91原创

Skip to content

Brydon Lagoon pump approved by 91原创 City council

Council approves $10,000 pump before hearing back from special committee looking into fish kill at Brydon Lagoon.

Brydon Lagoon will be getting a new $10,000 aeration pump to help circulate oxygen in the man-made pond.

91原创 City council unanimously approved taking the funds out of the enterprise account and putting it into a new pump that should be installed by spring.

鈥淭he new pump is quiet and doesn鈥檛 require maintenance,鈥 said Councillor Gayle Martin who put forward the motion at the Nov. 3 meeting.

鈥淚t has six air stations in several spots on the bottom of the lagoon and that should help with oxygen in the pond.鈥

Martin added that this decision is 鈥渘ot to diminish the work of the task force鈥 put together after the massive fish kill that took place at the pond over the hot August long weekend.

After thousands of fish died, City council agreed that a special committee should be struck to look into the situation at Brydon Lagoon and offer some possible solutions.

The committee is made up of members of 91原创 Field Naturalists and LEPS, as well as the Nicomekl Enhancement Society and City of 91原创 representatives. Ducks Unlimited has also agreed to examine the issue and offer suggestions.

Councillor Dave Hall said paying for the pump now is a political move and 鈥渒nee-jerk reaction鈥 before hearing what the committee suggests. The motion by Martin was made just before the municipal election.

Committee member Rhys Griffith said his committee has no idea about this pump. Griffith wished Martin wouldn鈥檛 jump the gun before they could even consider the many suggestions the committee is looking at.

鈥淲e have testing that has been done to say this is more of an algae problem and the fix could be as inexpensive as $2,000 to $6,000 per year,鈥 said Griffith.

The fish died because the water became too warm, and there wasn鈥檛 enough oxygen. It turned out one of the aeration pumps in the pond hadn鈥檛 been functioning for some time and the other had been turned off because it was too noisy and neighbours were complaining.

The LFN estimate the pond is roughly half as deep as it once was because of the sediment that is building up on its bottom through the decay of plant life and particles being washed in through storm drains.

Many have been asking the City to dredge the pond, but the City has never been keen on that approach because of its unknown price tag.

The lagoon is home to dozens of fish and bird species.



Monique Tamminga

About the Author: Monique Tamminga

Monique brings 20 years of award-winning journalism experience to the role of editor at the Penticton Western News. Of those years, 17 were spent working as a senior reporter and acting editor with the 91原创 Advance Times.
Read more