Saturday, April 20, 2024

“ALL OVER RHODE ISLAND”

Calling all community members who love Rhode Island???s shoreline: join the International Coastal Cleanup on September 16

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ALL OVER RHODE ISLAND ??? August 15, 2017 ??? Save The Bay is calling community members who love Rhode Island???s shoreline and want to do something good in our community. Saturday, September 16 is the International Coastal Cleanup, and thousands of volunteers are needed to help remove litter and debris from more than 80 beaches and shoreline throughout the Ocean State. The International Coastal Cleanup, organized by the Washington, D.C.-based Ocean Conservancy and locally by Save The Bay, is the largest global volunteer effort on behalf of the ocean.

To register as a volunteer, visit savebay.org/icc.

“The International Coastal Cleanup is a fun and easy way to give back to the community by cleaning up the shore. But it is much more than that. We are contributing to the global research on marine debris and taking action on a looming environmental crisis,??? said Save The Bay Volunteer Manager July Lewis.

On August 3, the United States Senate passed bipartisan legislation to address the marine debris epidemic affecting America???s oceans. Data from the International Coastal Cleanup was a key part of testimony supporting that bill. Save The Bay Executive Director Jonathan Stone, who testified before a Senate subcommittee, said, “passage of this bill is a wonderful example of how our local volunteers, through their involvement in the International Coastal Cleanup in Rhode Island, have helped influence a significant policy development at the federal level.???

Cleanup sites on September 16 will stretch from Smithfield to Block Island. For volunteers who aren???t available on September 16, cleanups will be held on alternate dates in September and October. At each cleanup, beach captains give volunteers gloves, trash bags, pencils, and a sheet on which to record and tally what they pick up. Volunteers then head out, often in pairs or small groups, on the hunt for cigarette butts, food wrappers, bottles and cans, abandoned fishing line and more. At the end of the cleanup, all the data from Rhode Island???s cleanups become part of an annual report on marine debris around the globe.

Last year in Rhode Island, 2,205 volunteers collected and removed 14,911 pounds of trash from 65 miles of shoreline.

“It’s always so terrific to see thousands of volunteers participate in this event! There are so many people who care so deeply about our shoreline, and who are willing to say “It’s not OK to trash the Bay,??? said Lewis.??Rhode Island???s International Coastal Cleanup is supported by local businesses and corporations offering financial support and volunteer teams. Save The Bay thanks current sponsors ???Citizens Bank, National Grid, Tanury Industries, Gemalto, Caster Communications, Strategic Retirement Partners, South County Tourism Council, Matunuck Oyster Bar, Bay Coast Bank. MetLife, and Matunuck Properties ??? who make the cleanup possible.

Rhode Island???s International Coastal Cleanup is supported by local businesses and corporations that offer financial support and volunteer teams. Save The Bay thanks current sponsors – Bank of America, West Hartford, Caster Communications, Strategic Retirement Partners, South County Tourism Council, Matunuck Oyster Bar and MetLife.

New cleanup sites will continue to be added over the next month. To date, cleanup locations still in need of community volunteers include:

Barrington:???? Barrington Town Beach, 10 a.m.-noon

Block Island:????Block Island Town Beach (Sept 17, 10 a.m.-noon)

Bristol:?? Colt State Park (Oct 3, 10 a.m.-noon) Jacob???s Point (Sept 17, 10 a.m.-noon)Pebble Beach/Ferry Rd, 10 a.m.-noon

Charlestown:??Charlestown Breachway, 10 a.m.-noon????Charlestown Town Beach, 10 a.m.-noon????Charlestown Shoreline with RIMS, 8:15 a.m.-12:15 p.m.

Cranston:?? Stillhouse Cove, 10 a.m.-noon??Tongue Pond (Sept 20, 10 a.m.-noon)

East Providence: Bold Point, 10 a.m.-noon

Little Compton:??Little Compton Town Shoreline, 9-11 a.m.

Middletown: Second Beach, 10 a.m.-noon Third Beach, 10 a.m.-noon

Narragansett: Aunt Carrie???s Beach, 10 a.m.-noon?? Ferry Beach, 9-11 a.m.???????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Narragansett Town Beach (Sept 23, 10 a.m.-noon)?? Salty Brine (Sept 22, 10 a.m.-noon)

Newport:????Easton???s Beach, 10 a.m.-noon North Kingstown: ?? ??Compass Rose Beach, 10 a.m.-noon

Pawtucket:????Festival Pier (Sept 19, 10 a.m.-noon)

Portsmouth:??Common Fence Point (Sept 30, 10 a.m.-noon)?? Sandy Beach, 9-11 a.m.

Providence:????Field???s Point Beach, 10 a.m.-noon???? Collier Point, 8-10 a.m.

Smithfield:??????Georgiaville Pond (and Smithfield Sites), 9-11 a.m.

Somerset, MA: Brayton Point (Sept 9, 10 a.m.-noon)

South Kingstown: ?? ??South Kingstown Town Beach. 10 a.m.-noon

Warwick:????Apponaug Cove, 10 a.m.-noon?? Chepiwanoxet Point, 10 a.m.-noon????Longmeadow Fishing Area, 10 a.m.-noon Oakland Beach, 10 a.m.-noon Rocky Point, 10 a.m.-noon????Salter Grove, 10 a.m.-noon????Warwick City Park, 10 a.m.-noon

Westerly:?? Westerly Shoreline with RIMS (8:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.)

For more information about the International Coastal Cleanup, visit http://www.savebay.org/icc

About Save The Bay: Founded in 1970, Save The Bay works to protect and improve Narragansett Bay and its watershed through advocacy, education, and restoration efforts. It envisions a fully swimmable, fishable, healthy Narragansett Bay, accessible to everyone and globally recognized as an environmental treasure.