The Sunnyvale Sun

Monterey Bay Aquarium announces reopening date

Popular landmark will open May 1 for members, May 15 for the general public

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Call it a golden oppor-tuna-ty for ocean lovers.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium, one of Northern California’s top visitor attraction­s, will reopen in May, 14 months after it closed due to the COVID pandemic.

The facility draws roughly 2 million visitors a year to Monterey’s Cannery Row to see exhibits of pulsating jellyfish, frolicking sea otters, waddling penguins and sharks cruising the rocky reef.

The aquarium will reopen to members only for two weeks starting Saturday, May 1, and then to the general public on Saturday, May 15. Admission for members and the general public will be by advance reservatio­n only at the aquarium’s website, montereyba­y aquarium.org

“We are super excited about having people back in the building,” said Julie Packard, the aquarium’s executive director. “It’s not just right to have the building be empty.”

During the pandemic, with no visitors, the aquarium suffered a major financial setback. To offset $55 million in losses over the past year, aquarium managers laid off about 40% of their staff of about 560 people to conserve enough money to continue to properly care for the animals and maintain the facilities.

Packard said the animals are doing well. They have been fed and cared for just as before.

“There’s no way to ask them,” she said. “But it would appear they are thriving. The ones that have a lot of human interactio­n like the sea otters and the penguins, they are very excited and interested whenever you are in the building and come up to them.”

Most other zoos and aquariums around California and the United States — including the California Academy of Sciences, Aquarium of the Bay and San Francisco Zoo in San Francisco, the Oakland Zoo and Happy Hollow Zoo in San Jose — already have re-opened.

COVID case rates have been higher in Monterey County than in many other Northern California

counties in part because of outbreaks of the virus among Salinas Valley farmworker communitie­s. As a result, Monterey County only entered the red tier on March 17. That tier allows zoos and aquariums to reopen indoor facilities at up to 25% capacity.

Packard said when Monterey County moves into the orange tier, which allows 50% indoor capacity, the aquarium will expand the number of visitors allowed in.

Aquariums around the country have been sharing informatio­n about best health practices for months. Most are operating at about 40% to 60% capacity, said Dan Ashe, president and CEO of the Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums, in Silver Spring, Md. Worldwide, zoos and aquariums have lost $2 billion in the pandemic, he said.

“A lot of them have had to burn through their reserves. They have laid off thousands of employees,” said Ashe, who served as director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in the Obama administra­tion. “But now if they want to be open, they are able to be open. The availabili­ty of vaccines is raising optimism about 2021 that we’ll start to see increasing normalcy. We’re optimistic. People are ready to venture out again.”

The Monterey Bay Aquarium opened in 1984 after a $55 million gift from tech pioneer David

Packard, co-founder of Hewlett Packard, and his wife, Lucile.

It is often ranked among the world’s best aquariums, and in recent years has focused on not just displaying the animals that live in Monterey Bay, but on teaching the public about threats to the environmen­t and the world’s oceans, including climate change, plastic pollution and overfishin­g.

“I’m overjoyed it’s reopening,” said Ashe, a marine biologist. “Monterey Bay Aquarium plays such an outsized role in terms of ocean conservati­on and inspiring young people, and helping the citizenry become engaged and aware of ocean conservati­on. It’s just a treasure for the state, the local economy and the world.”

At first, the aquarium will be open Thursdays through Mondays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and will be closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Seven-day-a-week operations will resume May 29.

Every visitor age 3 and older will be required to wear a mask to enter. So will employees and volunteers. For visitors who forget, masks will be for sale. No standing in line at the ticket window will be allowed.

Tickets will be sold on a timedentry basis, in blocks of 30 minutes, to keep visitor numbers to about 25% of normal or less. Reservatio­ns will become available online at 9 a.m. Pacific time on April 26 for members and May 5 for general public admission.

While the aquarium was closed, it dipped into its reserves, but also raised $25 million to help stabilize its finances — from large donors, but also from regular people, including children who mailed small amounts.

“One of the things that has kept all of us going is what we’ve heard from people, even thousands of miles away,” Packard said. “They tell us how they watch the penguins on the web cam, or how their children have done fundraiser­s for the aquarium. It has been a boost to realize how much people love the place.”

 ?? JESSICA WAN — MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM ?? Sea otters frolic at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which will reopen to the general public May 15 after being closed for 14 months due to the COVID pandemic. The aquarium will be open to members on May 1.
JESSICA WAN — MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM Sea otters frolic at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which will reopen to the general public May 15 after being closed for 14 months due to the COVID pandemic. The aquarium will be open to members on May 1.
 ?? TYSON V. RININGER/MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM ?? The Monterey Bay Aquarium draws roughly 2 million visitors a year to Monterey’s Cannery Row to see marine exhibits.
TYSON V. RININGER/MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM The Monterey Bay Aquarium draws roughly 2 million visitors a year to Monterey’s Cannery Row to see marine exhibits.

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