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View Poll Results: Who should be the next mayor of Ottawa?
Mark Sutcliffe 8 15.38%
Catherine McKenney 43 82.69%
Bob Chiarelli 1 1.92%
Other 0 0%
Voters: 52. You may not vote on this poll

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  #541  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 5:13 PM
zzptichka zzptichka is online now
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Old Boys Club is terrified
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  #542  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 5:19 PM
Fading Isle Fading Isle is offline
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Originally Posted by zzptichka View Post
Old Boys Club is terrified
Randall's upset his last article doesn't seem to have helped his buddy Mark.
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  #543  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 11:43 PM
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Bob Chiarelli calls on Ottawa police, the Royal to partner on mental health calls
The mayoral candidate said he doesn't believe the public has been well served by the service when there are 911 mental health calls

Matthew Lapierre, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 04, 2022 • 1 day ago • 3 minute read


Mayoral candidate Bob Chiarelli is proposing changes to the way the Ottawa Police Service handles mental health calls.

Chiarelli, who was Ottawa’s mayor from 2001 to 2006 and has served as a Liberal MPP in Queen’s Park, told this newspaper’s editorial board on Monday that he wants the Royal Ottawa Hospital to partner with the police.

“I believe we have not been well-served by the system when there are 911 wellness calls,” Chiarelli said. “The current situation needs to be significantly improved for the safety and security of both the police and the people who are involved in the dangerous situations that police are called in for.”

Chiarelli said his proposal would involve the creation of a group of mental health professionals who would attend emergency calls alongside police.

“I proposed that we created a partnership between the Ottawa Police Service and the Royal Ottawa Hospital whereby the ROH puts together a roster of perhaps 10 to 15 mental health professionals who can be called upon to join the police response,” he said. “The mental health professional(s) from the list (would be) available at the time of the call. We put on a vest to identify them clearly and go to the scene of the incident. Protocols would have been developed on how the team handles often dangerous situations.”

The OPS currently has a mental health unit that has existed for more than 20 years. Its officers work with mental health nurses from The Ottawa Hospital on calls where people are known to have had prior mental health emergencies. They link members of the public with community resources and support systems, during and following a crisis, according to the OPS.

In late 2020, the force announced it would invest $1.5 million into a new, community-led mental health response strategy, partly in response to criticism it received over the 2016 death of Abdirahman Abdi, a 37-year-old Somali Canadian with a history of mental health issues. Abdi died after a violent confrontation with police.

Asked about the feasibility of having mental health professionals available during a healthcare worker shortage, Chiarelli pointed to Toronto, which has already begun dispatching nurses and mental health professionals to some calls for people in crisis and said it has worked with the RCMP in Ontario’s north.

“It’s not creating new ground here. It’s been done,” he said.

Chiarelli said he had consulted with former police chiefs: “This was done with some consultation and not just out of my hat,” he said.

The Royal Ottawa Hospital did not respond to a request for comment.

The OPS responds to thousands of mental health calls each year, the according to a document delivered to the police board last year. The service had been developing a Mental Health Response Strategy in conjunction with mental healthcare and addictions professionals, and community-based organizations to improve outcomes for those with mental health problems.

Mayoral candidate Mark Sutcliffe has pledged to sit on the Ottawa Police Services Board and ensure every Ottawa region is represented on the board. But Chiarelli told this newspaper he wouldn’t sit on the board. “My sense is there should be some independence between the senior political person (and the police board),” he said.

Candidate Catherine McKenney (who uses the pronouns they/them) has called for more “effective policing,” and has said that police budgets should be set based on evidence and what actually works to reduce crime.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...l-health-calls
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  #544  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 11:45 PM
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Mayoral candidate Sutcliffe promises transit fare freeze for at least year one, expanding on previous fare commitment

Taylor Blewett, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 04, 2022 • 1 day ago • 3 minute read


Mark Sutcliffe is promising to freeze transit fares at current levels for at least the first year of his mandate if elected mayor, extending the reach of a previous pledge in his transportation platform to maintain the current cost of the seniors’ transit pass, the EquiPass for low-income residents and youth transit rates.

This freeze would extend to all OC and Para Transpo passes and fares, his campaign confirmed Tuesday, from the price tag on adult monthly passes to the cost of a Para Transpo ride from rural Ottawa to the core.

In a press release Tuesday, Sutcliffe said that Ottawans have lost confidence in the local public transit system.

“Until we rebuild the system and deliver better service, we can’t expect users to pay higher fares. That’s especially true with affordability being such an important issue for so many families,” said Sutcliffe.

It currently costs $3.70 a ride or $125.50 for a monthly pass for adults (paying a fare with cash is a five cents more than card payment), $2.80 or $47.75 for seniors, $1.75 or $58.25 for low-income EquiPass users, and $1.85 for children aged eight to 12, with kids seven and under riding for free. Those on ODSP pay $43.25 for a monthly pass, while rural-to-urban Para Transpo rides cost $10 one way.

The fare-freeze pledge comes after Sutcliffe’s release of full transportation plan last month, which included commitments to “modernize and optimize OC Transpo bus service” to reflect post-COVID realities and support travel within suburban communities and “fix Para Transpo by consulting with those who depend on it to get around our city,” as well as a promise that the cost of the EquiPass and seniors’ pass as well as transit pricing for youth would stay the same.

With his new campaign promise Tuesday, Sutcliffe is now the second big-name mayoral candidate to pledge a fare freeze across the board. Catherine McKenney made this part of the transit platform they released a month ago, along with expanding free transit to youth 17 and under and decreasing the cost of the EquiPass.

On Tuesday morning, McKenney’s campaign confirmed that the fare freeze would apply for all four years of their mandate.
Later in the day, McKenney tweeted that fares would stay that way “as long as I’m mayor” and that “transit won’t be an afterthought” if they’re elected.

Both McKenney and Sutcliffe are slated to release financial plans for their respective platforms this week.

Fellow candidate Bob Chiarelli has criticized the idea of freezing transit fares, warning of the potential hit to the already challenged OC Transpo budget.

Sutcliffe also pledged Monday to offer more transparency to the public on OC Transpo performance. While the transit agency publishes monthly performance data on its website, such as excess wait times for customers travelling by bus and light rail, average time to answer inquiries, and elevator availability, these haven’t been updated since 2021.

Sutcliffe is promising to create “benchmark performance service standards” and to make data public on a monthly basis showing how OC Transpo is measuring up.

“I believe that riders and all residents deserve more real-time information on the performance of our transit system, in order to restore confidence in the system and, ultimately, demonstrate better value for users,” he said.

Sutcliffe has also said that under his leadership in the mayor’s office, OC Transpo would increase the numbers of times it presents before the city’s transit commission — where councillors and members outside city hall can put questions to the agency publicly — to at least four times per year.

The price of taking a bus or train ride rose by an average of 2.5 per cent in May. Council had decided to delay the annual fare increase until Confederation Line contractor Rideau Transit Maintenance could deliver 15 trains for LRT service, following a derailment that left the line shut down for nearly two months.

Transit commission was told at the time that delaying the fare increase would cost about $426,700 in lost revenue each month.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...are-commitment
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  #545  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 11:46 PM
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Fixing lifeguard shortage, opening all libraries on Sundays are part of building a healthy city

Joanne Laucius, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 04, 2022 • 1 day ago • 2 minute read


Mayoral candidate Catherine McKenney would keep beaches and pools open longer and tackle a chronic shortage of lifeguards if elected.

The lifeguard shortage has plagued municipalities across North America, including Ottawa, which cancelled some classes and reduced the time of others this summer to deal with the shortage. It’s also not unusual for the city’s pools and beaches to be closed before the end of school summer vacation. This year, beaches at Mooney’s Bay, Britannia and Petrie Island were open for supervised swimming from June 18 to Aug. 28.

“On a hot summer day, everyone should be able to cool off in our pools and beaches. But we need to make changes to get this done,” said McKenney, who intends to widen the lifeguard hiring pool by supporting youth from lower income families to get the necessary credentials.

Early this summer, the city said hiring projections for this summer had been on track. But in the last weeks of June, a significant number of lifeguards resigned — many to pursue work in other fields, according to a memo from the city. The shortage has continued into the fall. Last week, the city said 11 per cent of registered aquatics classes were being cancelled.

McKenney, who uses they/them pronouns, said the first part of the plan is paying lifeguards a wage that will attract and retain them. The second is helping youth from lower income families learn about the opportunities and get the credentials.

The city already has programs for kids taking swimming lessons, sometimes for free. The next step is to help youth get through the final steps to be certified as a lifeguard, said McKenney. “That’s where the barrier is for kids from lower income families.”

Meanwhile, McKenney said they would ensure that the city audits access to municipal services in French, including recreation services. The registration numbers for recreation programs in French don’t tell the full story of the need for those services, they said.

“Francophone children should always be able to go to swimming lessons in French. But what happens now is sometimes those French lessons fill up too quickly. And, understandably, parents send their kids to recreation services in English instead.”

McKenney would also open all libraries on Sundays. People learn, gather and access the internet for free in libraries, but only a third of Ottawa Public Library branches are open on Sundays, they said.

“We know that there is a need for expanded hours. We know that libraries are a place for people to learn and grow as a community hub.”

McKenney did not provide costing for the promises made on Tuesday. Costing details are to be released on Thursday.

However, McKenney said they would spend an additional $500,000 a year to support emerging and evolving community and social service needs, ranging from food security to mental crisis support.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...a-healthy-city
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  #546  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2022, 11:46 PM
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Mayoral candidate Mark Sutcliffe releases spending plan, vows to limit property tax hikes to between 2 and 2.5 per cent for first two years
Mark Sutcliffe, who is making his first run for office, said the city is in “an affordability crisis.”

Blair Crawford, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 05, 2022 • 2 hours ago • 3 minute read


Mayoral candidate Mark Sutcliffe unveiled an ambitious fiscal policy Wednesday that promises to limit property tax increases to between 2 and 2.5 per cent for at least two years, while protecting and investing in the city’s critical infrastructure.

Sutcliffe also said that, if elected, he would target the same range of tax increases for the subsequent years — albeit with a caveat.

“With the current level of inflation and economic uncertainty, it’s impossible to predict the conditions that will drive the budget for 2024 and 2025,” Sutcliffe told reporters at a downtown campaign announcement.

“But I will commit, as I have since the very first day of this election campaign to keep taxes as low as possible.”

Sutcliffe, who is making his first run for office, said the city is in “an affordability crisis.”

“People are having to make tough choices, very tough choices so they can make their rent or their mortgage payments and still keep their kids in dance lessons or hockey,” he said. “… So they can buy enough groceries and still have money to put gas in their vehicles.”

His promise to hold tax increases below 2.5 per cent undercuts the promise of his main rival for the mayor’s chair, Catherine McKenney, who promises to hold tax increases to three per cent. McKenney plans to announce a more detailed fiscal plan on Thursday.

Whether either candidate can deliver what they promise is an open question.

Sutcliffe says he’ll launch a strategic review of city spending with the goal of finding $35 million to $60 million in “efficiencies” — equivalent to about one per cent of the city’s budget.

“There’s not been a proper, line by line review of city expenditures for almost 20 years,” he told reporters. “We’re going to find efficiencies and reapply them to the areas of investment that we’ve talked about.”

Although he says no one will lose their jobs, he says 100 positions will be eliminated by attrition of vacant and non-essential positions.

Funding for other promises — additional police officers and a police station in the ByWard Market, for example — will be paid in part with revenue from projected growth, he said.

Among Sutcliffe’s other promises:
  • $2 million to reduce child and family recreation fees by 10 per cent
  • $5 million to freeze transit fares for 2023
  • $25 million for road repair, better snow and ice removal, and fixing sidewalks and cycling lanes
  • $1.2 million for traffic calming measures
  • $4 million in funding for social services, targeting mental health and substance abuse disorders.

Sutcliffe said his budget was “cautious, accurate and responsible” and accounts for expected cost increases due to inflation.

Cost increases from inflation and supply chain shortages are outside a mayor’s control, he said. “But what I can do is show respect for taxpayers experiencing the affordability crisis and to make sure the city does not add to the financial pressure that people are feeling.”

The municipal election is Oct. 24.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...irst-two-years
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  #547  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2022, 5:12 PM
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Don't count Bob Chiarelli out yet in Ottawa's municipal vote; he has always played the long game
"So I looked at the situation, how bad it was, and I said to myself, I have something that I could contribute, something I'm experienced in and I know about."

Joanne Laucius, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 06, 2022 • 5 hours ago • 8 minute read


Bob Chiarelli recalls having a conversation with himself before he decided to announce his candidacy for mayor.

“I’ve been in 11 elections. I won nine, and I lost two,” Chiarelli said in an interview in his campaign headquarters on a second-floor office on Carling Avenue.

“You can win and you can lose. But if you’re not prepared to lose, don’t run. And work like hell to win.”

If that statement sounds familiar, you have only to go back to 2018, when Chiarelli lost his second election, coming in third in the battle for the provincial riding of Ottawa West-Nepean.

“If you’re not prepared to lose, don’t run,” he told supporters in his concession speech, announcing that it was “very, very unlikely” he would ever run for office again.

But Chiarelli has always played the long game. And he knows that the political wheel of fortune turns round and round.

“I’m watching the lightning and earthquakes strike city hall every two months or three months and I say ‘Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God. What are we going to do?” he said last week in an interview. “So I looked at the situation, how bad it was, and I said to myself, I have something that I could contribute, something I’m experienced in and I know about.”

Chiarelli learned about politics practically from the cradle.

His father, Eugene, came to Canada from Calabria in the 1920s, leaving behind his pregnant wife Antonia and oldest child. He landed in Montreal unable to speak English or French and got a tip about jobs in a gold mine in Timmins. He worked double shifts to save up enough money to bring his family to Canada and buy a business.

It was a butcher shop at the corner of Rochester Street and Pamilla Street in Little Italy. Eugene wasn’t a butcher, but he bought the business on a promise from the previous owner would he would teach Eugene the trade for six months. The shop expanded when his oldest son took a course in dairying and opened a dairy behind the store.

The second floor above the store was home to the family. Bob was the youngest of eight children, with 19 years between them. When Chiarelli was about 10, the store was expropriated to make way for government buildings on Booth Street. Eugene Chiarelli built a large house off Fisher Avenue and used the expropriation money to start a paving business.

Many in the Italian community at the time were Liberal supporters, and so was Eugene. When Chiarelli was 16 and got his driver’s license, his father gave him the car keys to drive voters to the polls.

“I learned about political allegiances early,” he said.

Like his brothers Frank, Dick and Pat, Chiarelli went to an American university on a hockey scholarship. He chose Clarkson University in Potsdam, N.Y., where he studied business administration but took as many courses as he could in politics and constitutions. During his summers home at home, Chiarelli worked in the family paving business.

He met his first wife, Susan, while he was a student at Clarkson. His son, Chris, was born just as Chiarelli started law school at the University of Ottawa. “I went to my first day in law school with 25 cigars,” Chiarelli said.

It was a small class of about 40 or 50 students, and many of the law students watched question period in the House of Commons when they were able. “There were Diefenbaker and Pearson, fighting. We would go to the gallery and watch all that stuff taking place,” he recalled.

Chiarelli was a Liberal MPP from 1987 to 1997, when he wrested the job of regional chair from Peter Clark by a whisker. Clark was known to be gruff and confrontational. Chiarelli campaigned on the need for co-operation.

Unseating Clark, who was an institution in Ottawa, was a significant victory, said Randy Boswell, an associate professor of journalism at Carleton University who covered the regional municipality and the city for the Ottawa Citizen. “Clark was almost unbeatable.”

The mid-90s were a difficult period for Chiarelli. In the space of three years, he lost his second wife, Carol, as well as both parents and an older sister. Left a widower in 1996, he resigned as MPP to be with his blended family of three daughters, two step-daughters and son Chris, who died in 2012.

“It was a bit of a challenge,” he said. “As regional chair, I made their lunches and got them to school.”

In 2001, Chiarelli became the first mayor of post-amalgamation Ottawa — no longer merely the urban core, but a city that sprawled almost as far as Rockland in the east, Arnprior in the west and Kemptville in the south. At times it was like a squabbling family with not much in common.

Chiarelli is known for his ability to keep the peace. He has a talent for building coalitions, not delivering barn-burner speeches. The times Chiarelli lost his cool were rare — he dropped the F-bomb on Rideau councillor Glenn Brooks after a disagreement about a development in 2004, but apologized later.

“He had a big P on his forehead. And that stood for patience.,” said Alex Cullen, a former MPP and city councillor who has known Chiarelli since he was a student Liberal in the early 1970s. (Cullen joined the NDP in 1998.)

Some suburban and rural councillors fought amalgamation, recalled former Ottawa Citizen municipal affairs reporter Mohammed Adam: “Despite all of the divisions, Chiarelli kept it all together. He was truly a consensus builder.”

Gloucester-Southgate Coun. Diane Deans, who has been a councillor since 1994, recalls one council meeting over a taxi bylaw. When she got to her car, with a police escort, there were two men waiting for her, which she took to be intimidation. Chiarelli assembled players in the taxi industry and read them the riot act, Deans recalls.

“I really felt that he had my back. You really appreciate that in a mayor.”

Voters saw him as moderate, a bridge-builder. “He could get along with a lot of different people. He could take the helm and get things done and create unity around the table,” Boswell said.

Chiarelli didn’t pick personal fights, said Cullen. When it came to infighting on council, he would let it roll instead of trying to control it. Street fighting was just never his style.

“The problem with throwing mud was that it splatters back,” Cullen said. “Bob is very conscious of that.”

Mayor Jim Watson has been criticized for the so-called “Watson club,” an inner circle of loyal councillors and an if-you’re-not-with-me-you’re-against-me attitude. Chiarelli says his philosophy has always been to have an open door. It could be a skill that is valuable when many city councillors elected this month will be new to the role.

“Bob knew where most of his votes were. But he didn’t try to run a club,” Cullen said. “He didn’t try to tightly control debate.”

Among his victories as mayor is the development of Lansdowne Park. It’s not perfect, but it could easily have been condos, Adam said. “Everyone forgets that Lansdowne was set to be bulldozed. We are lucky we have Lansdowne today because we had Chiarelli.”

Light rail was another Chiarelli victory — until it became his undoing. When he came in a distant third behind Larry O’Brien and Alex Munter in 2006, many saw it as a condemnation of Chiarelli’s north-south rail plan. Others were critical of tax increases during his term — 2.9, 3.9 and 3.9 per cent in his last three years as mayor.

The federal and provincial governments had each committed $200 million. Ottawa West-Nepean’s Conservative MP John Baird, who was then president of the federal Treasury Board, made federal funding conditional on a vote by the new city council. O’Brien argued that the plan would increase downtown congestion and it didn’t qualify as “rapid” transit. One council approved the plan in July. Another council dismissed it in December.

Chiarelli returned to Queen’s Park in 2010, winning in a by-election in Ottawa West-Nepean to replace Jim Watson, who was running for mayor of Ottawa.

He squeaked past Progressive Conservative challenger Randall Denley — a Citizen columnist and frequent critic — in the provincial election of 2011. (“A skillful politician is continuously reinforcing the impression that he’s doing a good job,” Denley wrote in a 2006 column. “Chiarelli has conducted himself as if that didn’t really matter, as if he would never be seriously challenged. The mayor actually has some accomplishments, but the ordinary voter would be hard-pressed to tell you what they are.”)

Among other provincial cabinet positions, Chiarelli was appointed energy minister in 2013, facing an unpalatable job after the Liberals cancelled two gas-fired power plants, costing taxpayers more than $1 billion.

In the 2014 provincial election, Chiarelli faced off against Denley again, this time increasing his margin of victory by 5,000 votes.

But in 2018, the fortunes of the Liberals had turned and Chiarelli was crushed, coming in third behind Jeremy Roberts of the Progressive Conservatives and Chandra Pasma of the NDP.

In recent years, Chiarelli was a senior fellow at the University of Ottawa, is on the board of directors of the RA Centre and is chair of the the Kiwanis Club’s medical foundation.

“I enjoy being creative. I enjoy working with people. I get satisfaction over accomplishing things. And the bottom line is, I’m still doing these things,” Chiarelli said in an interview.

Chiarelli turned 81 on Sept. 24. He spent his birthday with his daughters and grandchildren: “We talked politics. It was fun.”

But he was also clearly miffed that Denley referred to Mark Sutcliife and Catherine McKenney as “presumed mayoral front runners” in a column last week.

On the question of age, Chiarelli says it’s up to voters to decide. John Baird was first elected when he was 26. Mississauga mayor “Hurricane” Hazel McCallion was last elected at 89 and retired three years later.

“I’m somewhere in between.”

He’s going to be a player in this election, Cullen predicts. Chiarelli is a good example of a “retail politician,” one whose success is built on making personal connections. He’s got stamina. Chiarelli may be a bit of an introvert, but he slugs it out on the ground, Cullen said.

“Don’t underestimate Bob. You can’t count him out because of his age. He knows the hill he’s got to climb. He’s got grit. He knows he has to work.”

This is the first in a series of profiles of the top three candidates for mayor of Ottawa.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...-the-long-game
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  #548  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2022, 5:13 PM
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Candidates for Ottawa Council need to show us what they've got
So far, the focus is on the race for the mayor's seat. That's understandable, but there are 25 votes on city council. The other candidates must make their message — and qualifications — clear.

Mohammed Adam, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 06, 2022 • 2 hours ago • 3 minute read


A neighbour’s question on the race in our ward got me wondering how much we really know about the non-incumbents running in the municipal election. My neighbour has seen the election signs, but has no idea who the candidates really are, beyond the names on the placards. Or how qualified they are.

He complained that no one has been in contact in any way to give him some information, and he wonders how he will vote when he knows next to nothing about the candidates. It is a salient point.

In our south-end ward, six candidates are running to replace the retiring Diane Deans. Elections signs are everywhere, but except for one candidate I know by name, I have no idea who the rest of them are. A friend in an adjoining ward who normally votes in the advance poll says she didn’t vote this time for lack of adequate information about the candidates. And a colleague tells me her frequent-voter mother-in-law recently asked her which council candidate to vote for because she knows very little about those running.

Of course, there is enough information on the mayoral candidates to make an informed choice, but it’s not the same with prospective councillors. The more I talked to friends and family around the city, the more I realized that this as an issue many of us are grappling with. In this election, 107 candidates are running in the city’s 24 wards, but so much is unknown about many of the candidates that we could end up voting for people we don’t really know. And what a disservice to local democracy that would be.

Think about this: In this election, at least 12 councillors, nearly half of the 25-member chamber that will form the new city government, will be new and untested. And yet, some of us may end up voting for these potential councillors perhaps on a whim, or on someone else’s recommendation. There is a possibility some voters may simply stay away or, worse, elect people who are less qualified. For instance, in a race with six, seven, or 10 candidates, telling the good from the bad may not be easy, and anyone could sneak in with a tiny plurality. It is a danger we should try to avoid.

Of course, voters have a responsibility to do their homework on candidates in their wards and vote for the right person. We deserve the government we get if we don’t make sure qualified people get in. But you can’t put it all on voters. If you are running for office, and presumably want my vote, the least you can do is try to give me some indication of who you are and why I should vote for you. Knocking on doors may be impossible, but do something beyond a name on a placard to tell me more about you. It is worse in the school board races, and there, most of us will likely be voting blind.

It’s true that these days, campaigns are run more and more on websites and social media platforms. But it is not everybody who has the time, ability, or resources to surf the Internet. And sometimes there is scant information about candidates even on their websites. Worse, some candidates don’t even have websites.

It has been said before, but it bears repeating, that this really is a pivotal election. The city faces enormous problems and we need the right people in government to deal with the challenges. Public attention has largely been focused on the mayoral race, as it should be. But we should not forget the importance of a good, effective council. With a mayor who now has veto powers, there has never been a more important time for a strong council. A mayor alone does not make a city despite what Premier Doug Ford might think.

The election is just over two weeks away. Get to know your ward candidates. A lot is riding on your vote so pay attention to who you elect as councillor.

Mohammed Adam is an Ottawa journalist and commentator.

https://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/ad...hat-theyve-got
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  #549  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2022, 5:20 PM
originalmuffins originalmuffins is offline
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
[B]Don't count Bob Chiarelli out yet in Ottawa's municipal vote; he has always played the long game
I would rather count him out.

Drop out, Bob. Drop out.
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  #550  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2022, 6:34 PM
Fading Isle Fading Isle is offline
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Originally Posted by originalmuffins View Post
I would rather count him out.

Drop out, Bob. Drop out.
Can he drop out after advanced voting has already started?
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  #551  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2022, 7:15 PM
RogueNacho RogueNacho is offline
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Originally Posted by originalmuffins View Post
I would rather count him out.

Drop out, Bob. Drop out.
No! I would rather he split the boomer/conservative vote with Sutcliffe and thus give McKenney the win.
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  #552  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 12:50 AM
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Originally Posted by pattherat View Post
Hmmm, this gives me pause on who I’m voting for now. Landsdowne absolutely needs further development. Affordable housing has to use a subsidy approach, otherwise builders will simply not build at a loss. At any rate, ‘affordable’ is a misnomer as long as it means only 5-10% below market value. Also once built, who’s to say it won’t be resold at then market values 2-3 years on?

Re: Lebreton Arena, I wonder if any of them support brownfield grants? I agree on the public money overall, but the site still needs soil remediation and I believe the city should consider the grants route…no matter the mayoral candidate.
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Originally Posted by Williamoforange View Post
If its McKenney they have vocally opposed both CIP programs (when put into action) and Brownfield grants and will likely oppose them again with Lebreton.
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Originally Posted by pattherat View Post
Thanks for all the info!

Fuuuuuuuudge, this makes my choices tough. I really support the brownfield grants. You want property tax revenue instead of empty fields. The grants should play some role in my view.

Anybody also know if in Ottawa council, one vote is just that? The mayor’s vote doesn’t count for more etc.? (I know with strong mayor it can, but McKenney has stated that they wouldn’t use those powers.)
Sutcliffe just made it easier for some of you (not you Williamoforange, I know you oppose McKenney regardless, which is fair considering your priorities). He just promised to kill the Brownfield and Community Improvement Grants. So either way, seems we'll be losing those.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...dget-1.6607607
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Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 1:05 AM
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Catherine McKenney reveals financial plan to pay for mayoral platform, keep tax increases at three per cent
“I'm here to show you that ambition can be affordable.”

Taylor Blewett, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 06, 2022 • 44 minutes ago • 4 minute read


Catherine McKenney has released a financial blueprint to show how they’ll pay for the transportation, housing, climate and other promises they’ve made part of their Ottawa mayoral campaign, while keeping property tax increases to three per cent and without cutting existing city services.

“I’m here to show you that ambition can be affordable,” McKenney said Thursday at a media briefing about that financial plan.

It relies on four funding sources, which the McKenney campaign says are above and beyond the city’s existing budget.

The first three are: projected annual growth in city revenues, based on maintaining the average seen over the last term and after accounting for inflation and population growth; drawing down $90 million held in discretionary city reserves, which they said totalled $583 million at the end of 2021; and securing new transfers from federal housing development and active transportation funds for municipalities.

For the two major capital expenditures the financial plan maps out, the city would take on what the campaign describes as “smart debt” to the tune of $250 million and $65 million respectively, plus an unspecified amount of interest. This would pay for McKenney’s cycling infrastructure plan, which they said would be paid off in principal and interest by the $15 million annually the city is already expected to spend on cycling, and for retrofits of municipal buildings, which they said should be repaid within eight years from energy cost savings.

The city already has $3 billion in outstanding and $1.7 billion in authorized but not yet issued debt, according to McKenney’s campaign.

The new dollars required for McKenney’s major platform commitments on the operational side — the part of the municipal budget for which city isn’t allowed to incur debt or run a deficit — total $343 million over the four-year term. This includes: $288 million to increase transit operations, freeze transit fares, provide free transit to those 17 and under and reduce the cost of the Equipass for low-income Ottawans; $10 million annually for more diversion of organics from the waste stream and investment in biogas refinement to create renewable natural gas; and $16 million annually on rental allowances for people living in hotels and shelters and at risk of falling into homelessness, less money saved being spent now on those hotel spaces.

The campaign says the funding sources they’ve identified — revenue growth, reserve funds and money from upper levels of government — will cover the platform’s operational expenses with plenty of room to spare, leaving in contingency $132 million over four years.

As for future spending levels in areas within the existing city budget, McKenney said it’s “always a possibility “ that less of an increase is budgeted for one service so spending on another one can rise by more. Pointing to the police budget as an example, McKenney said if the draft comes back with a three per cent increase, the evidence justifying that has to be interrogated.

McKenney’s plan was announced a day after mayoral candidate Mark Sutcliffe released his financial framework, including a promise to increase property taxes between two and 2.5 per cent annually over his first two years — a break from the three-per-cent cap that Mayor Jim Watson stuck to over his last term and that McKenney is matching — and his own commitment that services will not be cut to pay for his platform.

The two leading candidates have traded criticism of their respective financial plans, with the $35 million to $60 million in savings Sutcliffe says he will find through eliminating vacant, non-essential city jobs and staff attrition as well as a strategic review of city spending being characterized by McKenney as “cuts” that will harm Ottawa residents.

“Is there $60 million in efficiencies at the City of Ottawa? Absolutely not … Jim Watson would have found that and we would have had a tax decrease,” McKenney told reporters Thursday.

Sutcliffe called McKenney’s plan “extremely risky.” Arguing that McKenney’s spending priorities weren’t aligned with those of most Ottawa residents, he said the plan “raids our city’s reserves, adds significantly to our debt and will dramatically undermine the financial stability of our city.”

In releasing the plan, McKenney included a positive review for its “fiscal transparency” from former Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page, now president of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy at uOttawa, who said it “promotes policy debate, accountability and trust.”

Mayoral candidate Bob Chiarelli had a different take, concluding even before his competitors released their financial plans that “the numbers will effectively mean nothing. They’re just for show.”

Chiarelli has promised tax, fee and non-discretionary spending freezes in the first year of his mandate as well as a review of city operations to find efficiencies. After that, he’s told this newspaper that determining any property tax increase would be a year-by-year process rather than something he would commit to ahead of time.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...three-per-cent
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  #554  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 1:45 AM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Sutcliffe just made it easier for some of you (not you Williamoforange, I know you oppose McKenney regardless, which is fair considering your priorities). He just promised to kill the Brownfield and Community Improvement Grants. So either way, seems we'll be losing those.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...dget-1.6607607
I'm fine with the removal of the CIP it was a bad program, that apparently councillors like McKenney, Menard and Company never bothered to figure out what it actually did before voting for it. So they got childish when it went to a dealership, like they always do when something doesn't go there way. (Like the buying of the rail yard where McKenney stated it was a gift to SNC lavalin, or calling there constituents racists for daring to ask for a consultation on a local ward development).

As for Sutcliffe the guy is running a campaign based around polling data, who knows what he is actually going to do when he wins.
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Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 11:29 AM
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And that's what scares me about the walking weathervanes. Someone who doesn't know (or acknowledge) what their principles and vision is is someone you can never fully trust. They'll be your best friend when it suits them, and throw you under the bus for a sandwich. How can you trust someone to make a tough decision if they can't withstand a soft breeze?

I may not agree with McKenney on every single issue. But I know where they stand, and they know where they stand. That's someone who can make tough decisions. Not always the one I want, but a decision that I can respect.
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Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 12:17 PM
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Originally Posted by Williamoforange View Post
I'm fine with the removal of the CIP it was a bad program, that apparently councillors like McKenney, Menard and Company never bothered to figure out what it actually did before voting for it. So they got childish when it went to a dealership, like they always do when something doesn't go there way. (Like the buying of the rail yard where McKenney stated it was a gift to SNC lavalin, or calling there constituents racists for daring to ask for a consultation on a local ward development).

As for Sutcliffe the guy is running a campaign based around polling data, who knows what he is actually going to do when he wins.
I thought Deans was the one who called the rail yard a "gift to SNC". I could be wrong.

On the Porsche dealership, I disagreed with the CIP would allow it from receiving the tax break however, since it was allowed, I would ultimately have voted in favour, but directed City staff to make some changes to prevent that from happening again.
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  #557  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 3:16 PM
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Tight race between McKenney and Sutcliffe for Ottawa mayor, 35 per cent undecided: Nanos poll

Josh Pringle
CTV News, October 6 2022




Catherine McKenney leads Mark Sutcliffe in a tight race for mayor of Ottawa, but a new poll suggests 35 per cent of Ottawa residents remain undecided with less than three weeks left in the municipal election campaign.

The Nanos Research poll for CTV News Ottawa asked respondents, "Who would you vote for if the election was held today?"

Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said they would vote for McKenney, while 24 per cent of respondents would vote for Sutcliffe.


Bob Chiarelli ranked third, with nine per cent of respondents saying they would vote for the former mayor of Ottawa.

With less than three weeks left until the Oct. 24 election and advance polls open on Friday, the poll shows more than one in three Ottawa residents say they are still undecided on who to vote for.

In an interview with CTV News Ottawa, Nik Nanos of Nanos Research said while voters are beginning to focus on the two frontrunners, the race is still "up for grabs."

"Basically, it shows that it's a two-and-a-half-person race. You know, McKenney and Sutcliffe at the top, and then Chiarelli, why don't we say, as the half. Right now, at least, voters in the city of Ottawa are clearly focused on those two front-runners," Nanos said Thursday afternoon.

"But still 35 per cent, more than one out of every three, are undecided so this is still a race that is up for grabs."

There are 14 candidates running for mayor of Ottawa in the election.

The poll shows 0.9 per cent of respondents said they would vote for Nour Kadri, 0.8 per cent would vote for Brandon Bay, 0.6 per cent supported Param Singh and 0.5 per cent of respondents said they would vote for Mike Maguire.

McKenney, the current councillor for Somerset Ward, is the top choice for residents living downtown and the west end, along with younger voters. Sutcliffe, the broadcaster and entrepreneur, is the top choice for residents living in the east end and rural Ottawa, while older residents are three times more likely to vote for him, according to Nanos Research.

The survey shows 42.9 per cent of respondents living in downtown Ottawa said they would vote for McKenney as mayor, compared to 16.6 per cent for Sutcliffe, while McKenney leads Sutcliffe in the west end 26.4 per cent to 25.3 per cent.

In Ottawa's east end, Sutcliffe leads McKenney 27.4 per cent to 24.8 per cent, and leads in rural Ottawa 26.9 per cent to 20.3 per cent.

The Nanos survey shows McKenney is the top choice for respondents aged 18 to 34, while Sutcliffe is the top choice of voters aged 35 to 54 and 55 plus. Thirty-three per cent of women said they would vote for McKenney, compared to 21 per cent for Sutcliffe, while 28 per cent of men said they would vote for Sutcliffe, compared to 24 per cent for McKenney.

"The other interesting thing is when you start to look at the demographics because McKenney does better among younger voters, Sutcliffe does better among older voters – we do know empirically that older voters are more likely to vote in municipal elections," Nanos said.


"If we look at the last election, only 43 per cent of people in the city of Ottawa actually cast a ballot so this might look like Sutcliffe perhaps is a little behind but when we look at people who probably will end up voting it could be an advantage for him. So it's all going to come down to a high voter turnout will likely favour McKenney, a lower or regular voter turnout could favour Sutcliffe."

Nanos conducted an online survey of 503 Ottawa residents, 18 years of age and older, between Sept. 23 and Oct. 3. Nanos conducted a non-probability survey representative of the city, and there is no margin of error.

CAMPAIGN PLATFORMS

The Nanos poll is released as the two main contenders for mayor release their campaign financial platforms this week.

McKenney unveiled their financial plan on Thursday morning, promising to cap property taxes at 3 per cent a year. McKenney's campaign platform includes freezing transit fares and introducing free transit for students under 17, invest an additional $500,000 a year to support community and social service needs, a $250 million plan to fast-track cycling infrastructure over four years using Green Bonds, and promises Ottawa will be net zero by 2050.

Sutcliffe promised to cap property tax increases at 2 to 2.5 per cent in 2023 and 2024, and find between $35 and $60 million in efficiencies at City Hall. He has also promised to freeze transit fares for one year, cut child and youth recreation fees by 10 per cent, spend $100 million over four years on roads and bike paths and boost funding for community service agencies by $4 million a year.

Both Maguire and Chiarelli have proposed no new tax increase for 2023.

CTV News at Six will host a mayoral debate on Thursday, Oct. 13. Coverage will begin on CTV News at Five, with extended post-debate coverage on CTVNewsOttawa.ca.

https://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/tight-race...poll-1.6098733
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  #558  
Old Posted Oct 7, 2022, 4:56 PM
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Public safety — we're not asking the right questions in Ottawa's municipal election
The front-runners in the race for mayor are missing a golden opportunity to discuss what they really mean by making us all safer in our city.

Brigitte Pellerin, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 07, 2022 • 4 hours ago • 3 minute read


The municipal election campaign is in its final month, and so far the big themes are running in highly predictable circles between those who think we’re trying to kill cars and single-family homes with too many bike lanes, and those who say: yeah, why can’t we?

However, there are two topics that are tugging insistently at my little geeky heart: safety and health.

Both Catherine McKenney and Mark Sutcliffe have talked — at length — about safety. Lots of spirited chatter about it on my Twitter feed, too. The “healthy city” theme is a more recent addition to McKenney’s platform, but one I was pleased to see. My faithful reader may even remember the multi-part series I wrote in the Citizen three years ago on that exact topic. I’m nerding right out.

The gist of that series was that health is about a lot more than not being sick or the simple absence of disease. Similarly, safety is about much more than the absence of crime or the presence of armed police. So far, on the latter subject, most of the discussion has centred on police budgets and fear-mongering about same. Really, seeing as we are a bunch of grown-ups with some education and enough brains, we ought to do better than this.

That’s a point I made with a certain amount of passion on a recent video panel produced by your favourite newspaper and featuring Robin Browne, co-lead/founder of 613-819 BlackHub and Michael Kempa, criminology professor at the University of Ottawa.

Safety, I said, is a priority for everyone. It’s not because Ottawa is already a very safe city (ask anyone who’s travelled) that it always feels safe for everyone. Feelings of safety are relative. And we’re all entitled to feeling the way we do about our perceptions of safety.

All candidates in this election are in favour of safety, but they differ widely in their approach.

But what are their definitions? The front-runners in the race for mayor, I said in that video, are missing a golden opportunity to have a discussion about what they really mean by safety.

For instance: Is not feeling hunger part of safety? I argue it should be, as much as it is part of health. How about the youth I met for that 2019 series of articles who had been kicked out of the family home at 16 because his father suspected he was smoking pot? (He hadn’t been.) This kid ended up on the street where he ended up using, and much harder substances than pot, too. Was he safe with his family, even before he got thrown out? Of course not.

What about people who identify as women or who are female-passing and get sexually assaulted more than once by someone in a position of authority over them and don’t report it because they know how pointless it is, especially if they are not white? Are they to be considered “safe” because nobody cares that they’re repeatedly victimized?

How about marginalized people, Indigenous persons or people of colour who are made to feel less safe by police presence? The unhoused person begging in front of the McDonald’s on Rideau Street: do they feel safe in our city?

What if most people in Ottawa had what they need to be healthy and to feel safe? How much less trauma do you think we’d have? How much less crime?

We’re not asking those questions. We should be. What if, instead of having people focus on police budgets, we asked ourselves why we task cops with jobs they shouldn’t be doing? Do we really need highly trained, armed officers directing traffic when the lights are off? Or de-escalating mental health crises when they are trained in so much but not that?

There are only a few weeks left in the campaign. It’s time to start asking better questions.

Brigitte Pellerin is an Ottawa writer.

https://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/pe...cipal-election
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  #559  
Old Posted Oct 8, 2022, 2:33 AM
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French skills vary among mayoral frontrunners, but all have something to say for francophones
Mark Sutcliffe, Bob Chiarelli and Catherine McKenney have all touted shows of support from francophone members of the community during this campaign.

Taylor Blewett, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 07, 2022 • 3 hours ago • 4 minute read


More than one-third of Ottawa’s population speaks both English and French, a fact that doesn’t appear lost on any of the three candidates leading the race for mayor: one of whom is bilingual and all of whom say they’re working to sharpen their abilities in the French language.

On Friday, Mark Sutcliffe rolled out his francophone platform, with promises that included upping the amount of recreational programming offered in French, making sure Ottawans using front-line city services could get access to that service through someone speaking that language and engagement with local francophone institutions.

“I believe it is critically important that Ottawa’s mayor not only be able to speak French, but understand its importance and actively work to support the interests of francophones at city hall,” Sutcliffe stated in the accompanying media release.

Speaking to this newspaper, Sutcliffe characterized his grasp of the language as “not perfect, but I consider myself bilingual.”

Sutcliffe’s parents were bilingual as well, he spoke a lot of French growing up and, while he wasn’t in immersion, he studied the language throughout his schooling, including in university.

Sutcliffe said he lost some of his French over his career as a journalist and business owner, but had worked on it a little over the years through classes and seeking out French content, and a lot since entering the campaign for mayor. Now he works with a tutor for a few hours a week, and his comfort in the language is enough that he can do interviews in French, for example. He said he would continue with that study, if elected.

“Ottawa is a bilingual place, Canada’s a bilingual country, it’s the capital of Canada. There’s a significant population of French-speaking people in Ottawa. And I think it’s important that the mayor be able to speak to residents in French and English,” Sutcliffe said. He noted that, for high-level staff hiring, city policy had bilingualism as an expectation unless council approved an exemption.

If elected, Sutcliffe would pick up the bilingual mayor torch from Quebec-born Jim Watson, who operates in both official languages. In the past, it hasn’t proven a necessary qualification for getting elected as mayor: Watson’s predecessor, Larry O’Brien, did not speak French. But it’s certainly a skill that Sutcliffe has been able to wield on the campaign trail, including a mayoral debate last month, when Sutcliffe was the only one of five candidates present to respond to French questions in the same language rather than switching to English.

“That will be rectified in five or six months,” was Bob Chiarelli’s response on Friday. Over nine years as regional chair and more as Ottawa mayor, Chiarelli said he got to a point where he could “carry on a reasonable conversation in French” and give media interviews in the language.

“Then I left politics in Ottawa in 2006, and I didn’t practise and I didn’t use it fully over that period of time,” Chiarelli said, referring to that era of his career when he represented Ottawa West-Nepean at Queen’s Park. While he said he read speeches in French extremely well and could do some socializing, his French wasn’t yet back to where it used to be.

“It wouldn’t be truthful to say I’m bilingual. I could say that I’m close to being bilingual,” Chiarelli said, noting he would see it “as an obligation” to work towards a conversational grasp of the language through further practice if elected.

For now, he’s said he’s brushing up his skills during the campaign by speaking in French to relatives and reading in the language. “And I try it out on people to see how I’m doing.”

Earlier this week, Chiarelli released a statement about his position that “it is time a new City Council ask the provincial and federal governments to finally declare Canada’s capital city officially bilingual.”

The Ontario government passed legislation in 2017, when Chiarelli was a cabinet minister, to make the City of Ottawa’s bilingual status official, and Chiarelli himself has said French-language rights are well-protected by existing laws.

“This is not creating any new rights other than finally recognizing the reality we already know: that Canada’s capital city is officially bilingual,” he said in his Thursday media release.

Catherine McKenney’s campaign said their schedule could not accommodate an interview Friday, but McKenney said via emailed statement that they speak “beginner French” and had been taking classes to strengthen their abilities. “I am eager to continue learning French, and right now I use French with my campaign team.”

McKenney has committed to auditing municipal services in French “to see where the biggest improvements can be made, while working closely with francophone community organizations,” and said Friday this exercise would inform next steps for improving French-language accessibility.

In rolling out this platform commitment, released last month on Franco-Ontarian Day, McKenney included quotes of support from two locals of that background: a student named Francesco MacAllister-Caruso and Simone Thibault, former executive director of the Centretown Community Health Centre.

Chiarelli and Sutcliffe have also shown off their support from area francophones, with Chiarelli pointing to policy endorsements from “two pillars of the francophone community:” Ronald Bisson, one of the founders of La maison de la francophonie d’Ottawa and former French public school board chair Linda Savard.

Sutcliffe’s release said he was backed by Orléans MP Marie-France Lalonde, former Ottawa–Vanier MPP Madeleine Meilleur, outgoing Alta Vista ward city councillor Jean Cloutier and lawyer Ronald Caza.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...r-francophones
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  #560  
Old Posted Oct 11, 2022, 11:39 AM
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McKenney challenges mayoral candidates to disclose donor lists
The McKenney campaign disclosed a full list of its donors — everyone who gave more than $100 — on its website Monday.

Andrew Duffy, Ottawa Citizen
Oct 10, 2022 • 14 hours ago • 1 minute read


Mayoral candidate Catherine McKenney has challenged the city’s other mayoral candidates to release their full list of donors before election day.

The McKenney campaign disclosed a full list of its donors — everyone who gave more than $100 — on its website Monday.

“Voters have a right to know who is funding a candidate before they cast their ballot,” McKenney said in a news release Monday.

“Making this information public before election day isn’t the norm, but it should be and that’s why I’m calling on all other mayoral candidates to disclose their donor lists. I’m showing who is funding my campaign, and I’m not holding $1,200 per ticket fundraisers behind closed doors.”

Mayoral candidate Mark Sutcliffe has been criticized for holding a fundraising event at a private home during which he invited attendees to donate the maximum of $1,200. Sutcliffe has defended the event as a legal and normal fundraising event.

McKenney’s allies have tried to paint Sutcliffe as a candidate who will do the bidding of developers at city hall, and McKenney continued with that line of attack Monday.

“People should have confidence that the mayor is acting in the best interests of everyone,” said McKenney. “When we put residents first, we can build a city hall that works for everyone — not for corporate interests.”

McKenney has vowed not to accept contributions from developers, including their family members and staffers. “Should I learn that a developer, or their family member or employee has contributed to my campaign, that donation will be returned,” McKenney said.

Provincial law requires all municipal candidates to disclose contributions of $100 or more in documents filed after the election.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...se-donor-lists
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