Social Problems during the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill

This film talks about how the Exxon Valdez oil spill affected not just the land and water, but the people in the village of Chenega too. The storyteller explains how the community was already working through problems like drugs and alcohol when the oil spill happened. The clean-up work brought money, but it also brought stress, long hours, and sadness. People bought things like cars and satellite TVs, but it didn’t fix the deeper struggles. The film shares how the oil spill caused big changes in the village—emotionally, socially, and culturally.

Workshop Info

See Stories led film workshops with youth in six Prince William sound communities in 2016 (Cordova, Whittier, Nanwalek, Tatitlek, Valdez, and Chenega Bay) with generous funding and support from the Prince William Sound Science Center (PWSSC). The PWSSC wanted to support youth to create films on their communities' profound and changing relationship to the ocean 25 years after the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS). The films created during these workshops focus primarily on vibrant cultural and personal connections to water, and some of them explore the tragedy of EVOS and the long-standing impacts that ripple through to the present moment.

More videos from this workshop:

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Land Acknowledgement

This video was filmed on Dena'ina Land. Learn more about land acknowledgements at native-land.ca.