We have students, school kids, scout troops, stay-at-home mothers. We have military leaders, every imaginable walk of life, participating in these cleanups.
International effort
One of those volunteers is Oscar Oviedo, a banker from the Dominican Republic. A couple of friends and myself, we practice scuba diving and we began to see the situation of the ocean from underneath and said we had to do something, he says. So we established our own foundation, Vida Azul, which means Blue Life, four years ago. We gathered about 1,800 volunteers.
Theyve been cleaning waterways in the Santo Domingo area.
What were doing is we organize speeches and reunions where we talk about the importance of water and try to get people involved, mostly children under 12, Oviedo says. I think were pretty effective. A lot of people know about our efforts and they know the importance of not throwing trash in rivers and lakes and the ocean as well.
When Blue Life volunteers reach out to school children, he says, they raise other issues as well.
For example, we ask them if theyve seen their fathers while they shave. We say if you close the water every time you shave, then you open the tap again to wash the razor, youre saving so much amount of water.
Spreading the word
Judy Bolin, an American from the east coast state of North Carolina is also concerned about the oceans. She runs NC Big Sweep, a group which conducts year-round education to cut down on littering.
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