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[peaceful soundtrack playing]
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Downloaded from
YTS.MX
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[announcer]
What kind of country is Canada?
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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX
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That depends on the eyes you put on it.
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[Ellen Page] Nova Scotia:
Canada's ocean playground.
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I grew up in the capital city, Halifax.
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Drive less than an hour away
in any direction
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and you're on a scenic shoreline
without a worry in the world.
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In some ways,
Nova Scotia is the embodiment
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of what many view Canada to be.
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A sweet escape.
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As a child, this is the image
I had of the province.
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Connected to nature, open-hearted...
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and welcoming to all walks of life.
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After all,
Canada takes care of its people.
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-[woman] Are you Canadian?
-[man laughs]
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[Ellen]
We have universal healthcare.
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Marriage equality became a reality
14 years ago.
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[cheering and applause]
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And we're the second country
in the world to legalize weed.
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-[laughing]
-♪ Cannabis, cannabis ♪
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[Ellen] But when you look
beneath the surface,
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the picture-perfect image begins to crack.
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[protesters chanting]
No way! No way! No way!
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[chanting continues]
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[Ellen] Politicians promise one thing
and they do another...
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Our history of colonialism
continues today.
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And our chances to save the environment
are becoming slimmer every day,
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as corporate interests seem
more important to the government
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than public concerns.
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And the more I saw, the more
I couldn't help but use my platform
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to speak out.
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Do you have any idea how we can get
the public and the media
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to pay more attention to what's
happening in global warming?
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I just want to say, too, people,
particularly the most marginalized people,
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and particularly people in the world
that had nothing to do with this,
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are the ones that are
suffering the most currently.
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Including in Canada.
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Including the environmental racism
that's happening in Canada,
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including the province I'm from.
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It's like, this is
something that's happening.
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And it's happening,
the most marginalized people,
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and we need to be talking about it.
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[Ingrid over speaker] Hello. Ingrid.
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-[woman] Hi, Ingrid.
-Hey, Ingrid.
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-[Ingrid] Hi. I'll let you in.
-[women laugh]
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Thank you.
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[Ellen] I'm going to meet
with Professor Ingrid Waldron,
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who wrote the essential book
on environmental racism in Nova Scotia,
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There's Something in the Water.
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[Ellen] Nice to see you.
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-Thank you for everything.
-Nice to meet you. Oh, no problem.
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I woke up one morning in my office
and I went to my Twitter.
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And I saw somebody new following me.
It said "Tiny Canadian."
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It didn't say "Ellen Page, actress,"
so I didn't think anything of it.
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And then I think I went back
a month later
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and my Twitter page had
all these comments.
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Like never before.
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And I was like, "What is going on?"
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And I realized it was you!
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And it was there that this journey began.
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Environmental racism is the condition,
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is the problem,
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of disproportionate exposure
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of indigenous communities,
black communities,
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other communities of color,
to environmental burdens,
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to pollutants and contaminants.
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But it's also about the slow response by
government, right?
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To address these issues.
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What we know is that where you live
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has bearing on your well-being.
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In Canada, your postal code
determines your health.
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So we know that certain communities
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are less healthy
because of where they live.
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Most African Nova Scotians live
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in historical African Nova Scotian
communities,
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which are rural communities,
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and many of them are near landfills.
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And we know indigenous communities
as well are the ones
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that tend to be disproportionately located
near to these hazardous sites.
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When you're living in out-of-the-way,
invisible communities
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that often lack a voice,
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that are invisible to government,
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um, then often your voice isn't heard.
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You have to look
at environmental racism
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within the context of the history
of Nova Scotia,
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within the context of colonialism
in Nova Scotia and Canada.
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There is a reluctance,
a hesitance in Canada,
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to name racism.
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Racism imbeds itself
into all of our social structures,
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and in Canada we tend
to steer clear of that.
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Racism and environmental racism
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have real impacts on the ground,
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with respect
to these particular communities.
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It has impacted black
and indigenous communities socially,
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economically, and politically.
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When you look at particular communities
as not being worthy...
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of having no humanity...
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of, uh, not being valuable,
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which is how we typically think
of non-white peoples...
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then it makes sense in many ways
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that you're not going to respond
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in the similar way as you would
with a white community
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because...
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these communities don't mean
anything to you, to individuals.
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So I think there's a detachment,
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as if you're not taking time
to meet communities
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and get a sense of their priorities.
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Their experiences, their challenges
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will never get written
into environmental policy.
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It requires that you listen
to these communities,
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and that's typically what's not happening.
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[Ellen] If you look
at a map of Nova Scotia
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and you plot out the points where black
and indigenous communities are located,
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and then you mark where landfills
and toxic industries are placed,
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a disturbing connection becomes clear.
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I'm heading to a few of these communities
to hear how these environmental burdens
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impact people's lives.
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The first place I'm going
is the town of Shelburne,
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just about 20 minutes away
from where some of my family's from.
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Seen by many
as a lily-white coastal town...
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Shelburne County once had
the highest population
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of freed black people in North America...
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their descendants now living mostly
in the south end of Shelburne.
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But from the moment
they settled here 250 years ago,
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black citizens never received
the same treatment
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as their white counterparts.
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A reality that they still face today...
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as a dump that was placed
in the town in the 1940s
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continues to haunt residents
in South Shelburne
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years after it was closed.
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I'm going to speak with local activist
Louise Delisle to find out more.
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[producer] Hey, you really like dogs.
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[Ellen] Hi, precious!
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-It's so nice out here.
-Yep.
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Yeah, it's beautiful here.
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You know my family is from Lockeport.
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-Yes, I heard that.
-Yeah.
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-So I've spent a lot of time...
-I know some peo--
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-Do you know Fred Page?
-...in Shelburne.
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-Fred? No.
-No.
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-I just know my dad was Dennis Page...
-From Lockeport.
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Dennis Page, Lorie Page.
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-I know Lorie Page.
-Yeah.
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[man] Oh, jeez.
Zach does that all the time:
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"My cousin, my cousin, my cousin."
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-Oh, Zach Page.
-Lorie. I know Lorie.
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-Oh, yeah.
-Yeah.
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-Yeah.
-Nice, nice!
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From the time that the black loyalists
landed here,
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we, like I said, we were indentured.
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When we got here,
we got here with a promise
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of something better
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for us, because we were slaves.
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A lot of people coming through
the Underground Railroad
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and people coming on ships
into the harbor,
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and we're descendants of those people,
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and I feel very, very honored
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that I am part
of that strong, strong family
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of black loyalists.
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In the early '40s,
they started to gather together.
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Well, you know how people are.
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They gather around their family
and whatever.
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And people started to build
their homes around each other.
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In the late '40s, uh...
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they decided they were gonna put...
it was called a dump.
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Where everything went.
Nothing was sorted.
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All the garbage from surrounding areas,
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Shelburne, and Shelburne municipality,
all went there.
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There was things like
garbage from the hospital.
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In other words, there would be
body parts, probably.
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Uh, there were things from the navy base,
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that we don't know what was dumped there.
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Things from the shipyards,
like paint and oil.
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There were old cars.
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There was food from stores,
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there were animals dumped there,
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like dead animals.
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There was anything and everything...
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was dumped on that dump.
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They had to get rid of it because
it was like a mountain of garbage.
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So they set it afire.
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And that would burn for days and days...
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on end, and the smell would be horrendous.
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And the smoke
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would cover you.
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You couldn't open your windows.
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I remember that, um...
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someone would say,
"Oh, the dump's afire."
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First thing, the seagulls
would start yelling really loud.
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And they would be gone.
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And then the smoke would be
just like a black cloud.
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And then the soot,
when it started to die down
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or it started to rain,
the soot would be all over everything.
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I remember getting up and going to school
in the morning
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and we'd be lucky if we got to school
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without, uh, smelling like
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we'd been in some kind of, uh...
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chemical warfare.
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And then get to school
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and then have the teacher say,
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uh...
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"Did you wash this morning?"
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Was horrible.
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We have been drinking water
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from brooks
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and wells that are in this community
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for generations.
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Who knows when that dump
has leached into our wells?
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Who knows?
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When you're talking about, uh...
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how environmental racism
has affected this community,
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it has... it's killing us.
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We didn't put that there.
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Our families didn't ask for that.
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And now we're reaping
the fallout from that
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by losing the ones we love.
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They're gone.
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Like, you know, there's so much
cancer in our community,
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and people will say,
"Oh, there's cancer everywhere."
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But in this area,
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we have one of the highest rates
of multiple myeloma.
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People dying from it in this area.
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Why?
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It's from the dump.
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My mother is there.
That's her sitting there.
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And this is where... in our yard.
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But that's me with my braids.
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-Cute.
-[Louise laughs]
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Where were you in the seven?
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-Were you...
-[Louise] The oldest.
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That's my brother Robert.
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Robert here. Right here.
That's the one that...
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Him and... who passed away with cancer.
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And that's my sister Babe,
who has multiple myeloma.
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And my youngest brother, Frank.
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That's us.
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That's my uncle
who just passed away recently with cancer.
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Two years ago, he passed away.
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After my father passed away to cancer,
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he sort of stepped up and was
the father figure.
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But they're gone.
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I don't wanna...
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I don't wanna say things
that hurts anybody,
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but I try to tell the truth.
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That's, that's the thing, right?
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It's hard sometimes, especially
when you're talking about racism
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and discrimination.
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Couple of roosters. [chuckles]
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The black community actually starts here.
252
00:14:12,060 --> 00:14:16,064
These people, we did a well test here.
253
00:14:16,148 --> 00:14:19,526
And these people had, um...
254
00:14:20,027 --> 00:14:22,779
high levels of arsenic in their water.
255
00:14:23,363 --> 00:14:27,159
This community, this community
is a small community.
256
00:14:27,242 --> 00:14:30,120
This family lost members
257
00:14:31,079 --> 00:14:33,290
of, uh... for cancer.
258
00:14:33,373 --> 00:14:37,836
This man is diagnosed
and probably won't live much longer.
259
00:14:37,920 --> 00:14:41,548
He, uh, he has, uh, lung cancer.
260
00:14:41,632 --> 00:14:43,258
Man that lives here.
261
00:14:44,218 --> 00:14:45,969
Very nice people there.
262
00:14:46,053 --> 00:14:47,930
Should have took you in
and introduced you to them,
263
00:14:48,013 --> 00:14:51,808
but I didn't let them know
we were coming, so better not.
264
00:14:51,892 --> 00:14:53,227
[laughs]
265
00:14:59,149 --> 00:15:01,151
These people's well is contaminated.
266
00:15:02,236 --> 00:15:03,904
Can't drink their water.
267
00:15:06,448 --> 00:15:08,242
This lady's husband died of cancer.
268
00:15:08,325 --> 00:15:10,452
She lives alone there.
269
00:15:10,536 --> 00:15:12,871
This lady's husband died of cancer.
270
00:15:13,455 --> 00:15:15,666
He, uh... But she moved on.
271
00:15:15,749 --> 00:15:18,669
Found somebody else.
A very nice man from Newfoundland.
272
00:15:19,711 --> 00:15:22,089
All the family that lived in this house
273
00:15:22,673 --> 00:15:24,007
died of cancer.
274
00:15:24,091 --> 00:15:27,135
This is now... now belongs
to somebody else
275
00:15:27,219 --> 00:15:31,682
who moved in the community
and is trying to fix it up, live in it.
276
00:15:31,765 --> 00:15:34,434
But everybody that lived
in that house died of cancer.
277
00:15:37,813 --> 00:15:40,774
This lady's husband died of cancer.
278
00:15:40,858 --> 00:15:43,694
She's quite sick now herself with cancer.
279
00:15:44,570 --> 00:15:48,282
The man that built this house,
him and his wife died of cancer.
280
00:15:48,991 --> 00:15:52,119
Their daughter lives in Birchtown now.
281
00:15:52,202 --> 00:15:54,955
She had cancer, survived cancer.
282
00:15:56,331 --> 00:15:57,541
But, uh...
283
00:15:58,750 --> 00:16:02,337
the sons, the other two sons,
died of cancer.
284
00:16:05,465 --> 00:16:06,508
Yeah.
285
00:16:08,302 --> 00:16:09,469
Not good.
286
00:16:13,432 --> 00:16:15,767
This... this house here...
287
00:16:15,851 --> 00:16:17,895
is the closest house
288
00:16:19,062 --> 00:16:20,522
to the dump.
289
00:16:20,606 --> 00:16:22,191
This young woman
290
00:16:22,274 --> 00:16:24,318
had to move back home here
291
00:16:24,985 --> 00:16:26,486
and live here.
292
00:16:27,654 --> 00:16:30,949
Her mother died of cancer.
Her father died of cancer.
293
00:16:31,700 --> 00:16:35,787
And she's back there now.
She has five kids living in that house.
294
00:16:35,871 --> 00:16:38,165
She has no place else to live.
295
00:16:38,248 --> 00:16:40,042
So she has to move back into there.
296
00:16:44,254 --> 00:16:46,798
And you can, just through those trees,
297
00:16:46,882 --> 00:16:49,259
is where the foot of that dump was.
298
00:16:50,177 --> 00:16:51,720
It's not very far.
299
00:16:53,472 --> 00:16:55,849
Yeah. We used to play in those woods.
300
00:16:58,143 --> 00:16:59,186
Yeah.
301
00:17:00,771 --> 00:17:01,855
Not good.
302
00:17:03,524 --> 00:17:05,859
Ellen, do you want to get out
and walk up?
303
00:17:05,943 --> 00:17:07,736
[Ellen]
Can we walk up to the dump?
304
00:17:07,819 --> 00:17:11,532
We'll... Well, there's a sign
that says "no trespassing."
305
00:17:11,615 --> 00:17:13,659
But I know how to get in there.
306
00:17:16,245 --> 00:17:18,372
This is Mr. Clyke.
307
00:17:18,455 --> 00:17:20,582
Mr. Clyke is very eccentric.
308
00:17:21,542 --> 00:17:23,418
And Mr. Clyke is now diagnosed--
309
00:17:23,502 --> 00:17:28,173
He's probably the oldest black man,
I think, in the community.
310
00:17:28,924 --> 00:17:30,926
I don't know if he's home or not.
311
00:17:35,222 --> 00:17:36,306
Huh?
312
00:17:36,390 --> 00:17:38,892
[man speaking in the distance]
313
00:17:38,976 --> 00:17:40,519
What are you doing?
314
00:17:40,602 --> 00:17:42,312
This is Mr. Clyke.
315
00:17:42,396 --> 00:17:43,772
This is Ian.
316
00:17:43,856 --> 00:17:45,023
Ian what?
317
00:17:45,107 --> 00:17:46,525
Ian, I don't know what...
318
00:17:47,526 --> 00:17:48,569
[Ian] Daniel.
319
00:17:48,652 --> 00:17:50,696
-Daniel.
-Ian Daniel.
320
00:17:50,779 --> 00:17:52,364
Look at all these cameras.
321
00:17:52,447 --> 00:17:53,657
[Louise laughs]
322
00:17:53,740 --> 00:17:55,075
Here, man, look at me.
323
00:17:55,158 --> 00:17:56,368
-[Louise laughs]
-You look great.
324
00:17:56,451 --> 00:17:58,078
-I'm Ellen.
-What?
325
00:17:58,161 --> 00:18:00,330
-My name's Ellen.
-Ellen. Ellen what?
326
00:18:00,414 --> 00:18:02,040
-Page.
-Page.
327
00:18:02,624 --> 00:18:04,751
Ellen's coming and talking about
the dump.
328
00:18:04,835 --> 00:18:06,336
Oh...
329
00:18:06,420 --> 00:18:08,046
Yeah, and we were talking.
330
00:18:08,130 --> 00:18:10,632
We were talking about, uh...
331
00:18:11,508 --> 00:18:15,721
how the smoke and the soot
and the ash and all that stuff...
332
00:18:15,804 --> 00:18:17,264
and what we wanna get.
333
00:18:17,347 --> 00:18:18,307
Yeah.
334
00:18:18,390 --> 00:18:21,977
[Louise] Because everybody's gone.
'Cause you're the oldest one left now.
335
00:18:22,060 --> 00:18:23,687
-Oh, I think so.
-[Louise] Yeah.
336
00:18:23,770 --> 00:18:25,522
The oldest man, aren't you?
337
00:18:25,606 --> 00:18:29,234
Yeah, because Wally Davis is about 70.
338
00:18:29,318 --> 00:18:31,904
Wallace, yeah. Wallace is...
339
00:18:31,987 --> 00:18:33,697
He's treatin' fast.
340
00:18:33,780 --> 00:18:37,826
Wallace is getting treated again
for lung cancer, yeah.
341
00:18:37,910 --> 00:18:40,120
And I go this week.
342
00:18:40,204 --> 00:18:41,663
You go this week?
343
00:18:41,747 --> 00:18:42,873
Next Friday.
344
00:18:42,956 --> 00:18:45,083
Next Friday.
You go to see how you're doing.
345
00:18:45,167 --> 00:18:46,210
-Yeah.
-Yes.
346
00:18:46,293 --> 00:18:49,004
I get rechecked.
I go once a year.
347
00:18:49,087 --> 00:18:53,300
Yeah. Do you think the dump had anything
to do with your cancer?
348
00:18:53,383 --> 00:18:54,468
Who knows?
349
00:18:54,551 --> 00:18:56,178
Who knows, yeah?
350
00:18:56,261 --> 00:18:57,429
For sure?
351
00:18:58,972 --> 00:19:00,682
'Cause the whole neighborhood's got it.
352
00:19:00,766 --> 00:19:02,434
-Yeah.
-Yeah.
353
00:19:03,268 --> 00:19:05,437
[Louise] All the men
are gone, aren't they?
354
00:19:05,521 --> 00:19:10,067
There's Frank and Selden and Ed,
and your friend Ed,
355
00:19:10,150 --> 00:19:11,235
is all gone, aren't they?
356
00:19:11,318 --> 00:19:15,113
-[Mr. Clyke] And Berne and Shirley.
-And Berne and Shirley, yeah.
357
00:19:15,697 --> 00:19:18,325
So we're just gonna go over here
and we're gonna walk around.
358
00:19:18,408 --> 00:19:20,369
We're going to sneak along the fence.
359
00:19:20,452 --> 00:19:22,162
Oh, yeah, there's a path right there.
360
00:19:22,246 --> 00:19:24,164
Yes, we'll go along the path.
361
00:19:41,890 --> 00:19:43,892
I hope that... I hope that...
362
00:19:44,935 --> 00:19:49,022
if anybody gets anything from this...
363
00:19:50,524 --> 00:19:52,234
I hope...
364
00:19:52,317 --> 00:19:58,323
environmentally, I hope that people learn
how to use stuff.
365
00:19:59,783 --> 00:20:01,577
That way there's no dump.
366
00:20:02,160 --> 00:20:03,662
I... Wouldn't it be nice
367
00:20:03,745 --> 00:20:05,539
if we could find a way to...
368
00:20:05,622 --> 00:20:10,711
everything that we need,
that we need, can be...
369
00:20:11,461 --> 00:20:14,464
used again and again and again
and again?
370
00:20:16,091 --> 00:20:17,467
How nice would that be?
371
00:20:18,552 --> 00:20:20,429
So we would never have this issue,
372
00:20:20,512 --> 00:20:25,058
of people dying of things
that we've consumed and...
373
00:20:27,895 --> 00:20:29,354
set afire.
374
00:20:33,817 --> 00:20:36,904
[Ellen] The dump was
permanently closed in 2016.
375
00:20:38,238 --> 00:20:40,032
When you walk around it today,
376
00:20:40,115 --> 00:20:42,534
if it wasn't for scattered remains
lying around,
377
00:20:43,118 --> 00:20:45,454
you may not know it had ever been a dump.
378
00:20:46,455 --> 00:20:49,124
The concern now
is what's buried in the ground
379
00:20:49,208 --> 00:20:52,920
and what impact that might have
on the water and soil nearby.
380
00:21:01,094 --> 00:21:04,973
[Ellen] I imagine, too, it's just like
daunting all the time
381
00:21:05,057 --> 00:21:06,975
when you're just like,
"Is it in my water?
382
00:21:07,059 --> 00:21:08,810
Has it reached the water?"
383
00:21:08,894 --> 00:21:13,690
Thank God, now,
the water testing that we've done
384
00:21:14,191 --> 00:21:16,777
and talking, going into people's houses.
385
00:21:16,860 --> 00:21:19,905
I've been going to everybody's house
and talking about,
386
00:21:19,988 --> 00:21:21,406
"You gotta get your well tested.
387
00:21:21,490 --> 00:21:23,867
I'm here, I've got a team of people,
let's do it."
388
00:21:24,576 --> 00:21:28,580
And people are becoming
conscious of that now
389
00:21:28,664 --> 00:21:30,916
because they've got that water test back
390
00:21:30,999 --> 00:21:32,876
that says there's something in my water.
391
00:21:32,960 --> 00:21:36,004
Whether they say it's not
from the dump or whether--
392
00:21:36,088 --> 00:21:38,215
we know it's our water
that's making you--
393
00:21:38,298 --> 00:21:43,554
When you have coliform and E. coli
in your well,
394
00:21:43,637 --> 00:21:48,183
that you use in your home to cook with,
to feed your children
395
00:21:48,267 --> 00:21:51,728
and your husband or...
and to brush your teeth with
396
00:21:51,812 --> 00:21:55,732
and to bath with and whatever,
you know.
397
00:21:56,525 --> 00:21:59,820
And when you find out that there's
something wrong with your water,
398
00:21:59,903 --> 00:22:01,738
well, it's your life.
399
00:22:01,822 --> 00:22:03,282
That's your life.
400
00:22:03,365 --> 00:22:04,533
Your whole life.
401
00:22:05,784 --> 00:22:10,163
You know, it's our God-given right...
to clean water.
402
00:22:10,247 --> 00:22:11,498
[Ellen] You shouldn't have
to fight for this.
403
00:22:11,582 --> 00:22:13,458
We shouldn't have to fight for this.
404
00:22:13,542 --> 00:22:16,461
We should--
And the people that we vote for
405
00:22:16,962 --> 00:22:21,133
in this community should be
fighting side by side with us
406
00:22:21,216 --> 00:22:22,759
for clean water.
407
00:22:22,843 --> 00:22:24,511
But wake up.
408
00:22:24,595 --> 00:22:27,764
They're not even... it's not an issue.
409
00:22:28,265 --> 00:22:31,101
Doesn't seem to be an issue
'cause it's not affecting them.
410
00:22:31,185 --> 00:22:36,023
Because they have what they call
clean, potable water
411
00:22:36,106 --> 00:22:39,234
because they have town water.
412
00:22:39,860 --> 00:22:41,028
We don't even have that.
413
00:22:41,111 --> 00:22:43,322
We don't have that option.
414
00:22:43,405 --> 00:22:45,282
We don't even have the option of saying,
415
00:22:45,365 --> 00:22:47,951
"Okay, well, I'm not going to use
this well anymore
416
00:22:48,035 --> 00:22:50,120
because it's contaminated,
417
00:22:50,204 --> 00:22:52,497
so I'll just hook up to town water."
418
00:22:52,581 --> 00:22:53,707
We don't have that option.
419
00:22:53,790 --> 00:22:56,960
They have-- They find it not feasible
420
00:22:57,044 --> 00:22:59,963
to put in pipes
so we can have clean water.
421
00:23:02,716 --> 00:23:08,597
Why are we any less in this community
422
00:23:09,681 --> 00:23:12,142
than the people in that community?
423
00:23:18,190 --> 00:23:21,443
[Ellen] For the past few years,
Louise has been speaking out,
424
00:23:21,527 --> 00:23:25,030
pushing the government to pass
an environmental bill of rights
425
00:23:25,113 --> 00:23:28,492
that would guarantee a healthy environment
for every resident,
426
00:23:28,575 --> 00:23:31,495
especially
historically marginalized people.
427
00:23:32,204 --> 00:23:36,083
But the response from local politicians
has been upsetting.
428
00:23:37,626 --> 00:23:42,631
So racism has carried on
and it's still here.
429
00:23:42,714 --> 00:23:46,552
And if we don't talk about it,
identify it,
430
00:23:46,635 --> 00:23:49,096
it's never, ever gonna stop.
431
00:23:49,179 --> 00:23:51,181
And my speaking out about it
432
00:23:51,265 --> 00:23:55,269
has separated me from some members
in my community,
433
00:23:55,352 --> 00:23:58,522
because they don't want to talk about it.
434
00:23:59,231 --> 00:24:01,066
[Ellen]
You mentioned the mayor.
435
00:24:01,149 --> 00:24:03,694
-Oh.
-[Ellen] Okay, there's my answer.
436
00:24:03,777 --> 00:24:04,987
[both laugh]
437
00:24:05,070 --> 00:24:05,904
-Oh, the mayor.
-[Ellen] I was gonna say,
438
00:24:05,988 --> 00:24:07,739
what is your mayor doing?
439
00:24:08,532 --> 00:24:12,619
[Louise] The mayor doesn't think
that I have the right to speak.
440
00:24:12,703 --> 00:24:14,037
[Ellen] How come?
441
00:24:14,746 --> 00:24:16,665
Because she...
442
00:24:16,748 --> 00:24:19,126
She actually has told me that, you know,
443
00:24:19,209 --> 00:24:23,005
"The community doesn't want you
to talk about this.
444
00:24:23,797 --> 00:24:25,090
The community doesn't care."
445
00:24:26,008 --> 00:24:27,551
But I'm sorry.
446
00:24:28,802 --> 00:24:29,845
I'm gonna say it.
447
00:24:32,556 --> 00:24:34,016
It's...
448
00:24:34,099 --> 00:24:37,811
It's my God-given right to tell you
449
00:24:37,895 --> 00:24:42,983
that you are destroying my family,
my community,
450
00:24:43,066 --> 00:24:45,068
and it's been destroyed
because you decided
451
00:24:45,152 --> 00:24:47,654
to dump your garbage in my backyard.
452
00:24:49,323 --> 00:24:50,199
Sorry.
453
00:24:50,741 --> 00:24:52,409
But that's how it is.
454
00:24:52,492 --> 00:24:56,663
You either help us or you're against us,
one or the other, right?
455
00:25:00,709 --> 00:25:03,587
When election time comes,
456
00:25:03,670 --> 00:25:07,841
they come into this community
and they promise you the moon.
457
00:25:07,925 --> 00:25:09,676
"Oh, we're gonna do this,
we're gonna do that,
458
00:25:09,760 --> 00:25:11,595
we're gonna do this for you,
we're gonna do that for you,"
459
00:25:11,678 --> 00:25:13,138
and people trust.
460
00:25:13,222 --> 00:25:14,932
My people trust people.
461
00:25:15,641 --> 00:25:18,602
And they vote for these people,
and these people just...
462
00:25:19,102 --> 00:25:20,020
[scoffs]
463
00:25:21,563 --> 00:25:24,525
And if you can't take care
of your neighbor...
464
00:25:26,068 --> 00:25:29,530
or the people around you, or your family,
465
00:25:29,613 --> 00:25:32,533
what good are you to anyone?
466
00:25:33,200 --> 00:25:36,119
Like, why are you here?
467
00:25:36,620 --> 00:25:40,123
If you don't care
about your brothers or your sisters
468
00:25:40,207 --> 00:25:41,708
or whoever...
469
00:25:42,668 --> 00:25:44,503
why bother?
470
00:25:44,586 --> 00:25:47,506
Like, you know?
What do you get up for every day?
471
00:25:48,173 --> 00:25:50,634
Yourself? It must be awful lonesome.
472
00:25:51,134 --> 00:25:53,136
If that's what they're living for.
473
00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:54,721
Right?
474
00:25:56,265 --> 00:26:00,811
The love for people needs to come first.
475
00:26:00,894 --> 00:26:04,606
We have to be there for each other.
476
00:26:04,690 --> 00:26:06,441
We only go one way.
477
00:26:07,860 --> 00:26:09,570
And if we don't do it right
the first time,
478
00:26:09,653 --> 00:26:12,364
we don't get another chance
to do it again.
479
00:26:13,448 --> 00:26:17,911
So, if it means making sure
480
00:26:17,995 --> 00:26:22,916
that my neighbor is healthy,
in some way,
481
00:26:23,000 --> 00:26:26,253
and if it's just one little thing
that I can do to ensure that,
482
00:26:26,336 --> 00:26:27,754
then I'm going to do it.
483
00:26:33,218 --> 00:26:34,845
[Ellen] Installing a community well
484
00:26:34,928 --> 00:26:37,514
to provide clean drinking water
at a location
485
00:26:37,598 --> 00:26:42,227
that Louise is proposing would cost
approximately $10,000.
486
00:26:43,437 --> 00:26:47,232
This year alone
the town budgeted $35,000
487
00:26:47,316 --> 00:26:49,735
for their annual Founder's Day Festival.
488
00:27:10,464 --> 00:27:12,341
Just three hours north of here,
489
00:27:12,424 --> 00:27:14,676
the community
of Pictou Landing First Nation
490
00:27:14,760 --> 00:27:18,764
is also confronting a toxic legacy
of government neglect.
491
00:27:21,016 --> 00:27:23,435
The current fight of
the Mi'kmaq people here
492
00:27:23,519 --> 00:27:25,854
is reflective of a long line of struggles
493
00:27:25,938 --> 00:27:28,357
between indigenous communities
and the government
494
00:27:28,440 --> 00:27:32,236
since the colonization
of present-day Canada began.
495
00:27:33,487 --> 00:27:37,908
Genocide, assaults from federal agents,
and Catholic residential schools
496
00:27:37,991 --> 00:27:39,326
have stripped the Mi'kmaq
497
00:27:39,409 --> 00:27:42,496
of much of the land and culture
they once knew.
498
00:27:43,914 --> 00:27:46,875
Today, they're also dealing
with an environmental disaster
499
00:27:46,959 --> 00:27:50,754
which has been plaguing
their community for over 50 years.
500
00:27:56,593 --> 00:27:57,636
[bird calling]
501
00:27:57,719 --> 00:27:59,304
[announcer 2] Boat Harbour, Nova Scotia.
502
00:27:59,388 --> 00:28:02,766
Thousands of fish
gasping for breath and dying.
503
00:28:02,850 --> 00:28:07,479
Most people who saw these pictures
on the news were disgusted, indignant.
504
00:28:07,563 --> 00:28:08,772
How could it happen?
505
00:28:10,023 --> 00:28:13,944
But these pictures are just the latest
in a long history of pollution here.
506
00:28:16,780 --> 00:28:18,448
-[gasps]
-Oh, hello!
507
00:28:18,532 --> 00:28:20,868
-It's so nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you, too.
508
00:28:20,951 --> 00:28:22,786
-Come on in.
-Yeah, sorry about that.
509
00:28:22,870 --> 00:28:26,623
GPS just... The next thing you knew,
I was getting it stuck in the mud.
510
00:28:26,707 --> 00:28:30,627
I kind of knew that it was the back road.
I was like, "road closed." Hmm.
511
00:28:30,711 --> 00:28:32,254
[laughing] Yeah.
512
00:28:37,551 --> 00:28:40,512
[Michelle] Pre-pollution,
what we now know as Boat Harbour
513
00:28:40,596 --> 00:28:42,264
was called A'Se'K.
514
00:28:42,347 --> 00:28:44,474
A'Se'K means "the other room."
515
00:28:44,558 --> 00:28:48,729
It was the place that
our community members ran to
516
00:28:48,812 --> 00:28:51,023
when the Indian agents used to come
517
00:28:51,106 --> 00:28:52,649
to collect kids.
518
00:28:52,733 --> 00:28:55,360
They used to run to A'Se'K.
519
00:28:55,444 --> 00:29:01,074
So A'Se'K... and one of our elders
says it so eloquently, at one time
520
00:29:01,158 --> 00:29:03,535
was like a parent to them.
521
00:29:03,619 --> 00:29:06,205
Um... they protected them.
522
00:29:06,288 --> 00:29:08,540
They fed them when they were hungry.
523
00:29:08,624 --> 00:29:11,627
You know, they kept shelter,
you know, and when...
524
00:29:12,503 --> 00:29:15,797
the mill came along in 1965
525
00:29:15,881 --> 00:29:20,719
and started their very intentful plan
to, uh...
526
00:29:20,802 --> 00:29:22,930
infiltrate our land,
527
00:29:23,013 --> 00:29:24,973
um, and our A'Se'K...
528
00:29:26,558 --> 00:29:29,937
uh... all that was taken away.
529
00:29:30,020 --> 00:29:31,313
All that was taken away.
530
00:29:31,396 --> 00:29:33,857
[announcer 2] In 1965,
the Scott Paper Company
531
00:29:33,941 --> 00:29:36,818
wanted to build
a pulp-and-paper mill in Nova Scotia.
532
00:29:37,528 --> 00:29:39,905
They knew exactly where
they wanted to go.
533
00:29:39,988 --> 00:29:41,865
The town of Pictou.
534
00:29:41,949 --> 00:29:43,784
[indistinct speech]
535
00:29:43,867 --> 00:29:45,869
It was their consultant, Dr. John Bates,
536
00:29:45,953 --> 00:29:48,664
who had selected the site
a few years earlier.
537
00:29:48,747 --> 00:29:49,915
This is what he proposed,
538
00:29:50,624 --> 00:29:53,335
that Scott Paper build a kraft pulp mill.
539
00:29:54,169 --> 00:29:57,881
The waste for the mill would be piped
under Pictou Harbour
540
00:29:57,965 --> 00:30:00,843
and dumped into Boat Harbour.
541
00:30:02,094 --> 00:30:06,265
Eventually, the industrial waste
would make its way into the ocean.
542
00:30:07,641 --> 00:30:09,101
By the time this was proposed,
543
00:30:09,184 --> 00:30:12,062
Dr. Bates was no longer
a consultant for Scott.
544
00:30:12,938 --> 00:30:16,358
He had become the head
of the Nova Scotia Water Authority.
545
00:30:16,942 --> 00:30:19,403
Everything was in place
for a very lucrative deal
546
00:30:19,486 --> 00:30:22,364
between Scott Paper
and the province of Nova Scotia.
547
00:30:23,866 --> 00:30:26,493
The government agreed to look after
the waste from the mill
548
00:30:26,577 --> 00:30:29,204
and began buying up land in the area.
549
00:30:30,247 --> 00:30:34,751
The only problem was the Indians
who lived on the edge of Boat Harbour.
550
00:30:35,627 --> 00:30:38,881
[Michelle] The Water Authority
had approached my grandfather,
551
00:30:38,964 --> 00:30:42,885
who was chief at the time,
and, uh, the council,
552
00:30:42,968 --> 00:30:46,763
and said, "Yeah, well, you know,
we wanna bring this mill here.
553
00:30:46,847 --> 00:30:48,807
Um, yeah, don't worry about it.
554
00:30:48,891 --> 00:30:51,393
Everything's gonna be great.
It'll be a fresh-water lake.
555
00:30:51,476 --> 00:30:54,021
It's not gonna impact,
you know, anything."
556
00:30:54,104 --> 00:30:57,900
There was documented concerns
about the impact on the environment,
557
00:30:57,983 --> 00:31:01,737
the impact on their fisheries,
so they were raising the concerns
558
00:31:01,820 --> 00:31:04,823
as our leadership, you know,
have done for decades.
559
00:31:04,907 --> 00:31:08,827
So once they found out that we were
worried about these things,
560
00:31:08,911 --> 00:31:11,371
"Oh, we'll just, you know,
we'll take them on a trip."
561
00:31:11,455 --> 00:31:13,790
They went and they took my grandfather
562
00:31:13,874 --> 00:31:17,878
and another councillor, Martin Sapier,
563
00:31:17,961 --> 00:31:21,089
to, uh, a place in, uh...
564
00:31:21,673 --> 00:31:22,716
New Brunswick,
565
00:31:22,799 --> 00:31:25,886
which wasn't even a treatment facility
566
00:31:25,969 --> 00:31:27,763
similar to the one
that they were building.
567
00:31:28,347 --> 00:31:29,973
Mr. Wigglesworth come down,
568
00:31:30,057 --> 00:31:33,644
took us up St. John's, or Lancaster,
569
00:31:33,727 --> 00:31:35,562
or whatever you wanna call it,
a pulp mill up there.
570
00:31:36,522 --> 00:31:42,694
And he showed us that there was
no discolor in the water, no odor.
571
00:31:42,778 --> 00:31:44,571
[reporter] He showed you there was
no discolor in the water.
572
00:31:44,655 --> 00:31:45,697
Discolor in the water.
573
00:31:45,781 --> 00:31:48,909
There's no odor or anything coming out
of that pulp mill.
574
00:31:49,993 --> 00:31:52,579
[announcer 2] The smoke here
is from the pulp mill in St. John.
575
00:31:53,205 --> 00:31:55,332
But the Indians were never taken there.
576
00:31:55,415 --> 00:31:58,210
All they were shown
was a water treatment plant
577
00:31:58,293 --> 00:32:01,296
for domestic sewage a few miles away.
578
00:32:05,384 --> 00:32:08,762
That was, you know, a facade in itself.
579
00:32:08,846 --> 00:32:11,849
Um, and, you know,
spewed some lies to them,
580
00:32:11,932 --> 00:32:15,227
you know, made them, you know,
try and understand
581
00:32:15,310 --> 00:32:16,687
that, "It's not gonna impact this.
582
00:32:16,770 --> 00:32:18,564
It's gonna be a lake.
583
00:32:18,647 --> 00:32:20,816
You're still gonna be able to enjoy it,
recreation,
584
00:32:20,899 --> 00:32:23,277
you're still gonna be able
to do the things, you know,
585
00:32:23,360 --> 00:32:26,071
that you want to do."
586
00:32:26,154 --> 00:32:27,698
And there were conditions.
587
00:32:27,781 --> 00:32:30,200
There were conditions in the agreement
that were totally ignored.
588
00:32:30,284 --> 00:32:33,829
You know, they wanted to,
they wanted to know...
589
00:32:34,872 --> 00:32:37,624
um, for sure, you know,
what's the impacts,
590
00:32:37,708 --> 00:32:39,543
and that was never followed through with.
591
00:32:39,626 --> 00:32:41,336
The only thing that
was followed through with
592
00:32:41,420 --> 00:32:44,256
was, uh, $60,000.
593
00:32:44,339 --> 00:32:48,093
You know, $60,000 back then
to an oppressed community
594
00:32:48,177 --> 00:32:50,095
that, you know, had been suffering
595
00:32:50,179 --> 00:32:54,266
under the impacts of, you know,
residential school and... and...
596
00:32:54,349 --> 00:32:55,392
It was a lot.
597
00:32:55,475 --> 00:32:57,978
I can just imagine what was going through
my grandfather's mind.
598
00:32:58,061 --> 00:32:59,938
"I'm doing so--
like, oh, my God.
599
00:33:00,022 --> 00:33:02,691
The environment isn't gonna be impacted.
600
00:33:02,774 --> 00:33:05,194
You know, I feel for the county.
601
00:33:05,277 --> 00:33:06,987
I feel for, you know, I'm helping.
602
00:33:07,070 --> 00:33:08,947
Nothing bad is gonna come out of this."
603
00:33:10,240 --> 00:33:13,076
My grandfather,
right there in New Brunswick,
604
00:33:13,160 --> 00:33:14,620
along with Martin Sapier,
605
00:33:14,703 --> 00:33:16,246
signed on a piece of paper.
606
00:33:17,748 --> 00:33:20,584
A piece of paper.
Right then and there, they had him.
607
00:33:24,421 --> 00:33:27,424
[announcer 2] The Indians had signed away
their rights to Boat Harbour,
608
00:33:28,008 --> 00:33:30,469
for about $65,000.
609
00:33:36,558 --> 00:33:39,436
Two years later,
the plant was in operation.
610
00:33:42,940 --> 00:33:45,567
And the waste started flowing
into Boat Harbour.
611
00:33:46,818 --> 00:33:48,529
They killed every fish out there,
612
00:33:48,612 --> 00:33:51,365
over the next day up there,
all along the shore.
613
00:33:51,448 --> 00:33:54,868
Dead fish, [indistinct] seals,
and everything all around.
614
00:33:56,119 --> 00:33:58,497
They killed them right away, overnight.
615
00:34:00,582 --> 00:34:03,085
[reporter] That was within a week
of the plant start-up.
616
00:34:03,168 --> 00:34:05,712
[man] That's about three, four days
after it started.
617
00:34:05,796 --> 00:34:07,923
Yeah. Killed everything with it.
618
00:34:15,848 --> 00:34:20,269
And just to think about the grief he felt
619
00:34:20,352 --> 00:34:24,314
when he realized
that Boat Harbour was dead.
620
00:34:25,858 --> 00:34:28,777
He died, you know, thinking that
621
00:34:28,861 --> 00:34:30,153
it was his fault.
622
00:34:34,157 --> 00:34:37,244
And then he passes that down
to, you know...
623
00:34:37,327 --> 00:34:41,957
that sense of guilt down to, you know,
his kids and the family
624
00:34:42,040 --> 00:34:44,918
and how did they cope,
you know, when...
625
00:34:45,002 --> 00:34:46,295
Then you have...
626
00:34:46,837 --> 00:34:50,549
[sighs]
It's just a cycle that needs to be broken.
627
00:34:51,216 --> 00:34:54,011
What would life be like for my family...
628
00:34:54,678 --> 00:34:56,388
if Boat Harbour didn't happen?
629
00:34:58,932 --> 00:35:02,102
My grandfather and my grandmother
had 13 kids.
630
00:35:06,148 --> 00:35:08,400
My grandfather passing away
at a very, you know,
631
00:35:08,483 --> 00:35:10,402
very young, late 40s.
632
00:35:10,485 --> 00:35:11,862
Um...
633
00:35:11,945 --> 00:35:15,365
Right now, to this day,
my mother is still living, and my aunt.
634
00:35:17,159 --> 00:35:19,661
All others have been lost to cancer.
635
00:35:20,537 --> 00:35:21,872
To suicide.
636
00:35:24,666 --> 00:35:26,543
You know, alcoholism and drugs.
637
00:35:26,627 --> 00:35:28,879
You know, took a driver's seat.
638
00:35:29,838 --> 00:35:33,383
So I often wonder...
if this didn't happen,
639
00:35:33,467 --> 00:35:35,260
would we have had a chance...
640
00:35:38,514 --> 00:35:40,057
to live in a way...
641
00:35:43,060 --> 00:35:45,145
where we could grow old together?
642
00:35:53,779 --> 00:35:59,743
I'll be taking you guys out
to see the Effluent Treatment Facility...
643
00:36:00,953 --> 00:36:03,705
uh, over at Simpson's Lane.
644
00:36:03,789 --> 00:36:05,791
Just not far from our community.
645
00:36:07,000 --> 00:36:09,837
This is the entrance
to the treatment facility
646
00:36:09,920 --> 00:36:13,340
that's been here since 1967.
647
00:36:21,014 --> 00:36:25,185
This is what is directly coming
out of the mill.
648
00:36:26,520 --> 00:36:28,689
Raw, untreated effluent.
649
00:36:31,358 --> 00:36:34,987
That used to dump directly
into, onto our land.
650
00:36:35,070 --> 00:36:37,489
There was no, like,
treatment system for it,
651
00:36:37,573 --> 00:36:39,449
so the pipe just used to dump.
652
00:36:43,996 --> 00:36:46,623
I get so sad coming down here.
653
00:37:06,685 --> 00:37:08,437
That's what our community smells like.
654
00:37:08,520 --> 00:37:11,148
Sometimes you go into
our community buildings and our homes
655
00:37:11,231 --> 00:37:14,985
and you feel that,
like it just sticks to the walls.
656
00:37:23,118 --> 00:37:24,870
These are the aerators.
657
00:37:24,953 --> 00:37:28,957
They're supposedly giving oxygen
to the water, which is fairly sad,
658
00:37:29,041 --> 00:37:32,878
but, uh, back in the day when they said
that it would have no impact...
659
00:37:33,879 --> 00:37:35,380
this is what we're left with.
660
00:37:39,551 --> 00:37:43,597
Uh, all this is boiling over
into our community,
661
00:37:43,680 --> 00:37:45,516
so not only are we suffering,
662
00:37:45,599 --> 00:37:48,352
knowing that, you know,
this exists to our water,
663
00:37:48,435 --> 00:37:50,312
look at our air as well.
664
00:37:52,022 --> 00:37:53,649
And, uh... yeah.
665
00:37:53,732 --> 00:37:55,192
It's...
666
00:37:55,275 --> 00:37:56,485
It's sad.
667
00:37:59,279 --> 00:38:01,073
[Ian]
Do you worry about your own health?
668
00:38:05,410 --> 00:38:07,246
It's so funny that you mention that,
669
00:38:07,329 --> 00:38:10,582
because, uh, just knowing, you know,
where I came from
670
00:38:10,666 --> 00:38:13,377
and, you know, the family
that's gone before me,
671
00:38:13,460 --> 00:38:15,254
I've never expected to live long.
672
00:38:15,337 --> 00:38:17,673
I'll be 41, you know, next week.
673
00:38:19,925 --> 00:38:21,677
And...
674
00:38:21,760 --> 00:38:24,721
knowing that, you know,
everybody passed away so young...
675
00:38:25,806 --> 00:38:28,475
uh, I'd always felt that,
676
00:38:28,559 --> 00:38:31,728
you know, I wasn't gonna get
a chance to grow old.
677
00:38:32,563 --> 00:38:34,273
And sometimes I think that way.
678
00:38:37,401 --> 00:38:40,779
Grief... and I say that word a lot,
679
00:38:40,863 --> 00:38:43,282
because I don't know how else
to describe it...
680
00:38:45,158 --> 00:38:46,577
takes many forms.
681
00:38:46,660 --> 00:38:48,829
It's... It's, you know...
682
00:38:48,912 --> 00:38:50,581
How do you cope with this?
683
00:38:53,083 --> 00:38:54,960
How would you cope with this?
684
00:38:59,882 --> 00:39:01,466
[reporter] Was that a concern of yours,
685
00:39:01,550 --> 00:39:03,594
that the lagoon was so close
686
00:39:03,677 --> 00:39:06,221
to the Indian reserve?
687
00:39:08,682 --> 00:39:12,186
Well, it wasn't doing them any harm.
688
00:39:14,104 --> 00:39:18,150
They weren't in the water,
they weren't living in the water.
689
00:39:19,568 --> 00:39:21,695
They were living in sight of the water.
690
00:39:23,614 --> 00:39:25,699
And, uh, so what?
691
00:39:28,702 --> 00:39:31,371
[Michelle] So these are some
of the community members that we've lost
692
00:39:31,455 --> 00:39:33,957
since the opening of the mill.
693
00:39:35,501 --> 00:39:36,627
Yeah.
694
00:39:36,710 --> 00:39:39,004
And, yeah, you can clearly see that...
695
00:39:40,047 --> 00:39:44,176
They die young, they die young. Yeah.
No, it's true.
696
00:39:44,885 --> 00:39:46,762
I don't like to count the dead.
697
00:39:46,845 --> 00:39:47,888
We had a lot.
698
00:39:47,971 --> 00:39:50,057
We have a lot of people
that should be here.
699
00:39:50,140 --> 00:39:51,600
[laughs] They should be here.
700
00:39:51,683 --> 00:39:53,560
They should be fighting alongside us.
701
00:39:53,644 --> 00:39:56,647
They should be seeing the end to...
702
00:39:57,856 --> 00:39:59,900
the water, the pollution.
703
00:39:59,983 --> 00:40:01,652
They should be, but they're not.
704
00:40:01,735 --> 00:40:04,571
So we wanted to try and commemorate that,
705
00:40:04,655 --> 00:40:06,073
where, you know, they're gonna be here.
706
00:40:06,156 --> 00:40:07,824
They see what's happening.
They see what we're doing.
707
00:40:07,908 --> 00:40:08,951
They're going to be proud of us.
708
00:40:09,952 --> 00:40:14,164
This just reminds me, it just reminds me,
you know, why I'm doing what I'm doing,
709
00:40:14,248 --> 00:40:15,791
because...
710
00:40:16,375 --> 00:40:17,376
[sighs]
711
00:40:19,461 --> 00:40:20,504
Enough is enough.
712
00:40:22,214 --> 00:40:26,802
[Ellen] In 2014, tensions came to a head
when the mill's pipe broke,
713
00:40:26,885 --> 00:40:31,765
spilling 47 million liters of toxic
untreated effluent into the area...
714
00:40:32,349 --> 00:40:35,519
on land known
to be Mi'kmaq burial grounds.
715
00:40:37,855 --> 00:40:41,233
The government had pledged
to close Boat Harbour several times
716
00:40:41,316 --> 00:40:42,776
but never kept their word.
717
00:40:43,360 --> 00:40:46,113
This time, Michelle and her community
sprung into action
718
00:40:46,196 --> 00:40:47,865
and created a blockade,
719
00:40:47,948 --> 00:40:51,535
vowing not to leave
until Boat Harbour was closed,
720
00:40:51,618 --> 00:40:55,414
forcing the provincial government
to finally step up.
721
00:40:56,582 --> 00:40:59,376
[Michelle] Since, you know, June 2014,
722
00:40:59,459 --> 00:41:01,753
it was, you know, highly in the media,
723
00:41:01,837 --> 00:41:03,922
of our peaceful protest
724
00:41:04,006 --> 00:41:05,632
during the effluent break
725
00:41:05,716 --> 00:41:07,509
from the pipeline.
726
00:41:07,593 --> 00:41:09,261
We were on the front lines.
727
00:41:09,344 --> 00:41:10,637
Just fed up.
728
00:41:10,721 --> 00:41:13,765
Just fed up that, you know,
this keeps happening,
729
00:41:13,849 --> 00:41:16,393
this effluent, you know,
that's been a burden since,
730
00:41:16,476 --> 00:41:20,105
you know, for five decades,
is continuing to harm us.
731
00:41:20,731 --> 00:41:22,024
We were going back and forth.
732
00:41:22,107 --> 00:41:25,277
Our leadership was, you know,
we're meeting with government
733
00:41:25,360 --> 00:41:28,405
quite frequently
and trying to figure out a resolve
734
00:41:28,488 --> 00:41:30,324
to what was happening.
735
00:41:30,407 --> 00:41:32,910
We met in our gymnasium,
our community gymnasium,
736
00:41:32,993 --> 00:41:35,287
and leadership would come back
and say, "Okay,
737
00:41:35,370 --> 00:41:37,664
well, we've had discussions
with the government
738
00:41:37,748 --> 00:41:38,916
and this is what they say,"
739
00:41:38,999 --> 00:41:41,168
and, of course, we don't trust,
you know.
740
00:41:41,251 --> 00:41:44,379
This is rule number one, is,
the trust has been broken,
741
00:41:44,463 --> 00:41:45,756
through several governments,
742
00:41:45,839 --> 00:41:49,092
and, you know, through several,
several broken promises
743
00:41:49,176 --> 00:41:51,261
throughout, you know,
the decades and decades.
744
00:41:51,345 --> 00:41:52,804
So, that was the biggest thing.
745
00:41:52,888 --> 00:41:56,767
That was the height of us trying
to figure out,
746
00:41:56,850 --> 00:41:59,019
is what they're saying, is it the truth?
747
00:41:59,102 --> 00:42:02,397
We were fortunate
to come to an agreement,
748
00:42:02,481 --> 00:42:06,318
an agreement that we weren't
totally happy with, um...
749
00:42:06,401 --> 00:42:09,947
that they were finally going
to acknowledge the devastation
750
00:42:10,030 --> 00:42:12,491
and they were going to propose
a closure date
751
00:42:12,574 --> 00:42:14,868
of the Boat Harbour
Effluent Treatment Facility.
752
00:42:15,661 --> 00:42:19,623
So the date they proposed
wasn't the date that we wanted.
753
00:42:19,706 --> 00:42:21,208
Um...
754
00:42:21,917 --> 00:42:23,043
We were hoping sooner.
755
00:42:23,126 --> 00:42:24,169
[laughs]
756
00:42:24,253 --> 00:42:27,089
The date they gave us
was January 31st, 2020.
757
00:42:27,172 --> 00:42:30,926
Um... We thought long,
we thought hard about that.
758
00:42:31,009 --> 00:42:32,803
Um...
759
00:42:32,886 --> 00:42:35,514
But we compromised.
760
00:42:37,850 --> 00:42:41,895
[Ellen] To be clear, the compromise made
was not to shut down the mill,
761
00:42:41,979 --> 00:42:44,064
but the Boat Harbour Effluent Facility,
762
00:42:44,147 --> 00:42:46,775
which had harmed
the community for decades.
763
00:42:48,402 --> 00:42:51,989
The government of Nova Scotia
passed the Boat Harbour Act,
764
00:42:52,072 --> 00:42:56,034
a law that orders
that by January 31st, 2020,
765
00:42:56,118 --> 00:42:57,536
using the Boat Harbour facility
766
00:42:57,619 --> 00:43:02,165
"for the reception and treatment
of effluent from the Mill must cease..."
767
00:43:02,875 --> 00:43:04,960
allowing time for two things:
768
00:43:05,043 --> 00:43:07,713
to plan and build
a new wastewater treatment plant
769
00:43:07,796 --> 00:43:09,798
and to plan the cleanup of Boat Harbour.
770
00:43:11,258 --> 00:43:15,387
Northern Pulp was given five years
to come up with an alternative plan.
771
00:43:15,971 --> 00:43:18,932
But four years later,
the best plan they could propose
772
00:43:19,016 --> 00:43:20,434
was to build a new pipeline
773
00:43:20,517 --> 00:43:21,977
that would dump the effluent
774
00:43:22,060 --> 00:43:23,812
into the Northumberland Strait,
775
00:43:23,896 --> 00:43:25,689
right next to Pictou Landing...
776
00:43:26,565 --> 00:43:30,861
lucrative fishing grounds for both
the native and non-native community,
777
00:43:30,944 --> 00:43:33,488
a plan that created public outrage.
778
00:43:37,868 --> 00:43:39,828
Yeah, we wanna be happy.
779
00:43:39,912 --> 00:43:42,122
We wanna celebrate the closure
of something.
780
00:43:42,206 --> 00:43:43,248
We wanna start healing.
781
00:43:43,332 --> 00:43:47,544
We want to do all those things
that we feel that...
782
00:43:47,628 --> 00:43:49,254
we should have been able to do.
783
00:43:49,338 --> 00:43:52,591
And, how can we celebrate that
knowing that they're proposing
784
00:43:52,674 --> 00:43:56,011
a new pipeline or a new treatment plant
785
00:43:56,094 --> 00:43:59,056
that just takes it from our backyard
and puts it in our front yard?
786
00:43:59,139 --> 00:44:01,683
But what really bothers me
is that they say,
787
00:44:01,767 --> 00:44:04,436
"treated effluent, treated effluent,
treated effluent."
788
00:44:04,520 --> 00:44:07,356
We've been impacted
by this treated effluent
789
00:44:07,439 --> 00:44:09,149
for more than five decades.
790
00:44:10,526 --> 00:44:14,655
Like, we shouldn't
have to continue to fight.
791
00:44:14,738 --> 00:44:17,407
We shouldn't have to be out there
792
00:44:17,491 --> 00:44:20,869
saying, "What the fuck is wrong with you?
793
00:44:20,953 --> 00:44:23,622
Why are you proposing to put that there?"
794
00:44:23,705 --> 00:44:27,626
Like, why is the government
okay with that?
795
00:44:28,168 --> 00:44:32,714
After knowing full well of the devastation
that we've been through.
796
00:44:32,798 --> 00:44:33,966
Our history.
797
00:44:35,968 --> 00:44:39,471
We're...
We're never gonna be free of it.
798
00:44:42,391 --> 00:44:46,603
[Ellen] In early 2019,
the Pictou community came together
799
00:44:46,687 --> 00:44:50,899
to keep public awareness focused
on the planned 2020 closure date.
800
00:44:50,983 --> 00:44:53,193
[reporter] The room was filled
with optimism
801
00:44:53,277 --> 00:44:56,864
as the Pictou Landing First Nations
kicked off their one-year countdown
802
00:44:56,947 --> 00:44:59,408
to the Boat Harbour
Treatment Facility closure.
803
00:44:59,491 --> 00:45:02,244
Together, we want a clean environment.
804
00:45:02,327 --> 00:45:07,040
Together, we want to make things right,
and that's what this is all about.
805
00:45:07,124 --> 00:45:12,004
This date means so much
to not just Pictou Landing First Nation,
806
00:45:12,087 --> 00:45:13,922
but it means a lot to everybody.
807
00:45:14,006 --> 00:45:17,968
"I want my kids to already be able
to swim and fish in Boat Harbour
808
00:45:18,051 --> 00:45:19,344
at my current age.
809
00:45:19,428 --> 00:45:21,847
So then they have the childhood
that I didn't."
810
00:45:22,431 --> 00:45:25,726
[Ellen] At the very same time
the community was celebrating,
811
00:45:25,809 --> 00:45:29,021
Northern Pulp decided
to have their own gathering.
812
00:45:29,104 --> 00:45:31,607
Without an alternative
treatment plan in place
813
00:45:31,690 --> 00:45:34,193
and hoping to avoid
a full mill shutdown,
814
00:45:34,943 --> 00:45:39,156
they asked for an extension
to keep the Boat Harbour facility open.
815
00:45:39,239 --> 00:45:42,242
We all have the same goal
816
00:45:42,326 --> 00:45:46,997
and that is to see Boat Harbour
return to its natural state.
817
00:45:47,080 --> 00:45:52,711
We simply need a bit more time
to ensure the time and due diligence
818
00:45:52,794 --> 00:45:54,588
to carry out each phase,
819
00:45:54,671 --> 00:45:57,007
from environmental assessment
820
00:45:57,090 --> 00:46:01,220
to construction, and finally commissioning
of this new facility.
821
00:46:02,846 --> 00:46:05,265
Well, today was meant to be a celebration,
822
00:46:05,349 --> 00:46:07,643
just an hour before the event kicked off,
823
00:46:07,726 --> 00:46:11,396
Northern Pulp Mill made an announcement
that they would be requiring an extension
824
00:46:11,480 --> 00:46:13,941
to shut down the Boat Harbour facility.
825
00:46:14,024 --> 00:46:17,778
Chief Andrea Paul says the timing
of that announcement is disappointing
826
00:46:17,861 --> 00:46:20,364
and says an extension
would be unacceptable.
827
00:46:20,447 --> 00:46:22,574
They knew by 2015,
828
00:46:22,658 --> 00:46:26,995
and had they taken that time
to be proactive
829
00:46:27,079 --> 00:46:30,040
instead of reactive to the news,
830
00:46:30,123 --> 00:46:34,336
they would have been further ahead
in what they wanted to accomplish.
831
00:46:34,920 --> 00:46:39,007
[Ellen] And then, Stephen McNeil,
the premier of Nova Scotia,
832
00:46:39,091 --> 00:46:42,261
and the first head of government
to be firm on a closure date,
833
00:46:42,344 --> 00:46:45,138
now also seemed to be bending.
834
00:46:45,222 --> 00:46:48,225
We gave them five years,
and I've been very clear about that,
835
00:46:48,308 --> 00:46:51,353
that on January 31st, 2020,
is our deadline.
836
00:46:51,436 --> 00:46:54,314
I've also said, to the community
and to this company,
837
00:46:54,398 --> 00:46:56,441
if you can come together and find a path
838
00:46:56,525 --> 00:46:59,361
that you can find
and land on an extension,
839
00:46:59,444 --> 00:47:00,904
then I would consider that.
840
00:47:01,488 --> 00:47:03,657
Instead of manning up and to say,
841
00:47:03,740 --> 00:47:09,079
"No, A'Se'K's government created
a legislation to close January 31st, 2020,
842
00:47:09,162 --> 00:47:11,206
and we're going to stick by that,"
843
00:47:11,290 --> 00:47:12,583
they chose to...
844
00:47:13,959 --> 00:47:15,669
use us as a scapegoat.
845
00:47:16,295 --> 00:47:20,799
"Okay, well, you know, we could maybe,
if Pictou Landing agrees..."
846
00:47:20,883 --> 00:47:22,759
I thought that was very unfair.
847
00:47:22,843 --> 00:47:24,428
That was very unfair to us.
848
00:47:25,304 --> 00:47:28,682
If it was true, a true relationship...
849
00:47:29,224 --> 00:47:31,143
like they like to boast about,
850
00:47:31,226 --> 00:47:33,937
they would have said,
"January 31st, 2020.
851
00:47:34,021 --> 00:47:36,231
We created the legislation,
we're gonna stick with it,
852
00:47:36,315 --> 00:47:37,566
that's it, the end."
853
00:47:37,649 --> 00:47:39,026
But they didn't.
854
00:47:39,735 --> 00:47:42,613
I just want so desperately
to believe in something,
855
00:47:42,696 --> 00:47:43,739
and...
856
00:47:45,157 --> 00:47:48,243
and right now I believe
in January 31st, 2020.
857
00:47:49,328 --> 00:47:51,872
I just hope that people will realize
858
00:47:51,955 --> 00:47:55,125
that, you know, we're not doing
these things to be troublemakers
859
00:47:55,209 --> 00:47:59,004
and to, you know,
to cause everybody grief.
860
00:47:59,087 --> 00:48:02,508
We're doing it because we need a future.
861
00:48:02,591 --> 00:48:05,260
We need to be connected to the land.
862
00:48:05,344 --> 00:48:08,597
We need to, you know,
have sustainable environment,
863
00:48:08,680 --> 00:48:10,641
um, for our kids,
864
00:48:10,724 --> 00:48:12,226
for our kids' kids.
865
00:48:12,309 --> 00:48:16,897
And, you know, we do it because
we're meant to be here and do this.
866
00:48:16,980 --> 00:48:20,400
The bottom line is,
is that we're sick of being sick.
867
00:48:21,902 --> 00:48:24,071
And we hope to heal.
868
00:48:24,154 --> 00:48:27,824
We hope to heal from all this,
eventually,
869
00:48:27,908 --> 00:48:30,702
but there's a quote
that I always go back to,
870
00:48:30,786 --> 00:48:33,080
is that you can't, you can't heal
871
00:48:33,163 --> 00:48:35,707
in the same environment
that made you sick.
872
00:48:35,791 --> 00:48:39,044
So in order for us to start healing,
that water has to stop flowing.
873
00:48:41,797 --> 00:48:44,758
[Ellen] If or when the waste water
does stop flowing,
874
00:48:44,842 --> 00:48:47,302
an intensive cleanup process is needed,
875
00:48:47,886 --> 00:48:50,180
estimated to take up to five years
876
00:48:50,264 --> 00:48:52,558
and cost over $200 million,
877
00:48:52,641 --> 00:48:56,061
to remove toxins like mercury
from Boat Harbour.
878
00:48:56,895 --> 00:48:59,606
The hope is that eventually
the area will return
879
00:48:59,690 --> 00:49:02,359
to something close to its original state.
880
00:49:03,318 --> 00:49:06,488
We've already started to talk about...
881
00:49:08,073 --> 00:49:10,868
what would Boat Harbour look--
882
00:49:10,951 --> 00:49:12,870
what will it look like in the future?
883
00:49:12,953 --> 00:49:17,416
What do you want to see, you know,
when we're able to revisit A'Se'K,
884
00:49:17,499 --> 00:49:20,002
when we're able to reclaim that again?
885
00:49:20,085 --> 00:49:22,796
Because we talk about,
you know, we call it Boat Harbour,
886
00:49:22,880 --> 00:49:25,382
you know, but that is the pollution name.
887
00:49:25,465 --> 00:49:27,050
Boat Harbour is
the pollution name of that.
888
00:49:27,134 --> 00:49:28,177
You know, it was A'Se'K,
889
00:49:28,260 --> 00:49:30,304
so when we get back to A'Se'K,
what do you wanna see?
890
00:49:32,306 --> 00:49:35,184
We talk about nature
and we talk about, you know,
891
00:49:35,267 --> 00:49:41,690
they just want to be able
to reconnect with the land.
892
00:49:44,735 --> 00:49:49,239
Something as simple as that
is healing, you know, for people.
893
00:49:51,533 --> 00:49:55,537
I want, you know, my grandfather
to rest peacefully.
894
00:49:56,163 --> 00:50:01,710
I want all the Boat Harbour warriors
before us to rest peacefully.
895
00:50:01,793 --> 00:50:03,670
And I want them to be proud
896
00:50:03,754 --> 00:50:07,132
that we fought right till the end.
897
00:50:23,565 --> 00:50:25,984
[Ellen] While Michelle and her community
continue to push
898
00:50:26,068 --> 00:50:28,237
towards Boat Harbour's closure date,
899
00:50:28,320 --> 00:50:32,157
only an hour away,
history could very well repeat itself,
900
00:50:32,241 --> 00:50:35,536
with the government being influenced
by corporate interests,
901
00:50:35,619 --> 00:50:38,830
again at the expense
of an indigenous community,
902
00:50:38,914 --> 00:50:40,874
which brings me to my last stop,
903
00:50:40,958 --> 00:50:42,793
where, in the town of Stewiacke,
904
00:50:42,876 --> 00:50:45,295
they are fighting
to keep that from happening.
905
00:50:46,004 --> 00:50:48,757
The Alton Gas Corporation
is proposing to build
906
00:50:48,841 --> 00:50:53,011
an underground storage facility
on unceded Mi'kmaq territory.
907
00:50:54,680 --> 00:50:56,807
Alton Gas discovered
underground salt caverns
908
00:50:56,890 --> 00:50:58,809
near the Shubenacadie River
909
00:50:58,892 --> 00:51:00,727
that could store natural gas.
910
00:51:00,811 --> 00:51:02,437
In order to do that,
911
00:51:02,521 --> 00:51:06,483
they've planned to dissolve the cavern's
salt deposits with river water
912
00:51:06,567 --> 00:51:10,195
and then dump that salt water mixture
back into the river,
913
00:51:10,279 --> 00:51:12,823
up to 3,000 tons per day.
914
00:51:13,448 --> 00:51:15,659
The brine mixture carries salinity levels
915
00:51:15,742 --> 00:51:19,955
six times higher than what's considered
safe for fish to survive.
916
00:51:20,038 --> 00:51:24,543
Naturally, community members
and local leaders are not pleased.
917
00:51:25,419 --> 00:51:27,337
Community is not happy about it.
918
00:51:27,421 --> 00:51:29,965
[reporter] The Sipekne'katik Band
is against the project.
919
00:51:30,048 --> 00:51:33,427
Chief Rufus Copage says
the latest environmental report
920
00:51:33,510 --> 00:51:36,597
wasn't properly explained
to his band council.
921
00:51:36,680 --> 00:51:38,265
I was hoping we'd have a chance
to talk to them,
922
00:51:38,348 --> 00:51:41,560
but it don't seem like the government
wants to give us an opportunity,
923
00:51:41,643 --> 00:51:43,437
so I guess we'll have to fight.
924
00:51:44,271 --> 00:51:47,316
They've never done this
anywheres in the world before.
925
00:51:47,399 --> 00:51:50,277
Why do they want to do it here
in little Nova Scotia?
926
00:51:50,360 --> 00:51:52,696
Why do they want to do it in our river
927
00:51:52,779 --> 00:51:56,033
that our kids fish every year,
928
00:51:56,116 --> 00:51:58,035
where they get their food from,
929
00:51:58,118 --> 00:52:00,662
where our community members
have gathered
930
00:52:00,746 --> 00:52:02,581
for many, many, many generations?
931
00:52:02,664 --> 00:52:06,168
The real public safety issue is Alton Gas.
932
00:52:06,251 --> 00:52:08,962
[chanting]
933
00:52:09,046 --> 00:52:11,715
[Ellen] I'm going to meet
with the local Water Protectors
934
00:52:11,798 --> 00:52:13,509
in the Sipekne'katik district,
935
00:52:13,592 --> 00:52:16,261
who are known
as the Grassroots Grandmothers.
936
00:52:17,054 --> 00:52:18,263
They're leading the resistance
937
00:52:18,347 --> 00:52:20,933
to prevent not only
an environmental catastrophe,
938
00:52:21,016 --> 00:52:23,435
but also a travesty
of their treaty rights.
939
00:52:25,187 --> 00:52:28,941
And several of them were arrested
just a few days before our visit.
940
00:52:29,024 --> 00:52:31,527
[protestors chanting]
941
00:52:31,610 --> 00:52:35,030
[reporter] The Mi'kmaq women say
they're protecting the land and water,
942
00:52:35,113 --> 00:52:38,784
and when they wouldn't leave voluntarily,
they were taken into custody
943
00:52:38,867 --> 00:52:41,161
for civil contempt of an injunction order.
944
00:52:41,245 --> 00:52:43,956
They say their movement is far from over.
945
00:52:44,039 --> 00:52:47,000
We're going to always stand
and protect the sacred.
946
00:52:47,584 --> 00:52:50,420
We're not going to stop.
Mark my words, Alton Gas...
947
00:52:50,504 --> 00:52:52,130
you're not going to be successful.
948
00:52:57,719 --> 00:53:01,348
[Ellen] I'm meeting Dorene and Michelle,
two of the Water Protectors.
949
00:53:02,850 --> 00:53:05,519
They're taking me
to the main Alton Gas gate,
950
00:53:05,602 --> 00:53:08,188
where they've been
actively disrupting the project.
951
00:53:14,111 --> 00:53:17,197
We're going to, uh, the...
952
00:53:18,198 --> 00:53:20,659
the Alton Gas gate.
953
00:53:21,285 --> 00:53:24,621
Where they arrested the ladies, yeah,
the women.
954
00:53:24,705 --> 00:53:26,290
[Michelle P.] They took
the tobacco ties off.
955
00:53:26,373 --> 00:53:28,166
-[Dorene] Yes, they did.
-[Michelle P.] Oh, no.
956
00:53:28,250 --> 00:53:29,835
I'm gonna ask them about those.
957
00:53:29,918 --> 00:53:31,378
[Michelle P.] Why is there a police car
right here?
958
00:53:31,461 --> 00:53:32,296
I don't know.
959
00:53:32,880 --> 00:53:34,381
[Ellen] Over the last four years,
960
00:53:34,464 --> 00:53:36,508
this has been the front line
of resistance,
961
00:53:36,592 --> 00:53:39,344
resulting in almost daily conflict.
962
00:53:39,428 --> 00:53:43,223
[Dorene] I just came down to check in
on the tobacco ties,
963
00:53:43,307 --> 00:53:46,059
those prayer ties that were on the gate.
964
00:53:46,685 --> 00:53:48,437
[Michelle P.] That was done in ceremony.
965
00:53:48,520 --> 00:53:50,731
We put those ties up in ceremony.
966
00:53:50,814 --> 00:53:53,150
We did do our best to respect them.
967
00:53:53,233 --> 00:53:56,695
We made sure the other side stayed up
and we double-taped those.
968
00:53:57,529 --> 00:53:59,031
I can give them to you now.
969
00:53:59,114 --> 00:54:02,117
I... Can I just collect them?
I'll just get them myself?
970
00:54:02,201 --> 00:54:06,079
I can't let you over the gate,
but I can bring them over to you.
971
00:54:07,539 --> 00:54:10,000
[Michelle P.]
That's not right, that's disrespectful.
972
00:54:24,097 --> 00:54:28,435
[Ellen] Alton Gas even ended up creating
a designated protest area
973
00:54:28,519 --> 00:54:31,188
to keep them from disrupting
the entrance.
974
00:54:31,271 --> 00:54:32,940
[Dorene] So this is our cage.
975
00:54:33,440 --> 00:54:36,235
This is the protest cage that they built.
976
00:54:36,818 --> 00:54:39,154
I won't step inside of that cage.
977
00:54:39,238 --> 00:54:41,365
'Cause my spirit won't go in that cage.
978
00:54:43,534 --> 00:54:46,787
"Peaceful protestors
can use this designated area
979
00:54:46,870 --> 00:54:50,916
during daylight hours
to maintain a safe and clean area for all.
980
00:54:50,999 --> 00:54:52,167
Please remove all garbage.
981
00:54:52,251 --> 00:54:54,878
Do not park vehicles,
camp or light fires.
982
00:54:55,462 --> 00:54:59,591
Note that the use of alcohol and drugs
is strictly prohibited. Thank you."
983
00:55:00,801 --> 00:55:04,221
The level of ignorance and disrespect
984
00:55:04,847 --> 00:55:07,516
that those words convey...
985
00:55:08,475 --> 00:55:09,768
[sighs]
986
00:55:11,645 --> 00:55:12,938
What are you guys doing here?
987
00:55:13,939 --> 00:55:17,818
[officer] We were talking to them about
playing it safe.
988
00:55:17,901 --> 00:55:19,194
She knows we're concerned.
989
00:55:20,404 --> 00:55:22,197
I just don't recognize you, that's all.
990
00:55:22,281 --> 00:55:24,283
-Oh.
-Your faces.
991
00:55:24,366 --> 00:55:26,577
I recognize this. [laughs]
992
00:55:26,660 --> 00:55:28,203
But not your faces.
993
00:55:28,954 --> 00:55:33,125
A lot of money is being
spent by the province...
994
00:55:34,960 --> 00:55:38,255
to allow, aid and abet the real criminal.
995
00:55:39,631 --> 00:55:42,342
And the criminalization
of our own people...
996
00:55:43,802 --> 00:55:47,472
has not, uh, been really spoken about.
997
00:55:48,307 --> 00:55:51,101
The real criminals are the company
that's trying to come in here
998
00:55:51,185 --> 00:55:53,353
and dump salt in this river.
999
00:55:53,437 --> 00:55:56,481
They're the real criminals,
but yet they're being protected
1000
00:55:56,565 --> 00:55:58,942
by, uh, the police services. It's...
1001
00:56:00,068 --> 00:56:02,821
it's incredibly, uh, disturbing.
1002
00:56:03,906 --> 00:56:05,282
Look, another one.
1003
00:56:08,702 --> 00:56:11,288
[Ellen] Dorene is taking us to meet
the other grandmothers
1004
00:56:11,371 --> 00:56:13,123
at their second site of resistance,
1005
00:56:13,207 --> 00:56:14,708
the treaty truck house,
1006
00:56:14,791 --> 00:56:19,004
where she accidentally stumbled upon
the start of the Alton Gas construction
1007
00:56:19,087 --> 00:56:20,464
three years ago.
1008
00:56:21,840 --> 00:56:23,383
By building the truck house,
1009
00:56:23,467 --> 00:56:27,888
the Water Protectors actively asserted
their treaty rights and occupied the area,
1010
00:56:28,514 --> 00:56:30,974
effectively delaying the company
from moving forward
1011
00:56:31,058 --> 00:56:34,603
and impeding on unceded Mi'kmaq territory.
1012
00:56:37,356 --> 00:56:39,066
[Dorene] This is a public access road.
1013
00:56:40,275 --> 00:56:43,570
And there was a backhoe up here,
1014
00:56:43,654 --> 00:56:44,738
uh...
1015
00:56:46,198 --> 00:56:47,533
filling in this dike.
1016
00:56:47,616 --> 00:56:50,911
And I ran up, I ran up
and asked them what they were doing,
1017
00:56:50,994 --> 00:56:53,747
and they said,
"Oh, you're not supposed to be here.
1018
00:56:53,830 --> 00:56:56,416
This is for a construction site.
1019
00:56:56,500 --> 00:56:59,586
And, uh, we had to build up the dike
1020
00:56:59,670 --> 00:57:02,256
on orders
of the Minister of the Environment."
1021
00:57:02,339 --> 00:57:05,759
And I said, "What?
She ordered you to do that?"
1022
00:57:05,843 --> 00:57:09,346
I said, "When is she gonna order you
to go the hell home, get out of here?"
1023
00:57:10,430 --> 00:57:11,682
And I went down to the river
1024
00:57:11,765 --> 00:57:14,142
and I was offering my tobacco
and praying,
1025
00:57:14,226 --> 00:57:18,063
and, uh, two security guards
came up behind me
1026
00:57:18,146 --> 00:57:21,942
and they stood there
while I was singing to the water.
1027
00:57:22,693 --> 00:57:26,154
And then they escorted me
back to my car.
1028
00:57:27,072 --> 00:57:30,576
And that's when I put that video out,
1029
00:57:30,659 --> 00:57:34,413
showing that there's backhoes up here
and they were building.
1030
00:57:34,955 --> 00:57:38,500
And, uh, told people,
"This is what they're doing to the river.
1031
00:57:38,584 --> 00:57:39,877
You better come."
1032
00:57:39,960 --> 00:57:42,462
And that weekend we came and built...
1033
00:57:42,546 --> 00:57:46,216
I'll take you over
to the treaty truck house.
1034
00:57:46,300 --> 00:57:47,801
All right.
1035
00:57:48,635 --> 00:57:50,888
-All right.
-[Ellen] You want me to grab this?
1036
00:57:51,763 --> 00:57:56,059
This is where it all began,
as far as the occupation of this site.
1037
00:57:56,143 --> 00:57:58,812
It was women who were here that day.
1038
00:57:58,896 --> 00:58:04,234
And we also had a copy of our treaty
that was rolled up like a scroll,
1039
00:58:04,318 --> 00:58:06,778
and we unrolled it and we
put it up to them
1040
00:58:06,862 --> 00:58:09,156
and we said, we recited the clause,
1041
00:58:09,239 --> 00:58:12,201
number four on our 1752 treaty,
that states,
1042
00:58:12,284 --> 00:58:13,785
"If the Indians shall decide,
1043
00:58:13,869 --> 00:58:16,455
a truck house will be built
on the river Shubenacadie."
1044
00:58:16,538 --> 00:58:20,584
And we all looked at each other
and we said, "We decide."
1045
00:58:24,463 --> 00:58:28,383
As soon as you get to the top
of this step, one view...
1046
00:58:28,884 --> 00:58:34,640
In one view, in one instant,
you'll realize why we are here.
1047
00:58:36,642 --> 00:58:38,685
This river is sacred to us.
1048
00:58:38,769 --> 00:58:43,315
This river is the superhighway
of our nation.
1049
00:58:43,398 --> 00:58:45,400
It connected our whole territory.
1050
00:58:45,484 --> 00:58:46,693
From time immemorial.
1051
00:58:47,528 --> 00:58:49,363
And we continue to do that.
1052
00:58:49,446 --> 00:58:52,407
And we won't let this company destroy it.
1053
00:58:52,491 --> 00:58:54,493
[drums beating, protestors chanting]
1054
00:59:26,608 --> 00:59:29,152
One of the things I think
is really important
1055
00:59:29,236 --> 00:59:33,782
is, uh, to know that
women are carriers for the water.
1056
00:59:35,117 --> 00:59:39,538
And the reason why women
are given this responsibility
1057
00:59:40,163 --> 00:59:44,042
is because women are the life givers.
1058
00:59:45,043 --> 00:59:50,632
It's passed down to the women,
the females in our families,
1059
00:59:51,425 --> 00:59:54,428
that the water is sacred
and it's our responsibility.
1060
00:59:55,470 --> 00:59:56,847
We are given a gift,
1061
00:59:56,930 --> 00:59:59,850
but we also have been given
a responsibility.
1062
01:00:01,768 --> 01:00:05,022
[Ellen] With their water endangered,
their treaty rights violated,
1063
01:00:05,105 --> 01:00:07,649
and the country's
environmental laws ignored,
1064
01:00:07,733 --> 01:00:11,195
these grandmothers have begun
confronting the very politicians
1065
01:00:11,278 --> 01:00:12,696
sworn in to protect them.
1066
01:00:13,780 --> 01:00:16,575
Honor our treaties, Mr. McNeil!
1067
01:00:16,658 --> 01:00:18,118
[Michelle P.] Talk to us, talk to us!
1068
01:00:18,202 --> 01:00:21,371
-[woman] Why won't you speak to us?
-Roll your window down. [tapping glass]
1069
01:00:21,455 --> 01:00:24,541
Roll your window down. Come on.
Roll your window down.
1070
01:00:24,625 --> 01:00:25,876
-Don't block that car.
-I'm not blocking it.
1071
01:00:25,959 --> 01:00:27,628
Step back or you're gonna get arrested.
1072
01:00:27,711 --> 01:00:29,338
Do not block the car.
You can protest all you want...
1073
01:00:29,421 --> 01:00:31,173
[woman 1] You need to learn to honor
the treaty!
1074
01:00:31,256 --> 01:00:32,090
[woman 2] Respect...
1075
01:00:32,174 --> 01:00:34,885
-[Michelle P.] Speak to the people.
-[woman 1] Honor the treaty!
1076
01:00:34,968 --> 01:00:36,428
[Michelle P.] Stop Alton Gas!
1077
01:00:40,182 --> 01:00:41,725
No, you are federal government,
1078
01:00:41,808 --> 01:00:44,394
you are the one that puts this
through our laws.
1079
01:00:44,478 --> 01:00:46,063
You are poisoning our waters.
1080
01:00:46,146 --> 01:00:49,024
You're allowing other companies
to come into our wa...
1081
01:00:49,107 --> 01:00:50,400
No, no, no "thank you" yet.
1082
01:00:50,484 --> 01:00:53,362
I'm thanking you for being direct with me.
1083
01:00:53,445 --> 01:00:54,780
-I'm a very straight-up grandmother.
-I really appreciate that.
1084
01:00:55,364 --> 01:00:57,324
While you're [indistinct] forward,
the regulations...
1085
01:00:57,407 --> 01:01:00,494
No regulations, we don't want
gas under our ass!
1086
01:01:00,577 --> 01:01:04,331
We're gonna be working with the indigenous
leadership, working with the province...
1087
01:01:04,414 --> 01:01:06,250
Why don't you work
with the grandmothers?
1088
01:01:06,333 --> 01:01:09,795
Take Alton Gas out of our province now.
1089
01:01:11,547 --> 01:01:14,800
[protestor] And the legislation
that Trudeau is trying to pass
1090
01:01:14,883 --> 01:01:15,968
needs to be stopped.
1091
01:01:16,051 --> 01:01:18,554
Because he's changing the legislation
1092
01:01:18,637 --> 01:01:21,890
so that Alton Gas can dump brine
in the river.
1093
01:01:21,974 --> 01:01:24,852
They're not in compliance
with the regulations as it is right now,
1094
01:01:24,935 --> 01:01:29,523
and the federal government proposes
to create and design new regulations
1095
01:01:29,606 --> 01:01:33,694
to make them... be in compliance,
I guess, which has just...
1096
01:01:33,777 --> 01:01:34,820
[protestor] Moved them up.
1097
01:01:34,903 --> 01:01:36,280
Yeah, it's just--
1098
01:01:36,363 --> 01:01:39,283
It's just another example
of their contempt
1099
01:01:39,366 --> 01:01:41,994
and their disregard for our rights.
1100
01:01:42,077 --> 01:01:44,329
They're doing it,
and they're not even tricking us.
1101
01:01:44,413 --> 01:01:47,249
They're just doing it now,
you know, blatantly.
1102
01:01:47,332 --> 01:01:50,961
And here we have
the Department of Fisheries, for one,
1103
01:01:51,044 --> 01:01:54,131
of the opinion, I guess,
that they're not able to step in
1104
01:01:54,214 --> 01:01:57,551
unless and until something
actually goes into the water.
1105
01:01:57,634 --> 01:01:58,677
You know?
1106
01:01:58,760 --> 01:02:00,596
And we're saying,
we're not gonna let that happen
1107
01:02:00,679 --> 01:02:02,973
because that risk is too great.
1108
01:02:03,056 --> 01:02:05,517
You can't unring the bell
once it's been rung.
1109
01:02:06,268 --> 01:02:09,563
Right? Like once that brine
goes in that river,
1110
01:02:09,646 --> 01:02:11,648
it will upset the salinity levels.
1111
01:02:11,732 --> 01:02:13,358
It will kill the fish.
1112
01:02:13,442 --> 01:02:16,486
You know, and then... and then what?
1113
01:02:17,571 --> 01:02:20,490
They're opening up
our territory for business.
1114
01:02:20,574 --> 01:02:23,243
Whether it be Alton Gas
or fracking companies
1115
01:02:23,327 --> 01:02:25,746
or rare-earth minerals
1116
01:02:25,829 --> 01:02:27,497
or gold mines,
1117
01:02:27,581 --> 01:02:31,084
those are all projects
that affect our treaty rights.
1118
01:02:31,168 --> 01:02:33,462
So they're blatantly
disrespecting our rights,
1119
01:02:33,545 --> 01:02:38,550
but they're granting Alton Gas
the exemptions to these regulations.
1120
01:02:38,634 --> 01:02:41,386
Canada, Canada is not a nation.
1121
01:02:42,179 --> 01:02:43,764
Canada is not a nation,
1122
01:02:43,847 --> 01:02:45,682
let's get that straight,
it's a corporation.
1123
01:02:46,350 --> 01:02:48,185
You know, doctrine of discovery.
1124
01:02:48,268 --> 01:02:50,687
They didn't discover nothing.
1125
01:02:50,771 --> 01:02:54,191
And each and every time we asked them,
"Well, give us the proof,"
1126
01:02:54,274 --> 01:02:55,567
they can't show us no proof.
1127
01:02:55,651 --> 01:02:59,196
This is why we never get justice
in this system,
1128
01:02:59,279 --> 01:03:01,698
because we're native,
because we're indigenous.
1129
01:03:01,782 --> 01:03:03,659
And it's time for it to stop.
1130
01:03:03,742 --> 01:03:07,996
It's time for us as women
to embrace who we are
1131
01:03:08,080 --> 01:03:09,456
as Mi'kmaqis,
1132
01:03:09,540 --> 01:03:12,751
remember our ancestors
fought for this land,
1133
01:03:12,835 --> 01:03:15,045
and that we need to wake up.
1134
01:03:15,128 --> 01:03:17,339
We need to rise our spirits again.
1135
01:03:17,422 --> 01:03:21,218
We need to go and tell them to leave.
They're not wanted here.
1136
01:03:22,553 --> 01:03:25,097
Right? And that's just basically
what we've been doing,
1137
01:03:25,180 --> 01:03:28,141
is telling them to leave.
They're not wanted here.
1138
01:03:28,225 --> 01:03:29,434
We don't want them here.
1139
01:03:30,269 --> 01:03:33,146
Now, you see that this
not only happens here,
1140
01:03:33,230 --> 01:03:35,983
it happens in every part of the world.
1141
01:03:36,900 --> 01:03:37,943
Every part of the world.
1142
01:03:38,026 --> 01:03:41,655
When you look at where industry
1143
01:03:41,738 --> 01:03:46,118
is affecting the lives of people,
those are indigenous people,
1144
01:03:46,201 --> 01:03:47,870
from those lands.
1145
01:03:47,953 --> 01:03:50,706
And those corporations,
the majority of them,
1146
01:03:50,789 --> 01:03:52,207
are Canadian companies.
1147
01:03:53,000 --> 01:03:55,836
And they have the power
1148
01:03:55,919 --> 01:03:58,255
to have people killed.
1149
01:03:58,338 --> 01:04:02,593
They have had the power
to assassinate grandmothers
1150
01:04:02,676 --> 01:04:06,471
and kill the people that are
standing in front of their gates.
1151
01:04:06,555 --> 01:04:10,392
I said, "We're doing the same thing
as what they did in Guatemala.
1152
01:04:10,475 --> 01:04:12,895
Standing in front of a corporation."
1153
01:04:12,978 --> 01:04:14,813
And people have been killed there.
1154
01:04:14,897 --> 01:04:17,858
If we were less visible,
they would knock us off, too.
1155
01:04:17,941 --> 01:04:19,401
[woman] They are knocking us off.
1156
01:04:19,484 --> 01:04:22,946
Look at the numbers on the missing
and murdered indigenous women.
1157
01:04:23,030 --> 01:04:25,532
They have been killing our women.
1158
01:04:25,616 --> 01:04:29,536
Our truth is that we don't have a choice.
1159
01:04:29,620 --> 01:04:30,996
This is who we are,
1160
01:04:31,079 --> 01:04:34,124
and this is who we are
always meant to be.
1161
01:04:34,208 --> 01:04:35,250
It's in our DNA.
1162
01:04:35,334 --> 01:04:36,668
It's in our blood.
1163
01:04:37,336 --> 01:04:38,504
They cannot stop us
1164
01:04:39,296 --> 01:04:41,215
from being indigenous anymore.
1165
01:04:41,298 --> 01:04:42,633
[woman] It's our identities.
1166
01:04:42,716 --> 01:04:46,887
They cannot stop us from learning
how to take care of the Earth,
1167
01:04:46,970 --> 01:04:48,847
what our relationship is.
1168
01:04:48,931 --> 01:04:51,016
And they cannot stop us from teaching,
1169
01:04:51,099 --> 01:04:54,269
not only our children,
but everybody's children.
1170
01:04:55,395 --> 01:04:57,648
The prophecy that we're taught
1171
01:04:57,731 --> 01:05:04,196
was that, if we didn't start taking care
of our Mother Earth,
1172
01:05:04,279 --> 01:05:06,448
our lands and our waters,
1173
01:05:06,532 --> 01:05:08,200
our food and our medicines,
1174
01:05:08,951 --> 01:05:12,746
and the animals and the flowers
and everything that sustains us,
1175
01:05:12,829 --> 01:05:19,002
one day an ounce of water
is gonna cost more than an ounce of gold.
1176
01:05:19,586 --> 01:05:22,714
It says that no matter
how much money you have,
1177
01:05:22,798 --> 01:05:24,925
you're not gonna be able to buy that...
1178
01:05:25,008 --> 01:05:26,677
ounce of water
1179
01:05:26,760 --> 01:05:28,720
because of how precious it is.
1180
01:05:29,721 --> 01:05:32,266
It wouldn't matter if you had gold.
1181
01:05:33,100 --> 01:05:35,853
You can't drink gold.
You can't drink money.
1182
01:05:37,729 --> 01:05:41,108
So it was a teaching for,
not only indigenous people.
1183
01:05:41,191 --> 01:05:43,026
We carry the message.
1184
01:05:43,110 --> 01:05:46,613
It's for all human beings, all mankind.
1185
01:05:48,532 --> 01:05:50,993
Everybody who's living now,
we have to be able
1186
01:05:51,076 --> 01:05:53,871
to tell our grandchildren
and those that are unborn
1187
01:05:53,954 --> 01:05:57,416
that we did everything in our power
to make a change
1188
01:05:57,499 --> 01:05:58,584
and to make a difference
1189
01:05:58,667 --> 01:06:01,795
and to stop the destruction,
to stop the pollution,
1190
01:06:01,879 --> 01:06:04,756
and to stop it from persisting.
1191
01:06:05,340 --> 01:06:07,509
We're just regular people.
1192
01:06:07,593 --> 01:06:10,554
We're all rights holders here,
sitting in front of you here.
1193
01:06:10,637 --> 01:06:15,642
And how we are connected to you
is that you were born here.
1194
01:06:15,726 --> 01:06:17,394
You're from here, too.
1195
01:06:17,477 --> 01:06:20,314
You have that connection to the land.
1196
01:06:20,397 --> 01:06:23,859
When your feet touch on other territory,
you're still from here.
1197
01:06:23,942 --> 01:06:26,361
Your spirit is from Mi'kma'ki.
1198
01:06:26,445 --> 01:06:30,282
And I hope what happened here today
you'll carry with you
1199
01:06:30,365 --> 01:06:33,410
in your spirit, and that's powerful.
1200
01:06:33,493 --> 01:06:37,539
[no audible dialogue]
1201
01:07:08,570 --> 01:07:11,782
[Ellen] The picture-perfect image I had
of my home growing up
1202
01:07:11,865 --> 01:07:13,700
was broken some time ago.
1203
01:07:14,201 --> 01:07:18,497
But I've come to realize
I just wasn't seeing all of the pieces.
1204
01:07:19,623 --> 01:07:21,834
And that, behind the shadow
of corporations,
1205
01:07:21,917 --> 01:07:24,336
beyond governments turning a blind eye
1206
01:07:24,419 --> 01:07:27,089
on the citizens
it has made most vulnerable,
1207
01:07:27,172 --> 01:07:30,592
a love for nature and one another
can prevail.
1208
01:07:35,722 --> 01:07:38,767
I was instilled with a sense of power
and purpose
1209
01:07:38,851 --> 01:07:40,811
by the Grassroots Grandmothers,
1210
01:07:40,894 --> 01:07:43,188
and all the women I've met
along this journey.
1211
01:07:44,565 --> 01:07:48,193
The truth is, even with their sacrifice,
1212
01:07:48,277 --> 01:07:50,696
there's no way we can know
what the future holds,
1213
01:07:50,779 --> 01:07:53,699
for them or for our planet,
1214
01:07:53,782 --> 01:07:57,077
unless we look to each other
and those in power
1215
01:07:57,160 --> 01:07:58,620
to be held accountable,
1216
01:07:58,704 --> 01:08:02,165
unless we start to shift our view
to see beyond ourselves...
1217
01:08:03,542 --> 01:08:05,085
to see that what affects one of us
1218
01:08:05,169 --> 01:08:07,004
affects us all.
1219
01:08:09,464 --> 01:08:11,842
You share DNA with a fruit fly.
1220
01:08:12,926 --> 01:08:16,388
You are connected
to every living thing on Earth.
1221
01:08:17,139 --> 01:08:18,932
You have the power of life.
1222
01:08:20,100 --> 01:08:21,185
Use it.
1223
01:08:30,777 --> 01:08:32,613
[water rushing]
1224
01:09:35,634 --> 01:09:39,346
And this is one of the hardest decisions
that we as a government
1225
01:09:39,429 --> 01:09:40,472
have had to make.
1226
01:09:41,348 --> 01:09:43,475
The commitment I made
to clean up Boat Harbour
1227
01:09:43,559 --> 01:09:44,852
was a serious one
1228
01:09:44,935 --> 01:09:48,105
and not something
our government did lightly.
1229
01:09:48,897 --> 01:09:52,359
Many governments before us
said they would clean it up,
1230
01:09:52,442 --> 01:09:53,735
but did not.
1231
01:09:55,195 --> 01:09:57,990
We will not repeat that pattern.
1232
01:09:58,657 --> 01:10:00,868
The Boat Harbour Act will be enforced
1233
01:10:00,951 --> 01:10:04,079
as of January 31st, 2020.
1234
01:10:04,872 --> 01:10:08,750
Northern Pulp will be ordered to stop
pumping effluent into Boat Harbour.
1235
01:10:10,210 --> 01:10:11,628
And let me be clear.
1236
01:10:11,712 --> 01:10:14,673
There will be no extension.
1237
01:10:17,301 --> 01:10:19,052
[water rushing]