July 8, 2014 Speaker: Jeff Harding, Recycle San Diego – How to Recycle: Electronics, Batteries, Light Bulbs, & Paint

Jeff HardingJeffrey Harding co-founded an e-scrap processor in San Bernardino in 2003. In 2006 he founded Recycle San Diego as a mobile hauler of e-waste, and established a permanent facility to accept e-waste daily in 2007. Ever since, Recycle San Diego has been growing and recycling over 85 tons of e-waste each month. Jeffrey believes that e-waste recycling should be easy and free for consumers, and has thus pioneered the practice of hosting free e-waste recycling events each week throughout San Diego County.

Mr. Harding is a Board Member of Accion San Diego, a member of the Spreckels Organ Society, a member of the Hillcrest-Mission Valley Lion’s Club, a Loud & Clear member of Voice of San Diego, a Lincoln Club of San Diego County member, and San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce member. Mr. Harding believes in community service and supporting causes that increases transparency in government and policies that supports the small business community.

August 21, 2012 Speaker: Haley Jain Haggerstone, Surf Rider Foundation, S.D. Chapter

Haley Jain HaggerstoneHaley is currently the Chapter Coordinator for the Surfrider Foundation San Diego Chapter. The position entails coordinating local chapter efforts to help protect our oceans, waves and beaches throughout San Diego. She is also President of the Board of Directors for Surfrider Foundation Canada. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Natural Resource Conservation from the University of British Columbia and is currently pursing a Masters degree from the University of San Diego in Nonprofit Management and Leadership. She grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia where she worked as an environmental researcher in forestry, fisheries and coastal resource management.  Haley was an active member of the Surfrider Foundation Vancouver Chapter executive committee for nearly five years before relocating to southern California.

With over 75 miles of coastline to cover, San Diego represents one of the largest chapters of the Surfrider Foundation.  It is a grassroots organization, which means the people working to protect our local oceans, waves and beaches are volunteers who care about San Diego and want to make a difference.

Globally, Surfrider is involved in a variety of campaigns and programs aimed at protecting our coastal ecosystems. Its campaigns and programs are developed to support its strategic goals/initiatives: Clean Water, Beach Access, Beach Preservation, and Protecting Special Places. The Surfrider Foundation chapter network works on a diverse set of coastal problems ranging from water quality, to single-use plastics in our marine environment, to shoreline armoring and the protection of surfing areas. However, the common thread is that all of these efforts are direct action organizing campaigns, in other words volunteer driven.

The Surfrider Foundation San Diego County Chapter is currently engaged in the following campaigns: Rise Above Plastics, Hold On To Your Butt, No Border Sewage and Beach Preservation. The chapter is also running several programs including Ocean Friendly Gardens, Know Your H20, Blue Water Task Force, Kids for Clean Water and monthly Beach Cleanups.

For more information go to www.surfridersd.org.

October 9, 2012 Speaker: Dr. Nigella Hillgarth, Exec Director, Birch Aquarium at Scripps

 

Nigella HillgarthDr. Nigella Hillgarth is executive director of Birch Aquarium at Scripps, the public exploration center of world-renowned Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego. She is a distinguished zoologist who came to the institution in 2002 from her position as executive director of Tracy Aviary, the nation’s largest bird park, in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Since joining the aquarium, Hillgarth spearheaded the creation of the dynamic Scripps Explorers Gallery, which transformed a decade-old exhibition in the Hall of Oceanography. She also expanded visitors’ hands-on interaction by installing two additional touch tide pools. One- to three-year exhibits developed and installed under Hillgarth’s direction include Sounds of the Sea, Earthquake: Life on a Restless Planet, Sea of Genes, Art of Deception, Wonders of Water, There’s Something About Seahorses, Boundless Energy, and the award-winning Feeling the Heat: The Climate Challenge.

During her tenure, aquarium visitors exceeded 415,000 per year at a time when most other U.S. aquariums were experiencing losses. Gifts from private funds have quadrupled since Hillgarth took the helm, extremely beneficial to a self-supporting aquarium that receives no direct support from federal, state, or city funding.

Hillgarth’s work extends far beyond her everyday guidance of Birch Aquarium at Scripps. She was the guest lecturer on two expeditions with members of the Scripps Oceanographic Society: Antarctica in 2006 and the Amazon in 2007. Hillgarth served on the Board of Directors of the California Association of Museums from 2005-2007. The San Diego Soroptomists recognized her with its Woman of Accomplishment Award in 2003. In December 2008, Hillgarth was named a “Metro Mover to Watch” in 2009 by San Diego Metropolitan Magazine. La Jolla Light named her one of “Five to Watch” in 2012.

Born in Tipperary, Ireland, Hillgarth received her master’s degree in zoology and doctoral degree in animal behavior, both from Oxford University, England. She specialized in the behavior and physiology of pheasants, carrying out research in Britain, India, and Thailand.

She came to the United States in 1992 to research jungle fowl at UC Riverside. A year later, Hillgarth attended the University of Washington, where she studied hormones and behavior in birds. She made several research trips to the Arctic during this time. In 1997, she joined the University of Utah in Salt Lake City to study the interactions of hormones, health, and behavior in mice.

In 1998, Hillgarth became curator of ornithology at Tracy Aviary, where she began research on the physiology and behavior of penguins in South America and the conservation of marine birds in Galapagos, Peru, and Argentina. She became the aviary’s executive director in 1999 and focused on developing the aviary into an institution to highlight the Great Salt Lake as a wetland of international importance.

Nigella is passionate about helping to shape the public’s perception of science and the environment. Follow her on Twitter at @NHillgarth, where she often shares her work as an amateur nature photographer.

At more than 65,000 square feet, Birch Aquarium at Scripps features more than 5,000 animals representing 380 species, as well as cutting-edge research discoveries made by Scripps scientists. Its mission is to provide ocean science education, to interpret Scripps research, and to promote ocean conservation. Birch Aquarium at Scripps is accredited by the Association for Zoos & Aquariums.

November 20, 2012 Speaker: Georgeanne Irvine, “The Katrina Dolphins…” Story of rescue & relocation of dolphins during Hurricane Katrina

Georgeanne IrvineSan Diego native Georgeanne Irvine has devoted more than three decades of her career to raising awareness about animals and wildlife conservation.  By day, she is associate director of communications/development for the San Diego Zoo and Safari Park, where she has worked for more than 33 years. In her spare time “George” is the author of more than 20 children’s books plus numerous magazine, newspaper, and Web articles.

Georgeanne Irvine with DolphinGeorge’s most recent work is the coffee table book, “The Katrina Dolphins: One-Way Ticket to Paradise,” which is a true story about 8 dolphins from an oceanarium who were washed out to sea during Hurricane Katrina and dramatically rescued.