well, that debris has been swirling through the pacific making its way to the continental u.s. and now here to hawaii. debris like part of this beer crate from japan. slamming the shores of one of hawaii s most remote beaches, debris, big and small. covering every inch of the beach coastline. the foreign markings tell where some of it comes from. these are definitely from japan. this is some type of pickle. that s definitely japanese. hawaii wildlife funds megan lamson has seen the debris since last fall, like refrigerator, large buoys, even an intact fishing boat from japan. sucked into the pacific on that horrifying day two years ago. traveling through the pacific, volunteers like hwf have been fighting the already big problem of marine debris. only made worse with the 1.5
mortgage. but lenders are trying to work with people to bring them back into the market sooner than the seven years. they are taking into account extenuating circumstances, maybe a divorce, layoff, health issue, other one-time events. lenders are being more sensitive as these former home owners are trying to get back in. carol? allison kosik live at the new york stock exchange. coming up in the newsroom, japan remembers a national tragedy, earthquake and tsunami two years today sending tons of debris into the ocean. even now, japan s toxic garbage is littering hawaii s coastline. e tens of thousands of dollars on their 401(k) to hidden fees. is that what you re looking for, like a hidden fee in your giant mom bag? maybe i have them. oh that s right i don t because i rolled my account over to e-trade where. woah. okay. they don t have hidden fees. hey fern. the junk drawer? why would they. is that my gerbil? you said he moved to a tiny farm.
pacific. then you open them up and this is, you know, what you find. reporter: he says every single bird he s opened up had some sort of plastic, some large ones like these toys and lighters in the adult birds. goes way beyond. reporter: it s also in our fish. noaa fishery biologist is cutting into a lancet fish, this is what tu that eat, the tu that that ends up on your plate. what s that black thing? a plastic bag. reporter: nearly half of the fish jan s cut into had plastic. one thing that is a concern that we don t know is if chemicals are absorbed by the fish. reporter: a disaster still in the making now widening its reach. the environmental activists here in hawaii say there s nothing they can do about the tsunami