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niyad

(113,471 posts)
Mon Apr 2, 2012, 09:51 PM Apr 2012

"liquid assets: the story of our water infrastructure"

watching the above-named program right now, from pbs, and completely recommend it.

(a couple of points--this was aired first in 2008--so little mention of how the repukes are gutting the clean water act, and the safe drinking water act. did point out how reagan eliminated the grants that cities were using to contstruct waste water systems.

Another point--in the doc, one of the people talks about tunnel 3 in nyc being online in 2012--looking it up just now--says earliest will be 2020)

quote from one of the experts (sorry, didn't catch his name, was turned away from set: federal government is not spending the money needed-has apparently decided to spend that money elsewhere--and that is just wrong)

PUBLIC TELEVISION DOCUMENTARY
Liquid Assets: The Story of Our Water Infrastructure

America’s aging water infrastructure systems–some in the ground for more than 100 years–are neglected and in dire need of national and local attention.

Though largely out of sight and out of mind, these drinking water, wastewater and stormwater systems provide the basis for public health and safety, economic prosperity, and quality of life.

Liquid Assets: The Story of Our Water Infrastructure explores the looming crisis underneath our feet and how ten cities and towns (Atlanta, Boston, Herminie, PA, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, New York City, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington, D.C.) are trying to meet the challenges. While the public takes system reliability for granted, cities must find the funds to rebuild eroding systems, separate sewer and stormwater flows, and protect the watershed. Industry and environmental experts, government officials, front-line water workers and citizens reveal how their communities are working to ensure the viability of water infrastructure assets.

The 90-minute documentary, produced by Penn State Public Broadcasting (WPSU), will be available nationwide to all public broadcasting stations beginning October 1, 2008.

Visit www.liquidassets.psu.edu to view the trailer and to access the companion community toolkit, intended to help facilitate discussions that extend beyond the broadcast.

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/blueprintamerica/blogs/the-dig-liquid-assets-the-story-of-our-water-infrastructure/86/

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