Runtime: 00:58 (hours:minutes)
Produced in 1991; released on DVD in 2007.
Watershed captures the early days of the campaign to clean up Chesapeake Bay. Here, telling the story in their own words, are some of the early voices -- the citizens and scientists, the politicians, farmers, and fishermen who spoke up and went to work to save the Bay.
This film presents a historical overview of the early days of the campaign to clean up Chesapeake Bay. Here, telling the story in their own words, are some of the first voices — the citizens and scientists, the politicians, farmers, and fishermen who spoke up and went to work to save the Bay.
At first they were solitary voices, working and living along the rivers around America's richest estuary. The Chesapeake, they warned, was changing. We were losing seagrasses along our shores, waterfowl in our autumn skies, oysters in our winter waters, and the great spawning runs of spring. Even the blue crab catches of summer were faltering.
Could we ever bring back the bounty that was the Bay?
A citizen movement began to spread, finally launching a major campaign to restore the Chesapeake. This historic, three-state effort is now backed by Congress, by federal and state governments, and by millions of citizens in the Mid-Atlantic region.
This documentary highlights some of the key people, events and scientific findings that played a role in the early stages of this ongoing drama. The film examines:
Will the Chesapeake Bay cleanup prove a model for restoring America's other coastal waters? Or a missed opportunity?