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SURFRIDER FOUNDATION August 06, 2009 10:51 AM

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MISSION & PRINCIPLES Mission Statement

The Surfrider Foundation is a non-profit environmental organization dedicated to the protection and enjoyment of the world's oceans, waves and beaches for all people, through conservation, activism, research and education.


Surfrider Foundation Principles

Represented by over 50,000 members and 60 local chapters in the U.S., the Surfrider Foundation also has affiliations in Australia, Japan, France, and Brazil. The Surfrider Foundation has adopted the following principles to guide and govern the activities of the organization .

1. SURFRIDER recognizes the biodiversity and ecological integrity of the planet's coasts are necessary and irreplaceable. SURFRIDER is committed to preserving natural living and non-living diversity and ecological integrity of the coastal environment.

2. SURFRIDER promotes the right of low-impact, free and open access to the world's waves and beaches for all people. SURFRIDER acts to preserve this right of access.

3. SURFRIDER is dedicated to enhancing wave-riding opportunities in ways which will not adversely impact nearshore ecosystems.

4. SURFRIDER believes environmental education is essential to the future health and well- being of the planet. SURFRIDER seeks to develop and utilize educational materials that are informative, factual, proactive, synergistic and fun.

5. SURFRIDER strives to be accurate and nonpartisan in its communications with its members and the general public. In addition, SURFRIDER will express the unique values inherent in wave-riding — individualism, camaraderie, non materialism, and an appreciation for human kind's historic relations with the Ocean.

6. SURFRIDER is a grassroots organization, effective through the participation of its members. SURFRIDER activities emphasize the value of an involved membership.

7. SURFRIDER encourages all commercial enterprises to adopt the Ceres Principles. Their determination to do so will favorably influence SURFRIDER's willingness to provide support. SURFRIDER will not permit sponsors to divert the Foundation from its mission or projects undertaken.

8. SURFRIDER does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, sex, or national origin for any reason. SURFRIDER promotes the healthy enjoyment of the coastal environment for all people.

9. SURFRIDER and its representatives, affiliations and chapters agree to abide by these principles and all rules and regulations governing non-profit organizations.


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Let's Pass the Beach Bill! August 06, 2009 2:05 PM

For the third year in a row, Congress is considering a bill to reauthorize the BEACH Act. This landmark law was first championed by Surfrider Foundation a decade ago.

The Clean Coastal Environment & Public Health Act of 2009 will increase the amount of federal dollars that can be spent on beach water quality monitoring and will modernize the technology we rely on to protect the health of the beach-going public. It also expands the scope of the BEACH Act to include tracking and cleaning up the sources of beach water pollution. The House of Representatives has passed this bill twice now, but it has not yet seen the Senate floor.

Urge your Senators to show their support for healthy beaches and robust coastal economies by cosponsoring the Clean Coastal Environment & Public Health Act of 2009. Don't let them put this off for yet another year!

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From The Soup - SEPTEMBER 2009 September 14, 2009 7:18 PM

More medical waste washes up on LBI, beaches remain openBy MICHELLE LEE Staff Writer, 609-272-7256 | Posted: Monday, September 7, 2009

Five syringes that look like the types used for home medical treatment were found Monday along the shore of Long Beach Township and Ship Bottom, Long Beach Island's health officer said.

The first three needles were recovered between 11:30 and 11:45 a.m. in the vicinity of 11th, 15th and 21st streets in Ship Bottom, health officer Tim Hilferty said. The other two needles were discovered at about 3:30 p.m. by 16th street in the North Beach Haven section of Long Beach Township and 23rd street in the Spray Beach section of the township.

No one was hurt, and none of the beach locations were closed. Hilferty said the syringes probably washed up because of the constant pattern of combined sewer overflows and heavy surf.

LBI beach patrols found 16 syringes washed ashore Thursday, and another three turned up Friday morning.

The Long Beach Township and Ship Bottom beach patrols canvassed the beaches and did not find any other medical waste. A staff environmental health specialist was dispatched to the beaches to pick up the debris, which will be properly disposed of later, Hilferty said. The state Department of Environmental Protection was notified about the discoveries.



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