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Dirty Business S01E01 [Full Movie] [Ranked]Full EP - Full
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12:14Sous-titrage Société Radio-Canada
12:44...
13:16Okay, have you been giving her plenty of liquids?
13:19Yes.
13:20Been keeping her warm?
13:21Yes. Did everything you said.
13:23Okay, and are there any more symptoms?
13:26Yes.
13:28She's been bleeding from her backside, Doctor.
13:31I'm calling an ambulance.
13:37So, look, I've got the telemetry for Burford, and I've deciphered the engineer's handwriting.
13:4427th of December, the engineer's name is Michael Lazarus.
13:51It turns out here that at eight minutes past five, on the morning of the 27th, the alarm got triggered
13:58at the works.
13:59The communications had failed.
14:02But it must have been intermittent, because at eight minutes past six, the centre got a message to say that
14:09both the main inlet pumps had failed.
14:14Then, at 16 minutes past eight, another alarm was triggered.
14:19The storm tank was overflowing.
14:23And that's when the dumping started.
14:27So, the pumps have packed up.
14:29The storm tank's overflowing.
14:31You've got three alarms sounding.
14:33Obviously, they dispatched an engineer.
14:36Not for five and a half hours.
14:43Wet pumps one and two.
14:44Both failed.
14:45Return liquor pump.
14:46Failed.
14:47Balancing tank.
14:48Fall.
14:48Untreated sewage tank.
14:50Fall.
14:50Effluent chamber.
14:52Flooded.
14:54Don't need this shit.
15:01Storm tanks filled to the top.
15:03All the sewage is flushing into the river.
15:08Set.
15:14Return liquor pump.
15:15Reset.
15:16Might fail again.
15:19The hull's just going to hold.
15:22Trying my best here.
15:25Everything's failing.
15:26He did what he could to patch things up.
15:28By then, it's been dumping sewage into the wind rush for over five hours.
15:33Yeah, and we know.
15:35We know that there wasn't any heavy rainfall, like Aylard said.
15:39Because it didn't even rain on that day.
15:41Yeah.
15:41And the oxidation tank failed on the 28th.
15:45The rotation arms packed up on the 29th.
15:49Burford was falling apart.
15:51It couldn't handle all the sewage it was taken in.
15:53So it was just flushing everything into the river.
15:56And I feel that Mickey's the kind of person
15:59who's in the habit of telling the truth, don't you?
16:01Yeah.
16:02What about Commander Aylard?
16:13The results are back from the lab.
16:16It's quite serious.
16:18Heather has been infected with E. coli.
16:22The most aggressive strain.
16:24A 1-5-7.
16:29We're going to keep her comfortable, keep an eye on her,
16:31and hope that it passes through.
16:33Can you sleep?
16:34No.
16:35It's possible that the virus could attack Heather's kidney functions,
16:39which might have serious consequences for other organs.
16:51This was really about a temporary malfunction to the alarm,
16:56we think at least partly caused by the heavy rainfall that day,
16:59rather than any actual interruption to the treatment process.
17:02So what I'd like to do...
17:04Sorry, can I say a few words, Commander?
17:08Yes, of course.
17:09There was no heavy rain.
17:12In fact, it didn't rain at all.
17:16If you'll bear with me, what I have here is the engineer's logbooks.
17:22The engineer is called Michael Lazarus, and what you can see from Mr. Lazarus' logs is that the alarms were
17:30in fact functioning as normal.
17:33Well, they were triggered as soon as the flooding began, but the thing is, Mr. Lazarus was not dispatched to
17:39the works for more than five hours.
17:42The plant was falling apart.
17:44It couldn't treat the sewage it was taking in, and so it was just pumping it all out directly into
17:51the river.
17:55Well, thanks so much, Ash, and to you, Peter.
17:59It does look as though I've been misinformed, and I intend to get to the bottom of this, and I'll
18:06be putting my thumb on whoever is responsible.
18:08So what are you going to do about what these two gentlemen have said? What's going to happen now?
18:12I think that we are both shocked, absolutely shocked, to hear that information, because we were...
18:18You've said one thing. They've actually backed up with evidence something completely the opposite.
18:23Our river. You're just dumping it, and just covering everything up.
18:28And making money.
18:29And what's the long-term problems for the wildlife, the fish and the birds? What's happening with those?
18:35The ecological welfare of our rivers and our waterways is something that we find incredibly important.
18:42And what are you doing?
18:43Nothing. You're polluting our water.
18:46I wouldn't even let my dog swim in the river now. It's disgusting.
18:49It is our highest, highest priority that we will be fixing this as soon as possible.
18:54I can assure you, from all of us at Thames Water, we are working night and day.
19:00I do. I do as well.
19:02Thank you, sir. Thank you for your honor.
19:04Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much.
19:06Thank you.
19:08Shall we go outside?
19:10Yes.
19:11I think he just lied to us.
19:13Just straight some of the downs look to our faces.
19:15No, he said he was misinformed.
19:18Princess Diana's Equary, I mean...
19:19What is that, by the way?
19:21I don't know.
19:23It helps when people lie.
19:24It's how you know they've got something to hide.
19:42I mean, it's ammonia we need to keep an eye out.
19:45I think that's going to read high right after they've dumped the sewage.
19:49Fuck me.
19:50It is actually like one of your cases, isn't it?
19:53Not really, no.
19:55It's more real-time monitoring of the river.
19:58And the outflow pipes as well.
20:02So the question is, is Burford acting alone?
20:07Because there's, what, seven?
20:09Seven, is it?
20:10Seven works along the Windrush.
20:13So we need to know if Burford is an outlier, you know, single failing plant.
20:17Like a lone assassin, just killing everything that lives in the water.
20:22Or are they more like Burford?
20:24Well, I mean, I suppose I could order the, order the telemetry and get it for all of them.
20:36Dear EIR team, I would be grateful if you could supply all the telemetry exchanges between the control centre and
20:47the works at North Beach Church, Humbrough, Whitney and all.
21:05I can't find a pulse.
21:11Is there nothing?
21:14That's weird.
21:20No, I can't feel anything.
21:22No.
21:23Somebody call for help?
21:24Help, no.
21:25Can we get a doctor in here, please?
21:33What have you done to your finger?
21:34Oh, I don't know.
21:37I woke up this morning and it was like that.
21:39It feels a bit weird.
21:40Well, do you think that Charlie should take a look at that?
21:42I mean, she is a chemist, isn't she?
21:44I know she's a chemist, I live with her.
21:45Okay, so you know that they sent me all these data flows from the works at Whitney and at Church
21:51Hamburger.
21:51Yeah.
21:52But what I've done, I've converted the programme that I built for the fetal alcohol kits.
22:02What happened there was that the mothers, they were being paid in wine, so most of their children had fetal
22:08alcohol syndrome.
22:10What I did was that I took thousands of photographs of these FAS kits.
22:17And so by showing the machine, hundreds of these faces of these unborn children, we taught it to spot the
22:24features of fetal alcohol syndrome in the womb.
22:34So when the programme sees it in a scan, then it can tell the doctor straight away and then they
22:40can stop helping the mother and the kid.
22:46Now, Burford does most of his heavy lifting during early morning, just before everyone goes to work.
22:51And then again in the evening, when they come back home, so you can see the flows of treated effluent
22:59hitting the daily peaks and troughs.
23:01Now, that's when the penny dropped.
23:03The thing is, that is just like the contours on a baby's face.
23:11By showing the machine nine years of this flow data, I've taught it to recognise when the usual flows, they
23:20don't show off.
23:22When the everyday flows are missing, well, they're not treating the sewage.
23:27And if they're not treating the sewage, there's nowhere for it to go?
23:31Except?
23:32Into the river?
23:33Except into the river.
23:55We've decided to transfer Heather to the Bristol Hospital for Children.
24:00It's one of the best in the country.
24:02They'll be able to look after her there.
24:05It's getting bigger, I think.
24:07Have you been in the river again?
24:09Yeah, yeah.
24:10Did you have any cuts?
24:12Yeah, yeah.
24:14I prick my finger on a thorn when I was sitting at the camera.
24:17Before? After you went to the river?
24:19Before.
24:20Right.
24:22So if there's a pathogen in the water, you've given it direct entry into your bloodstream.
24:30Is that bad?
24:31It's bad, you muppet.
24:33You need antibiotics.
24:36You know, a lot of sewage has drugs in it.
24:38And if they mix with bacteria, then the bacteria becomes antibiotic resistant, which means that the antibiotics might not work
24:49on you.
24:49So they might have to try different types of medication on you.
24:53Oh, God.
24:55Hold on.
24:59So what are you doing?
25:01I'm just drawing on you.
25:04Why?
25:04Because if it gets bigger, then we will know.
25:08That looks worse now.
25:10So that's where she drew the marker, and that's how much bigger it's got in like two days.
25:16Bloody hell.
25:16And that is just from putting your hand in the river.
25:19Yeah.
25:20I'm an idiot.
25:20Well, we know that.
25:22But, I mean, if it's doing that to your hand, just think about what it's doing to all the creatures
25:27that live in the river.
25:27Exactly.
25:28What was it you wanted to show me?
25:30Oh, yeah.
25:31Well, you know, I got all this data through from North Leech.
25:34You know, we went to the wheat chief there.
25:36Oh, yeah.
25:36That was overpriced for what it was.
25:38Well, you thought so.
25:39But, anyway, look.
25:40They must have sent this by mistake, because I'm pretty sure they haven't read it.
25:45Why? Why do you say that?
25:46Because it says here that the works at North Leech, they haven't treated any sewage for three and a half
25:51months.
25:53So either the good people of North Leech have been holding it in for three and a half months, or...
25:58Now, I know they did not do that, because I have the love books, and North Leech is on Michael
26:06Lezeris' plate.
26:10Fucking hate my life.
26:20Sight flooded for the fifth day running.
26:27Storm tank high alarm sounding for nearly 48 hours now.
26:31Storm pump failure alarm sounding for nearly four days.
26:36All four fire filters not rotating.
26:38No flow coming into the works.
26:41Power surges have badly affected all equipment on site.
26:45Serious plant failure.
26:49Generator not running.
26:51Running to get the site going.
26:54Oh, fucks.
26:55Oh, fucks.
26:56Oh, fucks.
26:59Oh, fucks.
27:00Oh, fucks.
27:01Oh, fucks.
27:02Oh, fucks.
27:05Oh, fucks.
27:06Oh, fucks.
27:07Oh, fucks.
27:18Oh, fucks.
27:21Oh, fucks.
27:23Oh, fucks.
27:27Oh, fuck.
27:34Oh, fuck.
27:36Oh, fuck.
27:37Oh, fuck.
27:37Oh, fuck.
27:38Oh, fuck.
27:38Oh, fuck.
27:38Oh, fuck.
27:39Oh, fuck.
27:39Oh, fuck.
27:39Nous n'avons pas d'utilisation de la séance sans pouvoir.
27:42Nous n'avons pas d'utilisation,
27:44ou nous n'avons pas d'utilisation dans le river.
27:48Et là, mec,
27:50il y a de la séance de la séance.
27:52...
28:06Thames's own data shows North Leach hasn't treated any sewage for three and a half months.
28:11Yeah.
28:12So, look.
28:14There's two works,
28:16and they're a few miles of each other,
28:18both rotting into the sludge,
28:20both dumping illegally.
28:22We've got to get this to the Environment Agency.
28:24They've got prosecuting powers.
28:26What do you mean?
28:26Well, they don't have to show their evidence to the police.
28:28These are crimes.
28:30They can prosecute privately.
28:33What, so they can just...
28:34just take temps to court?
28:36Yes.
28:37They're the sewage police.
28:39Wow.
28:40Can anyone else do that?
28:42Post office.
28:43The post office, that's unusual.
28:46I can see that your swelling's gone down.
28:49Yeah, yeah, the antibiotics are kicking in.
28:51Thank God.
28:53And it's about keeping us a little bit more local.
28:58Sorry, I'm just gonna fold this up, actually.
29:02We want to strip out as much unnecessary regulation as possible.
29:07So, under operator self-monitoring,
29:11we're going to be asking the water companies to monitor their own environmental performance,
29:17flagging any breaches to us as a priority.
29:21Sorry, I don't understand.
29:23So, you want water companies to monitor their own pollution?
29:28Yeah.
29:29It's about shifting the burden of regulation onto the companies and asking the water companies,
29:35if there's been a pollution, to give us the details.
29:41Hang on.
29:41Hang on.
29:42Just, just to be clear, you want us to ask the water companies to tell us when they've dumped sewage?
29:52It's about pivoting away from, away from on-site inspections to a more desk-based approach.
30:01Yeah.
30:01It's sort of streamlining our process.
30:04So, you want us to stop visiting sewage works?
30:07No, no, no.
30:08We'll still be doing on-site inspections.
30:10Yeah.
30:11Of course.
30:12Provided that we give the company two weeks' notice of our visit.
30:15Yeah, but that's a, that is a problem because, well, sorry, again.
30:18Yeah.
30:19But if we give the water companies two weeks' notice, they'll just clean up before we get there.
30:25I mean, it's, it, it is an honour system, so if the companies say that there hasn't been an incident,
30:31I don't think we should go looking for reasons to challenge that.
30:34So, what you're saying is, regulate yourselves, and then just let us know if you've committed any crimes?
30:45Yeah.
30:47Thanks so much.
30:49Okay.
30:50See you.
30:55To Julia Simpson, Area Director, Environment Agency, dear Julia.
31:00I live in Oxfordshire, near the River Windrush.
31:03My neighbour, Professor Peter Hammond, and I have been gathering evidence of sewage discharges into our river by Thames Water.
31:10We'd like to bring what we've learned to the attention of the Environment Agency.
31:14Dear Julia, we'd like to invite you to meet some members of our group to discuss issues of sewage pollution.
31:21Dear Julia, we are going to take a trip down the river on foot and by boat, looking at possible
31:26sources of sewage pollution.
31:28Would the Environment Agency be interested?
31:30Dear Julia, we are still waiting for a suitable point of contact.
31:39Dear Ashley, the Department for the Environment will provide you with a full response by the 8th of June 2018.
31:47She's got an MBE.
31:49And a bloody big salmon.
31:52Why is she taking so long to get back to us?
31:55Doesn't she realise you're doing your job for her?
31:57I don't know.
31:58I might put in a complaint.
32:26I might put in a complaint.
32:42Hello?
32:43Mr Smith, it's Julia Dimson from the Environment Agency. I'm so sorry it's taken me so long to get back
32:48to you.
32:49Honestly, waiting for DEFRA, it is maddening.
32:52Well, we've found each other now.
32:54We wanted to ask about how the Agency monitors sewage dumps into the river.
33:01Spills, yes.
33:03Well, as you probably know, we manage operator self-monitoring.
33:08Operator self-monitoring? What's that?
33:10Yes, it's for Thames Water to report any potential breaches.
33:13You mean it's Thames' job to tell you when they've dumped sewage?
33:19To report potential pollution incidents, yes.
33:23What if they don't report them?
33:24We would expect Thames to report 100% of pollution incidents.
33:29So, it's not even your responsibility to inspect the works?
33:35For?
33:37Well, to see if they're working.
33:40No, absolutely.
33:41We inspect the treatment works. Yes, of course we do.
33:44How often?
33:45Well, we would inspect perhaps once every few days, up to perhaps once every six months, depending on the inspection
33:53team's judgment.
33:55Ash, we're aware that there's been some discussion locally around water quality on the Windrush.
34:00And in fact, we just completed a new survey.
34:03So, I was thinking it would be a good idea for me to take up your invitation, come down to
34:08the Village Hall and to go over some of the results.
34:11So, the good news is that our testing shows that there's no evidence that the Windrush is seriously polluted or
34:20that the quality of the water has declined.
34:22We do know that the river is more brown these days, but our evidence has shown that this brown colour
34:29has got nothing to do with sewage.
34:34Sorry, we've spoken earlier on the telephone. I wonder if you could confirm something you told me then, that the
34:40agency inspects all the works along the Windrush between every two to three days and every six months.
34:46Yes, that's right.
34:48Professor Peter Hammond, and I'm also part of this Windrush group, a colleague of yours told me that actually you
34:56only inspect once every eight years.
34:59And also, I've just been running your figures and so you've only done about half of the inspections that you
35:09needed to have been doing.
35:10In fact, you've only been visiting the works once every 16 years.
35:16We also took a look at your water quality tests. And the thing is, they were all carried out upstream
35:24from all the major sewage works.
35:26It's almost as if you've chosen the cleanest part of the river to conduct your tests.
35:31The river is actually devoid of anything in there. The fish and all the wildfire and everything that reads on
35:39from that, from your kingfishers to everything.
35:42You've absolutely ruined this place and you should be bloody well ashamed of yourself.
35:51And the water crisp beds. You destroyed the water crisp beds as well. That used to be a source of
35:57industry years ago. Totally gone.
35:59So we will be taking all your feedback into consideration. I will have to go away and we will listen
36:07to your feedback. I promise you.
36:09Thank you.
36:11Thank you.
36:11Thank you.
36:14Thank you.
36:16Thank you.
36:34Is it Mr Lazarus? My name's Ash Smith. This is my colleague Professor Peter Hammond.
36:40We're doing some research on Thames water. And, uh, listen, it's all off the record.
36:46We're not disclosing the names of anyone we talked to. We wondered if you could spare 10 minutes.
37:00People call me Mickey, first of all.
37:01Thank you very much for coming here. I know it's not easy.
37:03We appreciate you so much. I can't tell you.
37:05I'm not grass, okay? So, I did grass on my mate, like, in year eight, back in the day, but
37:11this is different from grassing, right? This is like blowing the whistle.
37:13I told you I'm an ex-copper.
37:15Yeah.
37:15You've told me that as well. That's made me...
37:16This is not grass.
37:17Grassing is like when you grass on your mates and blowing the whistle.
37:21Whistle blowing is when you, like, grass on your boss. Right?
37:25We're gonna start. Um, right. Check this out.
37:29Most water companies get sold every 10 years or so.
37:33JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Kuwait Sovereign Fund.
37:38Chinese banks, we've had them all, mate.
37:46So, um, Macquarie bought us in 2006.
37:49That's the, that's the Australian hedge fund.
37:52It's known as the millionaire's factory.
37:54Such are the reputed riches of many of Macquarie's key executives.
37:57The vampire kangaroo.
37:59That's it.
37:59And they've earned that name because they are bloodsuckers.
38:02Leading companies rely on Macquarie for advice, access to capital.
38:05But the first thing they did was sell our offices and then rent them back to us.
38:10What?
38:11Wrong-ins.
38:11They make Del Boy look like a fucking amateur.
38:14Then they said that we had to get management clearance to buy pens.
38:19Right at the top to buy a biro.
38:21Not even a parka. Not a fancy pen. Just a normal pen.
38:24Piss take. All right?
38:25Now let's say this.
38:26Right.
38:27A pipe's broken.
38:28What do you do? Normally you take it out and you put a new one in.
38:30They would tell us to stick a collar around it.
38:34It's not gonna hold.
38:34What's the collar?
38:35It's just like sticking plaster.
38:37It's not gonna hold. It's a temporary fix.
38:38The pipe's still rotten.
38:40Okay? It's gonna go again.
38:41It's a box job. It's like Frankenstein.
38:43Why don't they want to do it properly?
38:45Why don't they want to spend money and seal it properly?
38:48They don't give up monkeys about the works.
38:50You know why?
38:50Because they're gonna flip you.
38:51If they don't want to spend any money on it,
38:55how are they going to maintain your works?
38:57They don't give a shit. You know why?
38:59They're like dodgy house flippers.
39:00They're gonna go in there. It's still rotten inside.
39:02And they flip it. They're out.
39:03That's why I banked for Macquarie.
39:07Macquarie, when they flogged us,
39:09they walked away with around 2.8 billion quid.
39:12It's scandalous.
39:15So, how do you know all this then, Mickey?
39:17I started working for Thames when I was 16.
39:19Right? On my second day, I joined the union.
39:23I get people ringing me up every day.
39:25Mickey, it's all falling apart.
39:27We can't keep it going.
39:29Pete, if you were there working there, you were an engineer, you know,
39:32and the pump saying work in your own capacity.
39:34What's your best option?
39:36Well, the best option, obviously, is just to get rid of the sewage, I suppose.
39:40The only option is to press the button that flushes it all out.
39:46I'm not proud to admit that.
39:48And I feel guilty, you know?
39:50I see people swimming in these rivers and their kids swim in the rivers.
39:55What am I supposed to do?
39:56I know what goes in there.
39:57I'll put it in there.
39:59We're at tipping point here, fellas.
40:05So, we have run the brain tests.
40:08Heather's brain has lost the ability to control her vital organs
40:11and unfortunately they are failing.
40:15I'm really very sorry.
40:18But I think it's time we consider turning off her ventilators.
40:41I will be fine.
40:41I will be fine.
40:44I will be fine.
40:57I will be fine.
41:06Dear Professor Hammond,
41:08Je suis un membre de Citizens Against South West Water.
41:12Nous avons créé un mois d'honneur pour combiner la compagnie de séance d'eau dans notre bit de Devon.
41:17Une de nos groupes ont été récemment donné ces, qui nous pensons que vous devriez voir.
41:26Une fille de 8 peut avoir été la première personne en Britain
41:30à avoir contrôlé fatal E. coli poison d'eau d'eau d'eau d'eau d'eau.
41:3410 autres personnes, including 4 enfants, qui all ont visité la beach en 28 juillet,
41:41ont été aussi été blessés par la même des bactériques.
41:46La première partie de l'E. coli.
41:59Si vous voulez, nous pouvons nous passer pour vous.
42:06Here we go.
42:08All right.
42:09Here we go.
42:10All right.
42:12I'll just leave you together for a little while now, okay?
42:20All right, all right.
42:32You're all right.
42:35You're all right.
42:48All right.
42:50Okay.
42:51Here we go.
42:53All right.
42:54Here we go.
42:56Be careful.
42:57It's okay.
42:58All right.
42:59Move on.
42:59Come on.
43:30No.
43:32Come on.
43:33Go on.
43:33Go on.
43:38Merci.
43:39Merci.
43:44All right, dear.
43:58So, vous savez,
43:59You know how I taught the machine to look for the anomalies in Whitney and Churchhamborough?
44:05Yeah, right. Well, have you been free jazzing your numbers again?
44:09Well, it's actually a lot of hard work, you know.
44:10Oh, no, sorry, sorry.
44:11Just looking for the patterns and spotting the deviations.
44:14Yeah, right.
44:15And you know that, you do know that when the machine sees an abnormality, it can only mean one thing,
44:22that it's dumping sewage.
44:23Yes.
44:24Okay, so, in the nine years that I have data for, these two works alone, Whitney and Churchhamborough, they've dumped
44:33sewage a thousand times.
44:38These aren't accidents, Ash. It's a policy.
44:45This is starting to look like organized crime.
45:00No, this isn't right. That's shit.
45:05No, this ain't right. That's pure sewage.
45:09You say you've got insufficient evidence, but we keep giving you the evidence. All we ever do is give you
45:14the evidence.
45:14If you don't know what caused the infection, then you need to shut down the beach. That's not going to
45:18happen.
45:19I wonder if we should be calling it an outbreak.
45:22I feel like the kind of term that could alarm people.
45:23We are conducting an investigation under Section 108 of the Environment Lab.
45:27Close the beach before this happens to somebody else.
45:30With their kids, with fishing nets, sitting amongst turds.
45:35Reuben!
45:38Reuben!
45:39Reuben!
45:40Reuben!
45:41Reuben!
45:43Reuben!
45:45Reuben!
45:46Reuben!
45:47Reuben!
45:48Reuben!
45:49Reuben!
45:49Reuben!
45:49Reuben!
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