At sessions in New Jersey, California, Washington, Oregon, Hawaii, and elsewhere, Surfrider members expressed strong support for the National Ocean Policy, while also pushing federal officials to strengthen actions identified in the draft outlines. Major points of emphasis focused on improving federal leadership on issues such as water quality, marine debris, and ecosystem protection.
“Strong policy statements are often meaningless without local stakeholder involvement and aggressive implementation and enforcement”, said Drew Kerr, a volunteer with the Portland Chapter. “We need better coordination and prioritization of efforts across the wide range of federal, state, and local entities and jurisdictions.”
At the New Jersey session, Joe Woerner and Joe Mairo, Co-Chairs of the Jersey Shore Chapter, provided comments on the need to protect water quality off the mid-Atlantic coast. John Weber, Surfrider’s Northeast Regional Manager, spoke about the problems with plastics in the ocean and why we need serious policies on product stewardship to prevent trash from entering the marine environment in the first place.
Surfrider members also provided public and written comments on Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning (CMSP) including the role Surfrider can play in providing community outreach and promoting participation from recreational users. At the Washington session, Jody Kennedy, Washington Policy Manager, emphasized the need for the National Ocean Policy to engage coastal communities in CMSP and support existing initiatives such as Washington State's community-based Marine Resources Committees. She also highlighted the importance of maintaining a grassroots approach in rural areas that make up a vast majority of Washington's coastline.
(Photo credits: Kathy Greer).