35,894 people attended the Community Environmental Council’s (CEC) 2013 Earth Day Festival, this past Saturday and Sunday, April 20 and 21, in Alameda Park. Volunteer crowd counters at the festival’s six entry points, tracked attendance for both days of the event.

This year’s event sought to inspire the community to learn from and encourage each other to find creative ways to protect and preserve the world we live in. Specifically, CEC emphasized ways to fulfill its mission of moving the Santa Barbara region away from fossil fuels in one generation—Fossil Free by ‘33.

On the Main Stage, two individuals were awarded with the CEC’s 2013 Environmental Hero Award. On Saturday, April 20 at 3 p.m., activist Van Jones accepted an award from Geoff Green on behalf of CEC and the Fund for Santa Barbara, and on Sunday, April 21 at 2 p.m. Bill Nye accepted an award from Assembly member Das Williams also on behalf of CEC.

“I’m really glad to be here,” said Van Jones, attorney, bestselling author and pioneer in the environmental movement during the acceptance of his award from the CEC. “There’s a breakdown happening in the nation’s capital, while there’s a breakthrough happening out here among the people. We’ve got to be clear about the peril that this breakdown represents, but we also have to be clear about the promise of the breakthrough.”

“It is fabulous to see so many people out here for Earth Day, because this is the future,” said Bill Nye, scientist and award winning actor and TV host. “The key to the future is to not just do less, the key is to do more with less: to go further on a gallon or a liter of gas, to get trains to run on time with less electricity, to make aircrafts more efficient, to make farming more efficient and to have less run-off run into our rivers and streams.”

Dave Davis, CEO and Executive Director of the Community Environmental Council; Sigrid Wright, Associate Director of CEC and the festival’s director; Bill Nye, scientist and one of this year’s Environmental Hero Award honorees; and Assembly member Das Williams at the 43rd Santa Barbara Earth Day Festival hosted by the Community Environmental Council.
Matt Perko

The CEC reports excellent statistics for the 2013 Earth Day Festival:

Approximately 1,026 bikes were valet parked; an estimate 1,000 more were self-parked.

628 people took a ride in alternative-fueled vehicles, like the 2013 Toyota RAV4 EV, the first all-electric SUV on the market, the 2013 Chevrolet Volt, the top selling electric vehicle of 2012, and other electric and hybrid cars at the “Ride & Drive” at the 14th Annual Santa Barbara Green Car Show, the longest-running public focused Green Car Show in the U.S.

35,894 people attended this year’s Earth Day Festival!

Green Project Consultants, which handled all of the event waste by hand sorting each piece, estimates it will divert over 90% of the waste generated from the festival.

92 pairs of gently used sneakers were collected by GreenSneakers.org, which partnered with CEC to collect retired tennis shoes at the Green Sneakers booth. The donated sneakers will be reused and provided to people in need around the world.

This year’s festival had about 250 Volunteers!

Regarding this year’s Environmental Hero Awards, “A particularly inspiring moment for me was seeing the throngs of youth here for Bill Nye; having a scientist raised to rock star status gave me hope for the generation whose lives will be shaped by climate change,” said Sigrid Wright, Associate Director of CEC and the festival’s director.

Santa Barbara Earth Day History:

In the wake of the devastating 1969 oil spill off Santa Barbara’s shores, a group of local concerned citizens began talking about a different way of looking at environmental systems. Over the next few years, around the country the environmental movement was born – including the Community Environmental Council, which was incorporated in the spring of 1970. During that time, Senator Gaylord Nelson visited Santa Barbara to view the damage from the oil spill. When he returned to Washington, D.C., he introduced a bill designating April 22 as a national day to celebrate the earth. In CEC’s first act as a newly established non-profit, it hosted one of the first Earth Day celebrations in the U.S. in 1970.

About the Community Environmental Council:

Since 1970, the Community Environmental Council (CEC) has led the Santa Barbara region – and at times California and the nation – in creative solutions to some of the toughest environmental problems. Today CEC is focused on eliminating the use of fossil fuels in the Central Coast region in one generation – Fossil Free by ’33.

Partners:

This year, CEC partnered with LoaTree, New Noise Media Group, Oniracom, Plus One Events, Sprout Up, Learningden Preschool, and Santa Barbara Bicycle Coalition to produce the festival.

For more information on CEC:

o Find CEC on the web at http://www.cecsb.org

o Like CEC on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/cecsb

o Follow CEC on Twitter @CECSB and on Instagram @CEC_SB

o Call CEC at 805-963-0583 ext. 100.

For more information on CEC’s Earth Day Festival:

o Find Earth Day on the web at http://www.SBEarthDay.org, or the mobile site, http://m.sbearthday.org/

o Like “Santa Barbara Earth Day” on Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/sbearthday

o Follow the event on Twitter @SBEarthday and on Instagram @SB_EarthDay

o Call CEC at 805-963-0583 ext. 100.

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