Playa del Rey School to participate in annual KIDS OCEAN DAY May 19

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Bringing Los Angeles school children to the beach helps put them in touch with nature, while challenging them to recycle, reduce litter and participate in cleaning up their environment.

Nearly 4,000 students from more than 30 Los Angeles-area schools will be take to the beach for KIDS OCEAN DAY, which will be celebrated May 19 at Dockweiler State Beach in Playa del Rey.

To enhance the lesson, student will participate in a giant aerial artwork of a Seascape of Ocean O’s and Fish, individually designed by each school.

KIDS OCEAN DAY is the culmination of a year-round school assembly program

by the Malibu Foundation for Environmental Education to teach school kids about how litter flows from our neighborhoods to the ocean, thereby killing marine life and polluting food resources.

KIDS OCEAN DAY is the creation of Malibu Foundation for Environmental

Education founder Michael Klubock. Michael started KIDS OCEAN DAY 23 years ago as a way to bring his school assembly program into the real world. The one-day cleanup event motivates the students of Los Angeles to care about their environment and involves them in community service, while instilling good habits and stewardship.

Bringing Los Angeles school children to the beach helps put them in touch with nature, while challenging them to recycle, reduce litter and participate in cleaning up their environment.

For many of the young people, KIDS OCEAN DAY is their first time at the ocean. The wonder and beauty of the coast, combined with a mission to protect the natural world, is a profound experience.

KIDS OCEAN DAY is sponsored by the City of Los Angeles Stormwater Program, a project of the Bureau of Sanitation, the City of Los Angeles Board of Public Works, as well as the California Coastal Commission and Keep L.A. Beautiful. Interested in becoming a volunteer at the event, visit, http://kidsoceanday.org/volunteer