I took the train into Boston on Thursday for a conference and was pleased to find this sign over the door at the former Choo-Choo shop.
Jane Curran had left me know they were going to expand. I haven't caught up with BJ or Dave yet but when I do, I'll provide additional info on when they open.
Hard to believe it is almost a year ago that they opened downtown (4/13/09)! You can view the photo slide show of the opening day here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2009/04/grand-opening-cafe-dolce.html
Providing accurate and timely information about what matters in Franklin, MA since 2007. * Working in collaboration with Franklin TV and Radio (wfpr.fm) since October 2019 *
Friday, February 5, 2010
Franklin, MA: Citizens Rail Trail Committee - meeting 2/9/10
The next meeting of the FCRTC will be held at the Franklin YMCA, Forge Hill Rd. Franklin. The meeting on February 9th will commence at 7:30 PM and conclude NLT 9:30 PM.
I. Call to Order / Introductions of New Attendees
A. Introduction of new attendees
B. Volunteer to write minutes of the meeting
C. Motion to accept previous meeting minutes
II. Report from our representative from DCR
A. Gates at Spring St
B. Leveling of the Trail
C. Walking Trails
III. Membership Committee Report (Denison, McKeown, Sawyer)
A. Committee to report on membership activity
IV. Report from Finance Committee (Rossetti)
A. Report from Treasurer
VII. Report of Fund Raising Committee (Sawyer)
A. Report on fund raising activities
a. Raffle Ticket Sales
b. Road Race Committee
VIII. Report on Meeting with Franklin PLUC 2/1/10 (Svendsen)
IX. Open Discussion on Restructuring FCRTC
X. Unfinished Business:
A. Questions from members / attendees
XI. New Business:
A.
XII. Set Date for Next Meeting and Adjourn
Additional information on the Citizens Rail Trail Committee can be found on their website
http://www.franklinrailtrail.org/
You can find prior posts on their activities by searching on Franklin Matters for "rail trail"
"build confidence in a high-pressure situation"
"It's a way to compete on a team for kids who may or may not be athletic," said Franklin mock trial team coach Mike Walsh.
Walsh, a social studies teacher at Franklin High School, said the school has recognized mock trial as a true team sport, going so far as awarding varsity letters to those who make the team.
Read the full article about mock trial teams here
Teens try their hand at the law
from The Milford Daily News News RSS by Melanie Graham/Daily News staff
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Waste Discussion Recap
For a short Town Council meeting, there was a bit of interesting discussion.
Assuming the second reading does come forward, all it is supposed to do is set the rates for the Town to charge the residents. The contract will still be negotiated sometime before the current one expires on June 30th.
Stay tuned to see what happens next week!
The discussion started right away with Citizen's Comments
Michael Galvin, Vice-President of American Waste Services, LLC (the current waste contractor and a bidder on the new contract), also a Franklin resident spoke.
He referenced an 11 page document that apparently the Town Council received (at least some of them) and tried to condense his remarks to keep within the guidelines for citizen's comments (5 minute limit)
He didn't make it; he got cut off at five, but then was allocated another five minutes from another resident.
This is what I walked away with:
- The contract is still under negotiation, three bidders are involved, why is this discussion in public, shouldn't the other two have equal access?
- There is some dispute about the numbers. If the current contractor has actual numbers, why wouldn't they be considered along with the research from other communities? Why weren't the actual numbers from Franklin's experience included earlier in the discussion. (If they were, it wasn't apparent from the discussion Weds.)
- Mr Galvin's comment should have stood alone. However, when the second piece of legislation scheduled for the meeting agenda came up for discussion, the conversation deviated from the matter at hand to get into this.
- The second piece of legislation was the authorization of the purchase of the totters/bins to implement the single stream contract. The totters would be used no matter which of the three bidders won.
The argument by Councilor Vallee that this is the wrong time to spend any money is interesting. This is actually the best time to buy the totters (assuming we go with this single stream process).
- The interest rate (for financing the purchase) is as low as it can be
- The cost for the bins will be low
- The waste rate will actually be a cost savings for Franklin residents (from $244 to $220, a $24 savings)
- It will be a sort of 'stimulus purchase' for the vendor who actually sells us the bins/totters, hence a really good deal, especially at this time
Given that the waste fee second reading will come before the Council soon (likely next week), this discussion will possibly be continued and revisited with more time wasted (pun intended) by some folks trying to.micro-manage the situation.
Assuming the second reading does come forward, all it is supposed to do is set the rates for the Town to charge the residents. The contract will still be negotiated sometime before the current one expires on June 30th.
Stay tuned to see what happens next week!
Town Council Mtg Smry 02/03/10
The collection of live reported posts from the Town Council meeting on Weds 2/3/10 can be found here
Senator Spilka to Hold Office Hours in Franklin; Fri - Feb 19
Senator Karen Spilka to Hold Office Hours in Franklin
Join Senator Spilka and Puja Mehta, Senator Spilka's District and Constituent Services Director, for coffee and conversation. They will update constituents on the latest news and events, and answer any questions you may have.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Franklin: Elizabeth's Bagels and More
10:00 a.m -11:00 a.m.
456 West Central Street, Franklin
In the News - authorized to buy
Highlights of the Town Council discussion on the new waste recycling system from Wednesday's meeting are reported in the paper:
Franklin votes to borrow money to fund new trash system
from The Milford Daily News News RSS by Ashley Studley/Daily News staff
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
FM Budget Workshop Part 4 - 1/25/10
This is part 4 of the Budget Workshop held on Monday, Jan 25, 2010. Susan Gagner completes her presentation, Jim Dacey covers debt and Jeff Nutting explains the Stabilization Fund and 'free cash'.
Time: 26 minutes, 47 seconds
MP3 File
Session Notes:
Franklin held conducted a budget workshop on Monday, Jan 25, 2010. This is part four of the session recording. Susan Gagner, Town Comptroller, completes her presentation reviewing pages 8 and 9 on Net School Spending, and a little on Page 7, which was covered in Part 1.
Jeff Nutting introduces Jim Dacey, the Treasurer/Collector, who goes into detail on the debt process, highlighting the almost continuous planning and re-evaluation done in this area. The master spreadsheet they use has had 57 revisions in about 7 or 8 years.
Jeff gets asked by Scott Mason to explain the Stabilization Fund.
Steve Sherlock asks for them to cover "free cash".
The group then takes a break for refreshments and conversation. We'll resume in part 5 with the School Budget.
Susan Gagner - Page 8 - Net School Spending
Susan Gagner - Page 9 - Net School Spending (cont'd)
Susan Gagner - Page 7 - Chapter 70 and School Budget history
Jim Dacey - Debt process details
Jim Dacey - Debt plan - latest revision
Jim Dacey - Debt percent of overall budget
-----
Thank you for listening.
For additional information, please visit FranklinMAtters.blogspot.com/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana" c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission
I hope you enjoy!
Note: email subscribers will need to click through to the website to listen to the audio version.
Live reporting from the workshop can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-special-meeting-budget.html
and here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-budget-workshop.html
Part 1 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/fm-budget-workshop-12510-part-1.html
Part 2 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/fm-budget-workshop-12510-part-1.html
Part 3 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/02/fm-budget-workshop-part-3-12510.html
Time: 26 minutes, 47 seconds
MP3 File
Session Notes:
Franklin held conducted a budget workshop on Monday, Jan 25, 2010. This is part four of the session recording. Susan Gagner, Town Comptroller, completes her presentation reviewing pages 8 and 9 on Net School Spending, and a little on Page 7, which was covered in Part 1.
Jeff Nutting introduces Jim Dacey, the Treasurer/Collector, who goes into detail on the debt process, highlighting the almost continuous planning and re-evaluation done in this area. The master spreadsheet they use has had 57 revisions in about 7 or 8 years.
Jeff gets asked by Scott Mason to explain the Stabilization Fund.
Steve Sherlock asks for them to cover "free cash".
The group then takes a break for refreshments and conversation. We'll resume in part 5 with the School Budget.
Susan Gagner - Page 8 - Net School Spending
Susan Gagner - Page 9 - Net School Spending (cont'd)
Susan Gagner - Page 7 - Chapter 70 and School Budget history
Jim Dacey - Debt process details
Jim Dacey - Debt plan - latest revision
Jim Dacey - Debt percent of overall budget
-----
Thank you for listening.
For additional information, please visit FranklinMAtters.blogspot.com/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana" c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission
I hope you enjoy!
Note: email subscribers will need to click through to the website to listen to the audio version.
Live reporting from the workshop can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-special-meeting-budget.html
and here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-budget-workshop.html
Part 1 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/fm-budget-workshop-12510-part-1.html
Part 2 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/fm-budget-workshop-12510-part-1.html
Part 3 of the workshop recording can be found here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/02/fm-budget-workshop-part-3-12510.html
Live reporting - Closing items
K. TOWN ADMINISTRATOR’S REPORT
none
L. OLD BUSINESS
none
M. NEW BUSINESS
none
N. COUNCIL COMMENTS
Powderly - under-utilization of funding available for seniors to provide relief from property taxes
Pfeffer - First information night on Housing trust, 6 couples came for info; Medway looking to become a green community, is Franklin looking at this?
Nutting - we are looking at it, but we are not sure we can meet the standard, our buildings are newer and may not be able to save as much as they would like. We have applied for solar panels for one of the schools
Pfeffer - One of Carlo's words of wisdom was if someone sends an anonymous letter, ignore it
Mason - yes, I have been getting unsigned letters, not that I am not concerned, but if you don't sign it, I can't follow up on it
O. EXECUTIVE SESSION – Negotiations, Litigation, Real Property, as May Be Required
not needed
P. ADJOURN
motion to adjorn
none
L. OLD BUSINESS
none
M. NEW BUSINESS
none
N. COUNCIL COMMENTS
Powderly - under-utilization of funding available for seniors to provide relief from property taxes
Pfeffer - First information night on Housing trust, 6 couples came for info; Medway looking to become a green community, is Franklin looking at this?
Nutting - we are looking at it, but we are not sure we can meet the standard, our buildings are newer and may not be able to save as much as they would like. We have applied for solar panels for one of the schools
Pfeffer - One of Carlo's words of wisdom was if someone sends an anonymous letter, ignore it
Mason - yes, I have been getting unsigned letters, not that I am not concerned, but if you don't sign it, I can't follow up on it
O. EXECUTIVE SESSION – Negotiations, Litigation, Real Property, as May Be Required
not needed
P. ADJOURN
motion to adjorn
Live reporting - Legislation
J. LEGISLATION FOR ACTION
• Resolution 10-85: Authorization to Expend Funds in Excess of Available Appropriations
a regular house keeping requirement, better to be a little under than over
motion to approve - passed 8-0
• Resolution 10-86: Authorization to Borrow for the Purchase of Trash Totters
motion to approve - passed
Discussion
Jeff in order to implement the new system, need to front the cost for the bins/totters
once paid off, the fee could be used to replenish them as needed and still drop over time
Vallee speaking against the purchase now, the timing is wrong
Nutting - We were told to fix this, we spent more than three years on this, we worked with the Recycling Committee, did a ton of research,
Whalen - I am in favor of this
Garella - the negative vote was due to the single bin option, not due to any other numbers. If you don't go with this program, the cost will increase over time.
McGann - clarification question on bidder delivery of new truck
Nutting - either bidder would have to meet the requirements of the RFP
Nutting - we went out with an increase in recycling, we have been to the Council previously on a pay-as-you-throw process and you didn't like that, we have now come with the single stream process
Pfeffer - my concern is with the seniors being able to handle the units
McGann - proceeding to ask Jeff
Mason - discussion is bordering on the item that would come up for discussion next week. This is for the totters, next week is the fee schedule
Nutting - we would need totters for this system
McGann - question on who pays for some items
Nutting - residents already pay for some items, some of which it will increase, the $25 fee may not be the contract, we haven't finished negotiation yet
McGann - how is there such a difference amongst the bidders
Nutting - I can speak to that, they have to meet the requirements of the RFP
Roll call (requires 2/3 majority)
Jones - can we combine this and do this next week
Vallee - I am against this for the reasons I mentioned before
Passed 6-2 McGann, Vallee - both voted no
1 Absent (Zollo)
• Resolution 10-87: Rescission of Authorization to Borrow – Municipal Off-Street Parking
house keeping item, authorized several years ago, taking it off the books but it is not relevant to anything now
Motion to approve - passed 8-0
• Resolution 10-88: Rescission of Authorization to Borrow – Purchase of Street Lights
The purchases were made with cash and we did not need to borrow to pay for them.
Another house keeping item, authorized several years ago, taking it off the books but it is not relevant to anything now
Motion to approve - passed 8-0
• Resolution 10-85: Authorization to Expend Funds in Excess of Available Appropriations
a regular house keeping requirement, better to be a little under than over
motion to approve - passed 8-0
• Resolution 10-86: Authorization to Borrow for the Purchase of Trash Totters
motion to approve - passed
Discussion
Jeff in order to implement the new system, need to front the cost for the bins/totters
once paid off, the fee could be used to replenish them as needed and still drop over time
Vallee speaking against the purchase now, the timing is wrong
Nutting - We were told to fix this, we spent more than three years on this, we worked with the Recycling Committee, did a ton of research,
Whalen - I am in favor of this
Garella - the negative vote was due to the single bin option, not due to any other numbers. If you don't go with this program, the cost will increase over time.
McGann - clarification question on bidder delivery of new truck
Nutting - either bidder would have to meet the requirements of the RFP
Nutting - we went out with an increase in recycling, we have been to the Council previously on a pay-as-you-throw process and you didn't like that, we have now come with the single stream process
Pfeffer - my concern is with the seniors being able to handle the units
McGann - proceeding to ask Jeff
Mason - discussion is bordering on the item that would come up for discussion next week. This is for the totters, next week is the fee schedule
Nutting - we would need totters for this system
McGann - question on who pays for some items
Nutting - residents already pay for some items, some of which it will increase, the $25 fee may not be the contract, we haven't finished negotiation yet
McGann - how is there such a difference amongst the bidders
Nutting - I can speak to that, they have to meet the requirements of the RFP
Roll call (requires 2/3 majority)
Jones - can we combine this and do this next week
Vallee - I am against this for the reasons I mentioned before
Passed 6-2 McGann, Vallee - both voted no
1 Absent (Zollo)
• Resolution 10-87: Rescission of Authorization to Borrow – Municipal Off-Street Parking
house keeping item, authorized several years ago, taking it off the books but it is not relevant to anything now
Motion to approve - passed 8-0
• Resolution 10-88: Rescission of Authorization to Borrow – Purchase of Street Lights
The purchases were made with cash and we did not need to borrow to pay for them.
Another house keeping item, authorized several years ago, taking it off the books but it is not relevant to anything now
Motion to approve - passed 8-0
Live reporting - License
G. LICENSE TRANSACTIONS - Application for a New Wine & Malt License – Spruce Pond Creamery
Motion to approve, Passed 8-0
H. PRESENTATIONS/DISCUSSIONS
none
I. SUBCOMMITTEE REPORTS
none
Motion to approve, Passed 8-0
H. PRESENTATIONS/DISCUSSIONS
none
I. SUBCOMMITTEE REPORTS
none
Live reporting - Town Council
Attending: Kelly, Jones, Vallee, Whalen, Mason, Pfeffer, McGann, Powderly
Missing: Zollo
A. APPROVAL OF MINUTES – January 6, 2010
Motion to approve, with addition of sentence from S Whalen
Passed 8-0
B. ANNOUNCEMENTS
none
C. PROCLAMATIONS/RECOGNITIONS
none
D. CITIZEN COMMENTS
Michael Galvin, Franklin Resident, Vice-President - American Waste Services, LLC
speaking on cost for contract bidding of the waste program
"taking away services that residents currently have"
Robert Delllorco gave his five minutes to Michael to continue speaking
\(I'll add the recording of this later)
Gene Garella - Chairman, Recycling Committee
committee voted three times
unanimous to accept a single stream recycling
3-1 vote to accept (to be filled in)
voted against increasing the fee at Beaver St
program adds overflow bags to residents to cover for parties
recycling made easier with single stream
recycling increase should reduce waste tonnage
No questions allowed during citizens comments
E. APPOINTMENTS
none
F. HEARINGS
none
Missing: Zollo
A. APPROVAL OF MINUTES – January 6, 2010
Motion to approve, with addition of sentence from S Whalen
Passed 8-0
B. ANNOUNCEMENTS
none
C. PROCLAMATIONS/RECOGNITIONS
none
D. CITIZEN COMMENTS
Michael Galvin, Franklin Resident, Vice-President - American Waste Services, LLC
speaking on cost for contract bidding of the waste program
"taking away services that residents currently have"
Robert Delllorco gave his five minutes to Michael to continue speaking
\(I'll add the recording of this later)
Gene Garella - Chairman, Recycling Committee
committee voted three times
unanimous to accept a single stream recycling
3-1 vote to accept (to be filled in)
voted against increasing the fee at Beaver St
program adds overflow bags to residents to cover for parties
recycling made easier with single stream
recycling increase should reduce waste tonnage
No questions allowed during citizens comments
E. APPOINTMENTS
none
F. HEARINGS
none
More on cyberbullying
... we need to treat bullying as a public health issue. We reduced teen smoking and drunk driving with massive education programs. We can do the same with bullying.
We’ve learned little in the United States, even though the study cited our national anti-bullying efforts to date. I suspect that the reasons the US bullying rate has not moved are complex. But a good place to start is coming up this Sunday as a huge percentage of Americans will sit down in living rooms and bars and watch the New Orleans Saints and the Indianapolis Colts play in the Super Bowl.
Most bullying begins with nasty words, and what will we certainly see on Sunday? We’ll see player after player jawing at each other and talking trash. No media outlet seems above glorifying in some way the top trash talkers in sports, whether it is reminiscing about Muhammad Ali or observing the most flamboyant athletes of the moment.
And read all of Derrick Jackson's column in the Boston Globe here
The MA Trial Court Law Library page here has a great collection on the legislation around cyberbullying
My preference is for starting at home. The schools can help but even if they do all they can, when a kid goes home and it is not reinforced, all the effort is lost.
Wha do you think?
Are your oil fired buners compliant?
From the massgov Twitter stream today, I saw:
When you follow the link you find: (bold added for my emphasis)
Is your oil fired burner compliant?
@massgov: Older oil burners must be upgraded to prevent leaks - A law enacted over a year ago (St. 2008, c.453) requires home... http://ow.ly/16tOyU
When you follow the link you find: (bold added for my emphasis)
The burner in my house failed and was replaced in Sep 2008 so I know we are compliant. This is the first I hear that there is a deadline to be complaint by July 1, 2010.A law enacted over a year ago (St. 2008, c.453) requires homeowners with oil burners installed before 1990 to make a small change to their systems by July 1, 2010 to prevent leaks. According to the Mass. DEP, under the Homeowner Oil Heating System Upgrade and Insurance Law, "Owners of 1- to 4-unit residences that are heated with oil must already have or install an oil safety valve or an oil supply line with a protective sleeve... Installation of these devices must be performed by a licensed oil burner technician." "It is important to note that heating oil systems installed on or after January 1, 1990 most likely are already in compliance because state fire codes implemented these requirements on new installations at that time."
The good news is that the law also requires insurers who offer homeowner's insurance to also offer coverage for oil leaks to those who have certified that they have made the repairs or are exempt from the requirement.
More information, including a diagram of necessary repairs, is available at the Mass. Department of Environmental Protection site.
Is your oil fired burner compliant?
In the News - road repairs
Ashley Studley, Milford Daily News, filed her report from the Finance Committee meeting that took place last night.
Franklin looks at street repairs
from The Milford Daily News News RSS by Ashley Studley/Daily News staff
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Partial Live Reporting at FINCOM
I didn't get to tune into the Finance Committee meeting Tuesday evening until it was an hour underway. I did catch part of Chief McCarraher's discussion on the needs of the Fire Dept, and then Robert (Brutus) Cantoreggi's discussion on the DPW's needs.
I will catch up to the full meeting when the video is available on demand and report on the capital outlook. The one good item from this is the attempt to start spending something on a regular basis to repair our roads. As you may be aware, there are approx 200 miles of roads, many of which were built in the last 30 years and with no budget for road repair we are asking for trouble.
Yes, some of our roads do get repaired as part of the water enterprise account when water mains need to be repaired and upgraded. Or when we get some Chapter 90 money from the state, approx 750,000 the past several years. The Town has been very thrifty on this front and will need to start spending something significant on a regular basis to begin to handle the demands.
The Finance Committee did not vote on any capital budget items this evening. Based upon what happened last year, Jeff Nutting will wait to see how the winter treats the snow/ice budget before committing to use some of the "free cash" for capital items.
The meeting can be viewed on the internet video archive for the Town here
I will catch up to the full meeting when the video is available on demand and report on the capital outlook. The one good item from this is the attempt to start spending something on a regular basis to repair our roads. As you may be aware, there are approx 200 miles of roads, many of which were built in the last 30 years and with no budget for road repair we are asking for trouble.
Yes, some of our roads do get repaired as part of the water enterprise account when water mains need to be repaired and upgraded. Or when we get some Chapter 90 money from the state, approx 750,000 the past several years. The Town has been very thrifty on this front and will need to start spending something significant on a regular basis to begin to handle the demands.
The Finance Committee did not vote on any capital budget items this evening. Based upon what happened last year, Jeff Nutting will wait to see how the winter treats the snow/ice budget before committing to use some of the "free cash" for capital items.
The meeting can be viewed on the internet video archive for the Town here
Text translator for 'teen speak'
Texting is all the rage amongst teens.
Cyberbullying happens to be one theme amongst the many messages sent.
LG has a website to help translate the texting shortcuts used.
You can translate from the short cut to SMS text or from a regular English sentence translate to text.
Related links:
Teen Angels is a group of middle school students working to raise awareness amongst their peers on cyberbullying. The TeenAngels presented to the School Committee earlier this month. You can see what they did here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-teen-angels.html
and here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/teen-angels-pledge-text-think-send.html
Legislation is being discussed to address cyberbullying. I don't think legislation is the answer. Parents, teachers, and the teens themselves can do a better job of creating awareness and changing behaviors.
Cyberbullying happens to be one theme amongst the many messages sent.
LG has a website to help translate the texting shortcuts used.
You can translate from the short cut to SMS text or from a regular English sentence translate to text.
Related links:
Teen Angels is a group of middle school students working to raise awareness amongst their peers on cyberbullying. The TeenAngels presented to the School Committee earlier this month. You can see what they did here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/live-reporting-teen-angels.html
and here
http://franklinmatters.blogspot.com/2010/01/teen-angels-pledge-text-think-send.html
Legislation is being discussed to address cyberbullying. I don't think legislation is the answer. Parents, teachers, and the teens themselves can do a better job of creating awareness and changing behaviors.
Green Reel - FLOW, Sunday, Feb 7 at 7:00 PM
A series of films on sustainable living called "The Green Reel" will be held Sunday evenings in North Attleboro. The films are presented free of charge. Some refreshments are available. Discussion about the film is encouraged.
"Flow" will be shown Feb 7th at 7:00 PM
"An astonishingly wide-ranging film. An informed and heartfelt examination of the tug of war between public health and private interests." - New York Times
"Lively and engaging...Smartly Done" - Los Angeles Times
“The inconvenient truth at the center of Flow: For Love of Water is that while the oil crisis is intensely debated and documented, disasters involving an even more essential fluid go perilously unnoticed.” - Slant Magazine
“Focusing on pollution, human rights, politics, and corruption, filmmaker Salina constructs an exceptionally articulate profile of the precarious relationship uniting human beings and water. “ - Rotten Tomatoes
----
Official Selection 2008 Sundance Film Festival
International Jury Prize 2008 Mumbai International Film Festival
Best Documentary 2008 Vail International Film Festival
Winner Best Documentary United Nations Association Film Festival
----
Irena Salina's award-winning documentary investigation into what experts label the most important political and environmental issue of the 21st Century - The World Water Crisis.
Salina builds a case against the growing privatization of the world's dwindling fresh water supply with an unflinching focus on politics, pollution, human rights, and the emergence of a domineering world water cartel.
Interviews with scientists and activists intelligently reveal the rapidly building crisis, at both the global and human scale, and the film introduces many of the governmental and corporate culprits behind the water grab, while begging the question "CAN ANYONE REALLY OWN WATER?"
Beyond identifying the problem, FLOW also gives viewers a look at the people and institutions providing practical solutions to the water crisis and those developing new technologies, which are fast becoming blueprints for a successful global and economic turnaround.
The flyer for the full series can be seen here:
"Flow" will be shown Feb 7th at 7:00 PM
Flow (For Love Of Water)
"An astonishingly wide-ranging film. An informed and heartfelt examination of the tug of war between public health and private interests." - New York Times
"Lively and engaging...Smartly Done" - Los Angeles Times
“The inconvenient truth at the center of Flow: For Love of Water is that while the oil crisis is intensely debated and documented, disasters involving an even more essential fluid go perilously unnoticed.” - Slant Magazine
“Focusing on pollution, human rights, politics, and corruption, filmmaker Salina constructs an exceptionally articulate profile of the precarious relationship uniting human beings and water. “ - Rotten Tomatoes
----
Official Selection 2008 Sundance Film Festival
International Jury Prize 2008 Mumbai International Film Festival
Best Documentary 2008 Vail International Film Festival
Winner Best Documentary United Nations Association Film Festival
----
Irena Salina's award-winning documentary investigation into what experts label the most important political and environmental issue of the 21st Century - The World Water Crisis.
Salina builds a case against the growing privatization of the world's dwindling fresh water supply with an unflinching focus on politics, pollution, human rights, and the emergence of a domineering world water cartel.
Interviews with scientists and activists intelligently reveal the rapidly building crisis, at both the global and human scale, and the film introduces many of the governmental and corporate culprits behind the water grab, while begging the question "CAN ANYONE REALLY OWN WATER?"
Beyond identifying the problem, FLOW also gives viewers a look at the people and institutions providing practical solutions to the water crisis and those developing new technologies, which are fast becoming blueprints for a successful global and economic turnaround.
The flyer for the full series can be seen here:
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