The Big Problem In The Great Lakes - A film on the Toledo Water Crisis and Lake Erie algal blooms

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
  • For three days, in August of 2014, the citizens of the city of Toledo, Ohio couldn’t use their tap water due to a toxic algal bloom surrounding the city’s drinking water intake in Lake Erie. City officials declared the water unsafe to drink, as well as use for bathing, brushing teeth, and cleaning dishes - boiling the water would not help, residents were told.
    Ten years later, Lake Erie is still afflicted with toxic algal blooms.
    The Big Problem In The Great Lakes is a documentary about a city’s frightening three day battle against toxic algae in Lake Erie - and one person’s mission for the last ten years to advocate for cleaning up that lake.
    Featuring:
    Kim Axe
    Activist, Lake Erie Advocates
    Mayor Wade Kapszuckiewicz
    Mayor of Toledo
    Dr. Greg Dick
    Professor, University of Michigan
    Director, Cooperative Institute For Great Lakes Research
    Dennis and Tony Ruffing
    Farmers, STJ Ruffing Cattle Farm
    The Big Problem In The Great Lakes Web Sites
    www.thebigprob...
    A Three Pines Production
    Website
    www.athreepine...
    Facebook
    / athreepinesproduction
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    / athreepinesproduction
    Support us on Patreon!
    / athreepinesproduction

КОМЕНТАРІ • 38

  • @stevenkirby7478
    @stevenkirby7478 25 днів тому +4

    The state of Ohio is notoriously inept when it comes water quality standards. Part of this rests with the power of the Ohio Faar Bureau's involvement in protecting polluting farmers in the watershed. The rest can be laid at the doorsteps of poor sewage treatent including non working septic systems draining directly into the lakes tributaries. Every discharge point in the watershed must be cataloged and permitted.

  • @kevinboehm134
    @kevinboehm134 Місяць тому +6

    Great video. This has much more impact than just Toledo. We need to protect Our Great Lakes. Ohio legislature needs to step up!

  • @matthewortiz7223
    @matthewortiz7223 22 дні тому +1

    We're seeing true greed.. money over people what wrong with this country.

  • @syntaxerorr
    @syntaxerorr 9 днів тому

    Never heard you can't bath in the water. I just came back from a vacation on the 1st day and didn't know what was happening, other than I couldn't drink the tap water. The next day I was able to buy bottled water at a store. It really wasn't a big deal. It is a problem that needs fix though.

  • @patrickhogan5565
    @patrickhogan5565 Місяць тому +3

    Very well done. Thank you for not letting anyone forget about this issue that is unfortunately ongoing

  • @PredecessorProfessor
    @PredecessorProfessor Місяць тому +7

    The toxic algal blooms have been linked to improper farming practices. So to fix this issue we should be overhauling the farming system. They will never do this though because the government suckles from Monsantos tit. Regenverative and organic farming practices would fix a whole lot of our problems in the U.S.. This mixed with some better regulation and policing of dumping in the waterways and heck we could all be relaxing by the rivers for a summer dip in no time.

    • @RobKaiser_SQuest
      @RobKaiser_SQuest Місяць тому

      FWIW Monsanto as any form of legal entity hasn't existed since 2018, they were bought out by Bayer.

    • @studiohost
      @studiohost Місяць тому

      I agree, but the bulk of fertilizer in rivers comes from lawn runoff.

  • @amyburgess7684
    @amyburgess7684 Місяць тому +4

    I'm a Toledo native and still live in the area. I vividly really this situation. Ironically, I was and still am living out in the country. Our well tried up that same day as the water crisis. I'm also a social worker, and I remember the stress that the city and area was in. You don't realize how just how much water you use under its gone. We live in with this beautiful area. But we need to take care of it as stewards. Because our area takes water for granted because we are blessed to be in the Great Lakes. Another point that needs to be discussed is how the trees and woods helped to filter the soil before the sediment, and such hits the watershed. Now we have less trees but more farms which cut down the trees to drain the swamp. And to have farmland. I live out in the country (30 min outside of Toledo near the airport). I understand and appreciate our farmers. We need the products they produce. That being said, there needs to be a way to have safe water and to keep our farms.

  • @lawrencejneuser8801
    @lawrencejneuser8801 26 днів тому

    It's kind of funny about water quality and how I noticed it back when I was a kid in high school. We used to have a water well that was located between a 25 acre field and the barnyard. The springtime my foster dad would start cleaning out the barn and spread the manure on the 25 acre field Would slope down towards the well. I told my foster mom one day the tap water tasted kind of funny. She blamed it on the fact that the school had just switched the water and they had chlorinated water. But it was springtime and we even had a river running through the basement to the sump pump, and the floors in the basement were always wet at this time of year. The year was 1969

  • @finntjomstol9364
    @finntjomstol9364 Місяць тому +5

    Less than 800 views and under 200 subs is criminal

  • @kkkk-wg6je
    @kkkk-wg6je Місяць тому +2

    I’m on the wisco side of lake mich. 2 things: There are many polluted rivers dumping farm waste into the lake, the river ecosystems are destroyed. And native species in the lake are almost non existent in favor of “game fish” like salmon which are planted.

    • @frankkolton1780
      @frankkolton1780 18 днів тому

      Not "in favor of gamed fish" it's because of invasive species, going back to 1950s and before were sea lampreys (devastated the lake trout population). Alewives out competed many native species. Salmon were brought in to manage alewives.

  • @kevinking9783
    @kevinking9783 Місяць тому +1

    not trying to be smart aleck, but a serious technical question: was water pressure flowing sufficient in pipelines to use toilets?

    • @AThreePinesProduction
      @AThreePinesProduction  Місяць тому +1

      Good question actually.
      So everyone says “shut off” but what they really mean is the city just told everyone not to use the water. The water system itself was never physically shut off probably for that very reason. Plus the loss of pressure could damage parts of the system.
      But that’s why there was a concern about elderly people or disabled people not knowing and drinking the water. There were reports of about a few dozen people who went to the hospital sick from drinking the water.

    • @syntaxerorr
      @syntaxerorr 9 днів тому

      This video blows it way out of proportion. No problem with water pressure. There was no problem with bathing, just don't consume it. You could buy bottled water after the 2nd day. It is a problem that needs fixed though.

  • @Cheddar_Curtain
    @Cheddar_Curtain Місяць тому +3

    I grew up in a mid sized Wisconsin town with a central lake. Algae blooms in the summer were a problem and a running joke. That stuff smelled awful, the lake turned green. There were rumors of dogs and kids jumping in that got sick. Luckily the drinking water was not affected. Most of the problem was due to poor farm management upstream meaning factory farm animal shit running into the water causing a spike in nitrates which is algae super food. We still have a long way to go fixing our water supply in the USA.

    • @AThreePinesProduction
      @AThreePinesProduction  Місяць тому +1

      Sadly this seems to be a problem everywhere factory farming exists. The Real News Network and Max Alvarez talked to some folks in Wisconsin about the issue a few years ago, if you haven't seen their doc on it, might be worth checking out. Are you connected with any groups working on fighting CAFOs in your area?

  • @python357magnum100
    @python357magnum100 15 днів тому

    All pollution , factory farms, habitat destruction, mega garbage dumps, over fishing, plastics all have one common denominator…..humans.
    The UN estimates that around 385,000 babies are born each day around the world (140 million a year).
    According to World Population Review, the average daily death rate in 2024 is 166,859 people worldwide.
    There’s the problem.

  • @Floofie_boi
    @Floofie_boi Місяць тому +1

    I live in Ohio and I've never drank tap water unless it's been run through filters. It always tastes nasty.

  • @danglesmcgee0774
    @danglesmcgee0774 23 дні тому

    Song????

  • @davidgrenis638
    @davidgrenis638 26 днів тому +1

    I THINK REQUIRING HUGE TRENCHES AROUND EVERY FARM AND MAYBE EVERY FARM BEING DIVIDED BY TRENCHES THAT WOULD CATCH THIS THAT WOULD ESSENTIALLY BE TURNED INTO PLACES LIKE MARSHES
    DAVID ADAM GRENIS CURRENTLY IN HOUSTON TEXAS

  • @3dFantasyCreations
    @3dFantasyCreations Місяць тому

  • @davidgrenis638
    @davidgrenis638 26 днів тому

    IN 100 YEARS ALL THE WATER COULD BE GONE THERE JUST LIKE THE LAKE THAT'S IN RUSSIA 😮

  • @maemorri
    @maemorri Місяць тому +1

    Factory farms are delicious.

    • @AThreePinesProduction
      @AThreePinesProduction  Місяць тому

      To clarify, are we talking the buildings themselves, the business entities, or the meat they produce?

  • @thomasollie1712
    @thomasollie1712 22 дні тому

    Liberal BS