The
aftermath of the Volcom Surf Contest at El Porto
In
a nut shell...Volcom had a contest at El Porto
and this is the way it looked the following
day. I was livid and decided to pipe up about
it.
Here is the email I sent to the Manhattan Beach
City Government, the County, Surfrider and Heal
the Bay.
I'm not sure who is responsible for issuing
permits for Surf Contests but here are a few
shots of how the Volcom organizers left El Porto
after their event on Saturday the 9th.
There is no acceptable excuse to litter a beach
like this. Even if the trash can is full you
can always walk down to another trash can, (they're
as far as the eye can see), not to mention most
of the debris could and should have been recycled.
I am sickened by this episode and hope that
someone has to answer for this Third World mentality.
In the future I hope you think twice about giving
these guys the right to use our local beaches.
Here, in chronological is the way the
incident was somewhat resolved through a Volcom
intermediary..
Mike,
I received an email about Volcom abusing our beaches
via a very good
friend of mine Ron Roebuck.
I am so stoked to see the fire from another south
bay local fighting
to preserve our beaches. Good for you. The south
bay by default is
one of the only surfable and therefore most impacted
beaches in LA.
That is something you and I as locals need to
oversee. And thanks for
people like you, there is someone who can actually
take action when
our beaches are taken advantage of. Good on ya!
Upon receipt of our friends email I felt I would
simply alert the
company of what was going on and how it was affecting
our beaches. I
felt as a native of MB, long standing resident
of 36 years in the
South Bay, an event promoter, and a veteran of
the surf industry
(many of the years dealing direct with Volcom)
had the right to alert
Volcom of what was happening in respect to their
latest event in El
Porto.
I understand your frustration, I believe Volcom
does, and I believe
that every single surfer understands your mission
as it is a
fundamental component to our longevity as humans
let alone surfers.
However, there are always circumstances that deviate
our ability to
maintain those core values that we believe in.
I believe that is what
has happened in this case.
- The city told them to stack the trash around
the cans and the city
would pick the trash up
- They left the trash there and the seagulls got
to it
- they clean up after every event they have. more
often leaving it
more clean than before.
I know the people that run the Volcom events from
the highest level (Troy Powell, Troy Eckert and
Brad Dougherty) and understated them as well as
anyone, and trashing our beach was not their intention.
Apparently there was a major misunderstanding.
And as I see it, the
best way to handle these situations going forward
is to contact the
Volcom Crew directly before going to the city.
The fact is, we are
all trying to do good things for the South Bay
and if we can work
together we can collectively keep the beach clean
and promote the
sport of surfing...
We are all people who love the ocean and in turn
all friends:) Hope
we can work this out.
Thanks,
Jeff ______________________________________________________
A Contestant from the contest throws his
2 cents into the ring
Mike-Are you kidding me with this public bashing?
As a participant
in the Volcom SeaSlug Series I am blown away by
your lack of knowledge as to what transpired on
Feb. 9th @ El Porto. The Volcom organizers make
it a point at every event location to organize
a trash collection by event participants. I personally
witnessed an LA County Beaches and Harbors employee
give instructions to stack the trash around the
trash cans. It amazes me how some people can go
public with shit they have no clue about. I see
you have since taken down the pictures at Porto
after the "trashing" that was done.
Hmmm?? Could it be because the trashing was done
by the ever present flying "rat"?
Sorry you were upset when you showed up at Porto
on the 9th only
to find the Volcom contest "taking over"
your waves. I understand the waves were good that
morning and the contest was set up in front of
a crumbling right, but no reason for the bashing.
Do you have a patent on the "3rd World Mentality"
phrase? It seems to be your go to phrase.
Anyways, do me and alot of other people a favor
and get your facts straight before going public
with accusations. And also please put the pictures
back up of the "trashing", they were
classic.
Did the LA County Beaches and Harbors employee
tell them not to
recycle anyof that stuff either...looks like boxes,
plastic and aluminum to me, and guess what, I
walked over there the next morning to investigate
and sure enough, it was! As for your flying rat
theory, there are now lids on the cans so if the
trash, (or recyclable materials), were evenly
dispersed, and not piled onto, or next to one
can, the gulls wouldn't have had an opportunity
to pull shit out. If that particular can had no
lid put one foot in front of the other...there
are about a hundred more to choose from.
Common sense should have prevailed. Lug it in
and lug it out, end of
discussion. There is no reasonable excuse for
that shit and yes it
is a Third World mentality! I have no personal
vendetta against Volcom
or surfcontests, just people who don't respect
the environment.
You can spin it any way you want but the end result
is trash on the
beach!
Best Regards, MD
PS, I never took the pics down I just recycled
them to another page.
______________________________________________________
Hi Jeff,
In hindsight I probably should have contacted
Volcom first but even
with the excuses I still feel the same way. I
pasted a correspondence I had yesterday with a
Volcom contestant so you can see the reasoning
behind my outburst. I am not out to trash Volcom
and do not plan on pursuing this any further.
I just think that someone needs to speak up...
I am stoked you spoke up. Regardless of what happened
with the Volcom event, since you spoke up, I guarantee
you that event organizers in the south bay will
walk the trash to an empty can instead of waiting
for Waste Management to pick it up. That is a
good thing. In the end, I guess my point is that
we are all part of the same surfing community
and should give each other the benefit of the
doubt. If we can't work together who can:) Thanks
for your attention to this Mike. You are coming
from a good place and we need more people to think
like you.
I have never met you but have heard good things
about you form mutual friends and look forward
to meeting you someday soon. I also hope the opportunity
presents itself (or I can present it) to introduce
you to Troy Powell who runs the Volcom events
from a management standpoint. He is a passionate
surfer and very good guy. Perhaps this all can
end up benefiting the community from an environmental
and from a local events perspective.
I appreciate you getting back to me MIke. Stoked
we had this correspondence.
Jeff ______________________________________________________
Sounds Good Jeff,
Like I said, I'm not trying to bring Volcom down...I
would had done the same thing had my Mother trashed
the beach. I'm not in this to make enemies and
I definitely hope the surf community can work
together to not only educate the public but set
an example of how to treat the environment. I'm
not really a soap box type of guy but my website
has put me in a position where I can do some positive
things. Our world can be a fu%#ed up place and
instead of just conceding that I want to make
a difference whenever possible.
I have no hard feelings for the brass at Volcom
but whoever was in charge of that contest needs
a little shot of common sense. ______________________________________________________
Good job, the both of you. I see no problem with
Mike putting the photos up. And, I think we have
all learned from the experience.I know from watching
Mike's website that his heart is in trying to
help our ocean environment, and I am glad that
he has used the website as a means to push for
the unacceptable way our beaches are treated.
He saw a situation and commented on it. I don't
think that there was malice toward Volcom intended.
Some people got a little hot, and sometimes that's
a good thing; I am willing to bet that the situation
won't happen again, even if the county guys (who
probably couldn't care less) told them to stack
them up by the can, the extra yard will be taken
to be sure the trash gets where it is supposed
to go. ______________________________________________________
Here are my communications with the County
Your email regarding trash left on site after
the Volcom surf contest on February 9 was received
via the City of Manhattan Beach and Supervisor
Knabe’s field office.
We adamantly agree with you that this should not
have happened and have contacted the representative
from Volcom to express our dissatisfaction with
the way the beach was left after the contest.
I believe they have a very clear picture of what
is expected and doubt that this will happen again.
It’s a shame we can’t have this same
conversation with much of the beach-going public.
It is our understanding that you have been contacted
directly by Volcom with regard to this matter.
We appreciate your bringing this to our attention
and should you have any concerns or questions
in the future, please feel free to contact us. ______________________________________________________
Hi Lynn,
I certainly hope they get a little more than a
verbal warning from the county. That’s a
multi-million dollar company that thinks they
can do whatever they want to, wherever they want
to, (and they market themselves as environmentalists).
How about, at the very least, a 2 year ban from
using the LA county beaches for their events.
Or maybe a Volcom sponsored beach clean up...
Their contests don’t pump any bonus revenue
into the community and are little more than the
equivalent of an aquatic little league game.
I for one am fed up with the “someone else
will clean up my mess” attitude and don’t
think the county should be so quick to forgive
and forget.
I truly feel that a harsher punishment is needed
to convey that this type of disregard for the
environment is unacceptable!
Finally, no, Volcom didn’t contact me.
Please let me know how you plan on handling this
matter, and by the way, what does getting a surf
contest permit entail?
Best regards, Mike ______________________________________________________
Although the Department of Beaches and Harbors
respects your opinion, we have done what we consider
appropriate at this time and we consider this
matter closed.
With regard to beach use permits, we have a policy
in the El Porto area, which was put in place by
the Lifeguard Division. The number of surf contest
are limited to five per year, with only one per
month, no holiday weekends and all contests in
this area must be held at 42nd St.
A Permittee completes an on-line application,
which is processed and must be approved by the
lifeguard captain of the area. The permit fee
is $150, with a refundable security deposit, based
on the number of attendees. If there are entry
fees or sponsorship attached to the event, the
County is entitled to gross receipts (10% for
participants under 18 and 15% for 18 and older).
We require an insurance certificate with limits
of One Million General Liability, with an Aggregate
of Two Million and an Additional Insured Endorsement,
naming the County of Los Angeles as an Additional
Insured.
We
at Swellmagnet.com take great pride in our site
and will do our best to keep all off the surf
reports and live surf cameras up and running around
the clock.
We now boast a daily, dawn patrol, Surf report
for Malibu as well as a live, streaming Malibu
surf camera, a daily, dawn patrol Surf report
for Topanga as well as a live, streaming Topanga
surf camera, a daily, dawn patrol Surf report
for Sunset as well as a live, streaming Sunset
surf camera, a daily, dawn patrol Surf report
for Venice Beach Breakwater as well as a live,
streaming Venice Beach Breakwater surf camera,
a daily, dawn patrol Surf report for Santa Monica
Beach as well as a, live, streaming Santa Monica
Beach surf camera, a daily, dawn patrol Surf report
for El Porto Beach as well as a live, streaming
El Porto Beach surf camera, dawn patrol Surf report
for Manhattan Beach as well as a live, streaming
Manhattan Beach surf camera, dawn patrol Surf
report for Torrance Beach as well as a live, streaming
Torrance Beach surf camera, dawn patrol Surf report
for Huntington Beach well as a live, streaming
Huntington Beach surf camera and a dawn patrol
Surf report for Huntington Beach well as a live,
streaming Huntington Beach surf camera. Lastly
we have free surf reports from both Manzanillo
Bay Inn in Troncones, Mexico and from Punta Roca,
El Savador courtesy of adventuresurftours.com.
If you know of any possible locations to put up
new surf cameras there is 150.00 finders fee for
you! Just hit us up with an
email.