By Richard Cooper, Ottawa Citizen Letter to the Editor, August 7, 2015
Re: No fun allowed: Ottawa’s new water feature a microcosm for bigger issues,
Aug. 5. It is obvious that the designer and the city who signed off on the plan
for the Lansdowne water plaza paid little if any attention to how children would
use it. via
Letter: Lack of foresight in Lansdowne water plaza implementation | Ottawa
Citizen.
By Alex Robinson, Ottawa Community News, August 6, 2015
Construction has begun on the Arts Court redevelopment and Ottawa Art Gallery
expansion projects. Following several delays, the city announced the start of
the $100-million project on Aug. 8, heralding the development as a cornerstone
building for arts and culture in the area. via
Arts Court redevelopment begins.
By Emily Chung, CBC News Ottawa, August 5, 2015
It has been a slow year for tornadoes in Canada, Environment Canada reports.
That's despite a spate of recent tornado reports – including a
"monster,"three-hour tornado in Manitoba and another in Ontario that smashed
buildings and uprooted trees — and at least one prediction that we might get
more tornadoes than usual this year, thanks to El Nino. via
Canada's tornado season slower than normal, Environment Canada says -
Technology & Science - CBC News.
By Lucy Scholey, Ottawa Community News, August 5, 2015
These days, the 32-year-old has turned tags into striking realistic wall art –
the legal kind. He’s among several painters brightening up dull grey walls of
buildings and underpasses through different city mural programs. “I kind of had
to decide if I wanted to continue run-ins with the law or see if I could
actually do something, make some money with it, and actually give back to the
city,” Metcalfe said, his hands stained with blue spray paint beside the French
Baker in the Glebe on Wednesday afternoon. via
More murals brighten up grey Ottawa walls | Metro.
By Ottawa Community News, August 5, 2015
The Ottawa police will focus their attentions on speeders and pedestrian safety
during August as part of its Selective Traffic Enforcement Program. Police
responded to almost 16,000 reportable collisions involving speeding between 2009
and 2013. Seventy-five were fatalities, while more than 4,430 resulted in
injuries, said police. via
Police focus on speeding, pedestrian safety in August.
By Matt Day, Ottawa Sun, August 5, 2015
Alligators are flying across the country. You read that right. Ottawa's Little
Ray's Reptile Zoo recently took in 18 crocodiles, caimans and alligators that
otherwise would have been euthanized after a private zoo in Kelowna, B.C., was
ordered to close its doors last month. via
Orphaned gators bunking at Ray's | Ottawa & Region | News | Ottawa Sun.
By Hugh Adami, Ottawa Citizen, August 5, 2015
One would think that following a number of serious accidents involving trees in
the past couple of months, the city would have moved quickly to remove a hazard
on a public path along the Rideau River in Ottawa East. A tree branch, partially
split and now perilously arched over the Rideau River Nature Trail, behind St.
Paul’s University, had still not been removed by the city Wednesday morning,
even though a neighbourhood resident reported it almost a week ago. And as
children biked and joggers ran under the limb — there was no way to get around
it — city crews were in full force next door at Brantwood Park, off Clegg
Street, mowing and trimming the grass. via
Adami: Damaged tree branch lurches over path while city crews mow nearby park
| Ottawa Citizen.
By Don Butler, Ottawa Citizen, August 5, 2015
It’s only a tiny slice of LeBreton Flats, but property south of Wellington
Street and the Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway near the Booth Street intersection
should look a lot more appealing by mid-December. According to a recent tender
posted by the National Capital Commission, work on the LeBreton Flats “interim
improvements” will begin as soon as a construction contract has been awarded and
must be substantially completed by Dec. 15. via
NCC targets mid-December for interim LeBreton improvements | Ottawa
Citizen.
By Alex Robinson, Ottawa Community News, August 4, 2015
The Pineview Community Association is looking to help residents feel a little
safer in their neighbourhood. The group conducted a safety audit in the
neighbourhood for residents on the evening of July 27, in partnership with
Women’s Initiatives for Safer Environments, to get a sense where people feel
unsafe at night in the neighbourhood. via
Pineview wants action on neighbourhood’s paths.
By CBC News Ottawa, August 3, 2015
If you've noticed an abundance of pesky deer flies and horse flies buzzing by —
and leaving you with painful bites along the way — it's no surprise given the
wet summer so far in Ottawa. Deer flies, along with the typically larger horse
flies that are part of the same Tabanidae family, thrive in mucky soil and
water, according to Jeff Skevington, a fly researcher at Agriculture and
Agri-Food Canada. via
Deer flies, horse flies having 'good year' in Ottawa due to rain - Ottawa -
CBC News.
By Patrick Smith, Ottawa Citizen, August 1, 2015
The township of Chapleau, east of Ottawa, will receive nearly $6 million from
the provincial and federal governments to upgrade a wastewater plant in Vankleek
Hill. The announcement came only two days after neighbouring community
Chute-à-Blondeau received government funding for the same purpose. via
Funding for sewage plants east of Ottawa continues | Ottawa Citizen.
By CFRA News, July 31, 2015
A boil water advisory has been issued for an area of Hull, after a fire hydrant broke on Friday afternoon.
2,400 residents near Boulevard Sacré-Coeur and Rue Laurier were briefly without water this afternoon because of the incident.










