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Community Corner

Brick Beach Sweeps Set for This Weekend

Clean Ocean Action hosting annual cleanups

Another summer has come and gone, filled with days of laughter, sunshine and relaxation at the beach.

While the parties have gone, the reminders of them -- caps from water bottles and soda, straws from drinks, and hundreds of other bits of debris -- remain behind.

This Saturday, hundreds of volunteers will be hitting the state's beaches from Sandy Hook to Cape May to pick up plastics, Styrofoam, cans and much more, left behind by humans and the tides, as part of Clean Ocean Action's fall Beach Sweeps event.

Find out what's happening in Brickwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

In Brick, volunteers will clean Brick Beach III on Rt 35 North, next to the Ocean Club and across from Bayside Park.

Other local cleanup sites include the Philadelphia Avenue beach in Lavallette and Normandy Beach, where volunteers will meet at Labrador Lounge at Peterson Street and Route 35 North.

Find out what's happening in Brickwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The sweeps begin with check-in at 9 a.m. and run until approximately 12:30 p.m., rain or shine. Volunteers will be provided trash bags and data cards to record the litter they pick up, which goes into the group's database and its yearly report.

Since the first sweeps in 1985, more than 90,000 volunteers have participated in the now twice-yearly event, picking up more than 4.5 million bits of trash and debris.

While the nature of that debris has changed as the times have changed -- cigarette butts have dropped out of the top three items, but plastic bottle tops, which were far more rare in the 1980s, have surged into their place -- the need for awareness has not, Clean Ocean Action says.

"Fish, whales, birds, and other animals often mistake litter for food," the group says on its information page about the beach sweeps. "As a result, animals get entangled in, or ingest, items such as plastic bags, cigarette filters, and fishing line, with deadly results."

Groups of 10 or more are urged to register in advance before participating in the sweeps, but all volunteers are welcome even on the day of the sweeps, Clean Ocean Action says.

Volunteers are reminded to dress for the weather and bring gloves to protect themselves from sharp objects during the cleanup.

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