For Immediate Release
                about screening or to arrange an interview with touring filmmaker Lech   Kowalski
      Drill Baby   Drill Film   Coming to Endicott.
  The new documentary   Drill Baby Drill will have its Southern Tier premiere in Endicott on Friday, April 12.
      Filmmaker Lech   Kowalski, a native of Utica who currently lives and works in Paris, France will   be present for the screening and for the discussion following the 84-minute   film.
      The film, which was   made in Poland and in Pennsylvania, tells the story of a group of Polish farmers   who band together to protect their land when unconventional shale-gas drilling   (fracking) threatens. It also looks at the effects of ongoing drilling on   farmers and their communities in Pennsylvania. 
      The film's power   derives in part from its refusal to provide easy answers to the questions it   raises about corporate power and its effect on democracy, and about the tensions   between our demand for energy and the necessity of protecting our air, water,   farmland, and food supply. The subject should be of strong, immediate interest   to residents of New York, where energy companies are leasing land with plans to   do similar drilling. 
      EVENTS LOCATION   and INFORMATION
      Friday, April 12, 7 p.m., United Methodist Church,   53   McKinley Ave., Endicott
      The event is free and open to the public, but   sponsoring groups, which do not have the resources of the megabillion-dollar   fossil-fuel corporations, suggest donations of $5 or more per person to cover   transportation and lodging costs.
      NOTES TO   EDITORS
      About filmmaker Lech   Kowalki
      Kowalski has won   wide acclaim over 35+ years as an independent filmmaker. His large body of work   has won awards and been the subject of retrospectives at international film   festivals. This film was shown recently   in the French Senate, and on French and German television (with high ratings. It   will be shown to European Parliament on April 23, prior to theatrical release.   
      Drill Baby   Drill film   description
      One day the people who live in a small   village located in eastern Poland near the Ukrainian border, an ecologically   pristine agricultural area called the "lungs of Poland," discover that Chevron,   the world's forth largest energy corporation, plans to build a shale gas well in   their village. At first the villagers are not against the construction of the   gas well, but research reveals that having a shale gas well so near farms might   not be such a good idea. The farmers mobilize. They appeal to politicians and   government institutions to stop the construction, but their requests are met   with silence. Suddenly Chevron sends bulldozers to start construction. Lech   Kowalski was there to film the first-ever farmer rebellion against Chevron. But   energy companies and the Polish government hope to hit a golden shale gas   jackpot, and the odds are against the farmers winning. The story about their   struggle weaves around realities that are taking place in Pennsylvania, which   industry has called the "Saudi Arabia" of North America. It's too late to stop   the harms in Pennsylvania, but can the farmers win in Poland? What happens is a   surprise
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May you, and all beings
be happy and free from suffering :)
-- ancient Buddhist Prayer (Metta)
 
 
 
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