World premier screenings at Flooded Out Film
Festival
All proceeds from Oct. 10 event go to flood victims
CHARLESTON, W. Va. ˆ While any good flick fest is bound to include a controversial
film, the Flooded Out Film Festival is all about controversy.
Many coalfield residents who lived through the deluges of July 2001 and May this
year believe both unregulated timbering and the controversial coal mining practice
of mountaintop removal (MTR) made flooding far worse than it would have been,
had the mountains not been denuded and scalped and the valleys not filled.
Those floods, including the July valley fill disaster at a Massey Energy mine
near Lyburn in Logan County, are examined in "Flood Stories," a short
by Charleston filmmaker Robert Gates. Gates film makes its world premier
as it opens the Flooded Out Film Festival at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 10 at the
West Virginia State College Capitol Center Theatre, 123 Summers St. Doors open
at 6:00 p.m. Tickets are available at the door with a suggested donation of $5.
All proceeds go to flood victims, including the McDowell County Public Library,
which was devastated by the May floods.
The Festival marks the two-year anniversary of the massive sludge spill from a
coal sludge impoundment at a MTR site in eastern Kentucky. On Oct. 11, 2000, 306
million gallons of black sludge burst out of the Massey Energy impoundment, devastating
75 miles of waterways.
While focusing on the environmental ruin coal companies wreak upon the state,
the Festival also celebrates the beauty of the mountains with the world premier
of "Mountain Memories," a documentary by Hardy County filmmaker Ray
Schmitt. Schmitt presents the life and work of nature photographer Jim Clark who
lives in War, McDowell County.
In late July, Steve Fesenmaier, West Virginias veteran film festival organizer
and Graffiti magazine movie critic, presented the concept for the event to the
Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (OVEC). OVEC and a coalition of groups calling
for an end to MTR ˆ including Coal River Mountain Watch, West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy, and Citizens Coal Council ˆ agreed to co-sponsor the festival. Fesenmaier
and the groups worked together to program the event.
Other sponsors of the festival include the WVSC Capitol Center Theatre, Robert
Gates, Appalshop Films of Whitesburg, Ky., Ray Schmitt, Bullfrog Films, Graffiti
magazine, and the Two Boots Pioneer Theater of New York City.
Fesenmaier, Sandy Berman, members of OVEC and CRMW and others recently conducted
a letter-writing campaign to convince the Library of Congress to create an official
subject heading for mountaintop removal mining that will be used by
libraries around the world. Up to now, the only way to find materials on MTR was
by researching subject headings such as "strip mining"and "coal
mining."
Journalists may borrow the films for preview by contacting Fesenmaier at 304-345-5850.
Schedule:
· 7 p.m. Two films by Robert Gates, WVs leading independent documentary
filmmaker:
--"Trip to Kayford Mountain" Examines efforts to educate the public
on the plight of Kayford Mountain, a green oasis in a moonscape of MTR.
--"Flood Stories" WORLD PREMIERE
8 p.m. Hardy County filmmaker Ray Schmitt:
"Mountain Memories." WORLD PREMIERE
8:30 p.m. Tom Hansell of Appalshop, the official media center for Appalachia:
"Coal Bucket Outlaw" WEST VIRGINIA PREMIERE Kentuckys coal truck
weight limit is 120,000 lbs., but drivers in the eastern part of the state speak
of being forced to haul much heavier loads. West Virginia is in the midst of an
overweight coal truck controversy. Trucks have been running extremely overweight,
breaking the law for years. Coalfield residents fear for their lives and taxpayers
balk at the costs to maintain coal-truck-pummeled roads and bridges. Coal industry
and certain legislators are calling for a new weight limit of 120,000 lbs., even
as some in the industry publicly admit to needing to haul 160,000
lbs. or more.
9:00 p.m. Mimi Pickering of Appalshop:
"Buffalo Creek Flood: An Act of Man" This 1975 film examines the 1972
Buffalo Creek disaster, the most devastating Appalachian flood in terms of human
deaths. 125 people died in the flood, created when a coal waste dam burst. This
25-minute documentary was one of Appalshops first films and may be its most
influential. Pittston Coal said the disaster was an "Act of Man." Shirley
Marcus, a flood survivor said, "I didn't see God a-drivin them slate
trucks and wearing a hard-hulled cap. I did not see that at no time when I visited
the dam. I don't believe it was an Act of God. It was an act of man."
The film uses some footage of Robert Gates, who was the first filmmaker on the
scene.
9:30 p.m. The festival concludes with a showing of various recent TV stories about
mountaintop removal and its effects. OVEC staff and volunteers and other West
Virginia activists have worked with the producers of these stories to tell the
world about one of the worst human-caused ecological disasters.