________________
CM . . . .
Volume VII Number 6 . . . . November 17, 2000
Environmental impact assessments, task forces, public hearings - today, these typically precede
the undertaking of major construction projects which will have significant impact on undeveloped
areas. However, in 1967, when the W. A. C. Bennett Dam was built to contain waters from the
Peace and Athabasca Rivers, environmental impact was not a consideration. More than thirty
years later, the wetlands of the Peace and Athabasca deltas have dried significantly, altering living
conditions for vegetation, wildlife, and the indigenous peoples who have lived here for centuries.
The "footprint" of environmental impact is deep, and, in this video, it becomes very clear that high
standards of living in urbanized areas are purchased at the cost of potentially hazardous ecological
change. Stewardship - the concept of responsibility towards and care for the environment - is
sadly lacking. It is easy to ignore the impact of these changes when they happen hundreds and
thousands of miles away from the city in which one lives. Canada and Canadians have long had an
ambivalent relationship with the wilderness: on the one hand, we celebrate its beauty and enjoy its
recreational opportunities, but, on the other, we show little hesitation in "conquering" and
destroying it, if it will advance our standard of living. Footprints in the Delta makes it clear that
we cannot continue to have it both ways. While the video focuses on one area of Canadian
wetlands and natural habitat, the lesson it offers is valid for any part of the country threatened by
man-made environmental change: no community is "isolated," and the changes we bring to one
area ultimately affect others. The video would be a useful in courses with a significant
environmental studies focus, and senior high school Canadian geography courses might find it a
useful supplementary resource.
Recommended.
Joanne Peters is a teacher-librarian at Kelvin High School in Winnipeg, MB.
To comment on this title or this review, send mail to cm@umanitoba.ca.
Copyright © the Manitoba Library Association.
Reproduction for personal use is permitted only if this copyright notice
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TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THIS ISSUE - November 17, 2000.
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