By Jon Willing, Ottawa Sun, January 22, 2015
It all comes down to "fit." Would a 12-storey condo complex on Wellington St.
east of Island Park Dr. fit into the fabric of West Wellington? The Ontario
Municipal Board on Thursday heard the final evidence and closing arguments on
Mizrahi Developments' appeal to build a bigger building than what the planning
rules allow at 1445 and 1451 Wellington St. via
City sticks to its guns on Wellington condo project | Ottawa & Region |
News | O.
By CBC News Ottawa, January 22, 2015
Ontario's Electrical Safety Authority is directing local utilities to replace a
certain model of smart meter "as a preventative step" after reviewing reports of
problematic metres in Saskatchewan. Last summer, the Saskatchewan government
ordered SaskPower to remove more than 100,000 newer model meters that had
already been installed after reports of nine fires related to the equipment. via
Fear of fire hazard causes removal of thousands of smart meters - Toronto -
CBC News.
By Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen, January 22, 2015
The now-common sound of chainsaws and wood chippers will be heard next in
Hampton Park as the National Capital Commission begins removing more dead and
dying ash trees. Nearly 400 trees will be cut in the area of Island Park Drive
and Merivale Road beginning Tuesday, Jan. 27, and continuing until Feb. 3. The
NCC says the Hampton Park dog-walk area won’t be affected, although park users
should watch out for heavy equipment working. via
NCC to begin emerald ash borer control in Hampton Park | Ottawa Citizen.
By Steph Willems, Ottawa Community News, January 21, 2015
Ontario’s Environmental Commissioner is giving the province’s time-of-use
electricity pricing a failing grade in his most recent report. In his findings,
published as Conservation First Needs More Work, Gord Miller said the province
is failing to meets the conservation goals, with time-of-use pricing being a
major culprit. Conservation is a key part of Ontario’s long-term energy plan.
via
Time-of-use rates failing Ontario’s energy policy: report.
By Steph Willems, Ottawa Community News, January 20, 2015
The top issues discussed at Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper’s quarterly forum
won’t come as much of a surprise to long-time Kitchissippi residents, given the
ward’s reputation as “ground zero” for many of the city’s most prominent
development projects and policies. Increasing pressures caused by traffic
congestion, intensification and infill, and looming disruptions caused by
construction of the city’s LRT system are all weighing on the minds of
Kitchissippi residents. via
LRT, infill, traffic top issues at Kitchissippi forum.
By Michelle Nash, Ottawa Community News, January 17, 2015
The city has announced plans to give a facelift to an area between Rideau Street
and Laurier Avenue. The plan is part of the larger redevelopment of several
ongoing projects between Rideau to the north, Laurier Avenue to the south,
Colonel By Drive to the west and Waller Street to the east. Those projects
include the construction of the Confederation Line light rail project, the
revitalization of the Rideau Centre, the Ottawa Art Gallery expansion and Arts
Court redevelopment and ongoing development at the University of Ottawa campus.
via
City announces plans to improve Rideau, Laurier area.
By Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen, January 21, 2015
The National Capital Commission’s board of directors has unanimously approved
the high-level plans to redevelop the old Domtar lands. Windmill Developments
has an ambitious plan for the 15-hectare site known as the Islands near
Chaudiere Falls that would see three million square feet of new building —
largely residential — and would include condos as high as 15 storeys, numerous
parks, a hotel, stores, restaurants and loft-style offices, and a developed
waterfront on the Gatineau side of the project. via
NCC board gives conditional OK to Windmill’s Chaudiere Falls development |
Ottawa Citizen.
By Randall Denley, Ottawa Citizen, January 21, 2015
The public has an image of the Ontario Municipal Board as a place where city
staff make righteous arguments in the public interest, only to be stomped on by
a developer-friendly board. At least when the city is facing off against a
developer and his band of experts, it might be considered a fair fight. That
certainly wasn’t the case at a recent hearing where the city took a homeowner to
the OMB to defend a policy that either doesn’t make sense or is beyond the
ability of city staff to explain. via
Randall Denley: The Ontario Municipal Board has its uses | Ottawa Citizen.
By Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen, January 21, 2015
We are a little past the halfway point in Mayor Jim Watson and Foreign Minister
John Baird’s 100-day truce on the very public disagreement the city and the
federal government’s National Capital Commission have been waging over a tiny
part of the proposed route for the western LRT expansion. So far, so good. via
Chianello: NCC board acquiescence to political masters could ruin the Hill |
Ottawa Citizen.
By Corey Larocque, Ottawa Sun, January 20, 2015
Premier Kathleen Wynne is using the looming federal election to turn up the heat
on Prime Minister Stephen Harper, urging him to pump billions of dollars into
Canada's aging roads, sewers and bridges. They give Canada its "competitive
advantage" in the global economy, she said. via
Wynne calls for more infrastructure spending | Ottawa & Region | News |
Ottawa S.
By J.C. Sulzenko, Ottawa Citizen Letter to the Editor, January 20, 2015
Re: Meteor strike may have caused ‘Bermuda Triangle of the North,’ Jan. 19.
Artist Andrew King’s story is excellent. The South Shore of Prince Edward County
is rich with history, from shipwrecks to rum-running, and alive with unique and
sensitive ecosystems, amazing bird migrations (Prince Edward Point Bird
Observatory) and species at risk. via
Letter: Area under threat of development | Ottawa Citizen.
By Tom Spears, Ottawa Citizen, January 20, 2015
A drought in Wisconsin’s lake country has reinforced a lesson that’s easy to
forget: Fallen logs that get in the way of cottagers also give life to a lake.
Jereme Gaeta and his research group at the University of Wisconsin were studying
what biologists call coarse woody habitat — trees that die and fall into the
water near shore, where they become waterlogged and sink. via
Let fallen logs lie, study shows cottagers | Ottawa Citizen.











