Nancy Gardner
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When Newport Beach residents think of the Surfrider Foundation, they
think of Nancy Gardner. The longtime local environmentalist’s name is
practically synonymous with Surfrider and a host of water-quality
causes near and dear to the city’s heart.
When Surfrider held its “50 in Five” rally on Coast Highway at the
mouth of the Santa Ana River on Sunday, Gardner was there. When City
Council members convened to hear a heart-felt pitch for an Orange
Coast River Park, Gardner was there, too. When local high school
students are conducting their own water-quality tests, her mark is
visible there, too.
It’s all for the cause of assuring water quality, she said.
“If we’re going to ask other cities in the watershed, places like
Santa Ana and Tustin, to help care for the water, then we have to set
an example,” Gardner said. “If we can say that those of us in the
cities right at the water are doing everything we can, that’s all the
more reason for others to do some, too.”
The 50 in Five campaign is Surfrider’s plan to reduce pollutants
at the mouth of the Santa Ana River by half in five years. Gardner
said that public awareness is job one because it helps Surfrider win
financial support from government agencies, nonprofit foundations and
private donors, and because it helps individuals become aware of how
their everyday actions can make or break local water quality.
Gardner, a noted surfer in the 1960s and ‘70s, helped found the
Newport chapter of the Surfrider Foundation around 1990 along with
Matt Gadow. In that time, she said, the dynamic between the city and
Surfrider has changed dramatically.
“They don’t just look at us like a bunch of surfers, they know
we’ve got our act together,” said Gardner, who has reduced her water
activities to bodyboarding in the summer. “And the city has become so
aware and enlightened. They’re wonderful to work with.”
The goal of Surfrider and of all her water-quality efforts is to
help people understand their role in preserving the marine
environment.
“Some people don’t understand that they’re part of the problem, so
they can be part of the solution,” she said. “That’s why we always
need to work for more awareness.”
-- Story by June Casagrande
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