Heal the Bay supports public health and education
outreach programs as well as sponsoring beach cleanup programs such as Coastal Cleanup Day, Adopt-a-Beach and Suits on the Sand in Los Angeles County, California. It operates
Heal the Bay Aquarium, which was previously named the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium and formerly known as the Ocean Discovery Center and was operated by
UCLA until 2003. In 2003, then-California Assemblywoman
Fran Pavley authored legislation that required the state to develop an environment-based curriculum to be offered to all California public schools. The bill (AB 1548 of 2003) was sponsored by Heal the Bay and was signed into law by then-Governor Gray Davis. The program it set in motion came to be known as the Education and the Environment Initiative. Heal the Bay publishes an annual Beach Report Card, which grades the water quality at popular beaches up and down the West Coast of the United States. It also produces weekly and daily beach water quality grades online at beachreporter.ort and river quality grades at the River Report Card on the Heal the Bay website. Recent accomplishments include leading grassroots movements to pass plastic reduction policies like Straws on Request and
California Proposition 67. Heal the Bay also launched an advocacy campaign to pass Measure W and fund the Safe, Clean Water Program. In August 2020, news outlets reported single-use
PPE items (gloves, surgical masks, etc.) in the Santa Monica Bay shoreline and parking lots. Heal the Bay members were not able to gather in large groups due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, but the policy has since been repealed. ==See also==