WYNDHAM
Home » News » George looks back on four decades at Werribee’s Western Treatment Plant

George looks back on four decades at Werribee’s Western Treatment Plant

Former colleagues shout out greetings as they spot George Judkins.

The former operations manager of Melbourne Water’s western treatment plant has been dragged back to his workplace of almost four decades to chat to Star Weekly about the highs and lows of climbing the ranks of sewage treatment, before he retired late last year.

Mr Judkins was “a local”, born and raised at Werribee and an alumnus of Werribee High, as he calls it (now Werribee Secondary College).

After school he studied draughtsmanship at Collingwood Technical College, which enabled him to secure a job – his first and only – with Melbourne Water in 1974.

He was transferred two years later to the Werribee Sewage Farm, where he remained until September last year.

“I drew sewage channels, pumping stations, all sorts of things,” Mr Judkins says.

His work ethic quickly paid off; he was appointed a technical officer of sewage treatment not long after starting and, ultimately, operations manager of the entire facility.

“I worked hard,” he says modestly.

Since he hung up the boots on his birthday late last year, Mr Judkins, 60, says it’s the people he worked with that he misses most.

“I guess I also feel attached to the site because I’ve spent 35 years of my working life here. I think of the history of the site.

“There were generations of people born here and, at one stage, there was about 350 employees – the biodiversity, the bird life, that integration of farming, birds, harmony with nature; it really describes how the plant operates,” he says.

Back when he started, the facility’s very own town, Cocoroc, was still home to one resident – the rest moved out after it became too expensive for the company to maintain – and five or six others lived elsewhere on-site.

He says it gave the place a strong sense of community.

Of the low-lights, Mr Judkins lists the smell.

“One of the great features of the site was it required very little energy, there was very little pumping required [in open channels].

“One of the drawbacks of that was the odour. It wasn’t until the ’80s that serious odour control started to be implemented. It became the ‘butt’ of all jokes,” he laughs.

Nowadays Mr Judkins spends most of his time either tending to his “huge” vegetable patch on his and his wife’s property at Teesdale, or on his road bike.

Digital Editions


  • Green wedge feedback opens

    Green wedge feedback opens

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 255196 Wyndham council is calling on the community for feedback to better understand the unique area of the Western…

More News

  • Chippie pays it back

    Chippie pays it back

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 536769 Most open house auctions aren’t all that newsworthy, but there are always pretty special exceptions out there. On Saturday 21 February, a five-bedroom…

  • Council wage bill blowout

    Council wage bill blowout

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 255196 Wyndham council has announced its wage bill will be more than $3.9 million higher than expected. Figures from the second quarter of council’s…

  • Call for stronger support

    Call for stronger support

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 255196 A resident is calling on Wyndham Council to strengthen support for National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) participants in the municipality’s 2026-2030 Accessibility and…

  • My Place

    My Place

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 536755 Genevieve Jackson is a library programs outreach support officer in Wyndham and runs programs such as Rhyme Time, as well as Craft and…

  • Point Cook into granny

    Point Cook into granny

    Point Cook overcame a disappointing start to the Bowls Victoria weekend pennant division 4, section 1 finals to make the grand final. Having finished on top, Point Cook earned two…

  • The Faces of Wyndham on display

    The Faces of Wyndham on display

    Point Cook photographer David Mullins launched Faces of Wyndham at the World Trade Centre in Docklands on Saturday 21 February. For more than seven years, Mr Mullins has captured portraits…

  • Bees into granny

    Bees into granny

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 523147 Werribee has won through to the Bowls Victoria weekend pennant division 2, section 1 grand final the hard way. The Bees finished the…

  • Runs flow in Subbies

    Runs flow in Subbies

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 317175 Hoppers Crossing and Werribee both piled on the runs in the Victorian Turf Cricket Association east-west on Saturday. After a couple of tough…

  • Eskimo Joe to headline west festival

    Eskimo Joe to headline west festival

    Australia’s beloved alt-rock power trio Eskimo Joe are sure to have audiences up on their feet when they headline the Lincoln Park Twilight Festival. Held on Saturday 28 February at…

  • Merzbow to bring noise to Newport

    Merzbow to bring noise to Newport

    For almost five decades now, Tokyo-based artist Merzbow has held an undisputed position as the iconic forefather of noise music. It’s said his work, which catapults the listener into an…