The District of Lake Country showed off some of its newest infrastructure Monday. The $8.3-million water booster station and reservoir projects are expected to make the water quality for Lake Country residents more reliable and help prevent boil water notices.
Global News at 11 Okanagan
Lake Country aims to improve water quality with new infrastructure
More Videos
-
“A lot of people have just put on the pause button,”: Fewer Okanagan residents list homes for sale amid pandemic
-
“This is ridiculous, this is taking too long,” Peachland’s mayor echoes calls for highway upgrades following deadly crash on Drought Hill.
-
“It was always a dream to have my own store,” Summerland business owner shuts down store permanently due to pandemic and not being able pay rent
-
Gas prices jump by 16 cents per litre at many gas stations in the Okanagan
-
Many Okanagan couples forced to postpone their weddings amid pandemic
-
Concerns and questions are being raised around the City of Kelowna’s priorities when it comes to protecting heritage sites
You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.
View Original Article