All About Change - Erin Brockovich - Fighting for Safe Water
Episode Date: July 22, 2024Erin Brockovich became a household name when her crusade against the polluting power company PG&E in a small California town was dramatized in the Oscar-winning movie Erin Brockovich, starring Jul...ia Roberts. But her mission to empower communities to fight for environmental justice didn't end there. Erin joined host Jay Ruderman to share her journey from a Kansas childhood marked by dyslexia to becoming a pivotal figure in environmental advocacy. Jay and Erin talk about the immense influence of her parents and a crucial school teacher in fostering her dogged persistence, the necessity of community action and local involvement, and her ongoing efforts to address environmental crises in America.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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So your point is stop waiting for a hero to show up.
You are the hero.
We can be our own heroes.
You already are.
You just got to look at that person in the mirror and go, I'm going to boss up today.
In the year 2000, Erin Brockovich became a household name with the release of the film
that highlighted her work on California water pollution.
But her story didn't start in Hinkley.
I have something they call dyslexia.
I really didn't know.
We think every single mind is supposed to think, walk, talk, act, look alike, do the
same.
It's just, it would be impossible.
And dyslexics, we code differently.
I can read.
I'm plenty smart.
But I'm a very visual learner.
Erin's findings in Hinkley set the stage
for the rest of her career.
And I just stood there and I was like,
what is a common denominator
that all of these people are utilizing?
And it dawned on me, I'm like, oh my gosh, it's cold water.
In the years since, Erin has used what she learned
in Hinkley and her notoriety from the film to advocate for communities all around the country suffering from environmental pollution.
We think it's going to trickle down from the top. It doesn't. It actually changes at ground zero with you and organizing a community and showing up.
Erin's wealth of experience has led her to one conclusion.
We've got to be our own heroes.
Thank you so much for being my guest on All About Change.
I am really looking forward to this discussion.
Let's start with your childhood growing up in Kansas.
this discussion, let's start with your childhood growing up in Kansas.
Who instilled in you your persistence and your sense of right and wrong?
So there was three really instrumental people.
My mom was a huge inspiration to me. She was a journalist and a sociology major.
Very interesting combo.
sociology major, very interesting combo. And then my dad was an engineer and he ran and built pipelines for industry.
He was a mechanical and industrial engineer.
And both of them were instrumental in my life for a plethora of reasons.
My mom in particular, because I'm a dyslexic, so school was very difficult for me.
And my mom would always tell me, you got to find your stick-to-it-iveness.
I had no idea what she was talking about.
I thought it was a made-up, you know, Kansas slang word.
And she ended up reading me the definition, and its definition is noun, a propensity to
follow through and a determined manner, dogged persistence, born of obligation and stubbornness.
Now see this, I understood I am stubborn.
I'm very dogged, but it helped me almost focus those feelings and those emotions.
I was always playing outside.
I was following the creeks, chasing the water,
amazed at the environment.
Everything about it was teaching me
what I didn't wanna learn in school,
and I understood it,
but I just didn't wanna learn it in school.
So my dad is the one that taught me about respect of the environment.
He is the one, and I know he saw things about what would go wrong with the water and promised
me in my lifetime, I would see water as a scarcity, as a commodity.
And those two were the main key characters.
The other would be a school teacher.
So I just wanted to dig down on that a little bit more.
You know, I have a child with ADHD and school has been a complete disaster for him.
So do you think when you were growing up that dyslexia was understood?
Dyslexia, in my opinion, was terribly misunderstood.
And I believe that it is still misunderstood today.
I think we talk about it more, whether it's ADD or ADHD or what we
call learning disabilities, dyslexia.
I worry if we don't get out of this box of how is it that we think
every single mind is supposed to think, walk, talk, act, look alike, do the same.
It's just it would be impossible and dyslexics we code differently. I can read,
I'm plenty smart, but I'm a very visual learner and I recognize patterns. And so if I don't
see those, I feel like that cat that has tape on its paws and I'm like, where am I? But
that wasn't allowed. So it was a school teacher. Her name is Kathy Borseth. And interestingly
enough, she was my psychology teacher. And one day leaving class, she was
passing out the exams. And I could see mine, I could see the
big old F on there. And she said, Well, Aaron, I'm, I'm
interested here. You know, everything in class, you're the
one that always has your hand up. I know. But yet when we test,
you fail. And so Kathy Borse said, well, if I gave you this test orally, do you
think you could pass it? I said, absolutely. And she just randomly went through there and
I knew everything. She goes, you do know. I go, yes, I do know. And it's like been stuck
inside of me because nobody sees me. Nobody hears me.
Nobody believes me.
To this day, I still get frustrated by that.
And I get even more frustrated in my work when I see the same thing happening to communities.
And so I can't help myself.
It almost becomes a calling of how do you push out if a door closes, how do we go through
a window?
Where do we go?
So, I want to go back to what propelled you to fame.
The case against PG&E, the company that had contaminated the groundwater in Hinckley,
California, and led to the movie that bears your name.
Can you just give us a short recap of, for those listeners
who may not be aware of the story of what happened?
So I ultimately graduated high school, graduated from college, went on to have a family, and
had three children, found myself being a single mom. And at the time I was living in Reno, Nevada, and I had a car accident.
And during that, before a trial, I moved down here and met somebody was actually the biker
dude and still had a lot of problems going on.
And he introduced me to Jim Vitito to help me in my car accident situation.
And Jim Vitito's partner was Ed Masry, the man played in the film by Albert Finney.
So we had a trial.
I didn't win.
I needed a job.
This firm told me it would be okay.
It wasn't okay. So Jimmy had introduced me to Ed Mazury
and I needed a job.
I didn't come in with a law degree.
I didn't come in with some PhD.
I came in as a single mom.
I came in with a really good skillset
and I had a really good,
I'm an empath in many ways and I can feel things. And I know that sounds weird, but it's
true. It becomes very vibrational for me. A connection. People will tell me their life stories.
I want to hear it. I get it. I understand that there's no box. There's no judgment. There's full-on acceptance. I get it.
And so Ed decided to hire me and put me in the workers' compensation department because
I have that good skill set.
And that's where I started my work with Mazarin Vititeau.
And one afternoon, if people haven't seen the film, he came into my office with a big
archive box.
See, I love my archive boxes.
I still do.
It's a whole thought process that goes on here in my dyslexic mind.
I have to touch it, feel it, see it.
There was a bunch of test results of children that piqued my curiosity.
I was a young mom, 31 years old. I had a baby, Elizabeth,
who was 12 months old that I was taking up to Hinkley with me when I eventually started
going out there. But so I was intrigued that it was children and all the blood tests were
done in a bar graph. Again, I'm visual. So see, I can clearly see, wow, this is out of range.
So I went to this great box we had called Google, and I just started researching and
learning myself.
A lot of these test results were indicating disease, potential cancer, and I was really
curious if I saw a blood test like this on my kids,
I'd want to know what the heck's going on.
So I asked Mr. Masry if I could go out to Hinkley.
And what happened for me there was the minute
I honestly had my feet planted on that ground,
it was a perfect storm that started to brew for me. Power of observation is great. I started
noticing all the trees were dying, which I thought was weird. When I met neighbors, they would tell me
about all the animals that were dying or the dairy farmers and the cows covered in tumors, and they took me to see them.
I could see that something was really wrong
and I could feel it.
All the trees were secreting this white stuff
out of the little pine ends of them.
And as I just stood there, I'm like,
what is happening out here in this desert town where people come for fresh air
and clean well water and freedom of living and enjoying riding their horses? Everything's sick
and dying. I couldn't understand it. And I just stood there. And I was like, what is a common denominator
that all of these people are utilizing?
And it dawned on me, I'm like, oh my gosh, it's the water.
And that set me out on my journey
and ultimately discovering that a large utility,
Pacific Gas and Electric,
had knowingly been dumping hexavalent chromium into
unlined ponds and all these people had been drinking it. And one thing that I
did recognize quickly was the mothers in particular weren't being heard, they
weren't being listened to. Here we go again, I'm back in the classroom.
You aren't this, you aren't that, you're being hysterical, you're not a doctor, you're
not a lawyer, you're not a scientist.
Let me tell you, well, you don't need to be any of that to be a mom and to know something's
wrong with your child.
And for me, it became a moment where I didn't have to be any of that, to be a human. And to tell you that I'm looking at
two headed frogs, and green water coming out of the tap,
that something is wrong. And I at that moment, thought of my
dad about that respect, giving that respect to listening to
these people believing in these people.
And it became a phenomenal response because I believed in them and they believed in me.
And we began to work together collectively to really uncover what had happened to them
and telling a true story. It's a very emotional film. I would recommend it to anyone who hasn't seen it.
I want to bring you, Erin, back to Hinckley.
Is litigation a way to get people justice?
That's an excellent question.
I want that.
Over 30 years,
I have a different perception of.
Yes, the judicial system is part of something
that we need to help find a form of justice.
There is no amount of money ever that
could give them a child back or their health back
or take away the fear that they're going to die of a disease
or cancer that is related to something that was hidden
to them and poisoning
them for years and years and years. So the judicial system isn't the answer. I
think we need to look at the upfront of infrastructures and safety first and
being honest with communities. I have learned that people, they handle the truth.
They never handle the lie.
None of us can make a choice if we don't know what the truth is.
Right. You've devoted your life to this and you've written a book called Superman is Not Coming.
Talk about what's going on in this country and what the risks people are facing in terms of just drinking
water?
I began my work in Hinckley in late 1991, and I was a single mother of two toddlers
and an infant.
Today, and I just want to kind of give that span upfront.
Again, I'm the visual one, so if I can help explain that,
I'm gonna be 64 this Friday,
and I'm now the grandmother of four.
Happy birthday.
So it's been a lot, thank you.
It's been a long career.
And I've been able to observe a lot in that time
about the law, about agencies, about the government,
about companies. It's
easier to kick the can down the line to the next CEO, to the next president, to the next governor.
And all of this is just built up and built up and built up and built up and built up. And I think
now we're seeing a huge impact of things that happened 30 years ago that we're starting
to work up against a wall and we got nowhere else to go.
And for me, it's astounding because that timeframe that I presented for you from 31 to 64, do Not much has changed. I'm gotten smacked by all of it.
In my 30-year span,
I think I've been through six administrations,
both Democrat and Republican,
and we still got the same result.
We haven't accomplished much.
I don't think the finger pointing of right or left is where we need to be.
When we are going to talk about our environment and most specifically our water, the most necessary element to sustain all of life is in huge jeopardy. And I believe that climate change is going to be
water issues. I've said this for a long time. We are watching that happening right now. We're
going to live it. Too much, too little, none at all. We see here in America, we see flooding
going on right now in Florida. You know, we're seeing scarcity of water. Aquifers are going
to run out of water. We see droughts. We're going to see huge interruptions to the supply chain.
We'll see more vector diseases.
We'll see migratory pathway changes.
We'll see municipalities, when they get flooded,
you can't just turn these systems back on
and can't get air on those lines.
You're going to have all kinds of bacterial outbreaks.
We're seeing it now.
So I think the real issue that we need to be paying extraordinarily
close attention to is going to be our water supplies or the lack of water supplies. And
while we continue to argue about climate change, which is here, you don't have to call it anything.
I think if you would just educate yourself and take a look around, things are different.
We need to stop the fighting.
And start having a legitimate plan, being realistic about the goals,
because we're not going to switch these things tomorrow.
This will be decades in the making and start getting prepared
for what is in front of us.
So Erin, I have to ask you if, if the political system is not addressing this
vital issue and if industry is not policing itself by and large, um, and if the justice system can be helpful, but is slow and limited.
What is the way forward?
How do people in communities across America make sure that their water is safe?
What can they do?
Well, what I have seen from Hinckley through Flint, Michigan, through whenever there's a big crisis like that,
I'm usually the first one that they come to. And what I have learned is that the change comes from
within you. The change will never happen with us sitting here and going, it's your fault and you
fix it and that's supposed to be your job. So I encourage communities and the mothers,
when they get organized, you know,
you got a group of moms, they've got stick-to-itiveness
like nobody's business.
And for them, they'll stay in it as long as they have to
until there's a resolve.
Oftentimes, we don't go to our very own local city councils.
We don't go to our very own local city councils.
That's where actual changes about your local municipalities exist.
We think it's gonna trickle down from the top.
It doesn't.
It actually changes at ground zero with you
and organizing a community
and showing up, doesn't matter.
You don't have to know all the science in the world.
Just show up.
People always say, what action can I take?
Just show up.
Just ask a question at city council.
One of the stories, and I wanna share it here real quick
is exactly what I'm talking about.
I share in the book and it happens to be
in Hannibal, Missouri, home of Mark Twain. And they had lead levels in their system
higher than what we were seeing in Flint. Now that was bad. So the community came
to us and myself and Robert Bocock, who's a water expert and water master. And we worked with the community
on what they could do. So first of all, they understood why, understand why you are having
a water problem. In their situation, it was lead. They had all this lead because the municipality was using chloramines.
They started adding ammonia to the system, and that created a huge corrosive water system
inside lead pipes.
So all the lead was leaching out of those pipes into the distribution system and was
being delivered to the tap. You can't
smell lead in the water. You can't see lead in the water. So we educated the moms and
they got very organized about why they had lead in the water. And they started going
door to door and informing their other neighbors. And what they started learning was they too
had sick children, skin rashes, their hair
was falling out, they didn't understand their attention wasn't there, they didn't seem
to be learning the same, the teachers were reporting it.
So they became very informed.
And they chose, you know what, I want to learn what's going on.
These mothers, I'm not kidding you, would have math equations on their drywall in the
house because they could look at it and study it.
Long story short, a couple of the ladies said, we need to do more.
And they were having local city council elections.
They ran for office, city council, and they won. They won. And now here they are
informed as community members on City Council what was happening and they created an initiative
that they wanted to put to vote now that everyone understood. Do you want to add ammonia to your system? Yes or no.
Unanimously, the community voted no. It went all the way to the state and they won their referendum and their amendments and they stopped adding
ammonia to the system. And I'm so thrilled to tell you as of March 2020,
that community has lead free water. That's awesome. That's the power to the
people. That's the power to you. That's the power to the individual. And I think
we're finding ourselves now. And that is that is key. And when we do, I truly
believe that we'll look at ourselves again and see I do have the courage and I do have the brain.
I have the ability.
I am a mom.
I can see, I can feel, I can tell you something's wrong.
And that's really the power of how and where it happens.
And again, I've been doing this for 30 years
and I can assure you 100% of the time,
that is what makes the greatest outcome of all.
Whether there's a lawsuit or not, they can change their circumstances, they can begin to protect
themselves, prepare themselves when they're informed, when they know the truth, when they
organize as their neighbors and have that respect for each other, their community, their environment,
that if they make more change than the United States EPA.
So your point is that stop waiting for a hero to show up.
You are the hero.
We can be our own heroes.
You already are. You just don't know it.
You just got to look at that person in the mirror and go I'm gonna boss up today
Right, that's powerful. I want to talk about something, you know much more recent
in
2023 there was a train wreck in in East Palestine, Ohio and
It set off a chain of events that caused a lot of harm to people that were living, you know miles around
You visited the crash site. You were there. What did you experience when you showed up there?
Exactly what I always experienced.
They weren't seen.
They weren't heard.
They weren't respected.
They were lied to.
And it's very upsetting.
You know, I never want to say you've come to expect a big corporation
to come to you and say, you know, but when they're in trouble, they tend to possibly do that.
But I don't want to make a broad stroke about that because I do believe that there are well-intended companies that want to do the right thing. But with Norfolk, it was kind of a whitewash,
a situation that never needed to have happen,
that quickly got covered up, that created a lot of chaos.
We, oh my gosh, we don't believe and we don't listen to,
and we have no empathy for those that are living it, breathing it,
drinking it, experiencing it, that can't possibly be. No, the science isn't here. That has to be
made up. You're being hysterical. I go nuts when I'm out there and I can't imagine how these people feel. But I don't want to
use words like gaslight because now I guess everything could be seen as that. But that's
exactly what happens to them. You're trying to tell them what they experienced they didn't
really experience. And it's maddening. So I was out there several times and I didn't come back
because I was being exposed myself.
You got sick.
I got sick.
And so even the CDC had people getting sick.
First of all, you could smell it.
You could smell it.
And everybody else was standing there that were
reporters too. Their eyes were burning. And so there was multiple occasions, whether it
was the people I was working with, whether it was the media, they would tell me. They
could smell it. Their eyes were watering. But yet nobody was doing anything. I'm like,
this is BS. And so I'd go home, I kept coming back. And around the
fifth visit, I started having my lacrimal and my goblet cell on my eyes were burnt away. And I was
sick. I always believed these people, but most people wouldn't. And so I stopped going out there. I tried to work
with people remotely and I still do and I'm still in touch with some. And I was very disturbed
and very taken back that during many of my community meetings, one evening somebody sent to me a report from Yahoo that I had
been returned into a fusion center, Homeland Security fusion center as a potential terror
threat.
Wow.
So you think you were getting blackballed?
Well, you want to talk about a good way to silence somebody?
Put them on a list like that. Yeah. think you were getting blackballed? Well, you want to talk about a good way to silence somebody?
Put them on a list like that.
Yeah.
It still upsets me.
I have not often been able to talk about it.
Homeland security created these fusion centers after 9 11 for a good reason.
And it makes me wonder that are we now utilizing that as a way to silence an activist or activism that a company or somebody may not like to silence a community's voice. I would find that extremely concerning. I still haven't got all the answers as to how it happened. I'm learning more and more about the fusion centers.
Um, but it would be terrifying that it could have been a situation where I
would be on a list or I couldn't fly or I couldn't travel.
So I see it as a way to silence people and that's disturbing.
And what about the environmental protection agency?
I mean, isn't that this, why this agency was created to protect our environment?
Are they doing anything to improve the situation?
No.
So there was a lot of things that went wrong in East Palestine.
And that's starting in the beginning.
And I, I'm, listen, I'm not taking any accolades for this, but we watched and I'm thinking
day after day after day. Did it occur to you that the government should be doing something about this? and starting in the beginning. And I, listen, I'm not taking any accolades for this,
but we watched and I'm thinking day after day after day,
did anybody not like see the fireball
that looked like an atomic bomb thrown up in the sky
that people were reporting on?
But nobody was talking about it.
That's not an elephant in a room
and everybody's just walking around.
But locals were like on their own cameras.
They're like, what is no, why is no one talking about this from the get go?
This was a cover up and.
We now learn that the railroad had days why it was burning.
They're the ones that decided and how this got by the state or
state agencies, I still don't really know. But they dug a trench and they bled out the
chemicals in the rail cars and lit it on fire. I think second grade science might tell you
that's not a really good idea. So for me, it's like, Whoa, what are you hiding that you just blew up and is now going everywhere? The EPA was slow to respond. Agencies were slow to respond.
There was lack of information, lack of communication. There was chaos. There was coverups. There
was senators asking questions and people were asking actually where was you know, department of transportation, where was the EPA who was out here?
Where was FEMA? Where are you going to put these people? I mean,
it was a shit show. I don't know what else to say.
I hope I can say that on your podcast. I apologize.
They were absent and even stories are coming out today and the media was there in
the beginning, but
once it settles down, these people are still left with the problem.
We do know the CDC had sick people.
They called them off.
We do have several occasions where the United States EPA came out and said, well, there's
some levels.
If it was my kids, yeah, I wouldn't let you play around the creek.
Well, that would have been helpful information months beforehand.
Even today that they're now admitting that they are finding pockets of vinyl chloride.
So it's like the whole situation's happened. There is a settlement.
Now they're kind of coming back in to go, oh, wait a minute, maybe we're wrong. And that's the problem. That's the problem with the EPA.
Well, you're letting all of these chemicals into the stream of commerce first.
And then when there's an accident like this, they get studied through us.
And it takes decades to do that to finally come to a conclusion.
Oh yeah.
Oops. We made a mistake. We've got to do that to finally come to a conclusion. Oh yeah, oops, we made a mistake.
We've got to stop that.
That's what I was talking about earlier.
We have got to put safety in people first.
You should know what these chemicals do
before they ever enter the environment.
And again, if we talk about the Norfolk Southern
Railroad situation, they had infrastructure failures on the line that they knew about.
But once again, we don't want to fix those infrastructures. This is going to boil down
to even when we really get to water. It's going to all be about our infrastructures.
They're antiquated. They're outdated. And if we don't shore up those infrastructures,
we will continue to
have disasters like this.
And that is what happened in Norfolk.
These things don't need to happen.
We allow them to continue to happen because we put profits and money first, health and
safety last.
That's not working out so well for any of us. So the $600 in a class action
might not get spread too far. It will get spread, but the dollar value will be less and less and
less to the families. And that will be up to the courts and the laws to figure out that structure.
I'm definitely not a part of that. Like I was a part of, you know, knowing precisely and Hinkley
and Kettleman and these other PG&E cases, what was going on. But I can assure you at the end of the
day, I talked to these communities and they would tell you, I do believe the law wants to help make
it whole, but that the justice in a settlement isn't a solution. I would like to see the law look at more legislative changes, look at more policies.
I think at the EPA, we don't necessarily need a bunch of new rules on the book.
What we need is better oversight, better enforcement, better follow through so we can catch these
things before they happen.
Yeah.
The money is not solving the issue.
Um, but let me ask you just to, to sort of leave this with, with the listeners
who might be saying, what's going on with my own water, how do they look into it?
How do they, you know, ensure that they and their families are safe?
How do they ensure that they and their families are safe? If we will accept that maybe not somebody else has got our back or is watching this,
maybe I myself will take part in it.
Just your observations again and again and again and again.
This is another story I talk about in Superman's Not Coming in Upstate New York,
where they were turning the ammonia feed on
and the water keeper, the head of the municipality,
made an observation.
Every time he turned on the ammonia feed,
his customer started calling him.
My skin is burning.
I have a funny rash.
My children's eyes are burning. And this water operator figured it out. He goes, wait a minute, every time they
call I'm turning on a pneumonia feed. He ultimately shut it off. So use the power of your own
observation. Don't be afraid to call your own municipality. Show up to a city council.
Talk to your neighbors. You know, it's funny,
we don't do that anymore. Yet we live right next door to somebody, you know, hey, how
are you? Are you experiencing this? But we don't want to do that because, and I see communities,
the minute they do, somebody else is going to tell them, you shouldn't be saying anything
or you could drive our property dyes down or what do you know? And then we retract.
Look, your gut is your second brain.
That's science.
It talks to us, but we ignore it.
That's why I say bring it home.
And if you're living it and breathing it
and experiencing it and you're seeing it happen
and you're seeing it happen to your child.
You can email me, make a phone call to the municipality if you're not getting any answers,
show up at City Council, go down to City Council, voice your concern, sign a petition, take
an action and pay attention to what's going on around you.
I think we all see it and we don't have to demon a name
or a climate change.
It is something's wrong.
And don't assume that somebody else is taking care of it.
And this is why I created my community health book,
a place for people to report to.
I wished I had it up because it is daunting. And we've
put up live images of bath water, bucket water, kitchen sink tap water, shower heads in the
buckets, Oklahoma, Texas, Boston, North Carolina, South Carolina, California.
That is a representation of America's water supply.
It's disgusting and it's shameful. And again, these municipalities,
they've got budgetary problems, they've spin it wrong,
they don't have the appropriate filtration system. And you know, it costs a hundred million dollars on some filtration
systems just to keep one chemical out of the water, just one. And so we have a lot
of problems. Every day I get lead reports. Every day we see more
Legionnaire outbreaks. Every day there's a whole host of reasons
why your water's black, yellow, green, purple.
I can tell you if it's running green,
I'm gonna worry about a chemical called hexavalent chromium.
If it's orange, we can tell you
that you've probably got chloramines in the system.
You have an acidic water source
that's causing all the iron and the lead and the manganese that's precipitating out of the pipes is being delivered to your tap.
Oh my gosh for heaven's sakes I was up the United States Capitol talking about lead I went into the women's washroom and there was a sign don't drink the water contains lead.
You for real to the picture of it is in the book.
It's so either book. So either we're normalizing
this or there's an elephant in the room we still don't want to look at. And for me, the
most important thing to say to everybody is please don't assume and never assume and think
that you can't because you can. If you see it, if you smell it, if you're experiencing it, if you're sick, if
a neighbor's sick, your child, ask a question. Get on this great big brain thing we got called
Google. Make some phone calls, call the municipality, email me, go to communityhealthbook.com. Take
an action, any action. And when I say show up, show up for yourself.
Because I don't think anyone else is going to do it for us.
I want to thank you for your leadership, your national leadership on this issue.
You've done so much.
You're going to continue to do a lot.
And thank you so much for being my guest on All About Change.
Thank you for having me.
It's so hard to explain everything in a short time, but you did a great job. And thank you. You know what? It'll be up to us. But I,
listen, I always end on a hopeful note and I know it may sound corny, but I believe in us. And I
think we can change and we can see ourselves and we can join together again. And it seems very
daunting. I'm experiencing it too, but I'm'm gonna forever be an optimist and I will go down fighting and I will go down with hope
The change isn't over there and something magical the change is gonna happen within us and when we find us
We prevail
Thank you so much. This was such a great conversation and I really enjoyed it. I'm a big fan. So thank you so much.
It was nice to be here. Thanks for having me.
Aaron Brockovich's story has inspired countless individuals and communities to feel empowered to ask questions and to advocate for themselves. To find or share information about your own water, you can
head to communityhealthbook.com. That's it for today's episode. Join us two weeks from
today for my conversation with actress and reproductive rights activist Tori De Vito.
Today's episode was produced by Rebecca Shasson with story editing by Yochai Meytal and Mijon
Zulu.
To check out more episodes or to learn more about the show, you can visit our website
allaboutchangepodcast.com.
If you like our show, spread the word, tell a friend or family member, or leave us a review
on your favorite podcasting app.
We'd really appreciate it.
All About Change is produced by the
Ruderman Family Foundation in partnership with pod people. That's all for now. I'm
Jay Ruderman and we'll see you next time on All About Change.