By CBC News Ottawa, December 3, 2014
A private member's bill was tabled at Queen's Park Wednesday to give
municipalities more power to deal with illegal taxis and ride-sharing companies
like Uber. John Fraser Liberals Ottawa SouthOttawa South MPP John Fraser tabled
the Protecting Passenger Safety Act on Wednesday. CBCOttawa South MPP John
Fraser tabled the Protecting Passenger Safety Act, according to a media release
issued Wednesday. via
New private member's bill sets sights on illegal taxis, Uber - Ottawa - CBC
News.
By Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen, December 3, 2014
An amazing thing happened Wednesday at this term’s first city council meeting.
Councillors discussed, debated and disagreed on the specifics of a 289-page
governance review for more than two-and-a-half hours. And yet the sky didn’t
fall, there was no sign of dysfunction, and council seemed actually more
productive than ever. There were even a few compromise motions passed, with a
welcome absence of grandstanding. Could this be the dawn of a new era around the
council horseshoe? via
Chianello: New council shows early promise | Ottawa Citizen.
By David Reevely, Ottawa Citizen, December 3, 2014
Alberta oil is suddenly a lot more likely to flow through a pipeline that
crosses Ottawa, with Premier Kathleen Wynne’s declaration Wednesday that she
won’t make a fuss about what digging that oil out of the ground in the West will
mean for greenhouse-gas emissions. Emerging from a meeting with Alberta Premier
Jim Prentice, Wynne’s statement was the opposite of the impression she gave
after a meeting on the subject with Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard just a
couple of weeks ago. via
Reevely: Oil pipeline through Ottawa closer as Wynne softens stance | Ottawa
Citizen.
By Ottawa Citizen, December 3, 2014
Environment Canada warns that after an evening of precipitation, a few patches
of lingering freezing drizzle remains in the area Wednesday morning. Eastern
Ontario is being affected by the swatch of mixed precipitation due to
temperatures that hover around the freezing mark. via
Weather office warns of slippery road conditions | Ottawa Citizen.
By Trevor Greenway, Ottawa Metro News, December 2, 2014
An Ottawa environmental group says that public transportation is one of the most
important aspects of building a “world class green city,” but local residents
think Ottawa doesn’t seem to be doing enough to increase ridership. A survey
conducted for Metro by MQO Research shows only 38 per cent of Ottawans think the
city is doing enough to encourage people to use public transit, with 50 per cent
of respondents thinking a lot more can be done. Graham Saul of Ecology Ottawa is
one of those people. via
City Matters: Ottawans think city should do more to promote public
transportation | Metro.
By CFRA News, December 2, 2014
Another round of weird weather for Ottawa and the surrounding area on Tuesday as we move from a low of -16C to a high of 3C over about 30 hours.
Environment Canada meteorologist Dave Rodgers explained to CFRA News on Tuesday morning what was expected that evening.
By Jana Weir and Michael Clark, Ottawa Citizen Letter to the Editor, December 2,
2014
Reconsider Carling for western LRTRe: Carling LRT route would benefit many, Nov.
29. In his letter, former Ottawa city councillor Clive Doucet nailed this debate
on the western LRT extension again, for the best possible route, which is
Carling Avenue. How the politicians don’t see it is beyond anybody’s
imagination. The LRT needs to be accessible to the masses who need the
transportation. The Carling route is close to a large population area, hospitals
and businesses along the route. via
Letters: Carling LRT route, and trains that rattle or hum? along parkway |
Ottawa Citizen.
By Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen, December 1, 2014
Fewer committee meetings. Cancellation of travelling public sessions on rural
issues. A potential increase in secret gifts to elected officials. These are all
recommendations our freshly sworn-in council plans to consider at its inaugural
meeting Wednesday, and they are all measures that could decrease the
accountability and transparency of our municipal government. via
Chianello: Is council becoming less accessible and transparent? | Ottawa
Citizen.
By Ottawa Citizen, December 2, 2014
Residents of the Fairbrooke Court areas of Arnprior continue to be under a boil
water advisory Tuesday after drilling operations by a contractor damaged the
systems and caused a drop in water pressure. A reduction in pressure in the
water distribution system means that groundwater or soil contamination could
seep into the watermain pipes through small cracks or leaks. via
Arnprior neighbourhood under boil water advisory | Ottawa Citizen.
By Jacquie Miller, Ottawa Citizen, December 2, 2014
Parents and students at Hopewell Avenue Public School began a fund-raising
campaign to raise money for trees in their barren playground with a tailor-made
holiday song Tuesday. They gathered in the playground, where all five trees had
to be cut down last summer after falling victim to the emerald ash borer beetle,
and serenaded kids going into the school with a song they made up to the tune of
Winter Wonderland. “Hey my friends, are you listening/in our yard, trees our
missing/but we’re here to say/today is the day/we can build a Hopewell
wonderland…” via
All Hopewell Avenue school students want for Christmas is a few trees in the
playground with video | Ottawa Citizen.
By Trevor Greenway, Ottawa Metro News, December 1, 2014
We’ve all seen it: a cyclist whizzing through a red light or rolling through a
stop sign while the rest of us cars have to wait for green. It angers drivers,
putting them in a fit of rage as they pound their steering wheel or yell
obscenities while pumping their fist of God out the window. via
Ottawa residents say scofflaw cyclist more dangerous than driver speeding in
school zone | Metro.
By Trevor Greenway, Ottawa Metro News, December 1, 2014
For a seemingly progressive city, Ottawa residents don’t trade in their car keys
for bike locks as much as you would think, as over 70 per cent of commuters say
they never ride their bike instead of taking a car to get somewhere. A new City
Matters survey conducted for Metro by QMO Research asked 600 people how often
they leave the car at home and hop on their bike and 367 of those said never.
via
City Matters: Ottawans don’t trade car keys for bike locks as much as you
would think | Metro.










