Ottawa
- NCC lowered ice thickness standard to push Rideau Canal Skateway open in February | CTVottawa.ctvnews.ca NCC lowered ice thickness standard to push Rideau Canal Skateway open in February
Internal documents show the National Capital Commission took what it called a 'manageable risk' to lower the standard for what qualifies as thick enough ice in order to squeeze a few more skating days into the Rideau Canal Skateway season.
- New technology at Ottawa airport will eliminate need to remove laptops, liquids during screeningottawa.ctvnews.ca New technology at Ottawa airport will eliminate need to remove laptops, liquids during screening
Passengers at the Ottawa International Airport (YOW) will not be required to remove their laptops and liquids from carry-on-bags for screening, thanks to a new CT X-ray screening technology.
>Passengers at the Ottawa International Airport (YOW) will not be required to remove their laptops and liquids from carry-on-bags for screening, thanks to a new CT X-ray screening technology. > >The Ottawa airport is the second airport in the country to be using CATSA’s new technology.
- Bike lanes to remain a priority in Ottawa despite new provincial rules, mayor saysottawacitizen.com Bike lanes to remain a priority in Ottawa despite new provincial rules, mayor says
'It's all about striking the right balance and serving the needs of everyone,' says Sutcliffe
Something, something, broken clock.
- Today's letters: Don't blame boomers for millennials' plightottawacitizen.com Today's letters: Don't blame boomers for millennials' plight
Tuesday, Oct. 15: The two generations made very different 'lifestyle' decisions, says a reader.
This better just be rage-bait. Otherwise, wow is this person out of touch.
- Updated COVID vaccines available in some Ottawa pharmaciesottawacitizen.com Updated COVID vaccines available in some Ottawa pharmacies
New COVID-19 vaccines designed to target current variants are now available at many pharmacies in Ottawa.
>New COVID-19 vaccines designed to target current variants are now available at many pharmacies in Ottawa.
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>Several Ottawa pharmacies contacted by the Ottawa Citizen said they were now administering COVID-19 vaccines, which they received earlier this week. At least one said they were still waiting for supply.
>The updated vaccines were approved by Health Canada in September. In Ontario and some other provinces, previous versions of COVID vaccines, targeting older variants, were destroyed before the new ones would be made available. That meant no vaccines have been available in the province for weeks of a significant COVID wave.
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>A spokesperson for Ottawa Public Health said it was awaiting shipment of the COVID vaccines so it could begin administering in its clinics, but it expected to have more information next week.
- The View From 227 Bank Street: Facing eviction in a morally unjust housing systemleveller.ca The View From 227 Bank Street - The Leveller
By Ben Emond At the end of October, 2023, Smart Living Properties (I will call them “Smart Living” for short), who had bought not only my building but the entire block along Bank Street between Lisgar and Nepean Streets in the Fall of 2022, issued a termination of tenancy form (N13) to me and all …
- Bank Street Tenants Confront Smart Living Properties to say No to Mass Evictionleveller.ca Bank Street Tenants Confront Smart Living Properties to say No to Mass Eviction - The Leveller
By Emily Miller Tenants facing mass eviction from a heritage building in downtown Ottawa marched to their landlord’s office on Sept. 10. Residents are demanding that Smart Living Properties (SLP) drop the N13 eviction notices and meet with tenants. Thirty tenants and supporters organizing under the ...
- Trial of convoy protest leaders concludes
> Tamara Lich, Chris Barber accused of orchestrating 2022 demonstration that took over downtown Ottawa It started more than a year ago, took nearly 50 days in a courtroom and may not be decided until next year, but the trial of two leaders of the 2022 "Freedom Convoy" protest in Ottawa finally ended Friday.
> Tamara Lich and Chris Barber pleaded not guilty to mischief, intimidation, obstruction and other charges.
> Crown prosecutors called 16 witnesses and presented hours of video evidence and numerous social media posts in an effort to prove their case.
I seriously hope these two racist assholes get what they deserve, but with Lawrence Greenspon as their lawyer, who knows.
- Winston Churchill portrait stolen from Château Laurier recovered by Ottawa police — in Italy
> The "Roaring Lion" has been found.
> A 1941 portrait of British prime minister Sir Winston Churchill by famed Canadian photographer Yousuf Karsh, which was reported stolen from the lobby of Ottawa's Fairmont Château Laurier hotel in August 2022, has been located in Italy, sources tell CBC News.
> Ottawa police investigators, who tracked the photo down, say it is set to be returned to the hotel
- Record number of photo radar tickets in Ottawa so far in 2024: Here are the 10 busiest camerasottawa.ctvnews.ca Record number of photo radar tickets in Ottawa so far in 2024: Here are the 10 busiest cameras
New data shows the 40 photo radar cameras have issued 229,105 tickets in the first seven months of 2024. The automated speed enforcement camera program resulted in 220,789 speeding tickets in 2023, 127,939 tickets in 2022 and 80,944 tickets in 2021.
>Ottawa's photo radar cameras have issued a record number of speeding tickets to drivers this year, as the city of Ottawa continues to expand the automated speed enforcement program in community safety zones, school zones and "high speed locations."
>New data shows the 40 photo radar cameras have issued 229,105 tickets in the first seven months of 2024. The automated speed enforcement camera program resulted in 220,789 speeding tickets in 2023, 127,939 tickets in 2022 and 80,944 tickets in 2021.
>Twelve new cameras have been activated so far in 2024, and work is underway to install 20 new photo radar cameras(opens in a new tab) across the city by the end of the year. Staff have estimated the city will issue one million tickets a year through the photo radar and red light camera programs.
>The busiest photo radar camera is on King Edward Avenue, the busy road for motorists travelling between Ottawa and Gatineau over the Ottawa River. The camera issued 36,210 tickets in the February to July period.
The 10 busiest photo radar cameras in Ottawa in July
- King Edward Avenue southbound, between Bolton Street and St. Patrick Street: 7,096 tickets
- Walkley Road, between Halifax Drive and Harding Road: 2,873 tickets
- Bronson Avenue, between Raven Road and Sunnyside Avenue: 2,220 tickets
- St. Laurent Boulevard, between Noranda Avenue and Clarke Avenue: 1,838 tickets
- Cedarview Road, between Fallowfield Road and Jockvale Road: 1,772 tickets
- Katimavik Road, between Castlefrank Road and McGibbon Drive: 1,602 tickets
- First Avenue, between Chrysler Street and Percy Street: 1,504 tickets
- Hunt Club Road, between Pike Street and Lorry Greenberg Drive: 1,495 tickets
- Bayshore Drive, near Woodridge Crescent: 1,474 tickets
- Fisher Avenue, between Kintyre Private and Deer Park Road: 1,323 tickets
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- Udderly mystifying: Why were three calves and a dog left in an abandoned truck?ottawacitizen.com Udderly mystifying: Why were three calves and a dog left in an abandoned truck?
Ottawa police are investigating what appears to be a case of cattle rustling gone wrong.
> On Saturday at about 11 a.m., Ottawa police were called to the area of Wellington Street West and Holland Avenue following reports of suspicious activity involving a pickup truck. The vehicle was later located, abandoned, in an alley beside Reid Park, near Sherwood Drive, in the Civic Hospital neighbourhood. > > > Inside the truck’s cab, police found three calves and a dog. > >Police initially suspected the calves must have been taken from the nearby Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, but they later confirmed the animals did not originate there. > >It’s not yet known where the calves came from, why they were in the truck or what happened to the person who abandoned them. The Ottawa police refused to provide more information, saying its official investigation is ongoing.
- Ottawa Pride stance on Israel has Liberals, U.S., some civil servants exit paradewww.sasktoday.ca Ottawa Pride stance on Israel has Liberals, U.S., some civil servants exit parade
OTTAWA — The decision by organizers of the Pride parade in Ottawa to boycott Israeli companies is prompting a growing number of participants to pull out of the festivities, including the federal Liberal party and the U.S. embassy.
- Riverside South residents unhappy with structure outside Jonathan Pitre schoolottawa.ctvnews.ca Residents in Riverside South are upset with an ugly structure erected outside a local school
Residents in Riverside South say they're unhappy with a tall electrical structure erected outside portables at Jonathan Pitre School. The school board says it is the safest and most efficient way to power temporary classrooms.
Slow news day in Ottawa.
- Digging down to learn about the past: NCC opens public archeological siteottawacitizen.com Digging down to learn about the past: NCC opens public archeological site
Visitors can mine for pieces of history on NCC land on a prime spot on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River
Visitors can mine for pieces of history on NCC land on a prime spot on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River.
On select dates throughout August, the NCC is opening the doors for the curious to get their hands dirty to check it all out for free.
“This is one of 14 Indigenous archaeological sites within Lac Leamy Park,” said Maika. “This is one of the ones under the most threat from climate change, active erosion and changing water levels on the Ottawa River, so we’re trying to learn as much as possible about this site before it’s completely gone into the river.”
Last August, Maika says about 1,000 people showed up for the 20 days the site was open. During last week’s heat wave, the daily count was around 20, slightly higher on the weekend. Crowds are largest around the noon hour.
- Former Ottawa councillor and news anchor Carol Anne Meehan announces federal conservative bidottawa.ctvnews.ca Carol Anne Meehan, former Ottawa councillor, news anchor announces bid for federal Conservative candidacy
Former Ottawa city councillor and media personality Carol Anne Meehan has announced she is seeking to become a Conservative candidate in the next federal election.
- Coun. Matt Luloff faces impaired driving charges, with a broad range of potential outcomesottawacitizen.com Coun. Matt Luloff faces impaired driving charges, with a broad range of potential outcomes
The Ontario Municipal Act, the Ontario Election Act and the CIty of Ottawa's code of conduct have little to say about elected officials facing criminal charges
>Orléans East-Cumberland Coun. Matt Luloff was charged with impaired driving earlier in July. How will the legal process unfold and what does it mean for Luloff’s future as a city councillor?
>Luloff, a second-term councillor, also serves as Ottawa Public Library Board chair and was the Conservative Party of Canada candidate for Orléans riding in the next federal election until he stepped down from that candidacy on July 10, citing personal reasons.
>According to the charges filed in court, Luloff, 40, was arrested and charged on Saturday, July 6.
>He was charged with two counts related to impaired driving, the filing shows. The first charge alleges Luloff was operating a motor vehicle while impaired. The second charge alleges that Luloff, “within two hours after ceasing to operate a (vehicle) had a blood-alcohol concentration that was equal to or exceeded 80 mg of alcohol in 100 mL of blood.”
>The allegations have not been tested in court.
>Luloff’s defence lawyer, Lawrence Greenspon, signed an “enhanced designation of counsel” on July 9. That means a defence lawyer can appear in court on Luloff’s behalf.
- As provincial funding ends, Ottawa's wastewater surveillance will continue for nowottawacitizen.com As provincial funding ends, Ottawa's wastewater surveillance will continue for now
Provincial funding ends July 31, but the University of Ottawa has secured funding to continue the program "as-is for the coming months.”
>Ottawa’s wastewater surveillance program will continue after the Ontario government ends funding on July 31, a memo from Board of Health chair Catherine Kitts says.
>In a memo sent to Mayor Mark Sutcliffe and council members Wednesday, Kitts said the surveillance initiative, operated and managed under Robert Delatolla’s team at the University of Ottawa, will remain as it is while discussions about longer-term solutions continue.
>The province announced earlier this year that it would stop funding for the highly regarded program as of the end of July — at a savings of around $15 million.
>Provincial officials said then that the federal government was expanding its own wastewater surveillance initiative and they wanted to avoid overlap. The federal government currently has four wastewater surveillance sites in the Toronto area and has said it wants to add four or five more. Ontario’s program, one of the world’s most extensive, gathers information at more than 50 locations.
>In the memo, Kitts said the city “has been assured that, although provincial funding sunsets on July 31, the University of Ottawa has secured funding to continue this program as-is for the coming months.”
>Meanwhile, she said, Ottawa Public Health Medical Officer of Health Dr. Vera Etches had sent letters to federal and provincial public health officials “seeking to collaborate to ensure the uninterrupted continuation of high-quality wastewater surveillance in Ottawa.”
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- Ottawa G2 driver clocked driving 160 km/h on Highway 417ottawa.ctvnews.ca Ottawa G2 driver clocked driving 160 km/h on Highway 417
Ontario Provincial Police in Ottawa caught a novice driver reaching speeds of 160 km/h on Highway 417 on Sunday afternoon.
Ontario Provincial Police in Ottawa caught a novice driver reaching speeds of 160 km/h on Highway 417 on Sunday morning.
An OPP spokesperson said officers stopped the G2 driver shortly before 9:30 a.m. near the Kanata Avenue exit.
The speed limit in the area is 100 km/h.
"This speed is never okay, but even more dangerous when you're an inexperienced driver," OPP said on social media site X.
The driver was charged with stunt driving and received an automatic 30-day driver's licence suspension and a 14-day vehicle impound.
If convicted, they will face a minimum $2,000 fine, six demerit points and a one year driving suspension.
- Barrhaven, Alta Vista shortlisted for tent-like shelters, councillors say
Temporary tent-like structures to house hundreds of asylum seekers in Ottawa could appear in Alta Vista or Barrhaven by the end of next summer, city councillors for those wards say.
The city plans on building two "Sprung Structures" — the trademark name of one company that could potentially provide the shelters — each with capacity for 150 asylum seekers. They would be part of what the city has referred to as a "welcome and stabilizing centre" for asylum seekers upon their arrival in Canada.
The city has submitted a $105-million funding request to the federal government to pay for the facility and its operation. That amount includes a request of $32.6 million to cover capital costs.
City staff began looking at 93 potential sites, narrowing that list down to 10 and eventually three. They considered a range of criteria including easy access to public transit.
- Guided Meditation Classes in or Around Westboro / Wellington West?
I'm looking for a meditation class that I can attend on a weekly (once or twice) basis. I found a lot of classes around that have a religious or philosophical flavor or ones that include yoga with meditation. I suffer from chronic pain and alexithymia and I feel like guided mindfulness meditation (Like the ones available through the Headspace app) to be very helpful. Anyone knows if there are any classes like that in the area?
- Anyone running Pathfinder Society (or other tabletop RPGs?)
Hey Ottawa! Bit of a long shot, but does anyone here know of a Pathfinder Society playgroup in town? I'd love to find one to join. Thanks!
- 'Not my finest moment:' Police called to dispute between Ottawa city councillor and daycare ownerottawa.ctvnews.ca 'Not my finest moment:' Police called to dispute between Ottawa city councillor and daycare owner
Ottawa city councillor Clarke Kelly says he is not apologizing after a Kinburn daycare owner alleged he screamed and swore in front of children during a dispute that saw police called to the scene on Wednesday afternoon.
Ottawa city councillor Clarke Kelly says he is not apologizing after a Kinburn daycare owner alleged he screamed and swore in front of children during a dispute that saw police called to the scene on Wednesday afternoon.
"This morning, councillor Kelly took it upon himself to enter chambers where a small summer camp group was doing crafts and started yelling profanities at staff, threatening that camps has to go and using vulgar language and names towards staff and children," the email said.
"He then proceeded to confront another staff outdoors to have toddlers (who were walking past a window outside) to have them remove their hands and get out of the area, in an aggressive manner trying to cause an escalated confrontation."
"I did use some profanity with the owner. I will admit that wasn't my finest moment as councillor and that I should have collected myself before going out there to have that conversation, but I don't think that gives her the right to lie and tell people things that I did not do."
"Which is absolutely mystifying to me. How could a couple of F-Bombs scare an adult so much that they called the police? And she did that," Kelly said, referring the Bolton.
"Just been incredible that someone would call the police for me on that."
"[…] I'm not sorry for showing my frustrations over what has been happening around here. The daycare operations are getting in the way of my ability to serve my constituents."
Kelly says the dispute was the culmination of almost two years of issues between the daycare and Kelly's constituency office.
- Skydiver crashes in Canada Day performancewww.ctvnews.ca Skydiver crashes in Canada Day performance
A member of the Skyhawks Military Parachute Team was injured after crashing during a performance at Parliament Hill.
A member of the Skyhawks, Canada’s military parachuting team, crashed into a cement pillar on landing. They’re facing serious, but non-life threatening injuries.
- Ottawa-area MPP Goldie Ghamari removed from Ontario PC Party caucustoronto.citynews.ca Ottawa-area MPP Goldie Ghamari removed from Ontario PC Party caucus
A statement issued by Ontario Premier Doug Ford's office Friday morning confirmed he removed Goldie Ghamari from the party's caucus.
You know it's bad when even Ford is tired of you.
- Meet Ottawa's new 'night mayor'ottawa.ctvnews.ca Meet Ottawa's new 'night mayor'
The City of Ottawa introduced Mathieu Grondin as the new 'nightlife commissioner' on Tuesday, the individual tasked with helping to shape the city's nightlife and shake off the image as the 'town that fun forgot.'
- Province announces funding for new Ottawa-area schools
Several of Ottawa's school boards are getting significant investments to build new schools in the city's suburbs.
By far the largest pot of money announced last week by the Ontario government will go to the Ottawa Catholic School Board (OCSB), which is receiving more than $117 million to be divided among four school-related projects.
On the French side, the province is investing more than $40 million with the* Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est *(CECCE) so they can build a new secondary school in Riverside South.
Meanwhile, the Conseil des écoles publiques de l'Est de l'Ontario (CEPEO), the French-language public school board, will see nearly $15 million for a new Leitrim-area elementary school near Kelly Farm and Barrett Farm drives.
It's also getting more than $52 million for secondary schools in Orléans and Clarence-Rockland, Ont.
No announcement was made Friday regarding funding for the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, the largest board in the city.
- Vacant unit tax brings in way more than forecast, but still irks some homeowners
>Ottawa's vacant unit tax (VUT) is raking in millions more than expected, leaving some residents and one city councillor wondering whether it's a fix for the housing crisis or simply a cash grab.
>The tax charges one per cent of the assessed value of homes left unoccupied for six months or more within one year. It's meant to push property owners to either put those units up for sale or rent them to address the city's housing shortage.
>When council approved the tax two years ago, it was expected to bring in about $6.6 million per year. But city staff now say last year's revenue haul came to $11.5 million.
>Orléans East-Cumberland Coun. Matt Luloff, a longstanding critic of the tax, asked staff for that information through a formal inquiry. He didn't like what he heard.
>"I don't think that this program is truly doing what it was meant to do, which is to free up rental units — not to become a new income source for the City of Ottawa," said Luloff.
>Luloff said he hasn't seen a clear measure of whether the tax is actually getting vacant homes back on the market. He also asked staff for more detailed information about how the revenue is being spent.
>Staff responded that all of the money goes to fund affordable housing initiatives, minus about $2.3 million spent to administer the program, though they promised to get Luloff additional details.
- It's turtle nesting season!
Spotted by the Rideau River near Brantwood Park, a known turtle nesting area..Please give them space and respect the turtles! 🐢♥️
- Ontario pulls plug on COVID-19 wastewater surveillance
>Premier Doug Ford's government is scrapping Ontario's program for sampling wastewater to monitor the level of COVID-19 in the population.
>The program measures how much of the virus that causes COVID-19 is circulating around the province and is run by a dozen universities and research sites, through funding from the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks.
>In a statement, a provincial official said the move will "avoid duplication" with a federal program.
>"The federal government conducts wastewater surveillance across Canada and is moving to expand its sampling to additional sites in Ontario," said Environment Ministry spokesperson Gary Wheeler in an email to CBC News.
>"Ontario is working to support this expansion while winding down the provincial wastewater surveillance initiative," he said.
>Public health officials are criticizing the move as short-sighted.
- Anaplasmosis: the lesser-known tick-borne disease on the rise in Ottawa and Eastern Ontarioottawacitizen.com Anaplasmosis: the lesser-known tick-borne disease on the rise in Ottawa and Eastern Ontario
Anaplasmosis can cause fever, headache, muscle aches, chills and severe respiratory illness, among other symptoms. If not treated, it can be life-threatening.
>At a time when tick populations are increasing, the Ottawa area is becoming a hotspot for one of the lesser-known illnesses spread by black-legged ticks.
>Anaplasmosis can cause fever, headache, muscle aches, chills and severe respiratory illness, among other symptoms. If not treated, it can be life-threatening, especially in people with compromised immune systems. It is less common than Lyme disease, also spread by black-legged ticks. Both are treated with antibiotics.
>Those are two of the potentially severe illnesses spread by ticks that are now being closely monitored by public health officials in Ontario as disease-carrying ticks spread through the province. They also include babesiosis, a bacterial infection, and Powassan virus, a rare disease that causes encephalitis and severe illness.
>The increased scrutiny comes as health officials are warning that Canadians are at increased risk of tick-borne diseases because of climate change. This week an Ottawa woman succumbed to complications from Powassan virus she has struggled with since she was infected by a tick near her home in Alta Vista in 2021.
>Ottawa Public Health spokesperson Emily Morrison says people should take precautions to avoid being bitten by ticks. There are many health benefits from being active and outdoors during warm weather, said Morrison, who is program manager of environmental health at Ottawa Public Health, “however, if you will be in outdoor areas suitable for black-legged ticks, it is important to be aware of the risks of ticks and tick-related diseases, and how to protect oneself.” Tick habitats include wooded areas and areas with tall grasses.
- Ottawa paramedics keep pushing for taxi pilot after province's rejection
>A "frustrating" refusal by the province has not weakened the city's resolve to launch a taxis-as-ambulances pilot project, Ottawa's paramedic chief told reporters on Wednesday, explaining that an opportunity may be hiding in what the ministry didn't say.
>The City of Ottawa proposed the pilot last autumn as a way to offset the hours paramedics are waiting at overcrowded emergency rooms. These delays lead to "code zero" events where no ambulance is available for calls.
>The trial would have allowed paramedics to send patients with non-serious injuries to hospital in a taxi instead.
>"That kind of creative solution is exactly what we need," said Mayor Mark Sutcliffe. "So, I was a little bit surprised by the fact that the province wasn't in agreement."
- Ottawa school board and 4 others join suit against social media giants
The suit seeks roughly $4.5 billion in total damages from Meta Platforms Inc., Snap Inc. and ByteDance Ltd., which operate the platforms Facebook and Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok respectively.
"The mix of public and Catholic school boards, and private schools in both urban and rural regions of Ontario demonstrate this is a universal issue that affects those from diverse cultural, religious and socio-economic backgrounds," the news release said.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford publicly criticized the suit after it was filed, calling it "nonsense" and questioning the legal fees the boards could end up paying in a protracted court battle against some of the richest companies in the world.
Neinstein LLP, the Toronto-based firm representing the school boards and private schools, said in March they will not be responsible for any costs related to the suit unless a successful outcome is reached.