Black Gully Music Festival 2022
10am SAT NOV 9th

Every year Armidale folk gather at Black Gully (behind NERAM) to celebrate community, music and biodiversity
Armidale Vegetable Sowing Guide
This guide shows planting time periods that should allow you to get a crop in Armidale.
Lightbulb Moments
Take control of your electrical use & costs with this Resource Guide Online PDF and Print PDF for welfare agencies to assist clients, colleagues and community.

Progressive Cinema presents ‘GasLand’

Progressive Cinema screenings are held on the second Wednesday of every month. In August we present

GASLAND

at 7:30pm on Wednesday, 10th August,

at the Armidale Club, 91 Beardy Street.

Turntables Restaurant will be open from 6pm.

In September 2006, theatre director and part-time banjo player Josh Fox received an unexpected letter in the mail: a natural gas company offering him $100 000 for permission to explore his family’s upstate New York property, in the lush Delaware River Basin area.

Rather than join many of his neighbours in signing on the dotted line, Josh’s curiosity saw him asking questions. He soon discovered that in the race for ‘cleaner’, greener and more efficient energy sources, the largest natural gas drilling boom in history is sweeping the globe. In the US, the Halliburton-led drilling technology of hydraulic fracturing (or ‘fracking’) has unlocked a “Saudi Arabia of natural gas”.

So Josh picked up his camcorder, and set out on a journey across America’s heartland. His personal concerns quickly uncover global ones, as the citizens of ‘GasLand’ testify to what’s been happening around them. It becomes evident that the multi-million dollar business of fracking has contaminated the water supply, the corporate giants are in cover-up mode, and the PR-spun government has not only turned a blind eye, it has regulated itself out of the picture…

Rough-hewn yet poetic, the film is a desperate plea for scrutiny of a powerful industry that has now turned its eyes on a new, massive and, for now, largely unexplored territory: Australia.

In Queensland and New South Wales the coal seam gas industry is targeting some of our most productive farming land – at a time of growing concerns about food security. But resistance is growing. The Lock the Gate Alliance was formed to protect our soils and water. The Alliance is planning a national day of action against coal seam gas mining in October. Michael and Julie McNamara are touring NSW to rally community support and will visit to Armidale on September 29.

‘GasLand’ was awarded the Special Jury Prize for Documentary at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, and voted the best competition film of any section by indieWIRE’s Sundance Critics Poll. It has recently received a 2011 Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature.

Please pass this message on to others who might be interested. Contact Bea on {mobile prefix O-four}58 752 680 for more information.

All welcome, entry by donation, $5/$10/$15.

P.S. The film on food sovereignty in Venezuela had to be postponed and will be screened in September or October.

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