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Inside NEWS
The City of Ottawa clears up some confusion about the proper name of the street in front of Watson’s Mill in Manotick. – Page 3
CITY HALL NEWS
JESSICA CUNHA/METROLAND
Giddy up, Greely! Sleigh rides take Greely Winter Carnival-goers around the field at the Greely Community Centre on Saturday, Jan. 26. The weekend festival featured a pancake breakfast, the annual Greely Idol competition, a magician and ice skating. For more photos see page 12. A Metcalfe woman waits for double lung transplant. It may take as long as six months for Linda Pandel to get new lungs. – Page 9
COMMUNITY COMMUNITY
Liveable Ottawa promises zoning certainty: mayor Laura Mueller
laura.mueller@metroland.com
Valentine’s Day is a time to reflect on love, life and relationships. A Kars couple celebrate 59 years together. – Page 10
EMC news - The city is asking for residents’ help tackling 12 planning issues as it looks to build a “liveable” city in the future. The city launched its massive master planning review on Jan. 29 with two meetings at city hall that outlined challenges – and ideas – to create a Liveable Ottawa. “Certainty” was the name of the game when it came to zoning, with both the mayor and planning committee chairman
Coun. Peter Hume repeatedly insisting that the review will result in a zoning bylaw that matches and implements the policies outlined in the Official Plan. “Providing certainty for the community and the development industry is a theme you’ve heard me talking about a lot in the past year,” Hume said. “Our refreshed Official Plan will be more prescriptive than ever before in terms of where the vision for height and density is in this city. … (planning manager John) Moser and his staff are com-
mitted to bringing forward the necessary zoning bylaws in 2014 that will implement these height permissions such that there is absolute certainty for all and fewer disparities between the Official Plan and the zoning bylaw.” It’s something community associations have been clamoring for. Essentially, it would mean that the rules for what can be built on parcels of land across the city and what sorts of uses those properties can feature would match the goals and larger vision for the city that’s set out in its Official Plan. Right now, there is so much discrepancy between the ideals in the Official Plan and the actual rules governing the zoning that the leeway often leads to spot rezoning of properties that community members often feel aren’t in line with the goals the city has set out for itself.
Trivia hardly trivial for rural support group Emma Jackson
emma.jackson@metroland.com
EMC news - Shiverfest continues to spread the warmth of generosity, raising $2,894 and counting for a local charity. Manotick’s annual winter carnival ran for three days over the Jan. 26 weekend, raising money all the while for Rural Ottawa South Support Services. The organization is based in Dickinson Square and delivers meals on wheels and other community services for seniors and adults with physical disabilities in the RideauOsgoode area. Profits from the week-
end’s popular chili cookoff, trivia afternoon, raffles and silent auctions all went toward the total, as well as donations collected at free events throughout the weekend. Saturday’s chili cook-off raised $503, and the silent auction and raffle raised $915. But it was the trivia contest at the Mill Tavern on Sunday afternoon that took fundraising over the top, with $1,165 profit from ticket sales alone. Another $50 was raised in donations. “The trivia was the main source of revenue,” said organizer Jan Hynes. See SHIVERFEST, page 5
See PROMISE, page 7
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