Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Headrick want's own biosolids monitoring

Fraser-Fort George Regional District director Bob Headrick wants to use $15,000 of his electoral area's community grant funding to pay for water monitoring and legal advice related to a plan to spread biosolids over 30 hectares at the east end of Pat

Fraser-Fort George Regional District director Bob Headrick wants to use $15,000 of his electoral area's community grant funding to pay for water monitoring and legal advice related to a plan to spread biosolids over 30 hectares at the east end of Patterson Road in Red Rock.

"It's not going to cost the taxpayers of any other area but electoral area D," he said.

About 100 people attended an information meeting at the Red Rock fire hall on the proposal. Headrick said most remained skeptical but resigned to it going ahead anyway. Runoff from the site was a major concern cited.

For more information see The Citizen.


For the complete "smart-version" of the Prince George Citizen visit our Digital Edition