Mr Merivale
                     The urgent demand for roads is undeniable.  All accounts public &
                     private agree that the progress of the Colony is retarded by the want
                     of them.  Roads were to have been the first care of the Engineers,
                     and they have made from 5 to 7 miles up the Country: & would
                     doubtless have made more if they had had time.  But I conclude that
                     the Engineers have had interruptions.  Are then the Roads to be
                     delayed until the Engineers have leisure to make them, and is nobody
                     else to make roads but the Military force.  Why should not the
                     writer—who is a Merchant in the City, & able to perform all he
                     promises—or any other person who may be fixed upon undertake this
                     very pressing and important Service?  The fact, I think, is that it
                     has been an expensive error sending out R. Engineers to 
B. Columbia.
                     It is difficult to combine Military & Civil duties in one person.  If
                     part of a Reg
t of the Line had been stationed in 
B.C. or
                     
V.C. Isld it 
wd have afforded adequate military protection—have
                     been much less costly, and roads, bridges surveys &c 
wd have
                     fallen into the hands of private enterprize, by whom, under 
Govt
                     supervision those duties 
wd have been performed promptly & well
                     enough.  We are now placed in the embarrassing position of having to
                     maintain the 
                     

                     Engineers for the nominal though not exclusive purpose
                     of making roads, and the 
B.C. public must be taxed to defray the
                     expense incurred by any person, or association of persons, who may be
                     willing to undertake the real service.