Beach water quality monitoring programs provide us with the information we need to know where it's safe to surf, swim or play in the water and where problems exist so we can avoid exposure to pollution that could make us or our families sick. The beach water testing programs run by health agencies in coastal states get most, if not all, of their funding from a federal grant program administered by the Environmental Protect Agency. Authorized by the BEACH Act, the EPA’s BEACH Grants program provides nearly $10 million to help 35 coastal states and territories run their beach water testing and public notification programs every year. Since the BEACH Act’s passage back in 2000, this has been a very effective program that helps protect the health of over 100 million visitors to US beaches every year and the booming coastal tourism and recreation economies they support (valued at $115.7 billion in 2015 and providing 2.3 million jobs nationwide).
Unfortunately, funding for this federal program has been on the chopping block for several years running, and worse, the entire EPA agency is currently facing a 31% budget cut in the FY 2020 budget proposed by the Trump administration. The good news is there are staunch supporters of clean water and healthy beaches in Congress that are willing to push back against these budget cuts. Senators Menendez (NY) and Merkley (OR) submitted a letter to the Appropriations Subcommittee on behalf of 29 offices that represent coastal states requesting $10 million in funding for the EPA BEACH Grants program in the FY 2020 budget. Likewise, Representative Pallone (NJ) lead a similar effort in the House of Representatives with 31 offices signing-on. View the letters and see who signed-on here: Senate & House.
Congresswoman Bonamici took her support a step further. Portland Chapter volunteers Sarah Mayer and Briana Bard had visited her office in Washington DC in February to educate her on what these budget cuts meant for Oregon beach monitoring. After learning about Surfrider’s efforts to augment the seasonal beach water testing program run by the Department of Environmental Quality in Oregon through our Blue Water Task Force (BWTF) program, she made the time to visit the BWTF lab run by students at Seaside High School in Seaside, Oregon.
Congresswoman Bonamici, who was impressed with the students’ enthusiasm, pressed the students to consider more ways to publicize their results to reach more people. That set off a frenzy of brainstorming with ideas ranging from working with the computer science class to develop an app to developing relationships with local media.
See where the students are testing and view their results on the BWTF website.
Photos by R Gold Photography