Maui News

Get the Drift and Bag It, Kahului Harbor Cleanup

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Mālama Maui Nui will host a cleanup at the Kahului Harbor small boats ramp from 9 a.m. until noon on Sept. 16, 2017. The cleanup will kickoff the annual Get the Drift and Bag It! campaign.

In 2016, volunteers in the Get the Drift and Bag It! Campaign collected almost 9,000 lbs of rubbish along 20 miles of shoreline. Volunteers at the Kahului Harbor alone picked up almost 2,000 lbs of material during a three-hour cleanup. PC: Jason Hastain

MMN says Kahului Harbor serves many purposes, from being the island’s central commercial hub to attracting surfers, paddlers, visitors and more. Maui residents will be able to give back by helping to clean the area.

MMN Executive Director Gabrielle Schuerger invites the public to attend and show respect for a place that embodies the spirit of Get the Drift and Bag It!

“On the surface, Kahului Harbor is an industrial entity that serves an indispensable function in our community- the bringing in and shipping out of goods,” she said. “However, in its most essential form, it is nature. It is the ocean, streams, pohaku, vegetation and marine life. Therefore, it is our kuleana to acknowledge and mālama these urban places for what they really are.”

Last year, volunteers in the Get the Drift and Bag It! Campaign collected almost 9,000 lbs of rubbish along 20 miles of shoreline. Volunteers at the Kahului Harbor alone picked up almost 2,000 lbs of material during a three-hour cleanup in 2016.

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The campaign, which launches every year on the Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup Day, encourages community stewardship by promoting organized cleanups throughout Maui County.

Each year, local businesses and civic groups form their own neighborhood and beach cleanups while collecting data on the amount and kind of materials found. The information later goes into a database used by researchers, politicians, and more to effect change around our waste and litter issues worldwide.

Maui College’s Student Ohana for Sustainability President Alicia Rittenberry says her group plans on attending the kickoff event and is attracted to the opportunity to collect data at the harbor. The college club regularly gathers rubbish there as part of the Adopt-A-Highway program, and she believes the use of data and citizen science will help showcase the area’s litter and challenges.

“We like Get the Drift and Bag It! because it’s nice to have the data,” she said. “It’s a good way to see what exactly is trashing the area.”

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She said the group attended last year’s cleanup, and was surprised to find out they collected around 4,000 cigarette butts that day. She said this type of information is needed to help inform and educate the public on waste and its impact on our environment.

“When you’re going to try to change people’s behavior and the way we think about how we live our lives and the products that we use and the way we use them, you’re going to need hard science to back it up,” she said.

Since the campaigns launch 31 years ago, hundreds of miles of shoreline have been cleaned and a wide-range of data has been used and gathered on the amount and types of material that ends up along Maui beaches and neighborhoods.

This year’s Get the Drift and Bag It! campaign will run from Sept. 16 until Oct. 14. Anyone interested in participating may call 808-877-2524 or email info@malamamauinui.org for more information.

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The public is welcome to attend the Kahului Harbor cleanup. Participants under 18 must be accompanied by an adult and/or bring an MMN liability waiver signed by a legal guardian. The event is supported by the County of Maui.

Click here for more information on Get the Drift and Bag It!

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