Commissioners reported a marked increase in volunteer participation for the city’s coastal cleanup, saying Vallejo had 19 active sites this year and volunteers estimated turnout around 1,200 — roughly double last year and comparable to pre‑COVID participation.
Commissioners who attended the cleanup said some sites reported they “doubled what they did last year.” The Girl Scouts provided lunch at one location, and new site captains joined the effort; commissioners said 3–4 new site captains is a positive sign for continuity.
Commission staff and volunteers have not yet published a final tally for debris tonnage. A staff member told the commission, “I don't have the report on how much tonnage came in yet. But they'll get that out to us here pretty quick.”
Why it matters: higher volunteer turnout increases the capacity for neighborhood and waterfront cleanups and supports the commission’s outreach goals tied to its work plan.
Commission members recommended using existing city channels to publicize future cleanup efforts and noted that partners such as Visit Vallejo and local businesses help reach volunteers.
The commission plans to incorporate lessons from this year’s effort into the Beautify Vallejo Day ad hoc committee work and to report back at upcoming meetings when official debris totals are available.