poisoned waters

Poisoned Waters

Overview

In Poisoned Waters, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hedrick Smith examines the growing hazards of water pollution to human health and the ecosystem, revealing that storm-water runoff and agricultural waste from huge chicken farms are combining with chemicals in consumers’ face creams, deodorants, prescription medications and household cleaners to threaten both human health and the environment. Focusing on genetic mutations in fish and marine life as the “canary in the coal mine,” Poisoned Waters both sounds an urgent alarm and points to citizen and government action groups that are attempting to address the massive problem of water pollution.

Answer the following questions while viewing the movie. The movie can be viewed by connecting to the link – http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/poisonedwaters/ or create a search for Poisoned Waters on PBS Frontline.1. When was the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) formed? What events prompted its formation?

The EPA was formed 2. How did deregulation of industry during the Reagan years affect water quality and the overall power of the Environmental Protection Agency? 3. What does “voluntary compliance” mean? 4. Why do businesses favor voluntary compliance? 5. The Clean Water Act of 1972 allows citizens to sue alleged offenders if government agencies do not act. Why is that provision of the law important? 6. The expression “canary in the coal mine” means an early warning of danger. (Coal miners would carry canaries or small animals with them into mines to detect deadly but odorless and tasteless methane gas.) To what does the expression “canary in the coal mine” apply in Poisoned Waters? 7. Twenty million Americans took to the streets for the first Earth Day in 1970 as a result of pollution they could see and smell: The Cuyahoga River in Cleveland burned, with flames that towered eight stories high; the1969 oil spill in Santa Barbara closed virtually all the beaches in Southern California; people had declared Lake Erie dead. How, according to the film, have both pollution and people’s reaction to Earth Day changed since 1970? 8. What do “endocrine disruptors” do? Why do genetic mutations in fish disturb scientists so much? 9. How do the products that average people use each day end up polluting the nation’s and world’s waterways? 10. How should we pay for environmental cleanup? Should it be the responsibility of industry? Government? Individuals? Explain your reasoning.