UT professor’s film on Flint water crisis receives PBS distribution

August 9, 2018 | Arts, News, UToday, Arts and Letters
By Angela Riddel



The National Educational Telecommunications Association has contracted with Holly Hey, UT professor of film, for exclusive public television distribution rights of her film, “Crossing Water — Flint Michigan — 2017,” a documentary about the ongoing water crisis.

Hey worked with the nonprofit service organization Crossing Water to highlight the continuing needs and challenges facing the residents of Flint and the social service volunteers who help them.

The film will broadcast regionally for the first time on WNED in Buffalo, N.Y., Saturday, Aug. 11, at 5 p.m.

Katherine Larsen, senior director of radio/TV programming for WNED, said Hey’s film is a “great program on an ongoing issue. Clean water is vital to our communities, especially in the Great Lakes region.”

Flint made national news in 2014 when the city’s emergency manager switched the source of the city’s water, plaguing residents with a host of immediate and toxic problems, including deadly bacteria, outbreaks and deaths from Legionnaires’ disease, and the widespread presence of lead in the city’s drinking water.

Hey

In the film, Hey highlights the work of Crossing Water, which brings together social workers and other volunteers to provide water, services, and access to resources to the hardest hit residents of Flint. Hey weaves together multiple stories of Crossing Water volunteers, staff and Flint residents, creating a portrait of what it is like to live within an ongoing systemic disaster.

Michael Hood, executive director of Crossing Water, called the film “a sobering story of the Flint water crisis.”

Hey believes all Americans should care about Flint because it’s a crisis that is indicative of the future for many U.S. communities. According to CNN, more than 5,300 municipalities around the country are in violation of lead rules.

“Eventually, systems will fail in any community, systems essential to human life like water and power. We can’t ignore that we are all vulnerable to such collapse, wherever we live in America,” said Hey, who is head of the Film/Video Program in the Department of Theatre and Film in the College of Arts and Letters.

Hey directed the documentary, which she co-produced with Lee Fearnside, associate professor of art at Tiffin University.

Learn more about the film and watch a trailer at crossingwater.movie.

Click to access the login or register cheese