Seven people are facing fines after riding e-scooters on Ottawa sidewalks.
Ottawa Police Sergeant Mark Gatien with the service's traffic division says
they've been getting numerous complaints from members of the public about
e-scooters being used on local sidewalks, so they assigned an officer to
e-scooter sidewalk enforcement.
Seven tickets were issued Monday, at $180 a piece.
The ‘Zibi’ development-in-construction is situated at a sacred site – the area
at what is known in English as the Chaudière Falls, on the river between
Ottawa and Gatineau, an area named Akikodjiwan or Asinabka in the Algonquin
language Anishinabemowin.
These first two August weekends, the RBC Bluesfest Ottawa drive-in concerts –
livestreamed online with #CanadaPerforms, a federal program to support artists
during the COVID pandemic – are being hosted at a venue that may raise
eyebrows to anyone supporting the current protests against racism and
monuments to a racist-colonial past.
(...)Ecology Ottawa chose to stop taking sponsorship money from the
development company in 2015, to maintain a clear distance from the developer.
Conservation groups say they are concerned about an Ontario government
decision to allow a hunt of double-crested cormorants across the province this
fall.
The Ontario ministry of natural resources and forestry announced the hunt on
Friday, calling it a "fall harvest," and said it will allow a hunter with an
outdoors card and small game licence to kill up to 15 birds a day from Sept.
15 to Dec. 31. Hunters will be allowed to shoot the birds from stationary
motorboats.
According to the ministry, the rationale for the killing of the birds is that
they reduce fish stocks and their droppings damage natural habitat. It says
they hurt the livelihoods of commercial fishermen and property
owners, hunters and anglers have all complained.
For humans, it’s often a negative, “ick-factor” value.
For a chickadee, the value is equivalent to over 200 aphids (which mean using
a lot more energy flying back and forth to the nest). Caterpillars are the no.
1 choice, especially this time of year when young birds are feeding to beat
the band.
(...)
That is, we could create Canada’s largest park if we changed just a few things
about our behaviour and priorities concerning our land, trees and water.
Environmental conservation is what we’re talking about here.
The conversation about conservation has shifted in recent years — among
environmentalists, especially — to the dual crises of climate change and
biodiversity loss. These connections are made by American entomologist Doug
Tallamy in his most recent book, “Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard” (Timber Press,
February, 2020).
The company is building on a lot, which until over
a dozen mature trees were cut down, was a beautiful oasis from the concrete jungle at the plaza and a nice
entry on Wilson Street into town. It is not as if Perth has a deficiency of
fast food outlets, there are half a dozen or more, even those with a
drive-through, making a mockery of the town's idle bylaw.
A new community-level project will allow residents to measure air quality in
Ottawa by simply taking a walk, riding a bike or pushing a baby stroller.
The
Breathe Easy campaign
— a partnership between Ecology Ottawa and the Ottawa chapter of
Sierra Club Canada
— will provide monitors to volunteers (or air-trackers as they’re calling
them) to identify areas of good and poor air quality in the city.
The monitors will measure levels of pollutants such as ozone gas, nitrogen
dioxide and “particulate” matter – small particles floating in the air made up
of harmful substances such as carbon and sulfur.
(...)“Air quality is possibly the most fundamental thing that we need to have
to survive. From the very first breath we take as little babies to our very
last breath on Earth, it’s something we cannot live for more than maybe two
minutes without,” said Cole. “And yet I don’t think any of us think about it.
We just get up and do our thing and think everything’s fine.”
(...)
The Ottawa campaign was inspired by the
INHALE project in Toronto and
Hamilton, which also monitored urban air quality by putting tools directly in
citizens’ hands.
“It can be a really powerful tool because it visualizes the invisible and it
starts the conversation. And depending on who’s holding the monitor, it opens
the door to, I think, really powerful conversations in the community,” said
Lynda Lukasik, executive director of Environment Hamilton.
Since adopting its Climate Action Plan in January 2020, Lanark County has
taken some decisive actions toward achieving goals for sustainability.
Protecting and enhancing the natural environment is a core strategy in the
county’s 2005 Strategic Plan, and council established “climate and
environment” as one of its top five priorities for this term.
“We need a holistic approach with a multitude of strategies in order to reach
a level of sustainability in our county,” explains chief administrative
officer Kurt Greaves. “Climate change and environmental degradation are
defining challenges of our time.”
A work plan outline set goals for this year and includes strategies related to
grant research and applications, homes, forests and farms, industry, waste
diversion, transportation, municipal buildings, and public engagement.
(...)
Currently, a Transportation survey is being conducted to gather information on
the current level of greenhouse gas emissions. The public is asked to help by
completing the survey
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/2019LCTravel.
Homeowners can get involved in reducing emissions related to heating and
cooling with the “Insulate Lanark” program, which piggybacks the existing
“Renovate Lanark” program. Low-income families can apply for funds to help
insulate their homes.
By Yonna Murphy, InsideOttawaValley, July 27, 2020
At first glance, nothing seemed amiss at Dan Woods and Tineke Doornbosch’s
five-acre wooded property in Tay Valley Township. Flowers bloomed everywhere,
the shrubs and trees were lush and green, and birds could be heard chirping on
a sunny July afternoon.
But look closer and one can see the devastation brought about by a two-inch
predator — the invasive Gypsy moth.
Mature, 100-year-old oak and pine trees in his property looked sickly, with
bare branches and thin foliage, remnants of a month-long defoliation brought
on by the Gypsy moth.
(...)
“Gypsy Moths know no borders. They’re at home throughout the United States and
in recent decades, throughout many parts of Canada as well,” Woods explained.
There are a few things that can be done to mitigate the Gypsy moth
infestation.
“Major municipalities in southern Ontario along the Niagara, Hamilton and
Toronto corridor have aerial sprayed gypsy moth caterpillars in the last
couple of years,” Woods said.
“It’s time municipal, regional and provincial authorities recognize the
destruction they’re causing to our eastern Ontario forests as well, and aerial
spray them here too. Our forests are far too valuable to ‘just do nothing,’”
said Woods.
By Jake Cole (Sierra Club), Ottawa Citizen, July 20, 2020
What may cause more deaths in Ottawa than COVID-19?
It’s air pollution and it may in fact be more dangerous to city residents in
the long term than COVID-19. According to Health Canada, there are
approximately 500 air pollution-related deaths in Ottawa annually. As of July
15, there had been 263 local COVID-19-related deaths since March.
(...)The Sierra Club Canada Foundation has financial support from the Ottawa
Community Foundation to provide that knowledge. We are working together with
Ecology Ottawa to make this information accessible and available to Ottawans
through the
Breathe Easy Project.
A western Quebec couple is in a battle with their municipality over a
specially designed yard containing milkweed, tall grasses and wildflowers.
Last summer, the municipality of La Pêche informed Jazmine Maisonneuve
and Samuel Cloutier, both 37, that the tall-growing vegetation on the
commercial property surrounding a new workshop facility in the village of
Masham constituted a "nuisance."
Last month, the municipality sent them another warning and told them they
faced a $400 fine if they didn't mow it.
"We very deliberately and intentionally did not sow grass. We don't want to
mow our lawn. We don't want a lawn, in fact — we want a meadow," said
Maisionneuve, a landscape designer.
The municipality told the couple that a neighbour complained the yard — which
is filled with milkweed, thistles, purple asters, Queen Anne's lace and other
flowers that attract pollinators — lowered neighbouring property values.
E-scooters are now available for rent in Ottawa from the first of three
companies chosen to take part in a city pilot project.
The city said in a news release residents can expect to see Bird Canada's
e-scooters popping up in central Ottawa on Thursday.
The standup scooters can be rented using a mobile app. They cost $1.15 to
unlock and 35 cents a minute to ride, plus tax, according to the Bird app.
The city is still finalizing contracts with Lime and Roll so they can
launch their scooters, too. The companies will have slightly different
boundaries.
Dockless e-scooters have been legal since the end of June on city streets with
a speed limit up to 50 km/h, as well as on bike lanes and paths.
A new LED street light project got the green light in Lanark Highlands
Township after council awarded the $72,266 bid to Black and McDonald Limited.
The recommendation is that the surplus funds (just under $22,000) from the
project will be set aside to replace the lights at the Clyde Memorial and
Vincent Hall Memorial ball parks sometime in the future, noted Ryan Morton,
CAO/clerk of the township. The public works department had budgeted $94,000
for the work.
(...)It is estimated that the current annual wattage of 26,468 will be reduced
to 9,622 with the new LED lights.