The Mercury News

At Monterey Bay Aquarium, animals thrive, business tanks.

Revenue has plunged at Cannery Row museum, closed to public for months in pandemic

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

MONTEREY >> A solitary African penguin waddled through an empty foyer at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, peeking curiously under an unoccupied bench.

As a glittery school of silver sardines glided through the 1 million-gallon Open Sea exhibit, soft atmospheri­c music played to an empty viewing room.

No families were there to watch the sharks get fed. The jellyfish shimmered alone in the dark.

Crowds would normally be filling the aquarium corridors in these waning days of summer. But the aquarium on Cannery Row has been closed to the public for five months because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Inside, it is quiet.

As he examined a sedated sea otter pup rescued from the kelp beds off Santa Cruz, Dr. Michael Murray, the aquarium’s director of veterinary services, wondered aloud if the animals noticed how much things had changed.

“Part of me says, ‘Oh, they don’t really care,’ ” he said. “The other part says, ‘These are not dumb animals. They’re very aware of their surroundin­gs. They can see people through the acrylic. They can react to people. So why wouldn’t they notice?’ ”

Life above the water has been fraught.

The aquarium missed its entire summer tourism season, and its finances are in such dire straits that more than a third of its staff has been laid off or furloughed.

“The visitors are gone. The revenue is gone,” said Julie Packard, the aquarium’s executive director. “Meantime, the animals and exhibits are doing great.”

Outside, three wildfires have been burning in Monterey County, causing at least one staff member to lose a home and others to evacuate.

Animals sensitive to smoke and ash falling from the orangeting­ed sky had to be pulled indoors.

The sea otters are susceptibl­e to the coronaviru­s, forcing staffers to wear masks and gloves around them — and to try to maintain a good distance from the social mammals, who perk up when they see the few humans walking past their exhibit.

“It’s been frightenin­g; it’s been concerning, disconcert­ing,” said Jon Hoech, the vice president of animal care, who was evacuated from his home near Salinas because of the River Fire.

“We’ve had to navigate PPE, social distancing, doing split shifts … but the real difficulty for the staff is not having people see the work they’re so passionate about.”

When it opened in 1984, the aquarium — built in the former Hovden sardine cannery — helped revitalize gritty Cannery Row.

The waterfront stretch is now a tourist destinatio­n filled with family-friendly restaurant­s and tributes to John Steinbeck, who, in his novel named after the place, described Cannery Row as “a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream.”

“The Monterey Bay Aquarium is world famous, and it’s like a global beacon for us for travelers,” said Rob O’Keefe, chief executive of the Monterey County Convention & Visitors Bureau. “What they’re doing directly impacts tourism for us.”

The aquarium shut down March 13. A grand reopening was planned for July 9, but it was scrapped a few days before because Monterey County had just been placed on the state’s coronaviru­s watchlist. No opening date is currently planned.

Faced with a projected loss this year of about $45 million, the aquarium laid off or furloughed 220 of its 580 employees.

Others had their pay cut through the end of the year.

Because the nonprofit had more than 500 employees, it did not qualify for a

forgivable coronaviru­s aid loan through the federal Paycheck Protection Program, Packard said.

It has been pleading with donors to give more and scaled back conservati­on programs.

It cut 70% of the budget for its conservati­on and science department, which, among other things, works to reduce plastic pollution in the ocean and combat the effects of climate change.

The aquarium has kept a limited staff on-site to care for the more than 81,000 animals and maintain the complex system that pumps in about 2,000 gallons of seawater per minute.

Zoos and aquariums — which rely on ticket sales, concession­s, parking, events and gift shops — have been hit especially hard during the shutdowns, said Dan Ashe, president of the Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums, an accreditin­g body that represents more than 200 facilities in the United States.

“The pandemic has just been, in a word, devastatin­g,” Ashe said.

The group has been urging Congress to provide $30 million for zoos and aquariums in the next round of stimulus funding and to expand the eligibilit­y for forgivable Paycheck Protection Program loans for larger nonprofits.

Virtually all of its members were shut down. Though about 86% have partly reopened, they are

operating with heavily restricted capacity that is not sustainabl­e in the long run, Ashe said.

The closure of the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which draws 2 million visitors a year, has been keenly felt on the Central Coast.

Tourism to Monterey County took a nosedive this year.

Hotel occupancy rates are typically 80% or higher during the summer, O’Keefe said. In June, that rate was 48%.

Travel has started to pick

up, but slowly, the chief executive said.

“It’s the ultimate double whammy, COVID plus the fires,” O’Keefe said. “We’re stuck with a quandary of, people can’t go inside and people can’t go outdoors.”

At the aquarium, they’re trying to keep morale up. There’s a staff dance competitio­n, which includes a choreograp­hed number by scuba divers in the Kelp Forest exhibit.

They’ve also recorded “MeditOcean” videos,

guided mindfulnes­s meditation­s with footage of jellyfish and crashing waves.

Swimming among the anchovies and rockfish in the Kelp Forest exhibit on a recent morning, a scuba diver answered questions from his audience about what it’s like to feed the denizens of the deep.

“Are there fish that prefer specific foods?” someone asked.

“Ohhh, yeah,” said Patrick Webster, his voice crackling on the underwater

microphone.

The giant sea bass is “always a little bit of a diva.” Sometimes, he explained, he tosses out a piece of shrimp and she gobbles it up and spits it out.

Other times, he brings squid and she decides, “I’m more of a prawn girl today.”

The questions would usually come from a live audience perched in stadium seating by the three-story open-air tank.

But the diver spoke instead to a dark, quiet room. Questions came from an online audience, watching via livestream.

Wearing an aquariumbr­anded mask with her own sketches of sunstars and algae, Packard said the facility is ready to go as soon as it’s allowed to reopen.

It plans on institutin­g limited, timed entry and one-way paths. Each guest will have to wear a mask and confirm twice that they are showing no symptoms of COVID-19.

People are itching to come back, Packard said.

“What each of us needs right now, every day, is something to calm us down and uplift us with something positive and happy,” she said.

“The beauty of nature here and enjoying something wonderful and curious with your family and loved ones — it’s just a reminder that as a human race we’ve done a lot to damage nature, and yet nature is going to endure.”

 ??  ??
 ?? KENT NISHIMURA — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Rey, a penguin, looks at the Kelp Forest tank while pausing near Senior Aviculturi­st Kim Fukuda of Marina, during a stroll in the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Normally, crowds would be filling the aquarium, but it’s been closed since March because of the coronaviru­s shutdown.
KENT NISHIMURA — LOS ANGELES TIMES Rey, a penguin, looks at the Kelp Forest tank while pausing near Senior Aviculturi­st Kim Fukuda of Marina, during a stroll in the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Normally, crowds would be filling the aquarium, but it’s been closed since March because of the coronaviru­s shutdown.
 ?? COURTESY OF MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM ?? A leopard shark glides through the water in the Kelp Forest tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. A reopening date for the aquarium has not yet been planned.
COURTESY OF MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM A leopard shark glides through the water in the Kelp Forest tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. A reopening date for the aquarium has not yet been planned.

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