Debbie McGuire's Wetlands Legacy: A New Chapter
Debbie McGuire, the long-standing executive director of the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center in Huntington Beach, California, is retiring after over three decades of service. Her career began during the 1990 American Trader oil spill, where she and other volunteers rescued oiled birds and wildlife. Inspired by the Exxon Valdez spill, she helped establish a dedicated facility in 1997, which has since become the areas go-to spot for injured, orphaned, or sick native birds and animals. The center has handled various environmental challenges and now includes a teaching hospital. As McGuire retires, new challenges like highly pathogenic avian influenza threaten birds and seals, and the center is searching for a successor to lead big projects like a one-hundred-foot flight cage and a new two-story building.
Support the show:
Get a discount at https://solipillow.com/discount/dnn.
Advertise on DNN:
advertise@thednn.ai
This is an automated, high-level news summary based on public reporting.
Report issues to feedback@thednn.ai.
View sources & latest updates:
https://sources.thednn.ai/68c89e1477ba346a
Bipartisan Housing Bill Passes Senate, Heads to House
Trump Taps Strategic Oil Reserve Amid Iran Conflict
Zizian Leader's Mental Competency Questioned
Shooting at Old Dominion University: Gunman Dead, Two Injured
Oil War Spikes Markets, Stagflation Fears
Starmer's Mandelson Appointment: A Risky Move
Trump Warns Iran: World Cup Risks Lives
Trump's Visa Changes Force International Teachers from Rural Schools
Clyburn Seeks 18th Term, Potential Black Speaker
Georgia's Film Industry Struggles: A Tale of Hard Times
Little Saigon's Economic Boom: A New Era of Growth
Israeli Soldiers Accused of Prisoner Abuse
Kids' Urinary Tract Infections: Symptoms, Causes, & Prevention