SMC 2023 Beach Cleanup

By Lucas Weiss & Presley Alexander | Staff Writers

As part of California’s Coastal Cleanup Day, Santa Monica College (SMC) hosted a beach cleanup at the Inkwell beach on Sept. 23, where 165 volunteers picked up 118 pounds of trash. Coastal Cleanup Day, hosted by the California Coastal Commission, is the world’s largest volunteer day, spanning over 36,000 volunteers across cleanup sites in California. This year marks the 40th anniversary of this annual event.

This is SMC’s eleventh year running the event at the Inkwell, a historic site for the fight against Jim Crow era racial discrimination. 

Students were encouraged to participate, with some classes offering extra credit opportunities for attending.

“When people come down here and they actually get involved with cleaning the beach, that’s a gateway to changing your lifestyle,” Benjamin Kay, a professor of Life & Environmental Sciences at SMC, said. Kay and his students have been documenting the conditions at this site since 2008. “We know very well that our oceans are filling up very quickly with plastic, and it’s hurting thousands upon thousands of species.”

One of the primary concerns, according to Kay, is a phenomenon called the first flush. After a storm, trash on the streets is swept into storm drains, where it can oftentimes drain directly into the ocean. The Pico-Kenter storm drain, which is at the Inkwell, creates what Kay described as a “conduit from the streets to the sea,” where plastic and other harmful debris pile up.

“I don’t want there to be all this pollution here.” Kay’s 8-year-old son, Cody, said. “And then, in the first flush, all the stuff comes from the gutter. All that comes through here and into the ocean.”

“I feel like it’s the least we can do.” said Ava Belcher, a third year student at SMC. “The materials are provided for you, and you can easily just come.”

“I just wanted to give back to the beach. I use the beach all the time, and there’s always so much trash,” volunteer Kristen Helmberger said.

Martine Harley, from Westside Ballet, has been organizing volunteer groups of dancers to participate in Coastal Cleanup Day for the past 10 years. “It’s a special experience for the dancers, and it helps educate them, although our young generation is already very sensitive to pollution,” Harley said.

SMC hosts this cleanup event annually in collaboration with Heal The Bay and SMC’s Sustainability Center. Later this month, SMC’s Earth Sciences club is participating in a similar cleanup at Venice Beach with SurfLA. The event will be hosted on October 29, 2023.