Save the Harbor/Save the
Bay awarded more than
$55,000 in Better Beaches Program Grants to support more than 40 free beach
events and activities on the Boston Harbor region’s public beaches this summer
in a ceremony on Boston’s Fish Pier on Saturday, June 3rd, 2017.
This year’s grant recipients
include 27 organizations in 9 waterfront neighborhood neighborhoods and
beachfront communities from Nahant to Nantasket, including groups from Lynn,
Nahant, Revere, Winthrop, East Boston, South Boston, Dorchester, Quincy and
Hull. Here's the complete list.
In 2016, Save the Harbor
and the Department of Conservation and Recreation awarded $219,442 in small
grants and additional organizational support to 43 groups in 9 beachfront
communities and waterfront neighborhoods. These groups in turn leveraged our funds
with $454,990 in cash and in-kind support from local government and businesses
and more than 8,800 volunteer hours to support 107 free concerts, fitness
boot-camps, beach festivals, sand raking demonstrations and sand sculpting
competitions.
Late last year the
Baker/Polito Administration cut $98 million from the budget, including all
funds to support free events and programs on the metropolitan beaches in Lynn,
Nahant, Revere, Winthrop, East Boston, South Boston, Dorchester, Quincy and
Hull this summer. Consequently, all of the grants for the Better
Beaches Program in 2017 come from the proceeds of the Harpoon
Shamrock Splash, where 250 brave
souls jumped into the cold waters of M Street Beach in South Boston in March to
raise money for free programs on their beach.
“In May, the House and the Senate restored funding for this program for FY2018,” said Save the Harbor/Save the Bay’s President Patty Foley. “I urge the Governor fully fund Metropolitan Beaches line item in the budget, and to make the funds available as soon as possible, so we can continue to invest in these free programs, which are so important to the region’s kids and families,”
From Left to Right: Chuck Lechien Jr. of Boston Circus Guild and his son Charlie, Patty Foley; President of Save the Harbor/Save the
Bay, Ellie Johnson and John Hall of Rhythm Room Records, Susan Hamilton;
Metropolitan Beaches Commissioner and Director of Park Operations at
the Department of Conservation and Recreation, Joe Newman; Board Chair
of Save the Harbor/Save the Bay.
Chuck Lechien Jr. of the Boston Circus Guild and his son Charlie were on
hand to receive a $3,500 Better Beaches Program grant from Save the
Harbor/Save the Bay to bring circus performers and fire juggling clowns
to the beach this summer. John Hall and Rhythm Room Records was also
awarded $1000 for the SoundWaves Blues Concert on the beach at Spectacle
Island.
This year’s Better Beaches Program Grants will fund concerts and sand sculpting competitions, beach festivals, movie nights, free kayak lessons and aquatics instruction, Art on the Shore and Storytelling by the Sea on public beaches from Nahant to Nantasket.
“We are especially pleased that Intertidal Artist Andres Amador will join us on the beach again this summer,” said Save the Harbor’s spokesman Bruce Berman. “I’m personally looking forward to performances by the Boston’s Circus Guild, featuring fire juggling clowns, and of course the Pokemon Go Festival, though I understand it is not a “thing” anymore.”
This year’s Better Beaches Program Grants will fund concerts and sand sculpting competitions, beach festivals, movie nights, free kayak lessons and aquatics instruction, Art on the Shore and Storytelling by the Sea on public beaches from Nahant to Nantasket.
“We are especially pleased that Intertidal Artist Andres Amador will join us on the beach again this summer,” said Save the Harbor’s spokesman Bruce Berman. “I’m personally looking forward to performances by the Boston’s Circus Guild, featuring fire juggling clowns, and of course the Pokemon Go Festival, though I understand it is not a “thing” anymore.”
“Though
all of us at DCR are of course disappointed that we can’t help fund the program
this year, we will continue to provide staff time and other resources to
support these events,” said DCR Director of Park Operations and Metropolitan
Beaches Commissioner Susan Hamilton. “Thanks to our partner’s at Save the
Harbor/Save the Bay for helping to make this summer a great one for the
region’s residents and visitors from across the Commonwealth”
At the event on the Fish
Pier Save the Harbor/Save the Bay thanked Metropolitan Beaches Commission Co-Chairs
Senator Tom McGee and Representative RoseLee Vincent and the legislative and
community members of the Commission for making this great program possible.
Save
the Harbor also thanked their foundation funding partners, The Boston
Foundation, the Richard Saltonstall Charitable Foundation, and
the Harold Whitworth Pierce Charitable Trust for their support.
Thanks
as well to corporate sponsors Harpoon Brewery, JetBlue, P&G
Gillette, National Grid, Beacon Capital Partners, LLC, Airbrush Unlimited,
Inc., Comcast, Google and the hundreds of individual participants and
donors to the Harpoon Shamrock Splash, and a special thanks to Syam
Buradagunta and the Blue Sky Collaborative, whose fundraising platform has
helped make the Better Beaches Program a success since its inception in 2008.
To learn more about
the Better Beaches Program visit Save the Harbor/Save the
Bay’s blog, Sea, Sand & Sky at www.blog.savetheharbor.org, or follow savetheharbor on Facebook, Twitter
and Instagram.
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