How to Run a Beach Cleanup

As the chairwoman for First Coast Surfrider I am often contacted by other local groups to partner with or help kick start their own beach cleanup program. So, I decided to create a quick reference guide for how to run your own beach cleanup.

Beach Cleanup in Jacksonville Beach

What’ll need before you begin:

  • A LOCATION
    This will often be the reason for your cleanup. You noticed a polluted access, street, park or beach that needs your help!
  • VOLUNTEERS
    You can hold a beach cleanup with just you and yourself, but having a few good men (women, children, dogs, aliens or anything else that can lend a hand) helps.
  • DATE & TIME
    When do you plan on holding the cleanup? Consider local weather patterns and any outside factors that could negatively or positively impact your efforts. Will there be a lot of traffic (foot or car) at a certain hour? Will that traffic hinder or help the cleanup? If it’s a beach cleanup, the best time is when the tide is going out. This exposes new trash and gives you plenty of ground coverage.

Essential Cleanup Supplies:

  • BAGS - Even buckets and boxes… go greener!
  • GLOVES - Latex and non-latex in small, medium, large and x-large sizes.
  • FIRST AID KITS - Include band aids, gauze, alcohol swabs, neosporin, pain reliever, etc.
  • WATER - It’s important to stay hydrated!
  • SIGN-IN SHEET - Keep count of your volunteers for safety and future reference; document their name, time in/out, email address. Also document the pounds of trash collected, a large bag half full is approximately 20lbs.
  • VOLUNTEER HOUR FORMS - Volunteers need to document their community service hours; include volunteer name, date, location, time in/out, organization name and your signature.

Optional Cleanup Supplies:

  • HAZARDOUS MATERIALS CONTAINER
  • GRABBER - For those hard to reach places or dangerous items.
  • DIRECTIONS TO NEAREST HOSPITALS - Extreme precaution, but you never know…
  • INFO ABOUT YOUR ORGANIZATION - Crowded areas will attract attention, seize the opportunity to spread awareness about your group.
  • CALENDAR OF EVENTS - Besides group info, give the volunteers and anyone with questions a copy of your upcoming events, so they can mark their calendars.

Additional Beach Cleanup Resources:

International Coastal Cleanup

Surfrider’s Respect the Beach Program

International Surfing Day

First Coast Surfrider 




Submitted by JonathanBennett on Tue, 04/08/2008 - 1:32pm.

Great ideas, Rhea!

Thanks for the post, especially after J_B's blog about having to pick up trash while at the beach.  




Submitted by RheaDrysdale on Tue, 04/08/2008 - 2:40pm.

Thanks this was originally posted on our blog, but after seeing J_B's post it looked like a nice fit in the Shorelines community area, too. We've had a lot of local schools and organizations ask about cleanups, so we wanted to provide an informative how-to. Hopefully it stimulates some discussion and action!

Thanks to you for bringing the social side of the web to the FT-U... helps give faces to the news in our web 2.0 world.  :)

 

Protect our oceans, waves and beaches: http://firstcoastsurfrider.com



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