Bali beaches ‘most polluted’: surf champ

WORLD surfing champion Kelly Slater says Bali’s beaches are littered with the “worst pollution” he has ever seen. Slater, who has won 11 Association of Surfing Professionals world championships, voiced his concerns on popular micro-blogging website Twitter on Sunday (Melbourne time) from Bali.

“If Bali doesn’t #DoSomething serious about this pollution it’ll be impossible to surf here in a few years. Worst I’ve ever seen,” he told his hundreds of thousands of followers.

When asked by a fan to elaborate on the source of the pollution, he tweeted: “Everything. Plastic, random rubbish, medical waste/needles on beach. Disgusting. Smelly water. Really sad.” He said solutions to the problem would require support from multiple industries. Slater later re-published — but did not respond to — a follower’s suggestion he make a documentary to prompt the Indonesian government to examine the problem. Bali was ranked third on CNN’s list of 50 best surfing spots — after Hawaii and Jeffrey’s Bay — in the world earlier this year.
“The island attracts the gnarliest surfers from Australia and Hawaii plus beginners from across the globe; all of whom can enjoy these perfect glassy faces,” CNN reporter Jade Bremner said.
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Jane Lee- April 25, 2012

SDSI Article

The People’s Movement: A “conscious” entrepreneurial leap with SDSI
By Chuck Scott

Late-morning sunlight streams through two skylights, warming the two-story building just off the Cedros Avenue Design District in Solana Beach.
Up in the loft office, CEO Kevin Flanagan is deep in discussion with design and marketing guru Mark Wystrach about their company’s new line of shoes for next spring. Flanagan jots down notes on a whiteboard resting on the floor as Wystrach paces, taking care not to step on the nearly two dozen color printouts of proposed shoe designs neatly aligned near his feet.
Satisfied they have enough new offerings for both their men’s and women’s lines, they wrap up the business meeting with a heartfelt hug.

Welcome to The People’s Movement, a nine-month-old shoe company with a mission to produce products inspired by the working class in an environmentally conscious manner.
Running a start-up has been a major change for Flanagan, whose background includes 16 years with several of the top actions sports brands in the country and who had risen to Vice President of Marketing at Reef before leaving to start his own company.

“I’d always wanted to be an entrepreneur – an inventor or an entrepreneur, is what I thought I’d be as a child,” Flanagan says. When a hoped-for promotion to the president’s position at Reef failed to materialize, he said it seemed like the perfect catalyst to pursue that passion.

“I really viewed not getting that job as a blessing,” he says. “It allowed me to have the runway and the freedom to follow my dream.”

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