Earlier this month, Save The Bay brought nearly 20 elected officials and their staff to the future site of the First Mile Levee Project. As shoreline flooding increases, this nature-based ...
What do a team of restoration experts, a habitat transition zone of native wetland plants, and a wastewater treatment facility have in common? They’re all helping to improve water quality ...
Interested in testing your Bay knowledge? Save The Bay is excited to launch an interactive new way for you to explore the Bay and challenge your brain at the same ...
Save The Bay Executive Director David Lewis received the Jean Auer Environmental Award this month for his “significant contribution toward improving environmental quality in the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary.” The ...
sat down with the longest-serving member of the Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC), Commissioner John Gioia, to find out how he’s overcoming the typical governance challenges that are associated ...
Save The Bay’s Habitat Restoration Teams HRT Fellow, Ruby Alvarado brings to life a collaborative mural that will be hung at our Palo Alto Baylands Nursery. The mural highlights native ...
As the 25th anniversary of Save The Bay’s volunteer program continues, we are sharing more volunteer spotlights! More than just helping our habitat restoration efforts, the volunteer programs bring together ...
Save The Bay is deeply grateful to United Airlines, whose partnership helps nurture the plants in our nurseries, provides students with opportunities to explore the shoreline, and strengthens our ability ...
In early April, Save The Bay’s Habitat Restoration Team (HRT) set out to learn about large scale native seed production and vernal pools! HRT traveled to visit our friends at ...
Save The Bay began enlisting volunteers in 2000 to restore transition-zone habitat along the shoreline, benefiting endangered wildlife, enhancing ecosystem health and protecting communities from rising tides The program has ...