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Not
so long ago, at a time when Santa Monica Bay
was treated daily as a dump site, a small group
of concerned people took it upon themselves
to heal this troubled part of the world. They
did it for those who simply wanted to swim,
fish or surf safely in clean water. And they
did it for the marine life that was suffering
from some of the highest levels of contamination
found anywhere along our nation's coastline.
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| Heal
the Bay's efforts are focused on Santa
Monica Bay and surrounding Southern California
coastal waters. Our work, however, often
impacts water quality for the entire state
of California and even the nation. |
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That
small group swelled into an organization and
movement that has done more to recover the
Bay's coastal environment than anyone could
have expected. But in the process, they did
more than that. They showed us that it's not
too late for Southern California, that no agency
is too big to fight and win, that we can heal
our environment and that we can heal our Bay.
The
First Fight
It was 1985, and a handful of people learned
that the City of Los Angeles was dumping barely
treated sewage into Santa Monica Bay. They learned
that the pollution from sewage and storm drains
had led to a decrease in the number and quality
of fish in the Bay, dolphins that had reproductive
problems and were full of tumors, a large patch
of the bottom of the Bay was essentially lifeless,
and people who swam and surfed in the Bay complained
about infections and other illnesses. This handful
of people, led by founder Dorothy Green, got
angry and they got organized. Heal the Bay was
born.
At
this time, the City of L.A.'s Hyperion Sewage
Treatment Plant was a disaster, breaking the
law on several counts, and dumping barely treated
sewage and sewage sludge into Santa Monica
Bay. Heal the Bay attacked on many fronts.
We signed up members at tables along the coast
and sold t-shirts at Venice Beach. We held
rallies at the beach and got the media to inform
the public of what was happening. We packed
hearing rooms and testified before regulatory
agencies. And we joined the Environmental Protection
Agency lawsuit already pending against the
City of L.A.
The
First Victory
Because of these actions, the City consented
to comply with the Clean Water Act. Plans were
developed to totally rebuild Hyperion to provide
full secondary treatment by December 31, 1998,
and replace a major sewer line that was regularly
causing raw sewage overflows into Ballona Creek.
We were granted Friends of the Court status in
this consent decree and met quarterly with the
City to ensure their compliance with the agreement.
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| The
Bay is getting better...and with your help,
the goal of a year-round swimmable and
fishable Santa Monica Bay can be a reality! |
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Since
that 1985 decision, Hyperion has become a world-class
treatment facility. Sludge stopped flowing
into the Bay in November 1987, and Hyperion
met their rebuilding deadline one month ahead
of schedule to provide full secondary treatment.
As a result of improved sewage treatment at
Hyperion, we have been overjoyed to see the
return of plant and animal life to previous "dead" zones
in the Bay.
Our
first big victory taught us a crucial thing:
that a small group of people can change their
world, can literally "fight city hall" and
win. We also learned that most problems can
be solved without bringing them into the courtroom,
and that most agencies respond much better
to offers of help than to threats of lawsuits.
Not
so long ago, the Bay was a different place.
In a short time, Heal the Bay has made it better.
Our greatest hope is that we will continue
our amazing progress through our second decade
as we continue to fight for workable solutions
to the problems threatening Santa Monica Bay
and all of Southern California's coastal waters.
We
are halfway to healing the Bay, and we don't
intend to stop now!
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