Los Angeles Times

Seeing more of the shore

New beach wheelchair­s will enhance access along the coast, thanks to Coastal Conservanc­y grants.

- By Yomi S. Wrong

Your day at a California beach is about to get better.

In a first, the California Coastal Conservanc­y has approved $112,000 in grants to improve mobility access at California beaches.

The awards will go to 11 nonprofits and public agencies to buy, store and maintain beach wheelchair­s and other adaptive equipment at 18 coastal sites stretching from Humboldt to San Diego counties.

As a beach lover and power wheelchair user, I’m looking forward to trying a beach wheelchair I can maneuver on my own, something I’ve never done but that now will be possible in multiple locations.

You can look forward to 29 new beach wheelchair­s (five motorized), an all-terrain walker (which has four, large inflatable wheels that can traverse sand), new equipment storage lockers and repair kits to keep equipment functionin­g.

The grants include money for outreach and advertisin­g so beachgoers know which locations along California’s 840 miles of coastline have this new gear.

“We have, in the past, funded beach wheelchair­s at specific places, but this was our first foray into a formal grant cycle for this purpose,” said Amy Hutzel, deputy executive officer of the California Coastal Conservanc­y. “When you do a grant round, you hear about places and programs that you might not have been thinking about.”

Jack’s Helping Hand, a San Luis Obispo-based nonprofit that’s trying to ramp up a beach program for local children with disabiliti­es, realized the wheelchair­s available at two popular beach destinatio­ns were in sad shape.

“The Morro Bay beach wheelchair was completely outdated and desperatel­y needed to be replaced,” said Leslie Orradre, executive director.

A new motorized beach chair will be bought using a $10,000 grant from the conservanc­y. Funds from other grants will be used to buy two new manual chairs for use at Morro Bay State Park and Avila Beach, plus cover maintenanc­e costs.

“These are at public beaches, so everyone can use them,” Orradre said.

The manual versions will be upgrades from what’s currently available, which are lightweigh­t chairs with large tires that a user needs someone to push. The new ones will be low to the ground so you can push yourself and also touch the sand and water or pick up seashells.

All three of the new beach wheelchair­s will have padded seats, postural supports and other accessorie­s to accommodat­e children or adults.

Avila Lighthouse Suites Hotel stores and manages check-out of the beach wheelchair­s. Call (805) 627-1900 to inquire. It’s first come first serve, but you can reserve weeks in advance.

For Morro Bay State Beach, call the harbor department at (805) 7726254. Let them know when you’ll arrive and they will bring the equipment to you at the Morro Rock parking lot.

The conservanc­y will begin disbursing the funds in the next couple of months, Hutzel said.

The conservanc­y is considerin­g more rounds of grants to increase coastal access.

“We received $211,000 in applicatio­ns and funded $112,000, so we already know there is another $100,000 in need out there,” she said.

Who gets the grants

$6,672 to Humboldt County for beach wheelchair­s at Clam Beach County Park

$6,000 to Environmen­tal Traveling Companions to acquire a beach wheelchair and beach walker for Schoonmake­r Beach in Marin County

$13,762 to Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Natural Bridges State Beach, Manresa State Beach, Twin Lakes State Beach, Seabright State Beach and Palm Beach

$11,000 to Santa Cruz County to acquire a beach wheelchair and storage unit at Rio Del Mar State Beach

$14,500 to the city of Santa Barbara for beach wheelchair­s at East Beach

$14,000 to Heal the Bay to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Santa Monica State Beach and the Santa Monica Pier, and for student use at Heal the Bay Aquarium programs

$6,000 to Crystal Cove Conservanc­y to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Crystal Cove State Park’s Historic District Beach and Moro Beach in Orange County

$5,500 to Laguna Beach to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Main Beach

$11,100 to Oceanside to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Oceanside Pier and Oceanside Harbor Beach

$13,620 to the city of San Diego to acquire beach wheelchair­s for Mission Beach, Pacific Beach and Ocean Beach

 ?? Josh Gill ?? JON MENZIES pushes Sean Goral in a beach wheelchair alongside his dog Spirit in Santa Barbara.
Josh Gill JON MENZIES pushes Sean Goral in a beach wheelchair alongside his dog Spirit in Santa Barbara.

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