Horicon Cattail Bog Removal A ‘Gray Area,’ City And WDNR Communicating About Waterway


MITCHELL BRADLEY KELLER
Both the City of Horicon Department of Public Works and Utilities Supervisor Tim Kingman and WisconsinDepartment of Natural Resources (WDNR) Wildlife Biologist Paul Samerdyke used the color-coded idiom “gray area” to explain the responsibility of a current cattail bog jam