Home
ArticlesDepartmentsEventsThe SceneRelocation GuideSubscribe FreeNewsletterseBrochuresContests
A Little Inspiration
A Trend Toward Transparency
Business Class
Doing Business (and Pleasure) in the Big Apple
Emotional Fallout from a Foundering Economy
Express to the Future
Great New Gadgets
Information, On Location
Leading Question
Life in the Fast Lane
Making a Match
Making Medicine Easier to Swallow
Making Waves
On the Job
Prepackaged Business
Problem Solver
Road Trip!

advertisement


Articles > Past Issues > 2008 > January 2008 > Making Waves

Making Waves

Quinn Ruelle President, Red Tide Relief

Lauren Bernaldo

Quinn Ruelle remembers exactly where he was when his philanthropic juices began flowing. "We were living in a condo on Bonita Beach. The red tide was the worst I’d seen it," he says. "I thought, ‘Man, I’ve got to do something about this.’"

Two years ago, Ruelle, 44, founded Red Tide Relief, a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding the cause of the toxic algae and minimizing its impact. "I’m an avid fisherman and I’ve seen red tide kill generations of fish. It’s a significant thing, considering what it does to sea life and the respiratory problems it causes for people."

Ruelle, who owns an electronics-distribution company in New Jersey, raises money for the effort by selling donated electronics on the organization’s Web site, www.redtiderelief.org. Red Tide Relief recently gave $50,000 to Florida Gulf Coast University to help create wet labs at the Vester/Marine Science site in Bonita Springs and to fund student research projects on the single-cell organism.

"Some of the people out there doing similar research are politically motivated, and I’m not a big fan of helping people with their own agendas, so that’s why I gave the money to FGCU," he says.

Right now, Red Tide Relief is a volunteer venture of four people. Among other tasks, Ruelle collects water samples and sends them to the state for testing. "They don’t get a lot of samples from 30, 50, 70 miles offshore, so we’re able to help them with the research they do," he says.

With Ruelle living in Bonita Springs, where he has since he moved into a house, he can see results of what they do. "My biggest concern is getting rid of red tide right here in Southwest Florida," he says. "I’d like to fix where we live."

 

 

 


********************************************************************************************************

Subscribe to Gulfshore Business now ยป

********************************************************************************************************

Current rating: 0 (0 ratings)

Send this to a friend...
Your message (click here):


Bookmark this page to:

Add to Yahoo Bookmarks Add to Facebook Add to Ask Add to Blogmarks Add to MyAOL Add to Delicious Add to Multiply Add to Faves Add to Twitter Add to Live Add to Furl Add to Segnalo Add to Reddit Add to Terchnorati Add to StumbleUpon Add to Digg Add to Slashdot Add to Spurl Add to Yahoo MyWeb Add to Newsvine Add to MySpace Add to Diigo Add to Backflip Add to Google Bookmarks

advertisement


advertisement


Bookmark This Site | Contact Us | About Us | Magazine Advertising | Privacy Policy | Legal | Site Map

© 2011 Gulfshore Media, LLC., All Rights Reserved

The information contained within this site is provided by us as a service for our readers.
Although this website strives to provide the most accurate and reliable information, this site cannot and does
not guarantee the accuracy, sufficiency, completeness, correctness or timeliness of such information.
You are responsible for confirming the accuracy and reliability of all information
provided on this website prior to making any decisions based on such information. 

Sarasota Magazine | BIZ941 | Gulfshore Life | Gulfshore Business | Homebuyer Magazine
 

This site is a member of the City & Regional Magazine Association Online Network

CRMA