Published
7 years agoon
Sometimes there comes a point when even a patient person who has spent much of his life in government and understands how things work there can’t take the red tape and turf wars anymore.
That’s what happened to Tom Bohigian, the longtime state director for former U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer and a two-term Fresno City Council member.
Bohigian started his one-man crusade with three goals: reduce trash, protect wildlife and make a point to local leaders.
“Sometimes, we look at problems and we say, ‘oh no, it’s so expensive and so difficult.’ I don’t look at things that way,” he says. “Problems like this occur in lots and lots of places. But there are solutions. This is, at the least, a temporary solution. … It’s not like, how do we tear down the Berlin Wall?”
Not only does Bohigian tidy up the habitat along the San Joaquin River — ridding it of fast-food containers, discarded clothing, cigarette butts and fishing line — he hauls away the debris from the two cans at the pedestrian walk-in point on Bluff Avenue.
Tom Bohigian makes his weekly rounds at San Joaquin River West. (Randy Reed/GV Wire Photo)
Bohigian, an unabashed environmentalist, knows River West like the back of his hand. I accompanied him to the river one afternoon. Bohigian identified birds, plants and trees. He explained the river bottom’s history — including the political fights. And he talked about a much better future for the river.
He might be Fresno’s best advocate for the San Joaquin River Parkway and getting more people to embrace the fact that great cities take special care of their rivers.
“My vision for the river is that we see the habitat restored and that we see access for regular folks,” he says. “We’re already seeing some of that. Salmon are now spawning in the river below Friant Dam, which is really important. … The river will never be what it was 75 years ago, but the river will be healthier and people will be enjoying it.”
Canoeing and fishing are popular activities on the San Joaquin River.
Strange as it sounds, Bohigian finds taking out the trash satisfying.
“A very grounding experience,” he says.
Down there, he is alone with his thoughts. He soaks up the vistas. And when he runs into curious people, he is part river bottom guide, part environmental evangelist.
Beyond all of those things, there is the satisfaction of a job well done.
“If we all do a little bit, it really adds up,” Bohigian says. “I’ve always believed that, and I think that’s the case here.
“What I find is, people are using those containers and there’s a lot less trash along the river.”
Not only does that make River West more pleasant for walkers, runners, anglers and everyone else, it makes things safer for wildlife.
“Birds can get tangled up in monofilament fishing line, they can eat things that look like food to them. And the thing is, it’s totally unnecessary. If the stuff is disposed of properly, we don’t have these problems.”
Bill McEwen is news director and columnist for GV Wire. He joined GV Wire in August 2017 after 37 years at The Fresno Bee. With The Bee, he served as Opinion Editor, City Hall reporter, Metro columnist, sports columnist and sports editor through the years. His work has been frequently honored by the California Newspapers Publishers Association, including authoring first-place editorials in 2015 and 2016. Bill and his wife, Karen, are proud parents of two adult sons, and they have two grandsons. You can contact Bill at 559-492-4031 or at Send an Email
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Paul Dictos
July 11, 2018 at 10:33 pm
A good man. A local treasure.
Patrck Ted Ferraro
July 13, 2018 at 3:16 pm
In San Jose and other communities in Silicon Valley, we recruit and deploy thousands of young and older volunteers to pick trash out of hundreds of miles of streams. Most of this comes into the rivers, as storm sewers carry litter, like food wrappers and cigaret butts, into our urban waterways. We are able to do this because high schools and college classes require public service as part of the completion of courses and degrees.
After this effort, which costs our governments nearly nothing, the mess will re-create itself within days of the efforts by these valiant trash warriors. Pollution prevention is not hauling shit out of our creeks, rivers and seashores. It’s banning plastic bags & straws, foam containers, and any packaging that won’t decompose quickly. read more: https://www.facebook.com/ptferraro
Lowell Young
July 22, 2018 at 2:40 pm
We need more people like Bohigian. Now, what if we used his example and expanded it to people who need jobs, who are homeless or just in need, and paid them to do this kind of thing all over our state. Everyone and everything would benefit.