The main contractor in charge of constructing the Site C hydroelectric dam project near Fort St. John in northeastern B.C. has been hit with a $1.1 million fine for dumping contaminated drainage water into the Peace River. The penalty was imposed after Peace River Hydro Partners pleaded guilty in provincial court in Fort St. John on Monday to depositing a deleterious substance into fish-bearing waters, a violation of the federal Fisheries Act, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada,
Northeastern B.C. district issues 'do not consume' order after water treatment plant failure
Almost three weeks after municipal authorities of a small northeastern B.C. community announced that a local water treatment plant had stopped working, hundreds of residents have been asked not to drink tap water or use it in cooking. On Tuesday, the District of Hudson's Hope — about 86 kilometres west of Fort St. John, home to more than 800 people — and the Northern Health Authority issued a "do not consume" order for potable water that the district processes and distributes.
Fort St. John unveils fire training, water treatment facilities
Two new facilities have been unveiled in Fort St. John that are designed to improve emergency training and increase environmental sustainability. The city’s new water recovery facility is now operational and producing reclaimed water for industrial and agricultural uses. The $9.5 million project received a $5 million grant from the federal Gas Tax Fund. It can produce over 4,500 cubic metres, or roughly two Olympic-sized swimming pools, of reclaimed water per day.