WGXC-90.7 FM

Views from the Watershed: A Seat at the Table

Nov 12, 2025: 4:30 pm - 5pm
WGXC 90.7-FM: Radio for Open Ears

90.7-FM in NY's Upper Hudson Valley and wgxc.org/listen everywhere
http://www.wgxc.org/

Views from the Watershed: A Seat at the Table

Views from the Watershed: A Seat at the Table. Image provided by Lize Mogel (Nov 12, 2025)

Produced by Lize Mogel.

A DEP Commissioner, a Catskillian, and a bunch of lawyers walk into a bar...The 1990s were a turning point for the relationship between the Catskills and NYC. The federal Clean Water Act changed the way the City needed to manage its water supply— it tried to impose stringent regulations on the watershed. Catskillians were having none of that! As the watershed community got together and organized, a new DEP Commissioner came to town with a very different approach from her predecessors. A pitcher of beer broke the ice, and the rest is history.  

Featuring Marilyn Gelber, former Commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, and Alan Rosa, former Director of the Catskill Watershed Corporation.

"Views from the Watershed" is about the landscape, history, and politics of New York City’s water supply, and the complicated relationship between the City and the Catskills communities that steward 90% of its water. It tells the stories of the watershed through firsthand, intimate perspectives from local people (including a historian, a dairy farmer, a former DEP commissioner, a grave restorer, and a forester) on what it means to be a part of the water system.

This series was originally produced by Lize Mogel as a “podcast tour” of the NYC drinking water watershed in the Catskills. Get more info including a driving map and participant bios at walkingthewatershed.com/podcasttour.

Credits:
Project Director: Lize Mogel
Sound Engineer: Brett Barry/Silver Hollow Audio
Soundscape: Suzanne Thorpe
Lead Community Partner: Catskill Mountain Club
Views from the Watershed was funded in part by the Catskill Watershed Corporation, in partnership with the NYC Department of Environmental Protection; Humanities NY, with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities; and the O’Connor Foundation. 

Bio:
Lize Mogel is an interdisciplinary artist and counter-cartographer. She creates maps and mappings (among other forms) that bring the politics of place to the surface, and engages people in the myriad potentials of that place. She is co-editor of the book/map collection "Atlas of Radical Cartography.” From 2016-2024, she developed “Walking the Watershed,” about the relationship between the City and the mostly rural communities that supply its water. She’s currently developing “Wallkill Futures,” participatory projects with Wallkill River communities in the Hudson Valley. More at publicgreen.com.