Crapshoot
April 12
7:30 pm
A Film About Our Sewers
Filmmaker Jeff McKay takes viewers on an eye-opening journey around the world to explore different approaches to sewage, starting at the 2,500 year old Cloaca Maxima in Rome, where the modern concept of sewers began.
A hazardous mix of solid and liquid waste is flushed into the sewer every day — literally billions of gallons of water passing through municipal sewer systems - composed of unknown quantities of chemicals, solvents, heavy metals, human waste, and food.
The questions become: Where does it all go? What effect does that have on us?
From ancient times, countries have chosen the sewer as the waste management
system of choice, flushing untold amounts of household and industrial contaminants
that inevitably resurface in the food chain; fish swim through rivers choked
with waste water, while processed sewage sludge is spread on farmland as a
fertilizer.
Filmed in Italy, India, Sweden, the United States and Canada, this bold documentary questions whether the sewer is alleviating or compounding our waste problem. While scientists warn of links between sewage practices and potential health risks, our fundamental attitudes toward waste are being challenged by activists, engineers, and concerned citizens alike. Does our need to dispose of waste take precedence over public health and safety? What are the alternatives?
When, Where, Ticketing
| When | April 12, 2009, 7:30 pm |
| Location | Columbia Center for the Arts, Hood River |
| Tickets | Donation appreciated. |
| More Info | Please contact Columbia Center for the Arts, 541-387-8877. |
Sponsored by the City of Hood River.

