Gonna be a lot of irate citizens when they find out that they鈥檙e paying for water they鈥檙e not gonna get. 鈥 Jack Nicholson as J.J. 鈥淛ake鈥 Gittes in聽Chinatown
In 1994, a handful of California state officials met in secret with representatives from big agriculture to transform wide swaths of formerly arid land into some of the country’s most fertile megafarms. Two decades later, amidst an historic drought, the Monterey Amendments have all but depleted the state’s river waters, leaving homeowners with dry wells and agribusiness billionaires with skyrocketing profits.
,听a new National Geographic documentary from Emmy Award-winning director聽Marina Zenovich, examines the little-known events in California’s notorious history of water manipulation and the far-reaching implications for the thousands of people currently lacking access to safe drinking water. Playing like a real-life, modern-day聽Chinatown,聽Roman Polanski’s 1974 film noir, the film lifts the lid on the chilling effects California’s water crisis has on all of us when a public resource is privatized.
Following the Sundance Film Festival premiere,听国产视频 NYC聽presented a聽screening of聽Water & Power: A California Heist at Tumblr, followed by a discussion with the film’s producer, lead subject, and environmental experts on how everyday citizens are facing down the water crisis to better preserve one of our country’s most precious resources.
PARTICIPANTS
Juliette Eisner聽
Producer,听Water & Power: A California Heist
Adam Keats聽
Senior Attorney, Center for Food Safety
Lead subject,听Water & Power: A California Heist
Upmanu Lall聽
Director, Columbia Water Center, and聽Alan & Carol Silberstein Professor of Earth and Environmental Engineering, Columbia University
Justin Worland聽
Energy and environment reporter, TIME Magazine
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