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There are other ways to help, Some 10,000 volunteers without biohazard training have registered with the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana, said executive director Steven Peyronnin. Hundreds of them have been sent to clear beaches of debris before oil hits, he said. "It will help when the oil comes ashore," Peyronnin said. "It will make that job easier." In Florida, about one-third of the 7,683 people who offered to help have actually worked, mostly in pre-oil beach cleanup, said Wendy Spencer, chief executive officer of the Governor's Commission on Volunteerism. In Alabama, 5,000 people signed up for the first week of a training program designed by Mobile Baykeeper and Alabama Coastal Foundation, said Casi Callaway, executive director of Mobile Baykeeper. The program trains volunteers to go photograph and document what's happening along the state's shoreline. "One of the problems we had was getting some kind of meaningful work for volunteers, Callaway said. "They were using a few to do clerical work, but people want to do more than that. They want to feel they are really a part of saving our waters and our coasts from all of this." ___ Online: Volunteer Louisiana: http://www.volunteerlouisiana.gov/ Mississippi Commission for Volunteer Service: Volunteer Florida: Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana: http://crcl.org/home.html Mobile Bay Keeper: http://www.mobilebaykeeper.org/ BP website: http://www.bp.com/
http://www.mcvs.org/
http://www.volunteerflorida.org/
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