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The Hills
Ines Sommer/2023/43 Min/Community, Conservation , Environmental Justice
Teens and young adults are encouraged to attend.
Accessibility Note: A live captioner will be present during this event.
The Hills Film Description: When the steel mills on Chicago’s Southeast Side closed decades ago, they left behind toxic sites that look harmless to the naked eye. Deriving its title from a deserted 67-acre hill made up of slag that Republic Steel/LTV dumped there during the 1950s–80s, The Hills is a place-based documentary where contaminated land, water, and wildlife play a leading role alongside the voices of community members. Easily mistaken for gravel, slag is a byproduct of steelmaking and contains arsenic, chromium, lead, and other toxins. Recently declared a superfund site by the EPA, the abandoned Schroud property has long attracted heavy recreational use and toxins from the slag continue to leach into the adjacent Indian Creek. Providing a rich habitat for fish, beavers, and birds, Indian Creek links Wolf Lake, a major recreational fishing area, to the Calumet River which in turn connects to Lake Michigan, Chicago’s source of drinking water. The Hills uses this singular site as a starting point to consider the area’s industrial history, labor, and current environmental justice struggles, including the fight against General Iron and the proposed expansion of the Army Corps of Engineer’s Confined Disposal Facility (CDF) right at the shore of Lake Michigan, the source of Chicago's drinking water.
IN THE PRESS
Chicago Tribune: Nearly $700K in public art installations on climate change and environmental justice to be revealed across Chicago
Axios Chicago: New environmental artworks pop up across Chicago
Chicago Reader: Rethinking our relationship to water
The Green Sense Show: Ines Sommer – The Hills
We will additionally be screening one of the One Earth Young Filmmakers Runner-Up films The Atlantis Mussels by Rachmat Kurniawan Idrus & Azyd Aqsha Madani.
Stay after the film for an enlightening facilitated dialogue with relevant experts and advocates.
Our Facilitator for the evening will be Dr.Matthew Smith, Biology Faculty, Illinois Institute of Technology.
We will be visited by Ines Sommer, Director, The Hills.
Panelists:
Ines Sommer, Director, The Hills
Gaby Wagener-Sobrero, Environmental Justice Project Manager, Chicago Department of Environment
Cheryl Johnson, Executive Director, People for Community Recovery
Remel Terry, Director of Programs, Equiticity
Yessenia Balcazar, Senior Resilient Community Planning Manager, Southeast Environmental Task Force
SOLD OUT!
Wednesday, April 23, 6:00-9:00 PM Doors Open at 5:30 for dinner and action tables.
Illinois Institute of Technology
3201 South State Street, Chicago, IL 60616. Free with a suggested $8 donation.