Photograph By Keith Anderson/The Daily News
New City bylaws won t make Kamloops brown and weedy, as long as everyone accepts they need to do things a little bit differently.
There is no question the City s new water meter and pesticide bylaws will change the way homeowners protect and care for their landscapes, said Chris Savage, a landscape specialist at Lyons Landscaping.
That doesn t mean it will make the task of keeping lawns and gardens green and free of weeds and pest impossible, he said.
Many people don t yet believe that. Savage said he regularly hears from people these days that wonder how they will be able to keep up their properties without the chemical tools they once had at their fingertips.
Photograph By Dave Eagles/KTW
The inside of the TNRD Building, headquarters of the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, which is located downtown at Victoria Street and Fifth Avenue. Photograph By Dave Eagles/KTW
Nandi Spolia (top right) and Sukh Gill (bottom right) have longtime membership ties to the Aurora Rotary Club and together organize the IndoCan Links Golf Tournament, an annual charity event. According to annual financial reports, the TNRD paid Nandi’s about $45,000 in 2018. Five years’ worth of purchases on Gill’s TNRD credit card show about $24,000 charged at the restaurant, most often on a Thursday or Friday night and including both TNRD staff and board directors.
A Kamloops city councillor will head the Thompson-Nicola Regional District’s policy review committee. On Wednesday, the regional district reconvened a policy review committee for the first time . . .
Mine CEOs want closed-door meetings with council candidates kamloopsnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kamloopsnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Defence questions police technique at Hoefman trial
Poll
Too strict
A sample of a letter reassembled from cross-cut shreds by MHPS Const. Kurtis Ladouceur from paper recovered from a shredding machine seized by police from the home of Robert Hoefman.
A Medicine Hat court heard Tuesday how a city police officer took weeks to reassemble a shredded letter recovered at the home of a man accused of a 2017 first-degree murder.
Robert Hoefman, 59, is accused of the homicide of James Satre on Oct. 10, 2017 as part of an extortion scheme to garner $1 million from an individual who can’t be identified due to a publication ban.