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January 10, 2017

City seeks to speed up turnaround times on traffic-calming solutions

By Erin McCracken, Ottawa Community News, January 9, 2017

Tweaks are being made to the city’s temporary traffic-calming program that some councillors hope will reduce a “bottleneck” of requests and speed up the installation of yellow flex stakes, planter boxes, road markings, signage and speed-display boards to slow down vehicles

.“Staff have a new strategy and more resources. I think they were just overwhelmed this term of council with the requests across all the wards for traffic-calming initiatives,” said River Coun. Riley Brockington, who complained about the time it has been taking to install these measures.

January 10, 2017

Egan: On Claridge, car-less culture and living in the clouds
Ottawa Citizen

By Kelly Egan, Ottawa Citizen, January 10, 2017

No car, no yard, waking up in the sky, seeing a whole river below: our Ottawa in the 21st century.

This, evidently, is how some planners and builders see the city’s future. Claridge, in particular, is already building a 45-storey highrise on Preston Street, overlooking Dow’s Lake, with some 320 units stacked to reach 160 metres, or 60 metres higher than the Peace Tower, formerly our sacred ceiling.

Now, only two kilometres due north, Claridge is pitching a 55-storey tower in a five-building package on its lands at the east end of LeBreton, a big jump in density from earlier plans. One imagines penthouse occupants, when the clouds clear, waving at each other across the length of Preston.

January 10, 2017

Science of winter: You can’t beet sugary brown goo for snowy roads
Ottawa Citizen

By Tom Spears, Ottawa Citizen, January 10, 2017

This winter, the Citizen’s Tom Spears looks at what makes our coldest season tick. It’s a series we call The Science of Winter, and today we hear from an expert what to do with a truckload of waste beet juice on a snowy day, in case you have one and were wondering.

Each year, the salt trucks in the Niagara Region are sprinkling sticky brown salt on their roads, melting the snow better than plain salt by mixing it with waste from a refinery that turns beets into sugar.

They use the same “beet juice” mixed with salt in Montreal, in British Columbia’s interior, and in Ontario’s Huron County, where Mike Alcock is the civil engineering technician in a system that has worked on country roads for a decade.

January 9, 2017

Ottawa councillors weigh in on their fears and hopes for 2017
Metro Ottawa

By Ryan Tumilty, Ottawa Metro News, January 9, 2017

Ottawa councillors will be coming back to City Hall this week. We asked them two big picture questions.

1. What are you most optimistic about seeing in Ottawa in 2017?

2. What are you most concerned about?

(...)

Jean Cloutier – Alta Vista

2.  My focus continues to be on addressing the needs of residents while sustaining the vibrancy of our community, throughout 2017 and beyond; making sure our local streets are safe for people to walk, cycle and drive on; maintaining and enhancing our green spaces, parks, playgrounds and community centres.

January 9, 2017

Councillors look back and ahead to 2017

By Michelle Nash Baker, Ottawa Community News, January 9, 2017 Last year, east Ottawa councillors and residents grappled with issues around traffic, rising costs around the city, intensification, violence and community safety .In a year-in-review questionnaire, Couns. David Chernushenko, Mathieu Fleury, Tobi Nussbaum, and Tim Tierney weighed in on the year’s challenges, what they are looking forward to in 2017, budget highlights for their wards and personal goals throughout the year. (...)

For an urban councillor, Chernushenko said one of his challenges this year was trying to achieve some semblance of control over infill development that supports the character of the neighbourhood and street.

“I continue to feel like I am fighting a losing battle on most projects, where they come in too high, too massive and with too much loss of trees and greenspace,” he said. “Urban infill for “stuff the sausage” residential projects that are designed to squeeze in the maximum number of unrelated tenants, often with insufficient room for waste receptacles, bicycles, etc.”

He added, traffic congestion related to the Main Street Renewal project, and ongoing Light Rail Transit and other infrastructure renewal also kept him challenged throughout the year.

Source: Councillors look back and ahead to 2017
January 9, 2017

Tree cutting begins on KNL lands

By Jessica Cunha, Ottawa Community News, January 8, 2017

The Kanata Lakes North Development Group began removing trees on its land in the South March Highlands on Jan. 4.

The work is expected to wrap by early April, said Jack Stirling, consultant for KNL Development. The developer received the necessary permits to cut trees last month.

Donna DuBreuil, co-founder of the Ottawa-Carleton Wildlife Centre, said she was concerned about wildlife living in the area, particularly those that hibernate.

January 9, 2017

Claridge to unveil expanded LeBreton Flats condo vision tonight - Ottawa - CBC News

By Joanne Chianello, CBC News Ottawa, January 9, 2017

Claridge Homes wants to double the planned number of homes on the eastern part of LeBreton Flats that it bought more than a decade ago, including a proposal to build a 55-storey building on Booth Street.

Highlights of the new plan include:

1,650 residential units, as opposed to the 850 units in the previous plan.

Four new towers ranging from 25 to 55 storeys.

Affordable, senior and rental housing units.

Commercial retail, including a grocery store, in the podiums of towers.

New city park system that incorporates the aqueduct and five historical bridges.

January 9, 2017

Of sinkholes, stormwater and condom slogans: 16 memorable city hall stories from 2016
Ottawa Citizen

By Matthew Pearson, Ottawa Citizen, December 30, 2016

Around Ottawa City Hall, 2016 will be remembered as the year Rideau Street sank and Uber scored a slam dunk, the year LRT trains began to roll and a new stormwater fee took its toll, the year the bureaucracy got lean and the mayor dreamed of 2017.

Here are 16 memorable moments from 2016.1.

This train is bound for gloryConstruction of the $2.1-billion Confederation LRT line reached a major milestone in early December when the first light-rail vehicle assembled in Ottawa began rolling along slowly on a stretch of track between Blair and Cyrville stations.

January 9, 2017

Meet the Rochester scientist who counts the plastics in the Great Lakes
Ottawa Citizen

By Tom Spears, Ottawa Citizen, January 9, 2016

Scientists have studied plastic pollution in the Great Lakes for years, and now one group is answering the question: What does it all add up to?

The short answer: Quite a lot.

Matthew Hoffman at the Rochester Institute of Technology used a method already used to estimate how much plastic washes into the Atlantic Ocean.

January 8, 2017

Ottawa Public Health issues frostbite advisory
Metro Ottawa

By Ryan Tumilty, Ottawa Metro News, January 8, 2017

With temperatures set to drop dramatically overnight, Ottawa Public Health has issued a frostbite advisory.

With the wind chill, temperatures are expected to drop to -32C overnight Sunday, which can easily lead to frostbite on exposed skin.

Public health is encouraging people to dress for the weather, including dressing in layers and making sure scarves, hats and gloves cover exposed skin.

January 8, 2017

Conservative leadership Kellie Leitch wants to ‘drain’ Rideau Canal
Metro Ottawa

By Dylan C. Robertson, Ottawa Metro News, January 8, 2017

A Conservative party leadership candidate adept at drumming up media headlines is again channelling U.S. President-elect Donald Trump — and taking aim at an Ottawa city icon.

In a Saturday email to supporters, Kellie Leitch pledges to be "a leader who will drain the Canal of the influence paddlers and lobbyists."

January 8, 2017

NCC asks people to stay off Rideau Canal

By CFRA News, January 7, 2017

The National Capital Commission is urging people to stay off the Rideau Canal Skateway this weekend.

The NCC says despite the cold temperatures, the ice remains “thin and unsafe.”

A picture on Twitter Friday morning showed someone had walked in a pattern along the canal surface.

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