What a toxic dust crisis in Utah could mean for Rhode Island | Weekend 401

The documentary “The Lake” explores the Great Salt Lake’s collapse — and a Providence screening asks what lessons it holds for New England

Video still from The Lake, a documentary about responding to the ecological crisis of the Great Salt Lake evaporating
Video still from The Lake, a documentary about responding to the ecological crisis of the Great Salt Lake evaporating
Share
Video still from The Lake, a documentary about responding to the ecological crisis of the Great Salt Lake evaporating
Video still from The Lake, a documentary about responding to the ecological crisis of the Great Salt Lake evaporating
What a toxic dust crisis in Utah could mean for Rhode Island | Weekend 401
Copy

How is a toxic dust crisis in Salt Lake City relevant to us here in Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts?

The new documentary “The Lake” follows the urgent race to save the Great Salt Lake, which has been swiftly evaporating. A conversation afterwards will explore how what’s happening in Utah can offer some lessons in addressing the impacts of climate change in our region.

For the Weekend 401, afternoon host Mareva Lindo spoke with Cathleen Carr, Executive Director of newportFILM, which is presenting the documentary “The Lake” tonight at the Avon Cinema in Providence.

Interview highlights:

A ‘documentary thriller’

Cathleen Carr: It is thrilling. It is a behind-the-scenes film that follows scientists, politicians, policymakers, and business leaders in Utah as they are facing the current and urgent ecological crisis of the Great Salt Lake evaporating. It is something that is a huge threat to the population of Salt Lake City and the surrounding communities because as the lake is evaporating, it creates all these dust plumes with a lot of toxic compounds in them. And that has implications for everyone outside of Utah as well because … dust has no geographical boundaries. So this film is so fascinating because It shows in real time how people with a lot of different agendas and needs and stories and interests have to come together at the table and figure out a really really urgent crisis.

On how ‘The Lake’ offers a ‘blueprint’ for addressing the impacts of climate change in our region

Carr: This film is an opportunity. It’s almost like a blueprint, a manual to see how people who have to act quicker than us are dealing with it and the difficult conversations that they’re having to have. Because what’s happening in Utah all of the same themes exist for every community. … It really gets us thinking about how we can approach this and what mechanisms that we can utilize as a community and come to the table and have these difficult conversations. It’s just a really great and entertaining opportunity to learn how we can address these urgent issues that are coming to us right now here in Rhode Island and Southeast Massachusetts.

On the post-film conversation

Carr: We have Terry Gray, who is the director of Rhode Island DEM. We have Senator Dawn Euer, who’s going to be speaking on the panel and we have Joanna Detz who’s from Eco RI. It’s going to be moderated by Bill Bartholomew, and we have an opportunity for folks to ask questions in the audience as well. So it’s a really great opportunity to get people in the room who can bring different perspectives and understanding about what the themes of the film bring up just in general around climate change, and how we’re dealing with it as a country and a society. But also localizing it and how we are dealing with it here in our community. So really a great event for people who are interested in this and want to know more and have an opportunity to talk to people in the space who are following this really really closely.

“The Lake” is screening on April 30 at 7 p.m. at the Avon Cinema in Providence, with a post-film conversation about its relevance in our region.

Judge calls the Justice Department’s request a “fishing expedition” for sensitive voter information
The city council approved the Providence Rent Stabilization Act on Thursday, which would have placed a 4% cap on annual rent increases for most Providence apartments
Officials project $38 million a year once tolling resumes, but spending obligations have outpaced revenue by millions
The Providence City Council is still one vote short of a supermajority that could override Mayor Brett Smiley’s expected veto. The policy would cap annual rent increases at 4% with exceptions for owner-occupants.
Mayor Ken Hopkins says a 7.4% tax increase is necessary to maintain city services and close the existing budget gap
Plus: the Rhode Island Black Film Festival, opening day at the drive-in and more