Public trust job one for head of Alberta environmental monitoring program
EDMONTON — Fred Wrona really, really wants you to trust him.
“The main piece that I’m working on is rebuilding public trust and confidence,” says the man charged with keeping track of Alberta’s land, water and sky.
As the province’s chief scientist, it’s his job to oversee the province’s much-maligned environmental monitoring program.
Since it was formed in 2012, that program has been kicked around like a soccer ball by critics from industry to First Nations. Originally an arms-length agency, it was yanked under the government’s wing by the New Democrats about 18 months ago, only to face another round of barbs, this time from scientists who feared a loss of independence.