â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

WATCH: New Masich Place Stadium public walking hours changed, 6AM to 9PM on some days

WATCH:

The new Masich Place Stadium walking hours will give up to 15 hours of public access some days from 6AM to 9PM.

This follows outcry from residents, a petition with 2,000 signatures, and hundreds of messages sent to council.

“The user groups that are going to be paying to use it are going to have priority during certain periods. The City is going to list on the website and at the track when the public hours are and when the user groups are going to be using it, but I think it’s going to be a combination that’s going to work.”

– PG City Councillor Brian Skakun

The drafted hours will be implemented for the rest of 2018.

Something going on in the Prince George area you think people should know about?
Send us a news tip by emailing [email protected].

Matt Fetinko
Matt Fetinko
SAIT RTBN grad.

Continue Reading

cjci Now playing play

cirx Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Infrastructure, housing, UNDRIP will top agenda as local governments meet in Victoria next week

Members of local governments and First Nations are gathering in Victoria next week for the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) convention.

B.C. Conservatives support federal bill to classify intimate partner killings as first-degree murder

B.C. politicians are voicing support for a federal Conservative bill that would classify the killing of an intimate partner as first-degree murder. 

PG Fire Centre expects wildfire season to last another month

While we are heading into the fall season, the wildfire season is expected to continue.

Mavrik looking forward to PG Cougars home opener after returning from cancer treatment

It's been an exciting week for 3-year-old Mavrik, who continues his battle against against high-risk neuroblastoma.

“Please stop”: Eby says Alberta’s pipeline dream jeopardizes B.C. projects

Premier David Eby said Alberta’s push for a new pipeline is a threat to existing major projects in B.C. 
- Advertisement -