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Barnegat Bay Blitz Deemed a Success

Brick residents, other, helped clean up bay watershed

This week's Barnegat Bay Blitz proved a success, state officials said Friday.

Thousands of volunteers gathered up and down the shores of the bay watershed to do their part to give the watershed a fall cleanup.

In Brick, volunteers included John Zingis whose group included several people who cleaned up a creek adjacent to the A.C. Moore store, as well as a Boy Scout troop whose members hauled trash out of a creek near the K-Mart store off Route 88.

"Once again, the enthusiasm out here is infectious," said state Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Bob Martin. He participated in cleanups in Toms River, Point Pleasant and Island Beach State Park's Sedge Island. "These volunteers, many of them students, truly care about the future of Barnegat Bay and are willing to do something about it. I commend each one of them for setting an example for everyone who lives and works in the bay's watershed to follow."

Volunteers came from all 37 municipalities in the 660-square-mile watershed, which encompasses 33 municipalities in Ocean County and four in Monmouth County. Scientists have pointed to overdevelopment, pollution and runoff, as well as other factors, for causing the bay to decline from its heyday as a home to an abundance of shellfish, finfish and seagrass species.

Martin said the cleanup effort, part of a ten-point plan endorsed by Gov. Chris Christie to improve the help of the watershed, results in trash being collected that could otherwise enter the bay through the discharge of stormwater.

The numbers aren't in from this week's event, though past Blitz efforts have made their mark on the bay. The May 2012 event included 6,800 volunteers who collected more than 3,200 bags of trash and recyclables, filling 40 dumpsters.

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Judy Sobko June 17, 2013 at 04:24 pm
Good luck- you will be missed!!! -JS
barb June 17, 2013 at 11:00 pm
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Robert Everett June 19, 2013 at 06:39 am
Hi Pat: Thank you so much for your time & efforts. You know how important I feel a free,Read More independent and viable press is. Freedom of the press is one of our countires most vital rights and needs to be protected, literally at all costs. Without the ability for the average citizen to investigate, critiicise, praise and comment on government, business, education and all facets of our lives the Great American Democracy would not exist - even if it does produce annonymous curmudgeons like the Chief and the rest of the fan club. ;-) That being said, the digital media world is still trying to find its way into a viable business model. I was very excited about the 'hyper' local idea of the Patch, but the challenges you mentioned are real. However, I do feel based on my dealing with the Patch on several levels (blogger, community person & advertiser) the corporate leadership does not quite get the 'hyper-local' idea - they like it only if it produces revenue. What comes firt guys, the classic 'chicken or the egg'. Advertising is all about numbers, and in our community that was tough to overcome - I see both sides. It was a pleasure having a 'hometown' reporter that actually had the knowledge, perspective and understanding of our community as only one that lives here can. You will be missed on these pages, but it will be still be good to see you around town! So good luck to you in Lacey & Barnegat, Ill be happy to share any of my contacts, never dull there either! Bob Everett
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