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The Story Collider

Stories of Urban Climate Change: Water

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Performing Arts, Society & Culture, Arts, Personal Journals, Science

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 10 April 2026

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Water covers roughly 70 per cent of the Earth’s surface and is essential for human survival. But it can also unleash devastating consequences.

In this week’s episode, both of our storytellers share tales about water — from flooding to polluted groundwater. Through their stories, we explore how water shapes our cities, our safety, and our sense of security in a changing climate.

Part 1: While researching flood risk and insurance costs in California, international student Hannah Melville-Rea is shocked by just how unprotected many people are.

Part 2: Patricia Schuba is determined to stop coal and waste pollution from contaminating the groundwater in Labadie, Missouri.

Hannah Melville-Rea is a PhD candidate and Knight-Hennessy Scholar at Stanford University, pursuing an interdisciplinary degree in Environment and Resources. Her research focuses on flood risk and examines how infrastructure decisions shape insurance costs and household vulnerability. She works closely with local agencies to translate research into practical tools that strengthen community flood resilience. Raised in Osaka, Japan by parents who hail from Australia and New Zealand, Hannah developed an early interest in how different countries tackle natural disasters. Today, she aspires to work at the intersection of science and policy to minimize the impact of climate hazards on frontline communities.

Patricia Schuba has been active in organizing and politics since 2000. She founded two political organizations that worked to give voice to working Missourians living in rural areas, and she was a candidate for Missouri State House in 2018. She was a caregiver for her father with Alzheimer's who died in 2018, and she has had T1 autoimmune diabetes since childhood. She has been the president of all-volunteer Board of Directors of Labadie Environmental Organization (LEO) since 2011 and an active member since 2009. She has lobbied legislators, trained community members to find their voice, and led a citizens' movement in Missouri to end coal and waste pollution of our water and air. The pollution related work has been mostly from the heart and has forced her to grow in ways she never thought possible. It included learning media and advocacy skills but, more importantly… showed her how the world really works and how necessary citizens are in the process.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Ice caps melting, oceans rising,

0:05.0

greenhouse gases building in the atmosphere,

0:09.0

record-breaking heat, storms that grow stronger every year.

0:15.0

When we hear about climate change, it often sounds like something happening to glaciers, forests, or coastlines far away.

0:25.6

But climate change isn't just happening somewhere else.

0:30.6

Sometimes it's happening right outside your front door.

0:36.6

This April, on the story clutter, we're bringing you a special series about urban climate

0:40.9

change.

0:42.8

Through eight true personal stories about science, we explore how the forces that shape our planet,

0:48.7

earth, water, fire, and air, show up in the places most of us actually live, our cities.

0:56.5

From flooded streets to wildfires uprooting day-to-day life, to the invisible air we breeze

1:01.6

suddenly becoming impossible to ignore. These are the moments when climate change stops being

1:07.5

abstract and becomes personal. Eight stories, four elements, one planet in crisis.

1:15.6

Join us this April for the Story Collider's Stories of Urban Climate Change.

1:21.6

True, personal stories about science.

1:38.0

A science story, huh?

1:41.2

Is NYU a scientist the... I felt...

1:42.0

And I just thought, well, I figured it out.

1:45.0

It was that golden moment.

1:47.0

Because science was on my side.

1:50.0

Hey, everyone. Hey everyone, welcome to The Story Clutter, where true personal stories about science help us to discover how weird and wonderful it is to exist in this world and be a human.

2:07.8

I'm your host, Mishigayevsky, and in today's episode, we're diving into climate change stories about water.

...

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