.
So foundation volunteers are going back to the drawing board,
looking for better ways to get their message across. Some say the
billboard should preach against littering, but Gardner said she’d
rather see a message telling inland residents that urban runoff from
throughout the region is a significant contributor to water
pollution.
The foundation has a contract to use the billboard for free for
three years, though it’s possible that the property owners could
display other messages there for a few weeks each year.
“The billboard, while small, still gets seen by thousands of
motorists a day,” said Dave Kiff, assistant city manager for Newport
Beach, who heads the city’s water-quality efforts. “We wish there
were dozens more messages like that to help people realize the link
between behaviors at home and water quality at the beach.”
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