By Phil Jenkins, Ottawa Citizen, December 6, 2015
For the past few days, as a curious and possibly endangered citizen, I’ve been reading up on the role cities in general, and Ottawa in particular, are expected to play in the mitigation of the coming, inevitable climatic disruption. It’s been rather like watching game tapes to prepare tactics for the upcoming contest, a contest of monumental proportions.
This spate of concerned research was prompted by several things. By the daily news coverage of the climate change summit in resilient Paris; by the return of the federal government to the positive side of the climate change conference tables; by the fact of Mayor Jim Watson, unable to attend the conference, being quoted as saying, via his spokesperson, that he “looks forward to speaking with those mayors who do attend (Paris) upon their return”; by the emails I’ve received lately from steadfast Ecology Ottawa (ecologyottawa.ca) regarding the advances and retreats in civic policy on climate change; and by the conversations I had after the fact with many of my neighbours returning from the 100% Possible rally on Parliament Hill last weekend, one of the biggest the city has ever seen (organized in part by Ecology Ottawa); and by the fact of the minister of environment and climate change being an Ottawa MP, plus the symbolism of her new title.