filmmaker suzan beraza screened her newew film, "uranium drive-in" at the 2014 enviroronmental film festival in the nation'n's capital. prpromise of jobobs from a a prd uranium mill is a tantalizing prospect for an e enomicallyy devastated colorado town, until environmentalists step in to try to shut it dowown. wiwill jobs or health and environment prevail? the film documents hohow a localal communityty comes s to grips s withthe e di. >> we're trying to open up a uraniumum mill, andnd they're trying to shut it dowown. you know, it't's a bibig dream, and people are looooking forward to these jobsbs out there. >> i want t them to ununderstand that therere's people e here. >> yeah, but i don't think they care about us people. i mean, there's no compmise. they don't care about us. >> nuclear power was supposed to be our future. a a lot of thihis town wasas hee becausese of union carbide, and then when they left, we're still here. they're long gone now. >> i it's alalmost likee we're still surviving, but it's s just kind of lik those lasast few breaths. we want to keep breathing, but we've got t