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Authorized by the Official Agent for the David McGuinty Campaign
PTEMBER 10 - 13, 2015
In Winkler, Steinbach and Port aux Basques the sale will run on Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Monday, September 10, 11, 12 & 14, 2015
David McGuinty (613) 523-2525 davidmcguinty2015.ca
news
BIG BONUS DAY THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 10
September 10, 2015 l 76 pages
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In Winkler, Steinbach and Port aux Basques the sale will run on Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Monday, September 10, 11, 12 & 14, 2015
OttawaCommunityNews.com
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ottawa COMMUNITY
news .COM
Ottawa South | Ottawa–Sud
(613) 523-2525 davidmcguinty2015.ca
2014 550 XT EPS
2014 TRV 550 XT EPS
$7,899*
$8,599*
MSRP: $10,399
MSRP: $11,999
R0013448064/0910
David McGuinty
0820.R0013408769
Authorized by the Official Agent for the David McGuinty Campaign
CT E L -E RE
(SAVINGS UP TO $2,600) (SAVINGS UP TO $2,500)
*Plus freight, PDI & set up
613.821.4263 • 2665 8th line Rd, METCALFE www.allanjohnston.com
Ottawa South News OttawaCommunityNews.com
September 10, 2015 l 76 pages
Bridge tour shows safety still an issue Erin McCracken
erin.mccracken@metroland.com
While the Airport Parkway bridge serves as a muchneeded pedestrian and cycling link, Kathleen Defalco said she would think twice before walking alone on the pathways in the area at night and even in the early morning due to their isolation. “The truth is I would not take this (path) at night. I would not come here alone,” said the South Keys resident, who joined about two dozen residents, most of them from the Hunt Club and South Keys communities, for a second bridge safety audit on Sept. 2. “I wouldn’t feel safe here,” said Defalco. See PEDESTRIANS, page 3
NADIAN TIRE FLYER LOOK INSIDE FOR YOUR CA
Erin McCracken/Metroland
First day smiles Barrhaven, Merivale, Perth, Kanata, Bells Corners, Coventry, Blair and Orleans Carling, Bank/Heron, Leitrim,
0903
Grade 1 teacher Jessica Gluss and her student, Teagan Corneil, 6, are all smiles on the first day of school at Steve MacLean Public School in Riverside South on Sept. 8. The day was extra special for both Gluss and Corneil. This is Gluss’s first year as a full-time teacher and for Corneil, this year marks the first time she and her Grade 1 schoolmates can enjoy playing in the school’s ‘big kid’ yard.
fresher than fresh!
SPECIALS IN EFFECT SEPTEMBER 9 – 15, 2015
1
$ 79
Sweet Red Peppers Product of Canada
/lb
Seedless Blue Grapes Product of Canada
2
$ 99
/1.5L
1
$ 99
McIntosh Apples
Nectarines
79¢
$ 49
/lb
Product of South Africa
6
Fresh Pork Back Ribs
/lb
15.41/kg
1
/lb
/100g
2
/100g
Fresh Atlantic Salmon Product of Canada
Robin Hood Flour Assorted Varieties
CHURCHILL
2446 Bank & Hunt Club 613.521.9653
417
MAITLA N D
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CARLING WOODROOFE
CONROY
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4
$ 49
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N
1855 Carling @ Maitland 613.722.6106
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Green or Red Leaf Lettuce
Roger Lalonde/Submitted
River Coun. Riley Brockington, left, Mayor Jim Watson and Capital Coun. David Chernushenko officially open the Brookfield multi-use pathway on Sept. 4.
79¢
/ea
/lb
Product of USA
9.90/kg
$ 29
San Daniele Regular Mortadella
2
Product of Canada
$ 99
Top Sirloin Steak
1
/lb
/ea
Product of Canada
NEW CROP
Clementines
99¢
Coriander
Product of Canada
3
$ 99 /lb
8.80/kg
4
$ 99
/2.5kg
Fresh Snapper Fillets
7
$ 99
/lb
17.61/kg
Product of B.C
Astro Kik Drinkable Yogurt
Brookfield path re-opens after year-long overhaul
99¢
/200ml
Assorted Varieties
SPECIALS IN EFFECT SEPTEMBER 9 - 15 2015. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRODUCTS NOT EXACTLY AS SHOWN. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. STORE HOURS: MONDAY TO FRIDAY: 8AM–9PM ; SAT: 8AM–7PM ; SUN: 8AM–6PM
For weekly specials, recipes, nutrition, preparation tips and more, visit PRODUCEDEPOT.CA facebook.com/producedepot R0692738880-0910
Erin McCracken
erin.mccracken@metroland.com
The Brookfield multi-use pathway is now officially open. The replacement of the city’s only at-grade crossing of the Trillium Line O-Train bridge was a year in the making. The official opening was attended by River Coun. Riley Brockington, Mayor Jim Watson and Capital Coun. David Chernushenko on Sept. 4. The project coincided with the city’s $59-million Trillium Line expansion project “to improve passenger service and system capacity on the eight-kilometre light-rail route between Greenboro and Bayview stations,” the city said in a statement. “The new Brookfield crossing is
a valuable asset to the Riverside Park community as it provides a connection with our neighbouring Heron Park community to the east, as well as to the pathway network that runs along the transitway,” Brockington said in an email. “The new grade-separated path provides greater safety over the previous level rail crossing.” The new dedicated grade-separated pathway, which now allows pedestrians and cyclists to cross under the Trillium Line O-Train bridge at Sawmill Creek, was overhauled to the tune of $2.3 million to connect people living or working in Riverside Park, Confederation Heights and Heron Park. The connection features a wooden deck-elevated crossing and asphalt path, and will be cleared in the winter, according to the city.
Look inside for the
Residents walk over the Airport Parkway bridge with Gloucester-Southgate Coun. Diane Deans and River Coun. Riley Brockington during a Sept. 2 safety audit of the pathways in the area. Men and women both say they would think twice before walking in the secluded and dark area at night.
FLYER
In Your Community Newspaper* 03/03/15 17:45:20 /
Z6
03/03/15 17:45:20 /
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: Z6
10/03/15 13:28:05 /
BASE Z6 P01 VALID FROM THURS
DAY, MARCH 26
TO WEDNE SDAY,
APRIL 1, 2015
I DU JEUDI 26
MARS AU
, MARCH 26 AY TO SUNDAY Y - THURSD 4 DAYS ONL
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is also an isolated area where an attack would likely go unnoticed depending on the time of day. “It’s visibility – the fact that you’re hemmed in, no one would hear you. There’s no place to go,” said Sankey. Ann Volmer of Uplands and Hanna Ahmed of Riverside South work at the South Keys Shopping Centre and regularly walk the path to visit friends in Hunt Club. They make a point of not walking the path alone or be-
ing in the area at night because it’s dark and secluded. Two homeless men have been camped out in the bushes in the area for months, and while they haven’t been a bother, to hear rustling in the trees is unnerving, said Volmer. “We always come with a buddy,” she said. Sankey said a quality surveillance camera should be installed in the area and linked to OC Transpo’s existing camera network.
MID-SUMMER
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“At least people would know that it’s being recorded,” he said. OC Transpo Staff Supt. Gord Robinson confirmed the transit company’s cameras, including one mounted over the door of the tunnel, are monitored. “The camera helps because it’s right in plain sight,” the special constable said. But, according to staff, the city’s cameras are not actively monitored and are used for evidence by police after the fact. “So having cameras here, there’s a balance of a false sense of security that people believe they’re being watched Accessories do
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and they’re not,” said Stuart Benson, a city security adviser who drafted a 16-page report based on feedback from the first safety audit in early February. Gloucester-Southgate Coun. Diane Deans, who organized the walkabout with River Coun. Riley Brockington, said some of suggestions in the report are feasible and can be done quickly, such as trimming bushes, while others, such as cameras, are more pricey. Residents have until Sept. 16 to provide feedback. Email riley.brockington@ottawa.ca or diane.deans@ottawa.ca. es last / Quantité While quantiti
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ticipants spent much of their time brainstorming possible solutions on how to address blind spots at the east end of the path where it connects to the South Keys transit station pedestrian tunnel. “That’s by far the worst,” said John Sankey, president of the Hunt Club Community Association. “Not only no sightlines, but no room to move.” It’s not only impossible to see cyclists coming around the corners, he added, but it
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“A couple of times I’ve come out (of the South Keys transit station tunnel) where there’s a guy just hanging around here. I just think, ‘Is it a drug deal about to happen?’ And the fact that a body was found ...,” she said. The body of Carleton University student Tausif Chowdhury was found badly beaten on the nearby Sawmill Creek trail last November, in what media reports say was a drug deal that went bad. During the walkabout, par-
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3
Upper Hunt Club house fire displaces family Damages pegged at $200,000
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A family of five, including three adults and two young children, escaped from their burning Upper Hunt Club Home after fire broke out in the basement in the middle of the night on Sept. 2.
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A family of five, including three adults and two young children, safely escaped from their burning Upper Hunt Club home in the middle of the night. Between 25 and 30 firefighters from multiple stations were called in on Sept. 2 just before 3 a.m. after smoke was spotted coming from the eaves of a twostorey home at 3009 Courtyard Cres., one block south of Hunt Club Road and east of Bank Street. “It was good news that all the people were out upon our arrival,” said Ottawa fire department spokesman Capt. Bob Rainboth. “It helps us know that people are safe and we can go to work fighting the fire without having the worry of dealing with rescue, because that’s our primary function – life safety.” No one was injured in the
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“It helps us know that people are safe and we can go to work fighting the fire ...” Capt. Bob Rainboth, fire department spokesman
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time is undetermined,” Rainboth said the fire began in the basement of the home. Damages to the house and its contents were estimated at $200,000. Rainboth did not know how long the fire had been burning by the time firefighters began their initial attack. They remained at the scene for about three hours, until 5:30 a.m. The Salvation Army and the Canadian Red Cross were called in to provide assistance to the family.
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Turner Syndrome supporters to lace up for new milestone Erin McCracken erin.mccracken@metroland.com
A new charity walkathon in the works represents some very big steps being taken – in more ways than one. “This is our first attempt at doing a largescale walkathon,” said Wendy Gee, executive director of the Turner Syndrome Society of Canada. The society’s west Ottawa-based national office, which also serves as its Ottawa chapter, is spearheading the Buds and Butterflies Walk for Turner Syndrome in the South Keys-Greenboro community on Sept. 12. The goal is to not only to generate muchneeded funds and community awareness about the chromosomal disorder which only affects females, but also develop the walk into an annual autumn event and expand it across the country. The small non-profit charitable organization has traditionally relied on grants and donations from individuals to better connect and provide support to females living with the syndrome. “So I’m hoping because we have five chapters and five groups across Canada that next year we’ll see (the event) increased to a couple more,” said Gee, who is relatively new in the director’s role, having come on board last November. “Everyone’s doing walks now to bring awareness to their causes and ... it really just brings everyone together,” she said. “I just want to get people out walking and bringing their families there.” The event, which takes place behind the Greenboro Community Centre, will feature several free activities, including a bouncy castle, music, chair massages, children’s crafts and laughter yoga. “If we get about 200 people out, I’d be really
happy,” Gee said, adding that participants are encouraged to bring their families and friends, as well as their canine companions. People can get involved by forming teams and collecting pledges, which will go in support of the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario. “Almost all of our children that are involved in the Ottawa chapter go to the pediatric endocrine clinic there,” Gee said. It sees about 70 patients with Turner Syndrome, which involves a wide range of symptoms and health problems, including heart conditions, hearing and eye issues, diabetes and infertility. One in every 2,000 to 2,500 females are born with the syndrome, which is caused when one of two X sex chromosomes is partially or fully deleted. Between 7,000 and 8,000 people in Canada live with the syndrome. The society has come a long way since it was formed 34 years ago as a support group. Today, it offers children and women support through various programs and services. “I love the women. They are the most caring individuals I think I’ve ever met,” said Gee. “They support one another. They all love and care for each other and their families.” GIRLS IN ACTION
Young girls and teens with Turner Syndrome will soon find even more support throughout the school year. A new Girls in Action pilot project is being made possible by an almost $10,000 grant from the Ottawa Community Foundation and an almost $20,000 grant from Telus. The goal is to expand the 10-month project, which the society is spearheading in partnership with CHEO, to chapters across Canada. “We’ll support them throughout the school year with different initiatives and activities and
counselling,” said Gee. “It’s something for these girls, especially the young girls, to connect to,” she said of the project through which participants will meet with their peers once a month. “It’s going to be expressive art. There’s going to be different recreational activities that they can do,” she said. “And then we’re going to be building a community for these young girls by offering them this opportunity to develop this national youth
chapter, (as well as) online forums, and getting them involved in building that.” The walkathon takes place Sept. 12, from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the field behind the Greenboro Community Centre, located at 363 Lorry Greenburg Dr. Volunteers, including high school students, are still needed the day of the walk. To register for the event or to help out, email info@turnersysndrome.ca, call 613-321-2267, or visit turnersyndrome.ca.
NOTICE OF STUDY COMPLETION LEMIEUX ISLAND SHORELINE RESTORATION MUNICIPAL CLASS ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT The City of Ottawa is planning for the restoration of the northwest shoreline on Lemieux Island. Lemieux Island is located in the Ottawa River between Ottawa and Gatineau. It can be accessed through the Rivers Street Bridge from Ottawa. Lemieux Island’s main use is to accommodate one of the City of Ottawa’s Water Purification Plants. The northwest shoreline of the Lemieux Island, adjacent to the lower level parking area, has eroded significantly. The northwest corner of the Island is composed of mostly weak and fragmented limestone, which is causing progressive recession of the shoreline and weakening of several parking lot fence posts which are currently either leaning or have fallen over completely. It is projected that if erosion is allowed to continue, the adjacent green space and parking lot will be impacted. Thus, the City is planning for the restoration of the shoreline to halt and prevent further erosion. This study determined the appropriate strategy for the restoration of the northwest shoreline of Lemieux Island. The study followed an approved planning process under the ‘Municipal Class Environmental Assessment’ document (2007 and 2011, as amended) as a Schedule ‘B’ Project. At this time, the City of Ottawa has decided to carry forward two alternatives for the shoreline protection, Stacked/Terrace Stone Revetment and Riprap Revetment and for the boat launch ramp, Pre-Fabricated Concrete Slab and Concrete Revetment Mats, to allow for flexibility in the detail design. The Project File and Environmental Summary Report are being placed on public record for viewing at the following location: City of Ottawa 100 Constellation Crescent Monday - Friday: 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Tel: 613-580-2400 Please provide written comments to the City of Ottawa within 30 calendar days from the date of this notice. If concerns regarding this project cannot be resolved in discussion with the municipality, a person may request that the Minister of the Environment and Climate Change make an order for the project to comply with Part II of the Environmental Assessment Act (referred to as Part II Order), which addresses individual environmental assessments. Requests must be made to the Minister at the address below by October 9, 2015. A copy of the request must be copied to the City of Ottawa Project Manager, Gordon Nix. Subject to comments received as a result if this Notice and the receipt of necessary approval and funding, the City of Ottawa intends to proceed with detail design and construction of this project in 2015/2016. Filter Gallery Lemieux Island Water Purification Plant 1 River Street, Ottawa, ON K1Y 2C4 For further information on this project please contact the following individuals:
ERIN MCCRACKEN/METROLAND
Wendy Gee, South Keys resident and executive director of the Turner Syndrome Society of Canada, based in west Ottawa, has her sneakers at the ready ahead of the society’s firstever Buds and Butterflies Turner Syndrome Walk for Awareness in South Keys-Greenboro on Sept. 12.
Gordon Nix, Project Manager City of Ottawa 100 Constellation Crescent, 6th Floor West Ottawa, ON K2G 6JB Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 43036 Fax: 613-762-0444 E-mail: Gordon.Nix@ottawa.ca This notice issued September 10th and 17th, 2015
McIntosh Perry Consulting Engineers Ltd. Lisa Marshall, P.Eng. Environmental Coordinator/Engineer 115 Walgreen Road, R.R.3 Carp, ON K0A 1L0 Tel: 613-836-2184, ext. 2224 Fax: 613-836-3742 E-mail: l.marshall@mcintoshperry.com Ad # Ad # 2015-502-S_10 R0013452133-0910
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
5
IN THE MATTER OF THE ONTARIO HERITAGE ACT Notice of Intention to Designate The City of Ottawa on September 9, 2015 established its intention to designate the Champlain Oil Company Service Station, 70 Richmond Road under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act for its cultural heritage value. Description of Property Constructed in 1934, the former Champlain Oil Company Service Station, 70 Richmond Road, is a small, irregularly shaped, stucco-clad building. It is located on the southwest corner of Richmond Road and Island Park Drive at the edge of Westboro, in the city of Ottawa. Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest The Champlain Oil Company Service Station has cultural heritage value as one of Ottawa’s few remaining pre-Second World War service stations built when car ownership was becoming more popular. Its location on Richmond Road when it was the main highway to the west also contributes to its historical and contextual value. The building is an interesting example of a 1930s service station, many of which were designed to evoke other building forms such as castles or houses. The former service centre is domestic in scale, designed to resemble an English cottage. Features of the building that illustrate this include the rounded-arch doorway and round-headed windows, the rectangular windows, each with an overhanging shed roof with brackets, the twin chimneys and the steeply pitched gable roof. The Champlain Oil Company Service Station is historically valuable for its association with the growth of private automobile ownership in Ottawa. In the early years of the car, gasoline was usually purchased by the can from the local blacksmith or from pumps in front of a general store. By the late 1920s, the rapid increase in private ownership of automobiles prompted the construction of service stations devoted solely to selling gasoline and servicing automobiles. Contextual value is found in the building’s location on Richmond Road, which played an integral role in the development of the small, rural villages west of Bytown, and later Ottawa as the main highway into the city. Objections Any person wishing to object to this designation may do so by letter, outlining the reasons for the objection and any other relevant information. This letter must be received by the Clerk of the City of Ottawa either by registered mail or personally delivered within 30 days of the publication of this notice. When a notice of objection has been received, the Council of the City of Ottawa will refer the matter to the Conservation Review Board for a hearing and a report. For more information please contact: Lesley Collins, MCIP RPP Heritage Planner City of Ottawa Planning & Growth Management Department 110, avenue Laurier Ave West, 4th Floor Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 21586 E-mail: lesley.collins@ottawa.ca 6
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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OTTAWA PARAMEDIC ASSOCIATION OF OTTAWA/TWITTER
Ottawa firefighters and paramedics work to extricate the occupants of a vehicle involved in a head-on crash on Albion Road on Sept. 6 that claimed the life of an elderly woman and seriously injured an elderly man and another elderly woman. Ottawa police continue to investigate.
Head-on Albion Road crash claims life of elderly woman Two other elderly people, a man and a woman, sent to hospital Erin McCracken erin.mccracken@metroland.com
A head-on collision involving two vehicles claimed the life of an elderly woman and seriously injured two other elderly people on Albion Road on Sept. 6. Ottawa police collision investigators continue to piece together what led to the crash at 5151 Albion Rd., between Rideau and Mitch Owens roads on Sunday, Sept. 6, around 2 p.m. An elderly female in one vehicle suffered multi-system trauma and was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics, “but that’s after resuscitative measures were started,” said J.P. Trottier, Ottawa paramedic spokesman. The elderly woman she had been travelling with also suffered multi-system trauma and was transported by ambulance to the trauma centre
at the Civic campus of the Ottawa Hospital, where she was admitted in serious but stable condition, according to paramedics. An Ornge Air helicopter ambulance was originally called in for the elderly female who died at the scene. The helicopter was then used to airlift an elderly male, who had been in the second vehicle, to the Civic. He was admitted in serious and unstable condition. “His vital signs were not stable so we feared that there was internal bleeding going on,” said Trottier. “His injuries were traumatic in nature.” Both vehicles ended up in the ditch following the crash, and fire crews needed to extricate those occupants who had become trapped. “This was a very high-speed crash so there was some extrication required there,” Trottier said.
Despite repairs, Herongate pathway still ‘dangerous:’ resident erin.mccracken@metroland.com
observations: In some sections, the new paving is crumbling away at the edges, uneven sections of the original path were never repaved, and a sealant applied on parts of the path that were not repaved has done little to seal the cracks and crevices. “This is not repairing it. It’s a question of quality. What they did is patch a few holes,” said Finnamore, who took her concerns to Alta Vista Coun. Jean Cloutier. “Then, all of a sudden, like about two days later, they come out and they do more of this.” The repairs are so substandard, Finnamore said the walkway, which is well-travelled by children, cyclists and mothers pushing strollers and elderly residents, is still “dangerous.” See THAT’S, page 11
or call 3-1-1.
More than 300 vehicles presented
DEVELOPMENT APPLICATIONS/AMENDMENTS UNDER THE PLANNING ACT NOTICE OF PLANNING COMMITTEE MEETING Tuesday, September 22, 2015 – 9:30 a.m.
Primary list and directions at www.rideauauctions.com List at www.icangroup.ca
The items listed below, in addition to any other items previously scheduled, will be considered at this meeting which will be held in the Champlain Room, City Hall, 110 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa.
Heavy trucks, (300) light vehicles, trailers; etc.
To see any change to this meeting agenda, please go to Ottawa.ca. Zoning – 605, 609, 613 and 617 Longfields Drive 613-580-2424, ext. 16482 – maryellen.wood@ottawa.ca Zoning – 2 Fourth Avenue, 364, 368 and 370 Queen Elizabeth Driveway and 1 Fifth Avenue 613-580-2424, ext. 25477 – allison.hamlin@ottawa.ca Wildlife Construction Protocol update 613-580-2424, ext. 14873 – amy.macpherson@ottawa.ca Community Design Plan, Master Servicing Study, Stormwater Management Low Impact Development Pilot Project Scoping and Official Plan Amendment for the former Canadian Forces Base Rockcliffe 613-580-2424, ext. 25192– selma.hassan@ottawa.ca
ERIN MCCRACKEN/METROLAND
Mavis Finnamore, a longtime Herongate resident, says a well-used privately owned pathway in her neighbourhood was shoddily repaired and continues to pose a safety risk to residents.
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A longtime Herongate resident is speaking out about a well-used pathway in Sandalwood Park that she says was shoddily repaired. Mavis Finnamore, who lives off Sandalwood Drive in the rental community, said her repeated requests to have the pathway repaved were only addressed earlier this summer after she took her concerns to the Landlord and Tenant Board of Ottawa in January. The results were disappointing. “Is this considered quality pavement? Is this considered safe pavement?” she said. “If you’re going to do a job, go a good job. “I’m trying to do this to fix
up my neighbourhood , but they don’t seem to want to fix up the neighbourhood,” said Finnamore. Her 93-year-old mother fell and broke her elbow and ribs last year while walking up a small incline in order to skirt the uneven pathway she was too afraid to use. She still refuses to use the path and takes the long way around to avoid using it. “I would like some standards, because this is ridiculous,” she said. Even after the tribunal ordered Timbercreek Communities, a major landlord in the neighbourhood, to repair the path, which it did in June and July, the walkway continues to pose a safety risk to residents, Finnamore said. Among her complaints and
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Erin McCracken
Registration of participants and vehicle inspection will be possible on September 16 between 9 am and 4pm, September 17 between 9am and 4pm and on September 18 between 9 am and 4 pm. A $500 deposit will be required immediately after the purchase of each vehicle. Vehicle pickup and complete payment including fees, GST and PST (if applicable) should be made before September 25. Will be accepted: cash, certified cheque, Visa, MasterCard, and Interac for the $500.00 deposit and only cash, certified cheque and Interac for balance of vehicle. NO CHILDREN ALLOWED Rideau Auctions Inc. Corner of Hwys 43 & 31 Winchester, ON (613) 774-7000
INTERNATIONAL PLOWING MATCH AND RURAL EXPO At the 2015 International Plowing Match and Rural Expo you can explore agriculture, food and rural living and antique and historical displays. Tented City offers over 500 vendors and exhibitors. Learn about new technologies in Farming for the Future Tent with lectures on topics such as AgriTourism, new crops and innovations, and the environment. The Local Foods Tent also has many
Sept. 22 - 26, 2015 Finch, Ontario
exciting features. Focus On Youth is highlighting the 100th Anniversary of 4-H in Ontario.The Hydro One Education area has activities and features geared for children from primary through secondary school. Relax and take in the fabulous array of local talent and entertainment – on various stages throughout the Match, including the Auctioneers Challenge and Dancing Tractors.
Call 1.800.661.7569 for more info! There truly is something for the whole family at the Plowing Match. www.plowingmatch.org Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
7
OPINION
Connected to your community
Cyclists must be held accountable
T
he province is cracking down on distracted driving by upping fines and grabbing more demerit points from drivers caught using their cell phones on the road. And the province is also bringing in new rules that will require drivers to leave a one-metre distance where possible when passing cyclists, and the ‘dooring’ of cyclists will carry an increased set fine of $365 and three demerit points upon conviction. Cracking down on distracted driving is fine. We have no arguments against getting tougher against those who insist on chatting on a phone or texting while behind the steering wheel of a vehicle. And yes, making it safer for cyclists by getting tougher on ‘dooring’, which is when a driver opens their vehicle door in a manner that makes it dangerous for a passing cyclist, is needed for greater cycling safety. But we do argue that more needs to be done to enforce the rules against rule breaking cyclists when it comes to the ever-increasing interaction between bikes and cars on our roadways. Here in Ottawa, as the city does more to make cycling an easier choice as a mode of transportation, cyclists need to take on more responsibility to make
the interaction between themselves and vehicle drivers safer as well. It is not just a one-way street, although at times, when observing the behaviour of some cyclists on our roads, it appears to be exactly that. Far too often some cyclists follow the rules of the road when it is to their advantage, but go wherever, and do as they want, when it is easier for them. Red lights are often blown through. Weaving from one side of a road to another depending on the traffic flow can be seen every day if you are looking for it. Cycling two or three abreast rather than in single file is not as uncommon as you’d think. According to the province, if current collision trends continue, fatalities from distracted driving may exceed those from drinking and driving by 2016 and research indicates that a driver who uses a cell phone is four times more likely to be in a crash. Yes, distracted driving is a serious problem, but where are the big fines for distracted cycling when a cyclist is blissfully pedaling away while listening to their iPhone on headphones? Safety on our roadways is more than just a oneway street. Drivers, cyclists and pedestrians all have responsibilities to make all of us safe.
It’s time to just play ball
B
aseball in Ottawa has had its ups and downs – the uppest being when the Ottawa Lynx, playing before the largest crowds in the league, won the International League championship in 1995; the downest being when the Ottawa Rapidz folded and the stadium on Coventry Road was empty for the 2009 season. It is difficult to predict how potential fans will behave in this city. People have gone broke trying. Back in the ’90s, Lynx games were the place to be. Everybody you knew was there. Then, all of a sudden, it all vanished. There are many explanations having to do with major league affiliation, the parking, the location, miserable spring weather, various ownership decisions. But it boils down to the people
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CHARLES GORDON Funny Town of the city somehow deciding that there was no big reason to go the games. The Rapidz, playing at a lower but still entertaining level, found that out. So did the Fat Cats, who lasted a little longer. It was fun to go to those games, but not enough people did. Now we are nearing the end of the first season of the Ottawa Champions. Attendance, we are told, is below league average, although there have been successful spurts, such as a three-game series
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against the Winnipeg Goldeyes that drew 10,000 people. In terms of the product on the field, as teams are sometimes called by accountants, there is no reason why the Champions should not be a huge success next year. It’s good ball they play – making all the routine plays smoothly and making the difficult ones too. In one game I saw the right fielder doubling the runner off first after catching a line drive, the catcher gunning a runner down at second trying to steal. They beat out a beautiful bunt single down the first base line. And the opposing right fielder made a magnificent throw to gun down an Ottawa at home plate. The pitching on both sides was strong, the umpiring was professional. And good things were happening off the field too. The Champions have a mascot, Champ, a red bear who looks a bit like the Montreal
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Expos Youppi, except that his (or her — who knows about mascots?) eyes don’t roll. He (or she) was great with the little kids in the stands. The public address system was too loud (as is always the case everywhere) but nicely bilingual. The food was all right, the parking fine. A nice touch was the late-inning garbage pickup: environmentally conscious fans walked considerable distances in the stadium to present their debris to the guy with a big garbage bag. The 50-50 draw was popular. Later in the season were such events as the ice bucket challenge, kids getting to run the bases and get autographed balls from the players. I could do without the playing of Sweet Caroline in the eighth inning, an imitation of something done at Fenway Park. And I think YMCA has had its day. Judging by the scarcity of EDITORIAL MANAGING EDITOR: 4HERESA &RITZ
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people dancing to it, the fans are now unresponsive to it too. Something originally Ottawa should be found. Can the Champions borrow Lucky Ron from the RedBlacks? Quibbles aside, the Champions are doing a lot of things right.
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OPINION
Connected to your community
It is time to make your mark at the ballot box
A
h, election time. Nothing is sacred during a campaign. Where people meet, candidates will come. Tim Horton’s, church, Tuesday night Bingo: If you’re having an event sometime in the next six weeks, you may want to pick up the phone and call your local candidates. I don’t mean to sound cynical - this is democracy in action. Every four years, voters have an opportunity to meet their democratic representatives, ask direct questions, and ultimately make their mark on the ballot. Democracy is a beautiful thing. Sadly, it’s been said this may be the last federal election campaign where we see candidates knocking on doors and visiting local fairs. Indeed, there are candidates from all parties who are laying low this campaign; some would argue they’re hiding behind social media channels. But others would counter that social media and the Internet has given candidates three very key opportunities – the chance to communicate with people directly, an opportunity to reach disparate groups of people without the time inefficiency of banging on doors, and the ability to target potential supporters with a message tailored to them, without the risk of having to answer tough questions or have the door slammed in their face. Social media is also a gift for voters – you cannot claim to be uninformed in this election. Through social media channels, you have the chance to ask questions of candidates directly, follow their campaigns and share information with others. You can also check your incumbent’s record in Parliament. A great website is openparliament.ca, which allows you to search by name and subject and read Hansard records of MPs in the House and committees word-for-word. You can also determine your incumbent representative’s vote record. A quick search on Google is all you need to get biographical information and often event information for your local can-
BRYNNA LESLIE Capital Muse didates. For these very reasons, it was bandied about in previous elections that social media would encourage people to participate and vote. Having these research tools at our disposal, however, has not translated into greater voter participation. The ugly side of the Internet is that people are exposed to all information – good and bad – sometimes leaving them to feel overwhelmed or cynical about the democratic process.
Until the end of the 19th Century, Canada boasted relatively high voter participation rates ... In 2008, we had the worst ever turnout for a general election, with just over half of voters (58.8 per cent) turning up at the polls. BRYNNA LESLIE
Until the end of the 19th Century, Canada boasted relatively high voter participation rates. Median voter turnout since 1867 is 70 per cent. It dropped to 69 per cent in the 2000 general election, and has been hovering around 60 per cent for the last 15 years. In 2008, we had the worst ever turnout for a general election, with just over half of voters (58.8 per cent) turning up at
the polls. Eighteenth century French philosopher Joseph de Maistre once said, “Every nation gets the government it deserves.” Perhaps that’s true. There are many armchair critics – now critiquing from their smartphones and computer desks – who say the current government doesn’t represent their Canadian values. Many of these people, however, are staying home on election day, convinced their vote doesn’t make a difference in the outcome. The Conservatives, on the other hand, have been excellent at getting out their vote – and it’s Conservative supporters who have determined the past three election results. They have been well rewarded for their participation, with two minority governments and a majority government.Maybe our first-past-the-post system isn’t working for everyone, but it’s the only one we’ve got. The recent NDP victory in Alberta – a province that’s been Conservative seemingly forever – demonstrated that single votes can trigger a paradigm shift. In the 2011 election, a number of ridings across the country were won by “a handful of votes,” in some cases fewer than two people per poll determined the outcome, so it’s possible your single vote can swing a riding one way or another. “Imagine having an election and no one showed up,” said an Atlantic Canadian newspaper columnist to me in an interview the other day. It’s a very real fear, not just for the candidates, but for democracy, itself. The 42nd general election is on October 19th. Mark your calendars and make your mark.
NOTICE OF PASSING OF A ZONING BY LAW AND ADOPTION OF AN OFFICIAL PLAN AMENDMENT BY THE CITY OF OTTAWA The Council of the City of Ottawa passed a zoning by-law amendment identified as By-law Number 2015-264 on August 26, 2015 under Section 34 of The Planning Act. Council also adopted Amendment No. 155 to the Official Plan for the City of Ottawa on August 26, 2015. The zoning by-law amendment and official plan amendment result from a city-initiated Community Design Plan study for Stittsville Main Street from Neil Avenue to Bell Street. Details on the secondary plan and zoning by-law amendment can be found on the study website at www.ottawa.ca/stittsvillecdp. PURPOSE OF THE ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT The proposed zoning will implement the Stittsville Main Street Secondary Plan. The proposed zoning includes a building height limit of 15 metres and four stories, height transitions to abutting residential zones and minor modifications to existing zoning performance standards. PURPOSE OF THE OFFICIAL PLAN AMENDMENT The purpose of Amendment No. 155 is to implement key components of the Stittsville Main Street Community Design Plan (CDP) with changes to Schedule B – Urban Land Use, and the addition of the Stittsville Main Street Secondary Plan to Volume 2A of the Official Plan. The changes to the Urban Land Use Schedule and the new Stittsville Main Street Secondary Plan are focused on the land abutting Stittsville Main Street from Neil Avenue to Bell Street. The plan refines the extent of the Traditional Main Street designation identified in the City’s Official Plan. The Stittsville Main Street Secondary Plan provides a broad and integrated twenty-year vision for the Mainstreet corridor in order to guide both private development and the undertaking of public works. The secondary plan is necessary to implement key components of the CDP including a four-storey height limit for the corridor. For further information on the above, please contact: Mark Young, Planner Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 41396 E-mail: Mark.Young@ottawa.ca. Please note that any person or public body who, before the zoning by-law or the official plan amendment were enacted, made oral submissions, at a public meeting or written submissions to City Council, may appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board with respect to either the zoning by-law amendment or the official plan amendment, by filing with the Clerk of the City of Ottawa, a notice of appeal setting out their objection to the zoning by-law or the official plan amendment and the reasons in support of the objection. Each appeal must be accompanied by the Ontario Municipal Board’s prescribed fee of $125.00, which may be made in the form of a cheque payable to the Minister of Finance. A notice of appeal can be mailed to the City Clerk at 110 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 1J1, or by delivering the notice in person, to Ottawa City Hall, at the Information Desk in the Rotunda on the 1st floor, 110 Laurier Avenue West. A notice of appeal must be received no later than 4:30 p.m. on September 30, 2015. Only individuals, corporations and public bodies may appeal a zoning by-law or an official plan amendment to the Ontario Municipal Board. A notice of appeal may not be filed by an unincorporated association or group. However, a notice of appeal may be filed in the name of an individual who is a member of the association or the group on its behalf. No person or public body shall be added as a party to the hearing of the appeal unless, before the zoning by-law was passed or the official plan amendment was adopted, the person or public body made oral submissions at a public meeting or written submissions to City Council or, in the opinion of the Ontario Municipal Board, there are reasonable grounds to add the person or public body as a party. Should the zoning by-law or the official plan amendment be appealed, persons or public bodies who wish to receive notice of the Ontario Municipal Board hearing can receive such notice by submitting a written request to Mark Young, Planner with the City. Dated at the City of Ottawa on September 10, 2015. Clerk of the City of Ottawa City Hall 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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NOTICE OF PROPOSED OFFICIAL PLAN AMENDMENT RIDEAU STREET KING EDWARD TO RIDEAU RIVER , UPTOWN RIDEAU COMMUNITY DESIGN PLAN In accordance with the Planning Act and Section 5.2.3 of the Official Plan for the City of Ottawa, notice is hereby provided that an Official Plan Amendment proposal has been initiated by the Planning and Growth Management Department of the City of Ottawa. The proposed Official Plan Amendment (OPA) affects properties located in Ward 12 - Rideau Vanier (File No. D01-01-15-0012). The planning area for the OPA generally includes properties adjacent to Rideau Street between King Edward Avenue and the Rideau River. The purpose of the proposed OPA is to provide policies that implement the land use and urban design components of the proposed new Uptown Rideau Community Design Plan (CDP) by including a new Uptown Rideau Secondary Plan (Secondary Plan) in the Official Plan. The CDP is being brought forward for approval by Planning Committee and Council at the same time as the proposed OPA. The main effects of the proposed OPA are: (1) Amend Volume 2a of the Official Plan to include the new Uptown Rideau Secondary Plan that establishes maximum development density and maximum permitted building heights in the planning area; (2) amend Schedule J – Land Use and Schedule K – Pedestrian and Bicycle Network and New Parks of the Sandy Hill Secondary Plan in Volume 2a to amend the Sandy Hill boundary to prevent overlap with the Uptown Rideau Secondary Plan planning area.
SUBMITTED
Building heights will range from 12 to 21 storeys inside the South Keys plaza property, which the city is rezoning to allow residential complexes. The new revision for the plaza is part of a community design plan for the area approved Sept. 8.
South Keys design plan to bring big change to transit hub Emma Jackson
To review additional information and materials related to the proposed amendment, please contact the undersigned planner, go to ottawa.ca/uptownrideau or to Ottawa.ca/ devapps and input the File Number in the “Search” criteria. The City of Ottawa would like to receive comments regarding the proposed amendments. Please forward comments to the undersigned planner via mail, telephone, facsimile or e-mail by Tuesday, October 8, 2015. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting (meeting date, time and location to be determined) or make written submissions to the City of Ottawa before the proposed Official Plan Amendment is adopted, the person or public body is not entitled to appeal the decision of the Council of the City of Ottawa to the Ontario Municipal Board. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting (meeting date, time and location to be determined) or make written submissions to the City of Ottawa before the proposed Official Plan Amendment is adopted, the person or public body may not be added as a party to the hearing of an appeal before the Ontario Municipal Board unless, in the opinion of the Board, there are reasonable grounds to do so.
Dated at Ottawa this 10th day of September, 2015. Matthew Ippersiel, Planner Planning and Growth Management Department City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 16391, Fax: 613-580-2459, E-mail: Matthew.Ippersiel@ottawa.ca R0013452328-0910
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
emma.jackson@metroland.com
It’s the kind of grand revisioning that progressive urban planners can usually only dream: taking a car-centric box store mall and turning it into a walkable, attractive place to shop and live, complete with urban parkettes, green space and rapid transit right next door. That’s exactly what the city has in mind for the South Keys shopping plaza near Bank Street and Hunt Club Road, which has anything but a main street feel right now. The mall, owned largely by Smart Centres box store plaza developer, is currently home to Chapters, Walmart, Loblaws, Winners, Michaels, a Cineplex movie theatre and several other major chains. But the city’s planning committee approved on Sept. 8 a set of policy and design changes that will set in motion an “incremental” change to the centre, which would see it transform into a main street-style centre with less surface parking and more landscaped elements such as a town square and urban parks. The transformation begins with adding new land uses, most notably urban residential, and increasing height limits to up to 21 storeys where the property is closest to rapid transit. That includes the existing Greenboro station, and the planned South Keys stop that will be added when the OTrain is extended to Riverside South by 2023. Other areas of the property would allow between 12 and 15 stories, to help transition from the established low-rise communities south and east of the plaza. The changes are part of a larger Bank Street community design plan for the area between South Keys and Blossom Park. The plan will focus future growth around the northern plaza, while
slightly increasing heights along the rest of Bank Street to nine storeys instead of eight to comply with Official Plan guidelines. It also puts in place a more detailed plan for developing walking and cycling facilities throughout the region. RAPID CHANGE
While the South Keys redevelopment idea was generally applauded around the committee table, there was a sense it didn’t go far enough to take advantage of what will someday become a major transit hub. Beacon Hill-Cyrville Coun. Tim Tierney felt the height limits should be increased to 21 storeys across the board in that section, instead of limiting it to 12 and 15 in some spots. “I don’t see why we didn’t just … give that opportunity, because we don’t have a light rail system in everyone’s backyard,” Tierney said. “This is where we want (intensification).” In fact, he and Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper both wanted to see heights approved above 21 storeys, similar to the city’s transit-oriented development plans for other light-rail hubs, which allow up to 30. But since the mall is on a flight path, the Ottawa International Airport Authority doesn’t allow buildings in the area to go above a certain elevation, city planner Chris Brouwer said. Brouwer also noted that a “pyramid approach” to height limits is common even for the other transit-oriented developments plans; in this case the 12-storey allowances front largely onto Bank and Hunt Club where low-rise neighbourhoods are located across the street. The 15-storey buildings in the centre provide a transition to the high-rise residential towers they expect to see closer to transit. See BOX, page 11
Box stores to transform into Main Street plaza He reminded the councillors that it’s still going to increase density by several times. “We’ll have the minimum density of 200 people and jobs per hectare in this area … the existing density in this area is about 50,” Brouwer said. “So the minimum density moving forward will be four times what we see here today.” River Coun. Riley Brockington, whose ward is just a train track away from the plaza, said he’s concerned residents will lose access to a major shopping centre – particularly cheap and accessible groceries – if the area is changed to encourage smaller, boutique-style shops. “There is a large population in that South Keys area who have no other grocery store to go to,” he said. Staff assured him the changes will simply add uses, not take away – although the design consul-
tations done earlier in the process did prefer a series of smaller buildings rather than the large box stores that dominate the space right now. Brockington was also worried about the impact on parking and traffic as density is increased – something staff didn’t seem too worried about, given their plans to focus the new mixed-use centre on increased walkability, cycling infrastructure and rapid transit. “As it becomes less convenient to travel in that area by automobile, they’ll choose to walk or cycle because it’s faster and more attractive,” Brouwer said. That won’t help shoppers coming in from Greely and other rural areas of the city to do their shopping, Kanata South Coun, Allan Hubley said. Smart Centres could not be reached for comment, but Brouwer said representatives have been “around the table” since the CDP consultations began in 2013 – and they’re on board.
‘That’s how you create ghettos:’ tenant Continued from page 7
Requests to Timbercreek Communities for comment were not returned before deadline. Finnamore, who is co-chair of the Ottawa South chapter of ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, which advocates for healthy communities, with whom she has been lobbying the city for strengthened bylaws that would mandate minimum wait times for urgent housing repairs, said the entire experience has been extremely frustrating. “I’m also the tenant rep, in addition, for this area and I can show you in the minutes how often I have asked to get this path done,” Finnamore said, adding she was repeatedly told by her landlord, “‘Yes, we’ll get to it.’” Finnamore said instead of proactively maintaining the rental property, Timbercreek is complaint-motivated, and even then, it’s still challenging to get any action. The longtime renter is worried the substandard pathway repair job is part of a larg-
er issue of neglect. During a tour of the neighbourhood, Finnamore pointed out several issues: Brick paths between sections of rowhouses are falling apart, backyard fences lean unevenly and gates are missing. A number of rowhouse units have sat vacant for some time, many of them in a state of disrepair. In addition to broken fences, shingles have come away from the roofs in some places. Their mail slots have been boarded over with wood. The vacant, deteriorating homes are an invitation to gangs and criminal activity, Finnamore said. “That’s how you create ghettos. They’re falling into disrepair and it’s affecting the people that live here,” she said, adding that more of her neighbours are considering moving away, while others feel they have no choice but to stay because they can’t afford to relocate. “All that uncertainty is driving people out,” she said. “They’re actually all afraid now to be here.”
“They are talking about incremental change over time in this area, and they are in agreement for providing various urban design components as they redevelop,” he said. “At each phase they would add sidewalks, multi-use pathways, parks, open space. They seem to be invested in the idea.” Despite the quibbles around the table, the community design plan was approved with dissent only from Hubley, who said he couldn’t see a big
enough benefit to the community to justify spending thousands of staff hours on a “feel-good exercise.” He said residents will now expect the new CDP to give them a certainty that can’t be guaranteed. “That’s our fault for not being clear about what should be expected,” he said. “We have to be more upfront with residents that this is a feel-good exercise but don’t expect it to win at the Ontario Municipal Board.”
NOTICE OF PROPOSED OFFICIAL PLAN AND ZONING BY LAW AMENDMENTS RIVERSIDE SOUTH COMMUNITY DESIGN PLAN UPDATE In accordance with the Planning Act and Section 5.2.3 of the Official Plan for the City of Ottawa, notice is hereby provided that Official Plan Amendment and Zoning By-law Amendment proposals have been initiated by the Planning and Growth Management Department of the City of Ottawa. The proposed Official Plan Amendment (OPA) and Zoning By-law Amendment (ZBA) affect properties located in Ward 20, Osgoode and Ward 22, Gloucester-South Nepean. The planning area for the OPA and ZBA is within the Riverside South CDP limits, generally south of Leitrim Road, west of Bowesville Road, north of Rideau Road and east of the Rideau River. The purpose of the OPA is to provide policies that implement the land use and urban design components of the update to the Riverside South Community Design Plan. The CDP is being brought forward for approval by Planning Committee and Council at the same time as the proposed OPA and ZBA. The purpose of the proposed ZBA is also to implement the CDP. In 2005, Council approved the Riverside South Community Design Plan to direct the long-term development of the community, and provide guidelines for city staff for the day-to-day decision-making on land use planning in line with the community’s priorities for the future. The Plan was amended in January 2010. Much has changed in the area since this time, and the City is receiving requests from landowners to review the current land use policies and zoning to identify infrastructure needs, transportation requirements, public greenspaces, open space and allowable building heights to position the community for future growth. The main effects of the proposed OPA are to: (1) change the land use designation in Schedule B of two areas from Urban Natural Feature to General Urban Area; (2) add text in the Official Plan to permit highrise buildings within the Community Core. The main effects of the proposed ZBA are to: (1) change the zoning for areas currently zoned Environmental Protection to Development Reserve and residential zoning to reflect the concurrent OPA; (2) change the zoning of certain lands in the vicinity of the proposed park and ride currently zoned Development Reserve to a residential zone; (3) Change the zoning for certain properties within the Community Core in the vicinity of the future Rapid Transit Corridor to generally permit additional land uses; (4) amend Schedule 269 to implement a new height schedule within the Community Core in the vicinity of the Rapid Transit Corridor. Generally, the lands to which the proposed Official Plan Amendment (file No. D01-01-15-0015) applies is also subject to the proposed Zoning By-law Amendment (file No. D02-02-15-0054). To review additional information and materials related to the proposed amendments, please contact the undersigned planner, go to Ottawa.ca/riversidesouthcdp or to Ottawa.ca/devapps and input the File Number in the “Search” criteria. The City of Ottawa would like to receive comments regarding the proposed amendments. Please forward comments to the undersigned planner via mail, facsimile or e-mail by Thursday October 8, 2015. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting (meeting date, time and location to be determined) or make written submissions to the City of Ottawa before the before the proposed official plan amendment is adopted and the proposed by-law is passed, the person or public body is not entitled to appeal the decision of the Council of the City of Ottawa to the Ontario Municipal Board. If a person or public body does not make oral submissions at a public meeting (meeting date, time and location to be determined) or make written submissions to the City of Ottawa before the proposed official plan amendment is adopted and before the proposed by-law is passed, the person or public body may not be added as a party to the hearing of an appeal before the Ontario Municipal Board unless, in the opinion of the Board, there are reasonable grounds to do so. Dated at Ottawa this 10th day of September, 2015. Don Morse, Planner Planning and Growth Management Department City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 13850 Fax: 613-560-6006 E-mail:Donald.morse@ottawa.ca
Wendy Tse, Planner Planning and Growth Management Department City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 Tel. 613-580-2424, ext. 12585 Fax: 613-560-6006 E-mail:Wendy.tse@ottawa.ca Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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Continued from page 10
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Author’s supernatural train takes readers on trip of dark secrets Erin McCracken erin.mccracken@metroland.com
Growing up in a small town, the haunting sound of a late-night train whistle called to James Moran. Little did he know then that the shrill blasts would continue calling to him over the next 25 years, long after he moved
away from Cornwall and eventually settled in Ottawa. Long having dreamed of becoming a writer, Moran was 17 when he began crafting his first novel, starring a supernatural version of those evening trains. “I just wanted to write about a mysterious steam-engine train,” said the 42-year-
old author of Town & Train, his debut horror novel, which was published last November by Lethe Press, an independent publishing company in New Jersey. “The characters are faced with an offer from the conductor of this train. The conductor offers to grant them their wishes, make their dreams
IN THE MATTER OF THE ONTARIO HERITAGE ACT Notice of Intention to Designate The City of Ottawa on September 9, 2015 established its intention to designate the Lipsett House, 37 Oriole Drive under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act for its cultural heritage value. Description of Property The Lipsett House, 37 Oriole Drive, is a two-storey, flat-roofed, rectangular structure constructed in 1959 and located on the west side of Oriole Drive in Rothwell Heights. Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest The cultural heritage value of the Lipsett House lies in it being an excellent example of Modernist residential architecture of the mid-20th century in Ottawa, its historical associations with the growth of the National Capital Region and the development of Rothwell Heights during the post-war period and its associations with architect Paul Schoeler, and its contextual value for its contribution to the character of the Rothwell Heights neighbourhood. The Lipsett House has design value as an excellent example of Modernist architecture. Popular in Canada from 1940 to 1970, Modernist architecture emphasized the simplification of form and lack of decorative features or historical references. The Modern style is expressed in the Lipsett House through its modest footprint, simple rectangular plan, low profile, flat roof, attached and integrated open carport, minimal entranceway protected by a simple canopy, simplification of form and the elimination of decorative features, and large floor-to-ceiling rectangular windows, some with exterior spandrel panels. The Lipsett House has historical value for its associations with the development of Rothwell Heights, the expansion of the National Capital Region in the Post-War era and as an early example of the work of architect Paul Schoeler. Schoeler is considered to be a pioneer of Modernist architecture in Ottawa. Other examples of his work include the Public Service Alliance of Canada Building (1968), the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Transport Building (1973), and the Canadian Labour Congress Building (1973). The Lipsett House has contextual value as one of several experimental Modernist buildings in Rothwell Heights. The house was carefully designed and sited to be in harmony with its surrounding natural environment. The lot is well treed and is in keeping with the architectural and forested character of Rothwell Heights. Objections Any person wishing to object to this designation may do so by letter, outlining the reasons for the objection and any other relevant information. This letter must be received by the Clerk of the City of Ottawa either by registered mail or personally delivered within 30 days of the publication of this notice. When a notice of objection has been received, the Council of the City of Ottawa will refer the matter to the Conservation Review Board for a hearing and a report. For more information please contact: Anne Fitzpatrick, MCIP RPP Heritage Planner City of Ottawa Planning & Growth Management Department 110 Laurier Ave West, 4th Floor Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 15203 E-mail: Anne.Fitzpatrick@ottawa.ca 12
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Ad # 2015-112-S_Oriole Drive_10092015 R0013452161-0910
come true,” said Moran, who set his story in Brandon, Ont., a fictionalized version of his hometown. “But the conductor isn’t what he seems, and neither is the train. “The whole book centres around the secret of how Brandon started and what the train is and why the train is there, that the train’s been there before,” said Moran, who lives in the Urbandale neighbourhood of Alta Vista. “It’s about secrets.” The work of fiction, said Moran, evolves as the characters begin to realize that more people than usual are going missing. There are “closeted protagonists, heinous pedophiles, the creeping supernatural, an array of interesting characters, from teens to retired firefighters, and a disturbing story set in 1990 before the Internet and cellphones,” Moran wrote on his blog. “I really wanted to learn about them,” he said of his central characters, who also include fictionalized versions of himself and his childhood best friend. His motivation also came from wanting to craft a story layered with such emotional impact that it hooks a reader into turning to the next page, something he enjoys when he picks up a book. “I want to reach the reader the way that I have been reached by things that I’ve read,” Moran said. “If I can make the reader cry or cheer or lose themselves or escape, that’s what I want to do – relate the human condition. “It’s a sci-fi story where the conditions for life keep changing, but what I’ve learned is it has to connect with the reader. There has to be a human interest to a story.” The pull to write a horror story with supernatural elements can be credited to the books he read as a youth. “I was inspired when I was younger by reading, especially Ray Bradbury, Stephen King, also Dean Koontz, and later on Clive Barker,” said Moran. “I even mention Stephen King in my (book’s) acknowledgment as a source of inspiration.” Over the course of 25 years, he wrote and rewrote his manuscript, and, as he gained life experience and matured as a person and a writer, he grew right along with his charac-
ERIN MCCRACKEN/METROLAND
James Moran holds a copy of his debut horror novel, ‘Town & Train.’ Moran, a freelance writer and poet who lives in the Urbandale neighbourhood of Alta Vista, is set to complete his second full-length manuscript in January 2016. ters. As a result, Town & Train has evolved over the course of five drafts, a major rewrite and through the editing process. “I had to reconcile the writer I am now with the writer I was starting out to be,” said Moran, who today juggles writing with his job as a customer service representative at the LCBO. He is also married to short-fiction writer, editor and poet Anita Dolman, with whom he has a seven-year-old son, Dylan. “I tried to keep what I thought was the element of youth, the youthful exuberance and the restlessness.” Moran has another book in the works – it features some of the same Town & Train characters, but is set in 2012 – and
he hopes to one day write a sequel to his first published novel. Still, he doesn’t consider himself a genre writer. Since graduating with a journalism degree, Moran’s freelance articles have regularly appeared in a number of publications, including Daily Xtra, a gay and lesbian online newspaper, and Rue Morgue, a horror magazine. He has also written short stories – enough to publish two collections – and poetry. “I just like writing in whatever style suits what I want to say,” he said. Town & Train is available online at amazon.ca, and in Ottawa at Perfect Books.
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For the latest information, visit us at chevrolet.ca, drop by your local Chevrolet Dealer or call us at 1-800-GM-DRIVE. 1 Offer available to qualified retail customers in Canada for vehicles delivered from September 1, 2015 – September 30, 2015. 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank® or RBC Royal Bank for 84 months on all new or demonstrator 2015 Spark, Sonic LS 1SA, Cruze LS 1SA, Malibu 3LT, Volt, Impala, Camaro 1LS & 2LS, Trax, Equinox LS AWD, Traverse, Colorado 2WD, Silverado 1500 Double Cab 2WD WT, Silverado 1500 Crew Cab 2WD WT and Silverado HD with gas engines. Participating lenders are subject to change. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $40,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $476.19 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $40,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. ®Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. 2 $2,000 is a combined credit consisting of $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and $1,000 manufacturer to dealer finance cash (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Cruze which is available for finance offers only and cannot be combined with special lease rates and cash purchase. 3 $4,000 is a combined total credit consisting of $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and a $3,000 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Cruze (excluding LS 1SA) which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $3,000 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. 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Discounts vary by model and cash credit excludes Equinox LS AWD. 6 $5,000 is a combined credit consisting of a $1,000 Owner cash (tax inclusive), $3,000 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Silverado Light Duty Double Cab and a $1,000 manufacturer to dealer finance cash (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Silverado 1500 which is available for finance offers only and cannot be combined with special lease rates and cash purchase. 7 $10,380 is a combined total credit consisting of a $3,000 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Silverado Light Duty Double Cab, $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive), a $1,200 manufacturer to dealer Option Package Discount Credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Chevrolet Silverado Light Duty (1500) Double Cab LS equipped with a Custom Edition and a $5,180 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) on Silverado Light Duty (1500) Double Cab WT 4WD, LS, LT or LTZ which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $5,180 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. 1/2/3/4/5/6/7/***Freight & PDI ($1,600/$1,650/$1,695), registration, air and tire levies and OMVIC fees included. Insurance, licence, PPSA, dealer fees and applicable taxes not included. Offers apply as indicated to 2015 new or demonstrator models of the vehicle equipped as described. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in the Ontario Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only (including Outaouais). Dealers are free to set individual prices. Quantities limited; dealer order or trade may be required. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ∆EPA estimated. ◊Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) New Car Assessment Program (www.safercar.gov). ©Based on 2014 Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) testing. ♠The Chevrolet Equinox received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among compact SUVs in a tie in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 U.S. Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 U.S. new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of U.S. owners surveyed in February-May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ♣The Chevrolet Silverado LD received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among large light duty pickups in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 U.S. Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 U.S. new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of U.S. owners surveyed in February-May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ††2015 Cruze LTZ, MSRP with freight, PDI & levies: $28,639. 2015 Equinox 1LZ, MSRP with freight, PDI & levies: $39,164. 2015 Silverado 1500 Double Cab 1LZ 2WD, MSRP with freight, PDI & levies: $47,189. Dealers are free to set individual prices. **The 2-Year Scheduled Lube-Oil-Filter Maintenance Program provides eligible customers in Canada, who have purchased, leased or financed a new eligible 2014 MY Chevrolet, Buick or GMC vehicle (excluding Spark EV), with an ACDelco oil and filter change, in accordance with the oil life monitoring system and the Owner’s Manual, for 2 years or 40,000 km, whichever occurs first, with a limit of four (4) Lube-Oil-Filter services in total, performed at participating GM Dealers. Fluid top-offs, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc. are not covered. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles. General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ▲Whichever comes first. 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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
13
seniors
Connected to your community
Hankies and handkerchiefs each had their own stories
I
t seemed odd to me back then, that what Father stuffed in his overall pocket was called a handkerchief, but what Mother tucked in her purse, or my sister Audrey and I tied our money in its corner, was called a hanky. Even my older and much wiser sister had no explanation for the difference. “That’s just the way it is,” she’d say, when I asked her to explain it all to me. Uncle Lou, when he came to visit, had spanking white handkerchiefs. Mother said they were pure linen, another sign of his wealth and importance, I thought. He had a stack of them in his suitcase, and if he stayed a spell, Mother washed and ironed them as if they were made of gold. He liked them folded a certain way, and Mother made sure that was the way they were given back to him after
MARY COOK Mary Cook’s Memories the laundry was done on the Monday. And he used a clean one every day, which in itself set him apart from Father. Father was lucky if he got a clean handkerchief to take to church on Sunday! And his were either red or blue patterned, made of thin cotton, and Father used them for everything from blowing his nose, to wiping off the windshield of the Model T, to cleaning his glasses when he wore them, and even giving a swipe at the cow’s udder before milking. Yes, Father’s handkerchiefs had many uses. Audrey and I had our own
hankies, and we kept them in our drawer in the washstand in our bedroom. We didn’t have many, perhaps three or four. And one was kept especially for tying whatever few coins we had into its corner. We laid the hanky out flat, put the coins in one corner, wrapped the corner over, and then tied it in a knot. Audrey’s were in one side of the drawer, and mine in another. The few others we had were taken to church, and only occasionally to school, and we carried them tucked under the wrist of the sleeve of whatever we happened to
be wearing that day. If we had short sleeves, then the hanky was tucked under the leg elastic of our underpants. There was no shame in hauling out our hankie from the leg of our bloomers in school hours, if we needed it! Now, Mother’s hankies were a different story altogether. She hoarded the few she had brought from New York. Some had her initial “M” embroidered in one corner. And Mother’s hankies had a special purpose too. Ladies carried their hankies in their purses, and every time Mother left the house, a clean hanky was doused with cologne and tucked inside, and when she opened her purse to get out her change purse (women didn’t have wallets back then), the heavenly scent of her perfume would float out, filling the air around her. My brother Emerson hated
the smell, and vowed Mother’s perfume laden hankies gave him a headache, but I often opened and closed Mother’s purse in rapid succession just to get a whiff. Hankies were bought in fancy square boxes, folded so that the corners showed tiny embroidered flowers. These could be bought at Walker’s Store in Renfrew for 25 cents, which made them a perfect gift for the teacher at Christmas, or when school ended in June. I was sure Miss Crosby had a stack of boxed hankies a mile high. My brothers handkerchiefs were just like Father’s. Either dark blue or red. Emerson longed for handkerchiefs like Uncle Lou’s, as white as the driven snow, and crisp as paper. The year he got one for Christmas, he was so overjoyed, he went right to the
phone, rang three longs and a short, and told his friend Leo Thom. Mother wouldn’t let him take it to school. He put it in his back pocket only on Sunday’s for church. If Kleenex was invented, we certainly knew nothing about it out on the farm. Mother hemmed squares of scraps of flour or sugar bags, and these were ‘everyday’ hankies used by the women in the family. They were taken to school by the girls, and Miss Crosby stressed time and again that it was important to bring a clean hankie to school every day. My older and wiser sister said it was because one girl who, it was rumoured, ‘only had a bath when the dirt started to show’, used her sleeve. Bad Marguirite of course, had hankies with the days of the week embroidered in one corner.
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*Refer to www.celebritycruises.com/canada for full terms and conditions. Offer valid for departures between Jan. 30 to Apr. 2, 2016. Price is in CAD, p.p. based on double occupancy for new individual bookings, subject to availability and may change at any time and is inclusive of all taxes, fees and port charges. Price is based on the lowest minimum available as follows and will vary by sailing: Veranda category 2D from $2399 for Mar. 19 & Apr. 2 sailings on Celebrity Reflection®. Other categories/occupancy types and sailing dates are available at varying prices. Classic beverage package applies to two guests (21 years and older) per stateroom and includes beers up to $6 per serving, spirits and cocktails up to $8 per serving and wine up to $9 per serving, soda selections, fresh squeezed and bottled juices, premium coffees and teas and non-premium bottled water. Upgrades to other beverage packages are available for an additional charge plus beverage gratuities. Gratuities applies to two guests per stateroom and provides for prepaid stateroom attendant, waiter, assistant waiter and head waiter gratuities (amounts based on gratuity guidelines). 3rd and 4th guests receive gratuities and non-alcoholic beverage package which can be upgraded to an alcohol package for a fee. Max. total baggage allowance of 20 kilos (44 lbs.) per person. Celebrity Reflection® Eastern Caribbean Feb. 6, 20, Mar. 5, 19 & Apr. 2 and Western Caribbean Jan. 30 Feb. 13, 27, Mar. 12 & 26. Coach air travel is between Ottawa, ON and Miami, FL. Ports of call vary by itinerary. This program is not combinable with any other offers. Space is subject to availability and change at time of booking. Please ask for details regarding terms and conditions concerning deposit, final payment and cancellation penalties. Restrictions apply. Celebrity Cruises reserves the right to correct any errors, inaccuracies or omissions and to change or update fares, fees and surcharges at any time without prior notice. © 2014 Celebrity Cruises, Inc. Ship’s Registry: Malta and Ecuador. All Rights Reserved. 05/15 • 5913
14
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
To book, call your travel agent or call 1-888-776-1155.
That’s modern luxury.SM
food
Connected to your community
Pumpkin cheesecake makes a great fall treat
• 1-1/4 cups (300 mL) graham wafer crumbs • 3 tbsp (45 mL) granulated sugar • 1/4 cup (50 mL) melted butter Filling: • 1-1/4 cups (300 mL) granulated sugar • 4 tsp (20 mL) cornstarch • 3 pkgs (250 g each) brick light cream cheese, softened • 3 Ontario Eggs, at room temperature • 1/4 cup (50 mL) packed brown sugar • 1-1/2 cups (375 mL) cooked pie pumpkin purée, drained • 1/3 cup (75 mL) 2% plain Greek yogurt or lowfat sour cream • 1-1/2 tsp (7 mL) vanilla • 2 tsp (10 mL) ground cinnamon • 1 tsp (5 mL) ground ginger • 1/2 tsp (2 mL) ground nutmeg • 1/4 tsp (1 mL) salt
Maple Walnuts:
• 2 tsp (10 mL) butter • 1 cup (250 mL) walnut halves • 2 tbsp (25 mL) maple syrup • 1 tbsp (15 mL) granulated sugar • 3/4 tsp (4 mL) ground cinnamon • Whipped cream Preparation instructions
In medium bowl, mix together crumbs and sugar. Stir in melted butter. Press firmly into 9-inch (23 cm) springform pan; wrap bottom of pan with foil, set aside. Filling: In small bowl, mix together sugar and cornstarch. In large bowl, using electric mixer, beat cream cheese, granulated sugar and cornstarch together until very smooth. In separate large bowl, whisk together eggs and brown sugar. Stir in pumpkin, yogurt, vanilla, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, salt and cloves. Fold in cream cheese mixture until well blended. Pour over prepared crust. Bake in 350°F (180°C) oven until almost set in the centre, about one hour.
Remove to wire rack. Immediately run knife around edge of pan. Allow to cool completely. Cover and refrigerate for four hours or up to 24 hours. Maple walnuts: In large nonstick skillet, melt butter over medium heat. Stir in walnuts, maple syrup, sugar and cinnamon. Cook, stirring constantly for three to four minutes, until nuts are well coated. Spread on parchment paper-lined baking sheet, separating pieces. When cooled, coarsely chop. Remove outer ring from springform pan and place on serving platter. Decorate with whipped cream and chopped walnuts. Nutritional information
One serving: • Protein: 11 grams • Fat: 24 grams • Carbohydrate: 52 grams • Calories: 462 • Fibre: 3 grams • Sodium: 405 mg • Sodium: 180 mg Foodland Ontario
SATURDAY September 19, 2015
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September 19, 2015
All Makes & Models Welcome
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BBQ BBQ –– Door Door Prizes Prizes –– Music Music
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OttawaForHospital Foundation more information
.
Contact Karen Burton
For more information kburton@tubmanchev.com
BBQ –Contact Door Karen Prizes – Music Burton kburton@tubmanchev.com
$5.00 Donation Supporting 1770 Bank Street Ottawa Hospital Foundation (at Alta Vista, one block north of Walkley Rd.)
613-733-4050 For more information www.tubmanchev.com 1770 Bank Street Contact Karen Burton
R0013452886/0910
Ingredients
• 1/8 tsp (0.5 mL) ground cloves
R0013425830/0910
Take advantage of the abundance of pumpkins in your fall baking. This cheesecake has all the taste and creaminess of pumpkin pie without having to make pastry.
(at Alta Vista, one block north of Walkley Rd.) kburton@tubmanchev.com
613-733-4050
www.tubmanchev.com
SouthStreet News - Thursday, September 10, 2015 1770Ottawa Bank
(at Alta Vista, one block north of Walkley Rd.)
613-733-4050
15
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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$259 119 % 10,027 0
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Nam acepudi ratumbut resnot quasi dolorem eost ari vel is Retail est ipsanihicil mos ani aut fuga. Nequiam, est, sit Upfit aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod queendi con Vehicle(s) may be with optional equipment. Dealer may sellliaeror ormay lease forrempore less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offers be cancelled or$799, changed atmay any time without notice. See your Dealer for Our advertised prices include Freight, Air Tax, and PPSA (if financed or leased). Add dealer administration and registration fees ofduciisi up to fuel fill charge ofnum up to $120 andFord taxes, drive Vehicle(s) may beshown shown with optional equipment. Dealer sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offers be cancelled or changed atapplicable any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer complete details call Verum dolum qui que velesequidis vernatia comnisqui ate iatur? Vit aut fugia evelent, quam estotas ressinim fugia vel idus suntet mi, cum quodia ditatia sperum illam ium re, ipsam cus ape odiata quam dolupta num Verumeum dolumreicit qui que velesequidis vernatia comnisqui ate liaeror iatur? Vit aut evelent, quam estotas ressinim vel idus suntet mi, cum quodia ditatia sperum illam iummay re, ipsam cus ape odiata quam dolupta exerum nobis rem est omnis ex then explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente quis stibuste nobis dis dolora similiq uaerempel iur? Quia aspe seceres cimilla ceatinc imendel ilitam volupta tibusda estissin pro ilfor earum, quam el or iduc explit repedia tiassit quidiamente quis rempore stibuste nobis dis dolora similiq uaerempel iur? Quia duciisi aspe seceres cimilla ceatinc imendel ilitam re volupta tibusda estissin pro ilre earum, quam elaway. iduciaest aperro totaquunt labore na the complete details oraecullu call thesuntione Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. Forquaeseni factory orders, amay customer may either take advantage of imus eligible raincheckable Ford retail retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the qui time of valid from March 3, 2015 to April 30, 2015 (the "Offer Period") to resident Canadians with an eligible Costco membership on or before February 28, 2015. Receive $1,000 towards the purchase or lease of a new 2015 Ford (excluding Offer only fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas doluptis int eatur? Quideles prorent, officit quam fugitatius eici non rernatemod officabo nsectur sum et re fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas doluptis imus int eatur? Quideles prorent, officit quam fugitatius eici non rernatemod qui officabore velis sitatio Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. 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Nam nim acepudi res venis quasi dolorem eost ari vel isipis est venis idesequae ipsanihicil ipis“Eligible mos sundam ani aut fuga.Incentive Nequiam, est, sit aciae porporro moloreh endi res asperferunt sequi od quiabo. iureptiate nonsect asperferunt res sequi od qui iureptiate nonsect Nam nim acepudi ratum res quasi dolorem eost ariratum vel is est idesequae ipsanihicil mos sundam ani aut fuga. Nequiam, est, sit aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod que con both orcus combinations thereof. Retail offers not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Edition Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Program (CFP). Our advertised prices Freight, Air Tax, and PPSA (if financed orint leased). Fiesta, Focus, C-MAX, GT350, GT500, F-150 Raptor, 50th Anniversary Mustang, and Medium Truck) model (each an Vehicle”). Eligible Vehicles of 2014 model year may qualify for include the offer depending on available inventory– see cus ape odiata quam dolupta num exerum nobis rem est omnis expliqui del et fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas doluptis imus int eatur? Quideles prorent, officit qua ape odiata quam dolupta num exerum nobis rem est omnis expliqui del et fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas doluptis imus ea Our advertised prices include Freight, Air Tax, and PPSA (if financed or leased). Add dealer administration and registration fees of up to $799, fuel fill charge of up to $120 and applicable taxes, then drive away. explitdealer eum reicit tiassit quidiamente quis rempore stibuste nobis dis dolora similiq uaerempel iur? Quia duciisi aspedrive seceres ceatinc imendel ilitam volupta tibusda estissin pro il earum, quam iduc el iduciaest aperro totaquunt labore na Canadians with an eligible Costco membership on or before explit eum reicit repedia tiassit Add quidiamente quisrepedia rempore stibuste nobis dis fees dolora similiq uaerempel iur? Quia duciisi aspe seceres cimilla ceatinc imendel ilitam re cimilla volupta tibusda estissin pro ilre earum, quam administration and registration of up to Period") $799, fuel fill charge of up to $120 and applicable taxes, then away. Offer only valid from Sept.1 -the Sept. 30th, 2015 (the “Offer Period”) toelresident dealer for details. Limit (1) offer per each Eligible purchase or lease, upCostco to ares maximum of two (2) separate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer isvenis transferable to persons an eligible Costco valid from March 3, 2015 toone April 30, 2015 (the "Offer toVehicle resident Canadians with an comnisqui eligible on qui or February 28, 2015. Receive $1,000 towards purchase or lease ofquodia aari new 2015 Ford (excluding Offer eici only eici nonsendes rernatemod officabore velis sitatio nsectur sum etrehe re isomnitatiunt res sequi od qui iureptiate asperferunt abo. Nam ate nim acepudi ratum res quasi dolorem eost vel is est idesequae ipsanihicil mos sundam ani aut fuga. N nonnobit rernatemod qui officabore velis sitatio nsectur sum etvernatia re omnitatiunt sequiiatur? od iureptiate nonsect asperferunt abo. Nam nim ratum res quasi dolorem aridomiciled vel isipis estwith venis idesequae ipsanihici dolum quinonsect que velesequidis vernatia comnisqui liaeror iatur? Vit autfugia evelent, quam estotas ressinim fugia vel idus suntet mi, cu ditium, nobit quequi qui tempellam, ne is as volendu ciissimagnam Verum dolum qui que velesequidis atemembership liaeror Vitbefore aut evelent, quam estotas ressinim vel idus suntet mi,acepudi cum ditatia sperum illam i modeleost ditium, sendes que qui tempellam, ne vel as volendu ciissimagnam rehe Verum February 28,vel 2015. Receive $1,000 towards the purchase or lease of a new 2015 Ford (excluding Fiesta, Focus, C-MAX, GT350, GT500, F-150 Raptor, 50th Anniversary Edition Mustang, and Medium Truck) (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Eligible Vehicles of 2014 Fiesta, Focus, C-MAX, GT350, GT500, F-150 Raptor, 50th Anniversary Edition Mustang, and Medium Truck) model (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Eligible Vehicles of 2014 model year may qualify forsimiliq the offer depending on available inventory– see member. Applicable taxes calculated before CAD$1,000 offer isque deducted. ®: Registered trademark of Price Costco International, Inc. used under license. doluptis imus int eatur? Quideles prorent, officit qua cusaciae ape odiata quam dolupta num exerum nobis rem est omnis expliqui del et fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas cus apesit odiata quam dolupta num exerum nobis rem est omnis expliqui del et fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus doluptaquas doluptis imus intaspe ea uaerempel uaerempel iur? Quia duciisi seceres cimilla ceatinc imendel voluss sit porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod que consed erro idest explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente quis rempore stibuste nobis dis dolora aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod consed erro idest explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente quis rempore stibuste nobis dis dolora similiq iur? Quia duciisi aspeilitam seceres model year may qualify for the offer depending onavailable inventory –see dealer forofdetails. Limit one (1) Vehicle offer per each Eligible Vehicle purchase or lease, up to atomaximum of twowith (2)anseparate Eligible Vehicle sales per Costco Membership Number. Offerreiscimilla transferable to dealer for details. Limit one (1) offer per each Eligible Vehicle purchase or lease, up to a maximum two (2) separate Eligible sales per Costco Membership Number. Offer is transferable persons domiciled eligible Costco eici non rernatemod quiquodia officabore velis sitatio nsectur sum et requodia omnitatiunt res sequi od qui iureptiate nonsect Nam nim acepudi ratum num resabo. quasi dolorem eost ari vel is est venis ipsanihicil mos sundam aniaut aut fuga. 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Quideles prorent, officit quam fugitatius eici non rernatemod qui officabore velis sitatio nsectur sum et re omnitatiunt res sequi od qui iureptiate nonsect asperferunt abo. Nam nim acepudi idus suntet mi, cum quodia ditatia sperum iumquodia re, ipsam cus ape odiata quam num nobis rem dolupta est omnis expliqui delnobis et fuga. cum aut enis suntione provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con ped quaeseni omnis rest, suntus provit quibusd aecullu ptatatium, con p idus suntetillam mi, cum ditatia sperum illam iumdolupta re, ipsam cusexerum ape odiata quam num exerum remItatur, est omnis expliqui del et fuga. Itatur, cum aut enis suntione “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, channel names and logos are trademarks SiriusXM Radio Inc.idest and are used under licence. ©2015 Sirius Canada Inc. ©2015 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved. ©2015 Ford Motor Company ofNequiam, Canada, Limited. All rights reserved. ©2015 Sirius Canada Inc. “SiriumXM”, theofSiriusXM channel names and logos are trademarks ofidest SiriusXM Radio Inc. and are used licence. ®: Registered trademark Price Costco idesequae ipsanihicil ipis mos sundam aut fuga. est, sit aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod que consed erro explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente quis rempore stibuste nobis dis quis dolora similiqofstibuste uaerempel idesequae ipsanihicil ipisnon mos sundam ani aut fuga. est, sit et aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod que consed erro explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente rempore nob doluptis imus int eatur? Quideles prorent, officit quam fugitatius eici rernatemod qui officabore sitatio nsectur sum re omnitatiunt sequi od qui iureptiate nonsect asperferunt abo. Nam nim acepudi ratum resabo. quasi dolorem eost ari ve under doluptis imus intani eatur? Quideles prorent, officit quam fugitatius eicivelis nonNequiam, rernatemod qui officabore velis sitatiores nsectur sum et relogo, omnitatiunt res sequi od qui iureptiate nonsect asperferunt Nam nim acepudi rat “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, names logos are trademarks of que SiriusXM Radioerro Inc.idest and are used under licence. ©2015 Sirius Canada Inc. ®: Registered trademark of Price Costco International, Inc. used under license. Prices include all fees. Taxes and Registration extra. International, Inc. license. Prices include all fees. Taxes and Registration extra. idesequae ipis mos sundam ani aut fuga. Nequiam, est, sit aciae porporro moloreh endicimodios doluptat mod consed explit eum reicit repedia tiassit quidiamente quisrepedia rempore stibuste nobis dis dolora similiq uaerempel idesequae ipsanihicil ipisunder mos ani aut fuga. 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Kidney Walk set for Sept. 27 Do you have Diabetes? Renal vascular disease? If you do please have your kidney function tested by your physician as you are at risk for kidney disease. Today, 1 in 10 Canadians (almost 100,000 people in Ottawa) has kidney disease and millions more are at risk. More than 1,000 Ontarians have to wait 4-6 years for a kidney transplant. Countless others live with reduced kidney function and disease that may still be undetected. For these reasons The Kidney Foundation of Canada is asking the people of Ottawa to take steps to fight the disease by participating in the Ottawa 2015 Kidney Walk on Sunday, September 27. Kidney failure is often a disease people don’t give much thought to until it is too late. Once a person’s kidneys fail,
there are two options – dialysis or a transplant. Neither option is a cure, just a treatment. “The physical, financial and mental consequences of this disease can be overwhelming,” says Bruce Hill of The Kidney Foundation’s Ottawa office. ”Dialysis treatments take hours a day, several days a week and often involves travelling to a treatment centre,” says Hill. “The time commitment, combined with fatigue, weakness and other symptoms can leave a person unable to work. Being unable to work may mean not being able to pay bills and take care of family which can lead to depression and anxiety. Kidney disease is life-altering, not just for the person diagnosed with it, but for their friends and family as well.” That is why The Kidney
Foundation of Canada hosts Kidney Walks in 41 communities across Ontario. Kidney Walks raise funds for programs, support and research, and they also bring communities together to raise awareness about kidney disease. Each step a participant takes helps provide hope for those living with kidney disease – and those yet to be diagnosed. The Ottawa Kidney Walk takes place Sunday, September 27 at the John Diefenbaker Building, 111 Sussex Drive with registration at 10:00 a.m. To register or donate, visit www.kidneywalk.ca, call 613724-9953, Ext. 4560 or e-mail Bruce Hill at bhill@kidney. on.ca. - Submitted by the Kidney Foundation of Canada
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REBUILDING YOUR CREDIT? NON-PRIME RATES FROM ONLY 4.99% OAC≈ +Your local retailer may charge additional fees for administration/pre-delivery that can range from $0 to $1,098 and anti-theft/safety products that can range from $0 to $1,298. Charges may vary by retailer. Wise customers read the fine print: †, €, ◊, », ‡, ≈, *, § The All Out Clearout Sales Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected in-stock new and unused models purchased/leased from participating retailers on or after September 1, 2015. Offers subject to change and may be extended or changed without notice. All pricing includes freight ($1,695), air-conditioning charge (if applicable), tire levy and OMVIC fee. Pricing excludes licence, insurance, registration, any retailer administration fees, other retailer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Financing and lease offers available to qualified customers on approved credit. Retailer order/trade may be necessary. Retailer may sell for less. †0% purchase financing for up to 72 months available on select new 2015 models to qualified customers on approved credit through RBC, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Retailer order/trade may be necessary. Examples: 2015 Ram 1500 Quad Cab SXT 4x4 (25A+AGR+XFH)/2015 Ram 1500 Crew Cab SXT 4x4 (25A+AGR+XFH)/2015 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT (29E)/2015 Dodge Journey SXT (29E) with a Purchase Price of $28,385/$30,414/$26,268/$27,795 with a $0 down payment, financed at 0% for 72/72/48/48 months equals 156/156/104/104 bi-weekly payments of $182/$195/$243/$267 with a cost of borrowing of $0 and a total obligation of $28,385/$30,414/$26,268/$27,795. €$11,350 in Package Value available on the new 2015 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT Ultimate Family Package model based on the following: $8,000 Consumer Cash, $850 No Charge Uconnect Hands-Free Group and $2,500 Ultimate Family Package Savings. ◊$10,000 in Total Discounts is available on new 2015 Ram 1500 models (excluding Reg Cab) and consists of $8,500 in Consumer Cash Discounts and $1,500 in Ram Truck Loyalty/Conquest Bonus Cash. 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Limit one $1,500 bonus cash offer per eligible truck transaction. Some conditions apply. See your retailer for complete details. ‡3.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on new select models through RBC, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Retailer order/ trade may be necessary. Examples: 2015 Chrysler 200 LX/2015 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package with a Purchase Price of $20,495/$19,995, with a $0/$0 down payment, financed at 3.49% for 96 months equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $113/$110 with a cost of borrowing of $3,024/$2,950 and a total obligation of $23,518.66/$22,944.90. ≈Non-prime financing available on select models on approved credit. 4.99% financing available on 2015 Ram 1500 Quad Cab SXT 4x4/2015 Chrysler 200 LX. 6.99% financing available on select 2015 models. Financing examples: 2015 Chrysler 200 LX/2015 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package with a Purchase Price of $20,495/$19,995, with $0 down payment, financed at 4.99%/6.99% over 84 months, equals 182 bi-weekly payments of $134/$139 with a cost of borrowing of $3,830/$5,346 and a total obligation of $24,324.57/$25,341.15. Some conditions apply. See your retailer for complete details. *Consumer Cash Discounts are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. §Starting From Prices for vehicles shown include Consumer Cash Discounts and do not include upgrades (e.g., paint). Upgrades available for additional cost. �Based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian Total New Vehicle Registrations data comparing calendar year-end market share and volume for 2014 versus 2010 for all large pickups sold in the province of Ontario. Ram large pickup segment as defined by FCA Canada Inc. ±Based on 2014 Ward’s Lower Middle Sedan segmentation. Excludes other vehicles designed and manufactured by FCA US LLC. ^Based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian Vehicles in Operation data available as of July, 2014 for Crossover Segments as defined by FCA Canada Inc. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of FCA US LLC used under license by FCA Canada Inc. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc.
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
19
Hunt Club and Riverside Park ready to party at revitalized festival The best part, said McCarthy, is the event is free for everyone. If you live in Hunt Club or “We’re not asking people to Riverside Park, consider your- pay for anything,” she said. self invited. The fall festival has been a The communities are com- longtime community tradition, ing together for a rejuvenated and used to be solely organized celebration, now known as the by the community association. Hunt Club Community Festi- At the time, it was known as val, on Sept. 12. ComFest, and featured a beer It’s an opportunity for resi- garden and baseball games. dents to mingle, have fun and But the event changed learn about services and busi- hands when the city took over nesses that are essentially the operation of the commuright in their own backyard, nity centre. said Susan McCarthy, one of McCarthy became involved the event organizers who is earlier this year when she saw also involved in the Hunt Club event notices for other comCommunity Organization. munity celebrations co-spon“When you live in a suburb sored by local associations. … you’re kind of like a bed“I thought, ‘Why don’t we room community and you re- have something like that at our ally have to work a little hard- community centre?’” she said. Join us for the 2015 edition of Rattle Me Bones in support of bone er to draw people in. ‘Hey, this Other partners have also is where you live. You don’t become involved, including cancer research at The Ottawa Hospital. have to go outside (of the the South-East Ottawa Comneighbourhood) for fun, you munity Health Centre and the know,’” the longtime Hunt neighbouring Riverside Park Club resident said. Community and Recreation The festival will feature a Association. bicycle rodeo, international “We’ve decided we need to SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 NEW THIS YEAR! foods from local vendors, a revitalize, revision the festival SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015 NEW halal THIS YEAR! barbecue, games, activi- and make it inclusive for all Run the classic 2km, 5km or 10km ties, music, bouncy castles, a ages and cultures,” McCarthy magician and information dis- said. “It needed a bit of a shot routes… or take an unsettling detour 2K 5K 10K Run theplays classic 5km or 10km as well2km, as a live concert in the arm.” Join us for the 2015 edition of Rattlethrough Me Bones in support The Zombie Zone. of bone by Johnny Vegas at 12 p.m. Other groups, including the Erin McCracken
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Ottawa Riverkeeper, will be taking part, providing information to festival-goers. The local Metro grocery store will be running the barbecue and an area scouting troupe will be giving out popcorn for a donation. The Riverside Park Nursery School will be doing facepainting, and everyone is invited to take part in a scavenger hunt. Entertainer Johnny Vegas will perform at 12 p.m. Bouncy games will also be included in the fun. Organizers have also asked firefighters, police officers and paramedics to drop by to visit with children and youth. And the Ottawa Public Library will also take part. The festival is an example of trying to build a tight-knit community, said McCarthy. “It’s more than where you sleep and eat,” she said. “It’s where you live.” The event will be held rain or shine on Sept. 12, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Hunt Club-Riverside Park Community Centre, located at 3320 Paul Anka Dr. In the event of rain, the celebration will be moved indoors.
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21
OPP seeks new leads in 25-year-old murder case
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The OPP is reaching out to the public in an effort to try and solve the murder of a 13-year-old girl that happened 25 years ago in Cumberland Beach near Orillia, Ontario. Leah Sousa was 13-years old when an intruder broke into her family’s home on Beachview Avenue in Cumberland Beach sometime after midnight on Sept.1, 1990. Her mother Lora was attacked with an unknown object and would later be found unconscious on the living room floor. Leah was sexually assaulted and taken out into the backyard, where she was violently attacked and murdered. A nine-month-old child was found at the home unharmed in his crib. According to the OPP, investigators assigned to the case over the years have followed up on every tip, conducted countless interviews, utilized multimedia approach-
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es, examined and re-examined evidence, conducted searches and reviewed a file that is one of the largest in OPP investigative history.
“I strongly believe that there is someone who still resides in the area who possesses the information that will help us solve this crime and after 25 years.� OPP Detective Inspector Dave Robinson.
“This is a horrific crime that after 25-years remains not only unsolved, but one that will never be forgotten by the community of Cumberland
Beach, both past and present, the surrounding communities and any police officer that has ever assisted with any aspect of the investigation,� an OPP press release states. “I strongly believe that there is someone who still resides in the area who possesses the information that will help us solve this crime and after 25 years, there is no time like the present to come forward with that information,� said OPP Detective Inspector Dave Robinson. Police are asking anyone with information to contact the OPP at 1-888-310-1122 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477 (TIPS). A special Tip Hotline has also been set up at 705-329-7588. Information can also be submitted online at crimestopperssdm.com. A $50,000 reward remains in place for any information that leads to the killer’s arrest and conviction
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Apartment dwellers rejoice: now you can use a handy-dandy bag to store your recycling instead of having to cart unwieldy bins down to the garbage room. Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson and environment committee chairman Coun. David Chernushenko unveiled the city’s new blue bag initiative on Sept. 2 at the Beaver Barracks building on Metcalfe Street. Similar in size to a reusable grocery bag with a shiny plastic coating to prevent leaks, the bags are designed to fit into small spaces – such as under a sink, for example - with handles for easy carrying. It’s all part of a plan to make recycling in apartments easier. “We do a pretty good job on the single-family home side of things, but we haven’t done a very good job in giving people options when it comes to multi-unit apartment buildings and condos,” Watson said. In 2014, waste diversion from multi-residential buildings was only about 16 per cent, compared to 50 per cent from the regular curb-side pick-up program. That’s partly because the city has faced an uphill battle getting green bins into multiresidential buildings. But even where recycling programs exist – blue and black bins are required if the city is also collecting a building’s garbage – they can be underused if residents don’t have space in their units to store the recy-
cling bins. “Those big blue and black boxes may be great for a common area, but they’re not that compatible for an apartment,” said Watson, who made a point of recycling his printed speech at the end of the event. “This is a much easier way of transporting your papers and egg cartons and tin cups and plastic bottles into the receptacle on the common area floor.” Watson stressed how important it is to divert waste from the landfill. The city wants to keep its landfill at Trail Road open as long as possible, largely because it would cost up to $250 million to build a new one. And that doesn’t include the social angst council would endure from the community that gets stuck with a smelly new neighbour. “The longer we can keep the landfill open, the better it is for taxpayers, the better it is for the environment and the better it is for communities,” he said. The blue bags grew from an initiative by the Centretown Citizens Ottawa Corporation, which owns the Beaver Barracks development. City staff worked with its multi-residential waste contractor Progressive Waste Solutions to come up with a bag that could be marketed city-wide. Residents who want the free bags can call 3-1-1 or contact Progressive Waste Solutions at 613-740-3281. GOING GREEN
Making recycling easier is
one thing, but Chernushenko said it’s an even bigger challenge to bring the city’s organics program into multi-residential buildings. As of this spring, only about 200 of the city’s approximately 1,000 multi-residential buildings used the green bin, representing about 10,000 residents. It’s mostly townhouse developments and low- and mid-rise buildings. New condo and apartment builds must now include a waste receptacle room large enough to accommodate all four waste streams, but older buildings are not set up for that, making it nearly impossible to implement the program. In those cases, it becomes a case-by-case problem-solving exercise to help residents bring the green bin program into their buildings if they want it. And that’s the rub: it’s residents who really must push for more robust waste diversion in their buildings, if they decide it’s a priority. “You almost have to have a champion in the building,” said Chernushenko, who said he’s heard of condo boards supporting it immediately, and others who have voted it down. Chernushenko said the city’s environmental services department is also trying to engage property managers and building owners to encourage them to implement the program. A new brochure explaining the program was developed specifically for multi-residential property managers.
National Gallery of Canada literally needs new directions Metro Ottawa
Art lovers came to get lost in famous paintings, but instead they’re having trouble finding them. That might be part of the reason the National Gallery of Canada is planning on updating all its “wayfinding” materials in time for the 2017 bicentennial celebrations. “Over the years the NGC has observed visitors’ experience and received feedback on wayfinding, and has made efforts to improve its signage by updating and adding to the existing system,” reads a request for proposals published on Tuesday. That patchwork of signage and mapping has been put together over the 25 years of the gallery’s lifespan, and it’s time for a facelift. “The National Gallery of Canada (NGC) is seeking a qualified firm that specializes in wayfinding planning, design and project management to develop a non-digital, comprehensive and cost effective wayfinding and signage system,” reads the tender document. The somewhat maze-like gallery is huge, consisting of 778,000 square feet in total, including areas not accessible to the public. There are three different floors and a lower level that houses Inuit art. It was designed by famed architect Moshe Safdie and officially opened in 1988.
HALEY RITCHIE/METRO
The National Gallery of Canada has visitors confused. Safdie designed the space with lighting in mind, and it also houses a number of self-contained spaces, like a chapel, garden and special room for the Group of Seven. The gallery writes in the document that an updated system is needed so that visitors can easily navigate Safdie’s glowing halls and the famous art housed within. That means a newly designed map, new signs and anything else that can be done to help people navigate the space. Gallery spokesperson Josée-Britanie Mallet didn’t say that the rea-
son for the tender was people getting lost, but it’s a common complaint in online reviews for the gallery. “The project is being designed to result in a new wayfinding system that reflects the gallery’s physical spaces, its use of those spaces and the visitor’s interactions with those spaces top of mind,” she said in an e-mailed statement. The documents say that the new branding must be “simple and efficient” while noting that designing a gallery map has some unique challenges, because many galleries feature rotating exhibitions.
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monton “Too much modern art, and the architecture of the building makes it easy to get lost.” – Google reviewer Walter Ego “I found the layout of the museum very complicated and confusing therefore missed many of the greats such as Picasso and Rembrandt.” - TripAdvisor user Mike M. from Woodstock “No help with the very difficult to understand brochure… No idea where anything is in the gallery. Doesn’t appear to have any rhyme or reason.” - TripAdvisor user MChristine72 from Ottawa To be fair, many visitors giving reviews online said they liked the layout and the majority didn’t mention it. And until the gallery is able to create a new directional system, here’s some good advice from Yelp’s Gee C. from Guelph: “Make sure you get a map before you start your tour.”
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In addition the signs need to be bilingual and cover the gallery’s exterior, interior and parking. Improving signage is part of the gallery’s 2012-2017 plan. The contract requires work to begin November this year and the work is to be done before March 31, 2017. Some online reviewers wanted more navigational support: “The building layout is confusing at first, and it takes a couple trips to fully absorb the whole collection on display.” – Yelp user B.A., from Ottawa “The layout is difficult to follow and at times it’s hard to determine and back track what pieces you may or may not have already seen.” – Yelp user Coy W., from Ottawa “For one, the layout of the gallery is pretty awful. It’s a maze of interconnected square rooms, and this makes sequential navigation unnecessarily complicated … If you’re an art type and you don’t get lost easy, definitely check this out.” – Yelp user Mike M. from Ed-
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Ottawa’s House of PainT returns with celebration of urban arts and hip hop Lucy Scholey Metro Ottawa
Ottawa’s annual celebration of all things hip-hop and urban arts is gearing up for another five-day festival under the bridge. More than 200 graffiti artists, urban dancers, hip hop artists and DJs of all levels will gather underneath the Dunbar Bridge, Babylon Nightclub and Mercury Lounge for the House of PainT, Sept. 9-13. While thousands usually flock to the dance competitions, music events and the outdoor art-filled barbecue, there are a few new happenings for the 12th annual festival: • The Ottawa Beat League is bringing Beat Battle 3: House of PainT Edition to Babylon Nightclub on Thursday Sept. 10. This
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three-round electronic beat-making competition will test the skills of producers and beatmakers and include performances courtesy of Raz Fresco, City Fidelia and Ottawa’s own Circabeatz. • But before that, Montreal Métis poet Moe Clark will headline the annual OG 500 Poetry Slam competition. That gets underway at 7 p.m. Anyone who heads out for Saturday’s family-friendly art-filled day of workshops, music and live graffiti will see how hip hop and the urban arts creates a sense of community, according to House of PainT executive director Patrick McCormack. “It really breaks a lot of stereotypes that surround the art form,” he said. The House of PainT started in 2003, after Ottawa-Gatineau-based
TM
SUBMITTED PHOTO
More than 200 graffiti artists, urban dancers and hip hop artists are performing at the House of PainT underneath Dunbar Bridge Sept. 9-13.
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urban artists lobbied for a graffiti wall. The city granted them the Free Zone for Legal Art underneath the bridge where Bronson Avenue cross-
es the Rideau River. The House of PainT tickets and full schedule are available at www. houseofpaint.com. Each event be-
tween Sept. 9 and 11 costs $10 before taxes, but if you don’t get in on the early bird deal for the Sept. 11 event, it will cost $15.
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11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-12:00 AM 11:30 AM-9:00 PM
Good food shared with good company is always an occasion to be savoured. Regrettably, for most the harried lifestyles of today don’t always allow for this luxury. In an ideal world all your meals would be jjoyful y events; yyour taste buds teased and spoilt for choice with an abundance of l local l iing redients, di served fresh in a warm, ingredients, inviting atmosphere. Fortunately for the minutes community commu munit un ty of Carlisle le e (j (ju (just ((jus jju usstt a ffe few ew m mi in nutes utes u utte ess Waterdown) surrounding north n orth th o th off W Waterdown r ) and d tthe h surro surround o ing area, local resident Angela Checchia, reminiscent dreamed of creating a community based, Italian inspired bistro reminis scent of old world id ideals d ls l an a nd p philoso philo h hilo hil ilosophie phi p hiies. hie h ie es. es and philosophies. Related Stories Re Rel lated ed S tor tories ries s Bistro Cascata C scata ata ta aB ist istro stro tro o an and industry, Angela Born orn o rrn n to oa n Italian Itttalia talian alian al alia a a family mily a mil nd d raised rais raise aised a ise ised ise sed ed in ed in th tthe he re rrestaurant esstaurant est esta estaurant ura urant an ntt industry iindustr ndus ndustry dustry tr try, A Ang An ngela ((mother, mother, wife, triathlete entrepreneur) instinctively knew year old landmark triathlet iathle athlet le ete et e and nd n de en ent nttrepreneur n repreneu epreneur preneur eneur neur neur urr) in ur) iins insti instinc instin inst nssstinc nstinc nsti nst n stin ti ttinc tin iinc ncttively nc tivel tiv ivve ive ively vely ely e lyy kn k ew w that tha th hat h ha at tthe at he e 1100 100 yye arr o a ld la andmark building corners Carlisle greater heights. One day, on n the he e fo fourr cco four corne corner orn or o rn rne s of of C Car Carl Ca ar arrllis arl issl isle sle le w le was wa as a destin dest destine dest destined desti de estined estin es e sstined stine tiiined ttined tine ine ned ffo for orr great o g gr grea gre rea ea ate at er he height heig hei heigh e gh g tss. O ne d ay, whilst eating old watching occurred ice ice-cream iice-cre ce-crea ce-cream e-crea -cream -crea -cr ccream ream w with ith th th he her h 3 yyear ye yea e o ld d an and a nd n dw wa atc tchin tch ttching cch ching chi chin hi hin h hing iing ng th ng tthe he cars rss g go b by, y,, it o ccurred tto ccur o her that the cars bistro. numbers go goi goin going oing o iing ng n gb by ccould ould ou o uld ld db be stopping stoppin stoppi to toppin topping toppi opping opping in ng n ga att her he h er er b bi bist isstro stro. ttrrro tro tro. ro. o. It o. I wasn wasn’t wa w was asn’t a sn ssn’t n t lo llong on ng g before before n befor bef number num nu um m rs were negotiated, permits wass b permit ts iissued ts sssued ssue sued su ued ued e a and Ca an Casc Cas Cascata Casca ascata a scata sca cat cata ata tta aB Biist Bistro iistro stro tro o wa w born bor bo born. orn o orn. rrn rn. n. philosophy farmers using Fol Followin FFollowing Follow Foll olllow llowing low lo ow owing wing in ing ng tth ng the he he fa farm farm far arm ar rm to o ta table ttab ab ble le e phi phil philoso philosop ph hiloso h hilosop il iloso ilo iilosop losop lo loso oso osop o sop op o phy hy w which hich hich iccch h supports supp ssup su upp upports up upp pports p ppo ports port po p orts o rt rrts ttss local lloc lo o occcal ocal all ffa a far arrmers by a b u sing locally seasonal produce available, att the a award grrow grown ow ow wn n sea se easonal son o onal nal all p pr pro rro odu duce uce uce uc ce w when whe wh h hen en n availabl availab availa avai vailab vaila vai vail vvailabl aiiillable, ailabl lab ab e, e, a all llll o off the the th he me men m menu en e enu nu n u iitems item ite tem tems tte ems e ms a ms ward winning Cascata Bistro handmade, ensuring quality ingredients are C ascat asca asc catta aB istr istro strrro st sstro o are a arre re h handmad hand handmade ha handm andmad andma an andm a andmade and nd n dm ma made ade ad a de d e, ens en ensur ensuri ensurin e ensu nsurin ns nsuri nsur n nsu ssur su surin suri urin uri u ur rri rin iin ng o on onl only nly nlyy fr ffresh resh sh hq qual qua quali qu uali uali ual alli lity ty ing iingre in ng ngre n ngred grre gre g re ed dients a re used. Together and bistro’s chef continuously delicious Angela A ngela a an a nd d th the h b bi bis iisstro ttrro’s tro’s o’s o ’’ss cch che he h ef cco continu contin cont conti on ontin ontinu o nti ntinu t nuo ou ously usly sllyy str sl sly sstrive st ttrrrive iive iv ve tto ve o cr ccreate re ea eate eat atte a ate te n ne new new, e ew w, d w, eliciou us and enticing combinations -often herbs vegetables bistro’s combin combi ccomb ombin mb bin binati bin ina inati nat nati ati a ttiion ons o ns ns -o --of -ofte o offfte ten using te us usi sin ing gh erbs rb rbs bss and an nd d vve veg vege e eg ege getable etab ta table ables fr ab able ffrom fro rom m th tthe he bis bi b bist iist is ssttro’s own n kitchen garden. events hosted include pairing dinners, specialty brunches Special S Specia pecial pe ecial cciia ial e vent vven vents ents ent e en nts h hos ho os oste ted ed iinclu inc incl nc nclu n clu ud de ew win wine wiin ine ne p ne airin airing a iri iring iirin rring ing gd di nners, nners nne nner nn n ners, ers, ers rs, s ssp pecialty eci ecialt ecia ecial cia cial cialty iialty alty l yb runche es and weekly live visit Cascata Bistro entertainment. For contests and more information, vis i iitt C Cascat ta B Bi Bistr istro on Facebook.
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ingredients mixed traditional flavours Fresh local in ngred ngred re red edi dients ients t mix m i ed dw with wit i the the e tradit ttrad raditional onal nal al ffla fl vours ours urs of urs o authe authentic a uthe c Italian cuisine are combination. Especially service a winning co ombinat binat b bi i attiion. on E on Esp ecially when paired with friendlyy ser sse ervice rvii in n an eclectic Whether are planning two lively atmosphere. Wheth h her you ar e plann plannin planni plan lanni g an lannin an inti in int iintimate t mate ate te e dinner dinn d din di err ffor fo orr tw o or a li vely group event, designed Cascata Bistro delight the wonderfully llyy d de esigned ssiiig igne gned gn g ned ed C Ca assc scata sca ca ca atta ta Bis tro in Carlisle, is an artisanal del light just waiting to
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An employment scam making the rounds has bilked 10 Ottawa residents of thousands of dollars, say Ottawa police, who are warning the public not to send money to people they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know and trust. This text message was recently sent to Sgt. Jamie Ritchie with the Ottawa police organized fraud unit.
Ottawans bilked out of thousands of dollars in employment scam Erin McCracken erin.mccracken@metroland.com
More Ottawa residents than usual have recently fallen prey to an employment scam that has bilked them of thousands of dollars. Ten victims came forward in the last two weeks of August alleging they had each been bilked of between $3,000 and $10,000 after they were targeted by scammers promising them high-paying jobs. â&#x20AC;&#x153;For us, we would see one or two a week,â&#x20AC;? said Sgt. Jamie Ritchie, with the Ottawa police organized fraud unit. The recent spate of crimes prompted the unit to issue a warning about the scam on Sept. 2. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t think thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s an increase in this scam going on, just that thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been a lot of victims lately in this area,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t believe theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re all falling prey to the same guy either. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s lots of people out there running this scam.â&#x20AC;? In the scam, false job ads are listed on websites and in newspapers, and are sent through unsolicited emails and texts. Respondents are told theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve gotten the job, often as a secret shopper who is sent to test the services of a
bank, store or money transfer service, fill out a survey and report back. In other cases, the victim is asked to pay the scammerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s accounts for them. The â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;new employeeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; is sent payment in the form of a forged, fraudulent or stolen cheque and is instructed to deposit the money into their own bank account. They are told to keep some of that as their pay, but then send the rest to another account or to different addresses via money transfer. But then their bank calls to inform them that cheque or electronic transfer of funds was fraudulent and their account is now overdrawn or has been frozen. While surprised that people are still falling victim to this scam, Ritchie said that someone responding to these job offers â&#x20AC;&#x153;is obviously someone who is desperate for a job.â&#x20AC;? TOUGH TO CRACK
Cracking these crimes and recouping the stolen money is an uphill battle since they are Internet-based thefts and the perpetrators are masters at covering their tracks. â&#x20AC;&#x153;As far as where the ad is coming from and where theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re operating from, we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have
much success,â&#x20AC;? said Ritchie. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Success comes from where the money goes.â&#x20AC;? Often, the fraudsters use money transfer services, like Western Union or MoneyGram, and the funds are wired out of Canada to places like India, Ukraine and Jamaica. The scam artists also ask the job seeker to deposit the money into Canadian bank accounts, some of them belonging to other victims caught up in another part of the scam, further adding to the challenge of tracking down those responsible. In some cases, the bank accounts have been taken over by someone who has learned a victimâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s banking information. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll know when the money goes in and theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll just pull it out right after, so you may not even notice that your account was being used by that type of thing,â&#x20AC;? said Ritchie. Investigators are warning people never to send money to someone they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know and trust. So far, no arrests have been made in connection with these recent crimes. The fraud unit is urging victims of this scam to report the incident by calling 613-2361222, ext. 7300. For a list of anti-fraud tips, go to tinyurl.com/pnrbqew.
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
27
Ottawa police will not be charged in drowning death of murder suspect: SIU Muhab Sultan was found dead after police chase in June Alex Robinson alex.robinson@metroland.com
The province’s Special Investigation Unit has concluded there is no reason to charge any Ottawa police officers in the drowning death of a mur-
der suspect in the Rideau River in June. Police divers found Muhab Sultan’s body on June 27, a few days after he was seen jumping into the Rideau River after a police chase. Sultan, 23, was wanted
in connection to the June 14 murder of 18-year-old Jeremy Cook, in London, Ont. Cook was shot and killed in a parking lot after he used a tracking app to locate his missing cellphone. Sultan had allegedly tried to run over two police officers on bicycles in downtown Ottawa on June 24, police said. One of the officers was hit, but suffered only minor
NOTICE OF COMMENCEMENT OF TRANSIT PROJECT ASSESSMENT PROCESS O TRAIN TRILLIUM LINE EXTENSION
injuries. He then took off in his car. When police caught up with him, they were able to arrest the passenger in his car, but Sultan ran away on foot. He hid in a shed in a backyard on Marlborough Avenue, until the owner of the property saw him and called police. Sultan then fled again, heading east and jumped into the river. Officers said they heard Sultan’s screams for help and that he was about half way to the other side of the river before he started to have trouble. Officers tried to save him, but he disappeared under the wa-
ter, before they could reach him, the SIU said. “They were tantalizingly close to reaching him before he dipped out of sight below the water’s surface,” said Joseph Martino, the acting director of the SIU. “The officers remained in the river for a period of time and dove underwater to search for Mr. Sultan, but the water’s murkiness made the effort a futile one.” Ottawa police contacted the SIU to take over the investigation after the incident. The SIU investigates cases involving police where death, serious injury or sexual assault occur.
Four SIU investigators and a forensic specialist looked into the case and interviewed six civilian witnesses and four officers. They determined that none of the officers involved in the incident were responsible for Sultan’s death. “In the circumstances, I am satisfied that Mr. Sultan’s death is the product of his own misadventure, and very likely the result of an ill-advised decision to enter the water in an effort to avoid police apprehension – a decision for which he alone is to blame,” Martino said. With files from the TorStar News Service
The Project The City of Ottawa is developing a plan to extend and expand the City’s existing diesel-powered O-Train Trillium Line service from Greenboro Station to Riverside South (Bowesville Road) and to the Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport. The plan will include options to service the growing communities of Riverside South and Leitrim, the Airport and adjacent lands, new stations at Gladstone Avenue and Walkley Road and a relocated station at Confederation Heights on the existing Trillium Line. The plan also allows for future conversion to electric light rail transit (LRT) technology. The Process The environmental impact of this transit project is being assessed according to the Transit Project Assessment Process (TPAP) as prescribed in Ontario Regulation 231/08. As part of the TPAP, an Environmental Project Report (EPR) is being prepared to document the planned project and all anticipated environmental impacts. Consultation Members of the public, agencies and other interested persons are encouraged to participate actively in the Transit Project Assessment Process by contacting staff directly with information, comments or questions. Information about the progress of the project to date is available on the City’s website at ottawa.ca/trilliumline. At the end of the consultation period, in January 2016, the draft EPR will be made available for public review. If you would like to be added to our project mailing list, have project-related questions, or have any accessibility requirements in order to participate in this project, please contact: Frank McKinney, P.Eng. Program Manager, Transportation Planning City of Ottawa 110 Laurier Avenue West, 4th Floor Ottawa ON K1P 1J1 Tel: 613-580-2424 ext. 28540 E-mail: Frank.Mckinney@ottawa.ca
FILE
The province’s Special Investigation Unit has determined that no police officers should be charged in the death of Muhab Sultan, who drowned in the Rideau River after fleeing from police.
Under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Environmental Assessment Act, unless otherwise stated in the submission, any personal information such as name, address, telephone number and property location included in a submission will become part of the public record files for this matter and will be released, if requested, to any person.
Ad # 2015-114-S_10092015 R0013452169-0910
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
FUTSAL INDOOR SOCCER WINTER PROGRAM FOR THE GLOUCESTER AND SURROUNDING AREA PLAYERS Register for Futsal League Today! WANTED Boys and Girls ages 4-21 ALL SKILL LEVELS YOUTH FEES 2015-2016: STARTS OCT 2015 AGE GROUP
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*First 6 TEAMS in Thursday COED league will receive additional $100 discount on the team fee. NOTE 1: Preregistered Teams will receive a $100 discount off fees above. NOTE 2: Preregistered Players will receive a $10 discount off fees above.
** Team fee is based on 10 players per team and one payment. Multiple payments will be priced as individual players. For additional players, a $20 OSA fee applies. Deadline for adding players to a registered team is Jan 31, 2016. No refunds after Oct. 31, 2015, or after a player has played. The deadline for registering new players is December 31, 2015. Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015 29
Craft show looks to bring out New Edinburgh’s artistic side Alex Robinson alex.robinson@metroland.com
A new craft show has put a call out to the creative people of New Edinburgh. Something New Edinburgh is inviting local artists and craft-makers to apply to sell their products in its 30 to 35 spots. “We’re looking for anything that’s handmade,” said Jenny Nelson, one of the show’s organizers.
Nelson had the idea for the show after she recently moved to New Edinburgh. She had started her own online business, Seedling Yarn, selling knitted home-made crafts on Etsy. com and had attended a number of craft fairs to sell her own products. She soon realized there would be interest in one in her new neighbourhood. “When I moved here, I thought what a great place to have one as it’s such a vibrant and creative commu-
nity,” she said. “I noticed there wasn’t a craft show here throughout the year so I thought it would be fun to try to put one together.” Nelson teamed up with her longtime friend, Tania Barton, to put on Something New Edinburgh. Barton has been responsible for the branding and imaging for the event, which is set to take place at Memorial Hall, at 39 Dufferin Rd., on Nov. 7. Nelson and Barton are hoping to
have a diverse group of artists and crafts that are mostly from New Edinburgh. “We’re going to curate at the end of September so that there is a good mix,” Nelson said. “We want to have people with links to New Edinburgh if possible.” Something New Edinburgh has already selected Ottawa-based photographer Matthew Hinther to sell his photos at the event. Briggs Trees, a Navan tree farm, will also be taking
pre-orders at the event for its handmade Christmas wreaths. A group of Ashbury Students will be making crafts to sell at the event to benefit Les Enfant pour Christ, an initiative that sends resources to rural schools in the Dominican Republic. Artisans have until Sept. 30th to submit an application with a short write up describing their home-made product. For more information or to submit an application, email somethingnewedinburgh@gmail.com.
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Jenny Nelson, of Seedling Yarn, does crochet at a craft show. Nelson is one of the organizers of the Something New Edinburgh craft show, which will take place Nov. 7. xclusive eels.ca e h s, W d n a t review Articles or exper f s o e Browse e id h V t elevison flecting Driving T stories re s w e n d rs s an roadtrip ian drive f Canad o s le y t Lifes to on tools omparis C t d n g a ri h at’s h Researc ehicle th v e h Use our t d fin out and learn ab le y t s Life for your
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Afro-Cuban flavour takes over Shenkman Brier Dodge brier.dodge@metroland.com
Afro-Cuban sounds will take over the Shenkman Arts Centre on Sept. 26 as AfroCuban Celebration comes to the stage. “We’re targeting Canadian audiences,” said show producer Yasmina Proveyer. “The reason is to be a little bit more education, to let them know about our history, our heritage. And now we’re part of this society, and it’s an artistic contribution.” Proveyer, a Centretown resident, is originally from Cuba but has been in Ottawa for seven years now. The two-hour show features dance and poetry, with the music lead by Centretown resident, Cuban-born Miguel de Armas and his Latin jazz quartet. The show will also feature singer Caridad Cruz, dancer Julio Hong, and dancers from the Montreal AfroCuban Association. Cuban arts have a heavy African influence because of the African slaves that came to Cuba, mostly the Yoruba ethnic group from Congo and Nigeria. “They have a very distinctive type of music and dance,” Proveyer said. “So that influenced the origins of Cuban music itself.” She said the arts are taken very seriously in the country, and artists attend special arts schools from primary school through university. The compositions used in the show are de Armas’ originals, but are heavily influenced by Afro-Cuban rhythms. He also will play some classical Cuban rhythms as well. “So far people love it,” Proveyer said. “This experience collects new Canadians that are originally from Cuba who are trying to preserve their traditions and their culture, and it’s a celebration of that.” The show was originally produced and presented at the National Arts Centre and Centrepointe Theatre during Black History Month in March, but didn’t have any east end performances. It was important to come to the east end, partially because of the group’s involvement with the AOE Arts Council, based out of the Shenkman
SUBMITTED
The Afro-Cuban Celebration will come to the Shenkman Arts Centre on Sept. 26. The celebration will highlight music, dance, and song presented by Canadian-Cubans.
Community Information Session College Ward Stage 2 Confederation Line Light Rail Transit Maintenance and Storage Facility (Woodroffe Avenue near Norice Street location; also known as the Nepean Corridor)
Environmental Assessment Study Monday, September 21, 2015 5:30 to 8 p.m., Presentation at 6:30 p.m. Ben Franklin Place, Council Chambers and Atrium 101 Centrepointe Drive This Community Information Session will: • Present the rationale for choosing the Woodroffe Avenue location for a future Stage 2 Maintenance & Storage Facility (MSF). • Provide background on initial site layout and access, potential construction phasing and timing, as well as measures to address environmental and community impacts and concerns. • Have City staff and consulting engineers to respond to residents’ queries about the site. The area of open land adjacent to an existing rail corridor has been selected as one of two recommended locations to meet future Light Rail Transit Maintenance and Storage requirements as the Confederation Line system expands. Accessibility is an important consideration for the City of Ottawa. If you require special accommodation, please call or e-mail the project lead below before the event. SUBMITTED
Music and dance will be combined when this celebration arrives at the Shenkman Arts Centre. Arts Centre. Through the AOE Arts Council, they received an Articipate grant to be able to bring the show to the east end. There will also be arts and crafts from Cuba on display,
and a Cuban inspired drink menu – which of course, includes mojitos. Tickets for the show are available at capitaltickets.ca. Tickets range from $38.50 to $48.50.
For further information please visit the study web site at ottawa.ca/westernlrt or contact: Nelson Edwards Senior Project Manager Transportation Planning 110 Laurier Avenue West Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 21290 Fax: 613-580-2570 E-mail: Nelson.Edwards@ottawa.ca
Ad # 2015-140-S_10092015 R0013452186-0910
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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Chasing a cure for cancer in Blackburn Hamlet Brier Dodge brier.dodge@metroland.com
Every year when Linda Desens starts collecting pledges for the Blackburn Cancer Chase, she gets out her shirt she got the first year she participated with the names of all those she’s lost to cancer written on it. They range in age from three-years-old to 90 when
they died, and include both her mother and her sister. She had sponsored friends who took part in the Cancer Chase years ago, when it was still an affiliate of the CIBC Run for the Cure. When she retired, she said there was no reason she couldn’t walk the five km route herself. The Blackburn Hamlet resident raised $600 the first year she completed the course,
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which she walks like a good portion of the participants. This year, her fifth, she had already raised $530 by the end of August for the Sept. 27 walk and run. “I just want to keep raising money,” she said. “Hopefully one dollar will send the total over to find a cure.” This year, she’ll especially be remembering her mother, who passed away 20 years ago.
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Linda Desens holds the shirt she made that lists the names of friends and family who she has lost to cancer. Desens proudly participates in the Blackburn Cancer Chase annually and fundraises for the Ottawa Hospital Foundation. This year’s Cancer Chase will be held on Sept. 27. She hopes that her shirt, listing those she’s lost to cancer, won’t have any more names added to it in the future. “No more names,” she said. “I want a shirt of survivors next.” “People like that are the heart and soul of this,” said race director Bill Horne about Desens. “They are so committed and keep on doing it year after year. It almost brought tears to my eyes when i was talking to her about how devoted she was to this.” The Cancer Chase will move from the old route near the community hall, and to the trails that start and end at the Hornet’s Nest on Bearbrook.
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The old route required crossing the street, and while last year hired police helped keep the route safe, the cost was prohibitive for a community fundraiser. The trails near the Hornet’s Nest, which are often used for cross country meets and by local routes, were a nearby alternative. “In many ways, it’s a much nicer course,” Horne said. “It’s a beautiful course, really. It’s so much nicer than running on the streets.” The new course includes going up and down the toboggan hill, so a detour that avoids the hill and cuts about 300 metres off the run will be an option for
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
those who don’t want to tackle the hill. “Some people want to run, they want to race. That’s great,” Horne said. “But manyothers just want to walk and enjoy the trail, and don’t care if they finish in 20 minutes.” The Blackburn Cancer Chase will be held on Sept. 27, with registration starting at 8:15 a.m. Advance registration to get a t-shirt is available through the Running Room, though those who show up on the day of are also welcome. The walk and run does not start at the community hall in Blackburn this year, instead it starts at the Eric Danis Clubhouse at 1660 Bearbrook Rd.
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Police released this photo of a woman, who they are looking for in connection to a credit card fraud. Submitted
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She was wearing a light-coloured baseball cap, sunglasses, a white t-shirt and shorts. Police described one of the men as between 5-foot-10 and 6-feet tall, 35 to 45 years old, heavyset with tanned skin and a chin strap beard. The second man was described as 6-feet tall, between 35 and 45 years old, heavyset, with a thin beard. He wore a large ring on his right ring finger. Police ask anyone with information regarding the investigation to call Det. JoLynn Wellman at 613-236-1222, ext. 5677. Anonymous tips can be submitted by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.
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Hospice Care Ottawa will enter the east end this year with a francophone day program in Orléans. The new hospice program will operate out of space attached to the Residence SaintLouis, and is currently operating under the working name Maison de l’est. The name may change before the official opening. Hospice care can be residential, for endof-life care, but can also be day programs for those still living with caregivers or at home. “A lot of people hear hospice and they just think end of life,” said Kristina Voth-Childs, Hospice Care Ottawa’s communications coordinator. “But it’s actually from the start of the diagnosis.”
The east end hospice will start as just a day program, but Voth-Childs said there are hopes that it could grow to a full-service hospice, such as May Court Hospice in Old Ottawa South, which is a nine-bed residence. Before the day program can operate, they need to find francophone volunteers who are available about one day a week to help with the program, and complete volunteer training. A typical day for a volunteer starts a bit before the 10 a.m. drop off, when most clients are dropped off by a family member. “They have coffee and goodies in the morning, tell jokes, have a hot lunch, and then an afternoon full of different activities,” Voth-Childs said. The program will then run until 2:30 p.m. Volunteers need to step forward and go through the training process before the hospice program can begin to accept clients. Voth-Childs said she expected the program to start in early 2016. Francophone training will run at the Residence Saint-Louis at 879 Hiawatha Park Rd. on Sept. 26, Oct. 3, 24 and Nov. 7. To volunteer, contact volunteerteam.maycourt@hospicecareottwa.ca.
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Just days into the new school year for francophone students, Lisa Marie Ng is already vowing to take action before her son is exposed to the province’s updated sex-education curriculum. “This year, when they teach sex-ed I’ll be removing my child from school that day,” said the Riverside Park mother of three, who also took her eldest son out of Ėcole George-ĖtienneCartier French Catholic school for a week during the past academic year to protest the new sex-ed curriculum. Ng brought her two youngest children to stand with about 40 other protesters, most of them grandparents, parents and young children, outside the Bank
Street constituency office of Ottawa South Liberal MPP John Fraser on Sept. 2. Similar rallies, spearheaded by the Campaign Life Coalition, were held the same day across the province. In Ottawa, protesters gathered outside the offices of Liberal MPPs Yasir Naqvi, Marie-France Lalonde and Madeleine Meilleur. The list also included offices of Jack MacLaren, Lisa MacLeod and Bob Chiarelli. “I came today because I think this is too much, too soon,” Ng said. While she believes the curriculum, which was last updated in 1998, needed another overhaul since the Internet plays such a big role in children’s lives today, she believes the new material is not age appropriate.
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Riverside Park resident Lisa Marie Ng, left, and her two youngest children, Julia, 19 months, and Jeremy, 4, join about 40 protesters, including Heron Park resident Diana Gaetana Nicolo, right, calling for the repeal of the province’s updated sex education curriculum on Sept. 2. “Mostly what I’m concerned about is they’ll be planting ideas in children’s heads before they’re really ready for it, especially with the older grades,” she said. “I’m very concerned that by
grades five, six and seven, children are already going to know how to have sex – anal sex, oral sex – and I think perhaps some children, especially my son who is very naive and young – he’s not going to be ready for that.”
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But Ottawa South MPP John Fraser said many of the topics in the curriculum, especially in the younger grades, are teacher prompts, meaning that the information can be used to respond to students’ questions.
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Angry parents let their feelings be known before return to school Continued from page 37
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Noga Abarbanel, who has 12 grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren, said the curriculum will rob children of their innocence. “They will be more active sexually and our society is already over-sexualized,” the South Keys resident said. “And there will be more abortions and more unwanted pregnancies. It’s not right.” For that reason, the onus should be on parents to teach such topics. “Parents have the right to teach their children the way they feel is right,” she said. Rev. Anthony Hannon with Saint Catherine of Siena Roman Catholic Church in Metcalfe echoed this, adding that the government “has no business in the classroom.” “I think every child is unique and I think the parents are best
able to figure out how to deal with their own children,” said Hannon, who was on hand to provide moral support since some of his parishioners live in the nearby community. “Biology can be in the schools, but not this stuff.” But Fraser said not all parents would take on that role. “It is the responsibility of all parents to teach their children about sexuality and love and responsibility. But what we do know is that in many, many cases that doesn’t happen,” said Fraser, who was in Toronto for committee work during the protest outside his Ottawa office. He planned to meet at a later date with some of the protesters to dispel some of the myths being spread about the curriculum, and stress the view that it does not encourage the sexualization of children. “At the core, what this is about is protecting our chil-
dren,” Fraser said, adding that children are now finding their information on the Internet. “So it’s about making sure that they have information that they need to make sure that they make responsible decisions in life.”
“Parents have the right to teach their children the way they feel is right.” Noga Abarbanel
Without it, he said, they are more likely to engage in risky behaviour. Kathleen Murphy, the mother of a Grade 9 student at Ėcole Omer-Deslauriers, a French public high school in Nepean’s Parkwood Hills, said the new educational material leaves out essential subjects such as mar-
riage, monogamy, love and legal age of consent. “Those are some pretty glaring omissions in a sex-ed curriculum that they say has been updated to take into account modern sexting and so forth,” the Riverside Park resident said. “Love, marriage and monogamy are fairly important in one’s adult life.” Gay marriage is also introduced too young, which Murphy said may confuse some children. Murphy, who served as the team leader for the south Ottawa protest, passed around a petition that calls for the government to repeal the curriculum and begin “a meaningful parental consultation process that actually gets buy-in from parents.” But Fraser said the province consulted about 1,000 parents and 70 agencies and looked to other provinces such as B.C. and Alberta.
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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Police warn against buying stolen goods Brier Dodge
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Can I help? 613-580-2751 Michael.Qaqish@ottawa.ca www.michaelqaqish.com 40
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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Riverside South Community Design Plan Update Please join myself and city staff for a community meeting to discuss the Riverside South Community Design Plan (CDP). The meeting will be held Monday Sept 21st from 7-9 p.m. at the Rideauview Community Centre Gymnasium, located at 4310 Shoreline Drive. At this meeting, residents and landowners will learn more about the draft revisions to the CDP, the Official Plan, the Zoning By-law and other supporting documents such as the Riverside South Core Area Urban Design Guidelines, Infrastructure Servicing Study Update, Master Drainage Plan Update and an Area Parks Plan. If you would like to learn more before the meeting please go to ottawa.ca/ riversidesouthcdp for further information. I look forward to seeing you there. School Zone Traffic Safety It is that time of year, children have now returned to school. It is important to remember that we will be seeing many of these children walking and biking to school on our roads and drivers must be vigilant. Many younger children often have limited experience with traffic and therefore lack the skills to negotiate traffic safely. Please take special care by following important safety rules such as, reducing speed in school zones, be ready to stop at all times, try to make eye contact with children wanting to cross the road, be patient and wait for children to complete their crossing before proceeding and also stop when a STOP paddle is held up by a crossing guard. It is also important to speak to your children about traffic safety before allowing them to bike or walk to school alone. You may have noticed new traffic signs along Spratt Road, through works with school Parent Councils and the City, the road has now been designated as a “school zone” when lights are flashing the speed limit will be 40km/h. Electronic Recycle Day in Riverside South Equity One with the support of my office will be holding an electronic recycle day on Sept 19th from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the parking lot of the Rideauview Community Centre. If you have any old computer equipment, TVs, cell phones, stereos and even cables and wires please drop them off for recycling. All of the proceeds will be donated to Habitat for Humanity and the Ottawa Food Bank. If you do not have any e-waste but would still like to donate, please stop by and make a monetary donation or bring a non-perishable food item and you will be entered to win tickets to an Ottawa Senators hockey game. E-waste accounts for approximately 3000 tonnes added to landfills each year, so it is a great opportunity to not only support local charities but also to take care of the environment. The Metcalfe Skating Club For those residents interested in learning or improving on their skating skills, the Metcalfe skating club’s registration is now open. They offer a variety of options including, precanskate, canskate, advanced canskate and even synchronized skating team programs. The programs are offered at both Fred Barrett Arena and Larry Robinson Arena. This is a fun and dynamic way to learn with certified skatecanada coaches. For more information or to register please visit, metcalfeskatingclub.ca. Fall Tim Horton’s Cleaning the Capital A reminder that registration for the annual fall Tim Horton’s Cleaning the Capital campaign is now open. Participants can register their cleanup projects by calling 3-1-1 or by using the easy online registration form available at ottawa.ca. The interactive map on the website will show which locations have already been claimed and allow residents to register their own project site. This is a great way to keep our city clean and green. Since the beginning of the program over one million volunteers have participated in over 16,000 cleanup projects throughout the city. Cleanups will commence in mid September and registration closes October 15th 2015.
Orléans police are cautioning residents against purchasing potentially stolen audio equipment. JP Vincelette, the community police of-
ficer, said in August a man was selling audio equipment out of the trunk of his car at the Tim Hortons at 4454 Innes Rd. “We’re advising the public not to get involved in these type of transactions,” he said. There’s “probably a good chance” the au-
dio equipment is stolen property, Vincelette said, adding he wanted to remind the public that being in possession of stolen property is a crime. If the public see something along these lines, of someone selling potentially stolen equipment, they are asked to call police.
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Ottawa board won’t take same hard line as Peel on sex-ed Brier Dodge brier.dodge@metroland.com
Brier Dodge/Metroland
Protesters against the new sexual education and physical education curriculum protest outside Orléans MPP Marie-France Lalonde’s office on Sept. 2. Lalonde, who was in Toronto at the time, had her staff distribute information.
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The same day that the Peel District School Board’s director of education said that parents pulling students out of classes that teach about same-sex couples and different family structures and gender identifies wouldn’t be tolerated, the Ottawa public school board said they can’t stop parents from removing students from classes. “At any time parents can pull their children from school, but that’s not the way we’re approaching it,” said Ottawa public board superintendent of curriculum Pino Buffone. “They can pull their child out of math class.” He said teachers have been undergoing training, especially with how to deal with the optional teacher prompts to answer student-asked questions. Many of the controversial content in the curriculum have come from the teacher prompts provided. Buffone said the physical education curriculum was the oldest curriculum and was in need of updating, and teachers’ jobs are to teach the curriculum as provided. He said it’s important that teachers are talking about topics such as the implications of social media and consent in the classroom. “It doesn’t mean sexual consent at early grades. It might be a classmate not wanting to play a game on the playground,” he said, adding that consent does address sexual consent in the intermediate grades. “It’s to have students respect each other.” While parents are allowed to pull their children out of classes if they wish, Buffone said 99 per cent of concerns he’s heard have been clarified or have been dealt with. There has been a wide range of misinformation about the curriculum, such as that students will learn about sex in Grade 1, or that masturbation is a mandatory learning expectation in Grade 6. A Grade 1 child will learn about anatomy and correct names for body parts, and personal hygiene such as hand washing. In Grade 6, teachers aren’t required to teach about masturbation, but are giving optional prompt information to correctly answer student questions that may arise. Buffone said teachers will be encouraged to communicate frequently with parents about what will be taught and share the resources that they’ll be using in the classroom so parents will know what is going to be taught and when. It could include teachers sending home letters, and putting the scheduled lesson days on calendars and in newsletters to keep parents aware. “I think it’s a respectful way to approach things,” he said.
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Winter Boat Storage. Eastern Ontario’s most affordable winter storage by VACATION/COTTAGES VACATION/COTTAGES a proper mechanic. From $350/season including LAKEFRONT 3 BEDROOM PET cleaning, winterizing, oil FRIENDLY COTTAGE (sleeps 6) change, storage and shrink available for weekly or weekend rental wrapping. Free oil change from Sept. 7th through the end of Oct. for first time customers. 40 years of repairing and at reduced Fall rates. Situated in Haliburton Highlands, GARAGE SALE storing boats. with 4 piece bath, living/dining area, well equipped kitch6 1 3 - 2 6 7 - 3 4 7 0 . en and attached screened-in Muskoka room. Well looked after grassy grounds on a gentle slope down to a 400 sq ft Multi-Family Garage Sale, steveday13@yahoo.ca Saturday September 12, dock on a very peaceful NO MOTOR lake. Great swimming, 26 Camberley Street, Barfishing, with 1 canoe, 3 kayaks, a peddalo, life vests, firePERSONAL rhaven. pit and games. Available now from Sept. 7th through Oct. Criminal Record? Don’t let at Fall rates. Please call Patrick 416-564-4511 or email your past limit your career patrick@nemms.ca for rates and full photos. FOR SALE plans! Since 1989 Steel Buildings/Metal Confidential, fast Affordable A+ BBB Rating, Buildings up to 60% OFF! & Travel 30x40, 40x60, 50x80, Employment 60x100, 80x100 sell for Freedom, Call for Free Info 1-8-NOWbalance owed! Call: Booklet. 1 - 8 0 0 - 4 5 7 - 2 2 0 6 PARDON (1-866-972-7366) www.RemoveYourRecord.c www.crownsteelbuildings. om ca
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Professionals Needed. Looking for career-minded persons willing to speak to small groups or do oneon-one Presentations locally. Part Time or Full Time. A car and internet access are necessary. Training and ongoing support provided. Build financial security. Paid daily. Call Diana 1.866.306.5858
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
CUSTODIAN Typical Duties: t %VTUJOH TXFFQJOH NPQQJOH TDSVCCJOH øPPST DBSQFU DMFBOJOH DMFBOJOH PG XBTISPPNT SFNPWBM PG HBSCBHF TOPX BOE HFOFSBM HSPVOE NBJOUFOBODF Skills: t "CJMJUZ UP XPSL JOEFQFOEFOUMZ JO B GBTU QBDFE FOWJSPONFOU BUUFOUJPO UP EFUBJMT HPPE DPNNVOJDBUJPO TLJMMT LOPXMFEHF PG DIFNJDBMT BOE FRVJQNFOU SFMBUFE UP QSPGFTTJPO Required Qualifications: t A( DMBTT ESJWFST MJDFOTF BMPOH XJUI B DMFBO ESJWJOH SFDPSE t .JOJNVN ZFBST PG CVJMEJOH DPNQBOZ DMFBOJOH FYQFSJFODF t 4PVOE LOPXMFEHF PG BMM DMFBOJOH EVUJFT BOE SFTQPOTJCJMJUJFT t (PPE JOUFSQFSTPOBM DPNNVOJDBUJPO BOE PSHBOJ[BUJPOBM TLJMMT
BARTENDER/ SERVER/COOK FOR SPORTS BAR t t t t t t t t
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Now Hiring Full Time - CNC Mill Operators (Days/Evenings) - CNC Mill Setup Person(s) (Days/Evenings) - Deburring Operators (Days/Evenings) - Minimum 2-3 years experience required Please forward resumes to harold@camcorindustries.com HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Email: hr@ozoptics.com or Fax: (613)831-2151 www.ozoptics.com
Cruickshank Construction, a leading road builder and aggregate supplier located in Ontario and Alberta has immediate openings for: Cruickshank is looking for ON-CALL and SPARE combination snow plow/salter drivers with an AZ/DZ license for the following cities:
~ Vankleek Hill ~ Carlsbad Springs ~ Carleton Place ~ Haley Station ~ Renfrew ~ Arnprior ~ Brockville ~ Kemptville
HELP WANTED
DRIVERS WANTED AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrakes: Guaranteed 40 hour work week + overtime, paid travel, lodging, meal allowance, 4 week’s vacation/excellent benefits package. Must be able to have extended stays away from home for three months at a time. Experience Needed: Valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrakes, commercial driving experience. Apply online at www.sperryrail.com under careers, FastTRACK Application.
HELP WANTED
WE’RE HIRING!
USED STYROFOAM FOR SALE 3”x 2’x 4’ - $6 per sheet 4”x 2’x 4’ - $7 per sheet Call Larry Cell phone 613-223-6734
Care for disabled man (63) $20/hour. Care of pets, yard work. Need reliable vehicle. Rural location. Call after 6 p.m. 613-890-1926.
HELP WANTED
CLR632779_0910
All Cleaned Dry Seasoned hardwood. (hard maple) cut and split. Free delivery, kindling available, also white birch. Call today 613-229-7533
PETS
CLR632769_0910
HELP WANTED
Make $1000 Weekly!! Mailing Brochures From Home. Helping home workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No Experience Required. Start Immediately. www.newmailers.com
www.emcclassified.ca
CLS466800_0903
FIREWOOD
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
~ Pembroke ~ Stonecliffe ~ Camden East ~ Crosby ~ Kingston ~ Lansdowne ~ Morrisburg ~ Summerstown
We a completive offer hourly rate, weekly stand-by pay and guaranteed hours. Candidates must live within 25 minutes of one of the cities listed above. To apply please send your resume to chr11@cruickshankgroup.com or Fax to 613-542-3034.
www.cruickshankgroup.com CL467801
Global Leader in Fiber Optic Components, Test Equipment and Sensors since 1985 WE’RE HIRING! FIBER OPTIC PRODUCT MANAGER Responsible for R&D, Production and sales of fiber optic components, such as fiber pigtailing of laser diode/lasers, polarization maintaining fiber components, high power components, opto electronic hermetic packaging, test equipment or sensors. Must have 5 years experience in either of the above fiber optic fields and have a University or College degree.
AR COATING TECHNICIAN The candidate will be responsible for the operation and maintenance of the equipment and the loading and unloading, of substrates and fiber fixtures. Regular measurement checks of coating runs using a spectrophotometer The cleaning and inspection of fiber tips. Minimum 5 years experience
CLEANROOM TECHNICIAN / ENGINEER The applicant will work in a clean-room environment, inspecting and cleaning optical components He/she will be examining parts under a microscope. An attention to detail, fine vision and motor skills are assets. Minimum of 3 years experience working in a clean room environment is required
SHIPPER/RECEIVER The candidate is to organize and ensure all items are properly packed all required paperwork and documentation is done. 5 years’ experience required in export documentation and courier software.
QA ENGINEER/TECHNICIAN Must have minimum 5 years experience. Requires good understanding of mechanical drawings and inspection of mechanical parts is an asset.
FIBER OPTIC TECHNICIAN/ASSEMBLER Responsible for the manufacturing of Fiber Optic Patchcords and/ or components. Must have 5 years plus experience in mass production environment
PRODUCTION SCHEDULER / PLANNER Must have minimum 5 years experience in production scheduling
Email: hr@ozoptics.com or Fax: (613)831-2151
www.ozoptics.com
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
43
CLASSIFIED
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
www.emcclassiďŹ ed.ca
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
KICK STARTING your CAREER (Ottawa & Eastern Ontario)
.BOBHFST t 1SPGFTTJPOBMT t Career Change $70,000 - $225,000 Salary Range
C.W. Armstrong Senior Counselor & Prominent Career Author
Summer is over! Professionals from all disciplines come to us to re-establish their careers, explore new options, relocate, change employers or increase their salaries and discretionary responsibilities. Our motivation: s .O ONE SHOULD ACCEPT A POSITION BENEATH HIS OR HER POTENTIAL s )T IS MUCH EASIER TO INCREASE YOUR SALARY THAN SETTLE FOR LESS s 7ISDOM EXPERTISE AND ADAPTABILITY ARE IN DEMAND s 3TRUGGLING FOR WEEKS OR MONTHS CAREER SEARCHING IS WRONG Donald L CHANGED EMPLOYERS AND INCREASED HIS SALARY TO + David A. 2ET D .AVAL #OMMANDING OFlCER ENDED UP DOING SECURITY WORK n HE IS NOW AN %NVIRONMENTAL -ANAGER Paula M. FULlLLED HER DREAMS AS AN %DUCATIONAL 4OURISM #OORDINATOR Laura D. " 3C FELT FORCED INTO WAITRESSINGxNOW A 0ROJECT -ANAGER AT HOUR CL632726
These people are now doing what they love! Can we do the same for you?
STRUGGLING TO RE-ESTABLISH, CHANGE or ADVANCE YOUR CAREER? Call to Arrange a FREE Exploratory Interview Professionals Option
1-877-779-2362 or (613) 498-2290 Helping Professionals Establish Their Careers Since 1986 Ontario, Nationally & World-Wide GARAGE SALE
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
CL421042
OPEN HOUSE SEPTEMBER 21-25 INCLUSIVE 1-4PM
www.119townline.com Live Auction: Sept. 26th, 2015 | ESTATE Sale 10 am / HOUSE Sale 1pm
AUCTIONS
GARAGE SALE
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
Eastern Ontarioâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Largest Indoor Flea Market 150 booths Open Every Sunday All Year 8am-4pm Hwy. #31 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2 kms north of 401
Carrie Hands, CAI, CPPA, Auctioneer & Appraiser Jason Hands, Auctioneer
-Auction-
Mchaffies Flea Market HELP WANTED
Fully Equipped Take Out Restaurant and Storage Building to be held at Van Buren St., Kemptville, ON on Wednesday, September 23 @ 11:00 a.m.
HELP WANTED
CLS466893_0827
www.ictr.ca click on Careeroute
CLS466924/0903
LUMBER We are hiring the following full-time position:
AZ and/or DZ DRIVERS 119 TOWN LINE E CARLETON PLACE
613-285-7494
joyntauctioncompany.com 44
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
CLR630882
This heritage home was built by wood craftsman Adam Dunlop in the late 1800â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. This home is hand built by one of the ďŹ nest craftsman 12 inch solid oak base boards and complementing trim with hand carved brass door hinges. All doors have rosettes with solid oak trim throughout, with many upgrades over the last century this has had 3 generations living in the home and never been offered for sale since built! Some of the features include 4 bedrooms, the original oak ice box still functioning, sneak stair wells, upper and lower kitchens second ďŹ&#x201A;oor terrace,3rd ďŹ&#x201A;oor fully renovated. Most if not all new dry wall and stucco ceilings up graded wiring and panel new gas furnace nearly new roof. Modern kitchen and all appliances included. Hard wood ďŹ&#x201A;oor throughout solid oak stairwells oak French door separating the dining room and formal living room to many stained glass windows to describe all original. Huge piece of property that includes large work shop built in 1878 2 car garages and large 3 tier barn. Property backs onto Christmas tree farm once owned by Dunlop family. IMPAC VALUATION $285,750. PROPERTY TAXES 2015 $ 3,545.30
We offer competitive pay and company paid benefits. Should you wish to be considered for this position please submit your application to www.joinkott.com or email to jobs@kottlumber.com or in person 3228 Moodie Drive, Ottawa
A rare opportunity! Move to your location, open the doors and you are in business! Built 7 years ago to engineers specifications these board and batten insulated buildings are year round facilities. Main building is 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122;6 X 19â&#x20AC;&#x2122; with 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; overhang front porch, storage building is 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122;11 X 11â&#x20AC;&#x2122;11. Completely outfitted with Lenox gas furnace, 200 amp service, on demand wall mounted hot water heater, Pitco triple 18 X 18 fryers with auto filter system, 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S/S hood w/makeup air & fire suppression system, Habco 4â&#x20AC;&#x2122; double door cooler, Flavor Burst Taylor cold beverage machine, GE double S/S ovens, induction stove top, Berkel 18â&#x20AC;? meat slicer, triple S/S sink, fry cutter, 4â&#x20AC;&#x2122; beverage air deli counter, 2 - 4â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S/S prep tables, service counter, 2 upright freezers, microwave, Kitchen Aid mixer, Sharp cash register (3yrs), Security system and more. For terms and conditions and to view please call 613-926-2919 to book an appointment.
5501 County Road 15, RR #2, Brockville, ON K6V 5T2 Phone: (613) 926-2919 E-mail: auction@handsauction.com www.handsauction.com
CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Network DRIVERS WANTED
WE ARE URGENTLY LOOKING FOR THE FOLLOWING AZ DRIVERS: OWNER OPERATORS We offer consistent miles and an excellent Owner Operator package. CROSS BORDER COMPANY HIGHWAY DRIVERS $.514 cents per mile or on average $1100 per week take home.
FINANCIAL SERVICES
CAREER TRAINING
$$ CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT $$
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONISTS are in huge demand! Train with Canada’s top Medical Transcription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1.800.466.1535 www.canscribe.com. info@canscribe.com.
HOME EQUITY LOANS FOR ANY PURPOSE!! Bank turn downs, Tax or Mortgage arrears, Self Employed, Bad Credit, Bankruptcy. Creative Mortgage Specialists! No proof of income 1st, 2nd, and 3rd’s Up to 85% Borrow: $25,000 $50,000 $100,000
Pay Monthly: $105.40 $237.11 $474.21
APPLY TO:
1-888-307-7799
1-855-721-3962 For More Details JOIN THE FAMILY DRIVE THE BUSINESS www.rosedale.ca/drivers
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
For more information contact your local newspaper.
LCV DRIVERS – MISSISSAUGA TERMINAL Premium Rate
OR CALL TOLL-FREE:
FOR SALE
www.emcclassified.ca
ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!
LARGER AMOUNTS AND COMMERCIAL FUNDS AVAILABLE !!Decrease monthly payments up to 75%!! Based on 3% APR. OAC
recruiting@rosedale.ca
FOR SALE
PHONE:
1-888-967-3237 1-888-WORD ADS
ONTARIO-WIDE FINANCIAL 1801347inc FSCO Licence #12456 www.ontario-widefinancial.com !! LET US HELP !! ON
PERSONALS ARE YOU SICK & TIRED of the Internet, Blind Dates & people who aren’t serious about finding a long term commitment? CALL MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS 613-257-3531, www.mistyriverintros.com.
ADVERTISING
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MORTGAGES 1st & 2nd MORTGAGES from 2.15% REACH MILLIONS OF CUSTOMERS VRM and 2.59% FIXED. All Credit IN ONTARIO WITH ONE EASY Types Considered. Let us help you CALL! SAVE thousands on the right mortgage! Purchasing, Re-financing, Debt Your Classified Ad or Display Ad Consolidation, Construction, Home would appear in weekly newspapers Renovations...CALL 1-800-225-1777, each week across Ontario in urban, www.homeguardfunding.ca (LIC suburban and rural areas. #10409). For more information Call Today $$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES 647-350-2558, Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, Email: kmagill@rogers.com or visit: Renovations, Tax Arrears, no www.OntarioClassifiedAds.com. CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY Toll-Free 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969).
WANTED FIREARMS WANTED FOR OCTOBER 17TH, 2015 AUCTION: Rifles, Shotguns, Handguns. As Estate Specialists WE manage sale of registered / unregistered firearms. Contact Paul, Switzer’s Auction: Toll-Free 1-800694-2609, info@switzersauction.com or www.switzersauction.com.
CLS466918_0903
ofah.org/membership call 1.800.263.OFAH
FOR SALE
SAWMILLS from only $4,397 - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber DRIVERS WANTED any dimension. In stock ready LAIDLAW CARRIERS VAN DIVISION to ship. FREE Info & DVD: requires experienced AZ licensed www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT drivers to run the U.S. Premium mile- 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT. age rate. Home weekly. New equipment. Also hiring Owner Operators. EMPLOYMENT OPPS. 1-800-263-8267 MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! Indemand career! Employers HEALTH have work-at-home positions CANADA BENEFIT GROUP - Do available. Get online training you or someone you know suffer you need from an employer-trusted from a disability? Get up to $40,000 program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT from the Canadian Government. Toll- o r 1 - 8 5 5 - 7 6 8 - 3 3 6 2 t o s t a r t free 1-888-511-2250 or www.canada training for your work-at-home career today! benefit.ca/free-assessment
Connect with Ontarians – extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
45
Connecting People and Businesses!
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A/C HEATING
A/C HEATING
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For All Your Cooling & Heating Needs
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*HW \RXU IXUQDFH UHDG\
UPGRADE to a NEW FURNACE AND RECEIVE FREE
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A GENERAL AIR ELITE 900 HUMIDIFIER /IL 'AS 0ROPANE &URNACES 1UALIFY &INANCING /PTIONS !VAILABLE /FFER %XPIRES 3EPT TH
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HR %MERGENCY 3ERVICE s &ULLY )NSURED ,ICENSED
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BASEMENTS
DON YOUNG
ROBOTEC Appliance Repair Appliance Repair - Most Brands
SINCE 1976
R0011951601
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613-265-8437
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&REE %STIMATES s !LL 7ORK 'UARANTEED
Seniors Especially Welcome " " ! " ! " "
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Specializing in Custom Sheds & Garages All Sizes Available Delivered & Installed
HOME IMPROVEMENT 0612.R001274435
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Y R T N E P R A-1 CLACONTRACTORS
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ALL TYPES OF RENOVATIONS
Call Phil 613-828-9546 46
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FREE ESTIMATES
GENERA
35s
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
DOUBLE YOUR IMPACT TO BOOK THIS SPACE CALL WITH PRINT & SHARON AT 613-221-6228 ONLINE ADVERTISING!
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=i\\ <jk`dXk\j
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<8M<JKIFL>? :C<8E@E> N@E;FN :C<8E@E> D@EFI I<G8@IJ JF==@K# :FM<IJ
-(* /,)$'+), Call Today: 613-407-2316
$ $ # $ " $ ! ! $ $ $ ! $
FLOORING
R0013239934-0430
8x10 Vinyl Shed Installed $1995 + tax
R0013417385
EAVESTROUGHS
SALE
years
CONCRETE
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CUSTOM BUILDS
END OF SEASON
LEAKING BASEMENTS!!
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R0013439336
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A+
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Did you say cold weather is around the corner?
CALL SHARON TODAY! 613-221-6228
email: sharon.russell@metroland.com
Connecting People and Businesses!
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HOME IMPROVEMENT
HANDYMAN SERVICES (OME -AINTENANCE 2EPAIRS 2ENOVATIONS s #ARPENTRY s +ITCHEN "ATH 4ILING s 0AINTING
s *ANITORIAL 3ERVICE s $RYWALL s &LOORING
s 0LUMBING s /DD *OBS s 4REE 2EMOVAL
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Experienced Carpenters, & Trades people
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Finish basements, Build kitchens, Bathrooms, Decks All home renovations including: Drywall , Taping, Plastering and Painting. All types of flooring installation/finishing floors. Additions & Plumbing
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47
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We Repair Leaking Ceilings & Stipple Ceilings FREE ESTIMATES t ZFBS XBSSBOUZ PO XPSLNBOTIJQ
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$9.!-)# (/-% 2%./6!4)/.3 ).#
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s $ESIGN s )NSTALLATION s 2EPAIR s &ENCING s 3OD
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www.phcinterlock.com Ottawa Area 613-282-4141
R0013003630-1120
TERRY CRONIER OWNER 613-796-2539
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
GRUB DAMAGE repair soil & sod installation interlocking stone driveways retaining & garden walls interlock repair patios & steps
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WWW.VISIONIRONWORKS.COM VISIONIRONWORKS@GMAIL.COM STITTSVILLE, ON
www.kerwinmaintenance.ca R0013430439
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R0013226983-0416
Â&#x201E; 7EEKLY -OWING 4RIMMING FROM PER MONTH Â&#x201E; ,AWN 3ODDING 4OP $RESSING Â&#x201E; &ERTILIZING 7EED 3PRAY 0ROGRAM Â&#x201E; #ORE !ERATION Â&#x201E; 7HITE 'RUB 4REATMENT Â&#x201E; (EDGE 4RIMMING 4REE 0RUNING 4REE 2EMOVAL
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Relevelling - Re-laying existing stones
Estimates 613-430-0000
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Changing tack Sailors from around the globe converged on Lac Deschenes the last week of August for the 2015 World Shark Class Championship, hosted by the Britannia Yacht Club. Running Aug. 23-28, the competition featured seven-metre Shark sailing vessels, a boat designed in Canada in 1959 for leisure and competition on inland waterways. The winner of the championship was Britannia’s very own ‘Crazy Ivan’, skippered by David Foy and crewed by David O’Sullivan and Jamie Foy. Steph Willems/Metroland
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Is your child in French Immersion? Enhance their experience through French recreation programs Registering your child in a French recreational program is a great way to encourage their language skills to grow. Not only is it a fun and friendly environment, it’s not school! No grammar or spelling mistakes to worry about, just fun activities that everyone loves! Mon Cyberguide franchophone des loisirs found at ottawa.ca/loisirs contains the French classes for all ages and interests. The easiest way to master the French language is to be immersed into it, whether you are into sports, arts, music or dance. Our recreation programs are perfect for everyone.
File
Westfest organizers are regrouping after their funding was withdrawn by the Westboro Village BIA. The popular festival of music, art and culture draws tens of thousands to the Richmond Road retail strip each June.
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Do they like moving to a beat? We have ballet, hip hop and jazz classes. Try out our Gotta Dance programs for all around dancing fun! Playing with paint, masks, murals, ribbons and more develops children’s artistic side. Explore our many crafting classes, or master improvisational skills in our introduction to theatre class.
Steph Willems
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A popular annual west-end festival might have to relocate after its funding was withdrawn from a local business improvement area. Westfest – a celebration of musical talent, arts and culture – has become an increasingly potent draw to the Westboro area in the 12 years since it launched. Last week’s news that the Westboro BIA had removed its sponsorship con-
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supporters shocked, while the festival organizers themselves scrambled to come up with a new plan for the festival’s future. The rationale behind the move comes down to money. Dan Hwang, chair of the Westboro Village BIA’s board of directors, said that the twoday festival (formerly three days) eats up 65 per cent of the BIA’s budget. This year’s event cost $125,000. “We had a two-year contract with Westfest with an opt-out
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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use that clause after the first year,” said Hwang. “It was a unanimous decision by the board. It was too expensive and there are other options we wanted to explore. Westfest is a great event and (producer) Elaina Martin has done a great job with it, but we wanted to branch out. Our intention is still to have a summer festival, and we’ll be issuing a request for proposals for a summer festival shortly.” Hwang said having a summer festival brings a lot of business to Westboro, adding that Westfest is welcome to bid on it. For Martin, the news came as a bombshell. “We cleaned up the Westfest office after this year’s event and went on holiday like everything was great,” she said. “It certainly came out of left field.” Not content to see the festival fade away, Martin said the show will go on with or without the BIA. “We have plans to move forward if the BIA decides not to fund us, and if they do, we’d love to stay in Westboro where we belong,” said Martin. “We’re excited to put this to bed, either way.” Martin said Westfest’s partnership with local store owners kept the festival grounded and mutually beneficial. “Our attendance last June was 40,000 people each day,” she said. “It’s always been a massive draw. We feel like we’ve done a good job of drawing attention, people, and money to Westboro. We hope we can work this out. We’d love to stay.”
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53
Hiring freeze, project ‘haircuts’ to fend off city’s $41M deficit Emma Jackson
emma.jackson@metroland.com
The city’s treasury department will take a little off the top this year as it faces its largest deficit in recent memory. City treasurer Marian Simulik presented a disappointing quarterly report on Sept. 1 outlining a $34 million shortfall in tax-supported programs and another $7 million loss for rate-supported services – about 1.8 per cent of the city’s total $3 billion budget. Most of the deficit came from things the city couldn’t really help: $18 million extra for snow clearing and winter maintenance during 2015’s record cold winter, arbitrated wage increases to the tune of $9.88 million, and an extra $4.7 million in injury payouts for families of firefighters who died of certain cancers dating back to 1960 – a new provincial law for which the city must now find funding. On the rate-supported side, there was also a $3 million
File
The city is facing a $41-million deficit largely thanks to snow clearing and winter maintenance costs. discrepancy in water consumption forecasts, which was compounded by skyrocketing operational costs – more than $5.9 million – to deal with frozen water pipes across the city. All this is causing a bit of a scramble, since Ontario municipalities by law are not allowed to post a deficit at the
end of the year. In July, the city implemented a hiring and discretionary spending freeze for the rest of the year. And on Sept. 1, the finance committee approved a plan to close and reduce funding for certain capital projects, while taking five per cent off the top of any projects financed through the
city-wide reserve fund. This “haircut” would return, altogether, nearly $10 million to the city reserve, but Simulik assured councillors it wouldn’t affect their ability to finish projects as promised. “In all cases the departments have said these projects can be closed, there’s a little bit of money left, or they’ve got a reduction because the tenders came in lower,” she said. “They have provided us a list of projects for reductions to take place.” She said in some cases it could be as little as a $1,200 reduction on a $500,000 project. Furthermore, strategic initiative projects that were just approved in July are exempt from this process, she said. PROVINCIAL HELP
Several councillors pointed out that the province is behind some of the city’s problems – and therefore should help pay for them. Coun. Eli El-Chantiry
passed a motion asking the province to cover the cost of rolling out SAMS, the new social assistance software that has wreaked havoc in municipalities since it was introduced last November. So far the city has paid about $1.2 million for extra staff and resources to keep the welfare system going, while staff wrangle the new software under control. Coun. Diane Deans also asked Mayor Jim Watson to urge the province to help cover the $4.7 million in extra WSIB costs for firefighters who developed certain cancers over the past 50 years. “(We should) ask them to at least share in the funding, because they’re the ones that brought in the legislation,” she said. In 2014, the provincial government announced it would add testicular, breast and prostate cancers, as well as multiple myeloma, to its list of eligible workplace injury claims for fire fighters – retroactive to 1960. Next year, lung cancer will
be added to that list, and in 2017 skin cancer will also be eligible. Simulik said it was impossible to predict how much money they would have to pay out in 2015. “Even with the number have today, we’re not certain that’s the final number,” she said. Simulik said forecasts for WSIB payments, winter maintenance costs and water consumption will be re-evaluated ahead of the 2016 budget process, which begins this fall, to avoid similar shortfalls next year. Watson told committee and reporters that he will not raise taxes just to deal with unexpected costs. “This is very much an opportunity for us to be much more creative and thoughtful when it comes to putting our budgets together,” he said. “I’m not prepared, just because we have some tough decisions to make, to fold like a lawn chair and all of a sudden decide we’d better go and raise taxes.”
Laroche Park site too expensive to prep, says city Steph Willems
steph.willems@metroland.com
A multi-use sports pad destined for Laroche Park in Mechanicsville won’t see the light of day anytime soon. A year ago, the Ottawa Senators Foundation and City of Ottawa announced that Mechanicsville would be the next location for a SensRINK project. The collaborative effort is designed to increase recreation and sports opportunities for youth in underserved neighbourhoods. That project will now go to Overbrook, after city staff announced the cost of the project would go well over budget due to the need for contaminated soil removal. The move isn’t sitting well with the community. “They were supposed to have shovels in the ground in June,” said Blair Simser, president of the Mechanicsville Community Association. “We’ve asked for confirmation of those (cost) numbers and they won’t do it.”
Steph Willems/Metroland
The proposed SensRINK project slated for Laroche Park is on hold due to projected cost overruns, caused by soil conditions and the need for better access. Laroche Park sits on the site of an old garbage dump that dates from the early days of the city. Methane gas still leaks from below the surface, leading to difficulty maintaining the ice on a communityrun rink. Frost heaves caused by the
expanding gas would require the city to remove a large quantity of earth below the SensRINK location in order to pour a permanent concrete pad. “The city makes a financial contribution to the site in terms of servicing, while the
Sens pay for the rink itself,” explained Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper. “The cost of removing the existing soil was expected to cost $40,000 to $75,000, but the actual cost … would be north of $100,000. Also, when they announced the rink, they
didn’t count on adding an access road or improving the water source.” That would increase costs even more, said Leiper, adding, “Mechanicsville residents are still in the queue, but we don’t know when it will be built.” The long-anticipated refurbishment of Laroche Park is also on hold, given a lack of Section 37 benefits from developers. A number of highrise condo projects proposed a few years ago on the edge of the community haven’t gotten off the ground, meaning the community improvement dollars that would have been drawn from them haven’t materialized. “They were promised a park in Mechanicsville and I’m extremely disappointed that it isn’t going forward,” said Leiper, adding that he will seek from the city and exact date for both the SensRINK project and park overhaul. “We need to demonstrate to residents that there’s mo-
mentum on this front,” he said. “Mechanicsville is due. My commitment is to keep momentum going on parks planning for when the budget is available … and get the rink built sooner rather than later.” Those words don’t hold much reassurance for Simser, who holds out little hope that the project will come to fruition in short order. “I don’t know – what do we do?” he asked. “We’re talking about getting (future Bayview Yards tenant) Invest Ottawa on board. We’re trying to get the Hintonburg Community Association involved, but once the decision is made, there’s little you can do about it,” Simser said. “It’s unfortunate. It would have been good for kids in the neighbourhood, as there are a lot of low-income kids and community housing in the area. That was the whole mandate of this project – to put the rinks in lowincome communities.”
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
55
Gotta go? Well, now there’s an app for that City to develop public toilet-finding app Emma Jackson
emma.jackson@metroland.com
If you’ve spent any time in downtown Ottawa, chances are you’ve been caught with your pants up – and desperately looking for a place to lower them so you can do your business. The City of Ottawa hopes to make that a little easier, now that the finance committee has approved plans to develop a toilet-finding app with the help of its private-sector
partners. The Where to Go app would use city facility data to tell users where and when public washrooms are open, and to what extent they are accessible. According to a staff report, the first phase would simply offer a list and map of the city’s washroom facilities. Later phases could allow the private sector to put its own washrooms on the map if they’re open to the public, which would also generate some revenue for the city. The city is responsible for making sure the app gets made, but information technology sub-committee chairman Coun. Rick Chiarelli said the IT department and Service Ottawa staff will use their annual budget to pair up with their pool of app development
Her group has been pushing for more washroom facilities to be included in the city’s light rail plans – they won a small victory in July when council promised to consider how it can add toilets in the new Hurdman and Bayview stations – on the grounds that almost every vulnerable or marginalized group would benefit. Families with young children can get stuck or have to leave an activity early if a child has to go; senior citizens are discouraged from venturing into the community without the promise of accessible washrooms; residents dealing with Crohn’s, colitis, IBS or other chronic diseases can be left stranded in a moment’s notice. Even the city’s homeless population would benefit from being able to access washrooms on a more predictable basis. The city’s Older Adult Plan also calls for better information on where and when public washrooms are available.
partners to make sure the best people are actually creating the product.
“We know there are a fair number of city washrooms, but it’s a bit of a mystery of when they’re actually open and how people can use them.” Joan Kuyek, chair, Gotta Go campaign
Joan Kuyek, chairwoman of the community-led Gotta Go campaign, said she and her colleagues are “delighted” with the plan. “We know there are a fair number of city washrooms, but it’s a bit of a mystery of when they’re actually open and how people can use them,” Kuyek told the committee.
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Community garage sales take to the streets of Old Ottawa South, Sandy Hill Alex Robinson
alex.robinson@metroland.com
Students looking to buy furniture for their new abodes this fall will be in luck Sept. 12, as neighbourhoods around the city’s two universities are both set to hold community garage sales. The Old Ottawa South Community Association and Action Sandy Hill are set to hold their annual events at various locations throughout the two neighbourhoods. Participants will be able to scour Old Ottawa South in search of treasures between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. As part of the porch sale, the association will also host a barbecue with face painting and other activities at the Old Firehall Community Centre, 260 Sunnyside Ave., from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The Sandy Hill event will run from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. Both groups are inviting residents to search their attics for things they might not need or want, but might be of value to others and to sell them on their porches or lawns.
Downtown Living!
File
Old Ottawa South Community Association will host its annual barbecue at the Firehall during the neighbourhood-wide Old Ottawa South Porch Sale on Sept. 12 from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
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Nothing says the end of summer like cured pork Celebration of all things bacon takes over Experimental Farm Sept. 12 on the museum’s Experimental Farm grounds with famed local chefs, music and lots and lots of every non-vegan’s guilty food pleasure. “We were looking at expanding our programming to wider audiences,” explained Ciara Cronin, the museum’s marketing and communications officer. “The museum’s mandate is to teach people where their food comes from. We already do a popular ice cream festi-
Steph Willems
steph.willems@metroland.com
While that isn’t the rationale being used by the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum for its Baconpalooza event, it’s not a bad one either. Officially, the Sept. 12 celebration of all things bacon represents an expansion of the museum’s focus on domestic food production. Local pig and boar farmers, who will be selling their fare, will mingle
val in July, so bacon seemed like a natural fit.” Cronin said that much of the museum’s attractions are geared towards children and youth, so having an adultfriendly event such as Baconpalooza opened up the venue to a different demographic. Participants can expect to find culinary creations cooked by six celebrity chefs, the offerings of 14 diverse food trucks, live music including headliner MonkeyJunk, and a number of local and regional vendors. The museum’s permanent pavilion allows for animalfree shelter on the agricultural Submitted
The Baconpalooza event will be held on Sept. 12.
since 1975
site, under which cocktails can be served. “We wanted to take advantage of our unique spot in the heart of Ottawa,” said Cronin. “We’re excited about it. There will be a lot of lo-
since 1975
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cal producers there, including Seed to Sausage and Kiefro Wild Boar Farms, which will be serving boar bacon. There are local suppliers, too, including Lowertown Canning Company.”
Cronin said the museum will hold similar collaborations in the future. A full list of vendors, suppliers, and musical acts, as well as ticket information, can be found at baconpalooza.ca. Didn’t get your
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59
Barrhaven LCBO tapped as only Ottawa store to sell 12-packs of beer Ottawa store becomes one of 10 province-wide participating in a year-long pilot program Megan DeLaire
mdelaire@metroland.com
An LCBO location in Barrhaven has been selected to join nine other stores across Ontario that will participate in the province’s new pilot program allowing 12-packs of beer to be sold at the stores. The Barrhaven location at 120 Riocan Ave. is the only LCBO store in Ottawa to join the program. Ottawa Centre MPP Yasir Naqvi was at the store on the morning of Aug. 27 to launch the program in Ottawa amid stacks of 12-packs of beer normally only seen at Beer Store locations. With the exception of the 10 stores in the pilot program, LCBO stores can only sell bottled beer individually or in packs of six. “The purpose behind these very incredible changes is to ensure that Ontario consum-
ers have more access to beer and convenience of beer,” Naqvi said. “(It is) also giving an opportunity for our small brewers, our craft brewers, to be able to sell their products in local markets and markets across the province.” The pilot program takes into consideration some of the recommendations made by Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s Advisory Council on Government Assets regarding beer sales in the province. Naqvi touted it as one of the most significant changes to alcohol retailing in Ontario since the end of prohibition and said it is one of many changes that will make the industry more inviting to local breweries. The year-long pilot will offer 12-packs from 11 domestic and international brewers. The Ottawa Centre MPP said the Barrhaven location
was selected out of more than 25 LCBO locations across the city due to its proximity to growing communities and the lack of access in the area to craft-brewed beers. “This is a relatively newer LCBO, fairly large with lots of shelf space available and healthy traffic from a very burgeoning community,” Naqvi said. “Downtown there is a fair bit of selection in terms of access to beer. Local craft beer is fairly accessible at places like Kitchissippi or Beyond the Pale. You can just walk into their outlets and have access to locally crafted beer which might not be the opportunity in suburban neighbourMegan DeLaire/Metroland hoods like Barrhaven.” Ottawa Centre MPP Yasir Naqvi announced on Aug. 27 that an LCBO in Barrhaven will Craft beer is one of the join nine other stores in Ontario in selling 12-packs of beer as part of a pilot program to LCBO’s fastest-growing cat- expand the availability of local beers across the province. egories, with sales of Ontario craft beer rising by almost 36 450 grocery stores across On- we will be making sure that Beer Stores, LCBO and groper cent in 2014-15 over the tario and has recently adjusted beer is available in more cery stores.” Depending on the success enabling fees for non-owner places other than just the Beer previous year. In addition to increasing the brewers in the Beer Store to Stores,” Naqvi said. “So that of the pilot in improving conavailability of beer in LCBO make it easier for small local it is more convenient for con- sumer experiences at LCBO stores, the province also plans breweries to get their products sumers to be able to purchase stores, the province plans to beer and, more importantly, to eventually expand the proto expand beer sales to up to on Beer Store shelves. “Our government a few create more opportunities for gram to up to 60 stores across months ago announced that craft beers to be available in the province.
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470 Roosevelt Ave. Westboro www.mywestminster.ca
The West Ottawa Church of Christ
Email: admin@mywestminister.ca
We welcome you to the traditional Latin Mass - Everyone Welcome For the Mass times please see www.stclement-ottawa.org 528 Old St. Patrick St. Ottawa ON K1N 5L5 (613) 565.9656
in Metcalfe on 8th Line - only 17 mins from HWY 417 s WWW 3AINT#ATHERINE-ETCALFE CA
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10 Chesterton Drive, Ottawa (Meadowlands and Chesterton) Tel: 613-225-6648 parkwoodchurch.ca
St. Clement Parish/Paroisse St-ClĂŠment Sunday Masses: 8:30 a.m. Low Mass 10:30 a.m. High Mass (with Gregorian chant) 6:30 p.m. Low Mass
Family Worship at 9:00am
Sunday Services: Bible Study at 10:00 AM - Worship Service at 11:00 AM A warm welcome awaits you For Information Call 613-224-8507
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Minister: James T. Hurd %VERYONE 7ELCOME
Ă&#x153;Ă&#x153;Ă&#x153;°Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x2C6;`i>Ă&#x2022;ÂŤ>Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x17D;°V>Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160;Ă&#x2C6;ÂŁĂ&#x17D;Â&#x2021;Ă&#x2021;Ă&#x17D;Ă&#x17D;Â&#x2021;Ă&#x17D;ÂŁxĂ&#x2C6;
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A vibrant mul -cultural, full gospel fellowship. Come worship and fellowship with us Sundays, 1:30PM at Calvin Reformed 1475 Merivale Rd. O awa Church. Rev. Elvis Henry, (613) 435-0420 Pastor Paul Gopal, www.shalomchurch.ca (613) 744-7425 R0012827577
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Sunday 11:00 a.m. Worship & Sunday School 1350 Walkley Road (Just east of Bank Street) Ottawa, ON K1V 6P6 Tel: 613-731-0165 Email: ottawacitadel@bellnet.ca Website: www.ottawacitadel.ca
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ǢČ&#x2013;Ĺ&#x2DC;_ É´ ǢsÇ&#x2039;É&#x161;Ă&#x17E;OsÇŁ Çź ˨ ŸÇ&#x2039; Ë Ë Ĺ? ËĄË&#x;ˤ ÂľÇ&#x2039;ssĹ&#x2DC;E Ĺ&#x2DC;Ĩ Ç&#x160;Ÿ _Ę° šǟǟ É www.woodvale.on.ca info@woodvale.ca É É É ĘłÉ Ĺ¸Ĺ¸_É&#x161; ÄśsʳŸĹ&#x2DC;ĘłO ĘšËĽË Ë˘Ęş ˧˥˨Ë&#x161;˥ˢ˼˥ NĂ&#x152;Ă&#x17E;Äś_ O Ç&#x2039;s ĆźÇ&#x2039;ŸÉ&#x161;Ă&#x17E;_s_Ęł ƝĜs ÇŁs O ĜĜ ŸÇ&#x2039; É&#x161;Ă&#x17E;ÇŁĂ&#x17E;Çź Č&#x2013;ÇŁ ŸĹ&#x2DC;Ë&#x161;ÄśĂ&#x17E;Ĺ&#x2DC;sĘł
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Invites you to our worship service with Rev. Dean Noakes Sundays at 11:00 am Please visit our website for special events. 414 Pleasant Park Road 613 733-4886 www.ppbc.ca
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All are Welcome Good Shepherd Barrhaven Church Come and Worshipâ&#x20AC;Ś Sundays at 9:30 am & 11:00 am (coffee time in between the two services)
3500 FallowďŹ eld Rd., Unit 5, Nepean, ON
BOOKING & COPY DEADLINES WED. 4PM CALL SHARON 613-221-6228
Sunday Services Worship Service10:30am Sundays Prayer Circle Tuesday at 11:30 10:30 a.m. Rev. James Murray 355 Cooper Street at Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor 613-235-5143 www.dc-church.org
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2400 Alta Vista Drive (613) 733 0131 Sunday Worship at 10:00 a.m. Sunday School; Ample parking; A warm welcome OC Transpo route 8 awaits you. Rev. Dr. Floyd McPhee sttimothys@on.aibn.com www.sttimsottawa.com
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BARRHAVEN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Worship - Sundays @ 8:30 a.m.
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FOR ALL YOUR CHURCH ADVERTISING NEEDS CALL SHARON 613-221-6228
Church Services Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
61
SPORTS
Connected to your community
A big Cobras welcome Cumberland Cobras players welcome the Ottawa Fury FC mascot to Millennium Park on Sept. 1. The Cobras had the most players attending Ottawa Fury FC games at TD Place this season, so they were awarded a special community practise with most of the Fury professional soccer players. The youth players got to meet the pros, as well as take part in different games and drills with the music pumping and parents taking photos.
BRIER DODGE/METROLAND
RIVERSIDE SOUTH COMMUNITY DESIGN PLAN UPDATE COMMUNITY MEETING Monday, September 21, 2015 Rideauview Community Centre - Gymnasium 4310 Shoreline Drive 7 to 9 p.m. Presentation at 7:45 p.m. Want to find out more about the updates to the Riverside South Community Design Plan (CDP)? If so, attend this community meeting, hear the staff presentation and have your say on the proposed changes to the Plan.
PROPERTY FOR SALE VACANT LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT 5731 HAZELDEAN ROAD The Ottawa Community Lands Development Corporation (OCLDC), a municipal corporation, is selling a development property at 5731 Hazeldean Road on behalf of the City of Ottawa. ADDRESS
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
SITE AREA (approximate)
5731 Hazeldean Road
Part of Lots 26 and 27, Concession 12, being Parts 3, 4 and 5, Plan 4R-6689 subject to NS234946, LT605199 and NS246082 together with easement over Part of Lot 27, Concession 12, being Part 1 on Plan 4R-25671 as in OC1328319.
4.6 ha (11.36 acres)
Zoning:
AM9 Arterial Main Street, OR1 Parks and Open Space and DR Development Reserve
Residents are invited to learn more about the draft revisions to the CDP, the Official Plan, the Zoning and other support documents including the following: • Riverside South Core Area Urban Design Guidelines • Infrastructure Servicing Study Update • Master Drainage Plan Update • Area Parks Plan Visit ottawa.ca/riversidesouthcdp to view the draft Plan. Send your comments to Donald Morse before October 2, 2015. Accessibility is important to the City of Ottawa. If you require special accommodation, please call 3-1-1 or e-mail Donald Morse no later than September 18, 2015. For further information, contact:
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
$4,100,000 plus HST
Offers will be received until Friday, October 9th, 2015 at 1:00 p.m. local time. Offers must be made using the standard City of Ottawa Agreement of Purchase and Sale form which will be provided upon request, and must be accompanied by a $50,000.00 certified deposit cheque made payable to the City of Ottawa and include a concept plan showing the general layout of the development and potential building elevations as well as a letter of reference from a financial institution. The sale will be subject to a development agreement and an option to repurchase agreement. Real estate commissions will not be paid on the sale of these lands.
Donald Morse, Planner Suburban Services, City of Ottawa Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 13850 Email: Donald.Morse@ottawa.ca 62
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For more information please contact: Bill Hamilton Tel: 613-580-2424, ext. 26977 Email: William.Hamilton@ottawa.ca
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Lowertown child care centre shutters despite protests alex.robinson@metroland.com
Despite attempts by parents to save the Beausoleil Day Care Centre, their children may have left the Lowertown institution for the last time. Parents and children gathered outside the francophone day care centre in Lowertown on its final day, Aug. 31, to mark its closing and celebrate the role it played in the community. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not just a day care, but a space within which our children can live, play and learn in French and it gave people a chance to connect to the community around them,â&#x20AC;? said Suneeta Millington, a parent whose two-year old son attended Beausoleil. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also a cultural institution. It offers our children an opportunity to flourish in French that they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t really get anywhere else in central Ottawa.â&#x20AC;? The city suddenly told parents in July the centre would close at the end of August, prompting them to band together to form SOS Beausoleil â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a group which aimed to save the
centre. City staff said they only learned from the province in mid-June that a two-year renovation project on the exterior of the building would close down the centre and that there was not enough time to license a new location. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The city hoped it could continue to operate based on having access to one of the two play areas, however, on June 16 the city was informed that both play areas would be closed during construction,â&#x20AC;? Marlynne Ferguson, a manager at community and social services, said in an emailed statement. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This meant that the city would not meet its licensing requirements.â&#x20AC;? The children who were set to return were offered spaces at other centres, but seven of them have been moved to anglophone spots. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The city has essentially said â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Take it or leave it and by the way, weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re checking the box that says youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re satisfied with the option weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve offered you,â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;? Millington said. Parents also said many of
the spots offered were in neighbourhoods that were not feasible for a number of families. There were 49 total spots at Beausoleil, 46 of which were subsidized. Ferguson said the closure of Beausoleil will not lower the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s capacity to provide French-language child care as it already planned to offer an additional 44 new spaces this fall. The city refused to say whether Beausoleil, which was one of Ottawaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s few city-operated francophone day care centres, will return to the site after renovations. â&#x20AC;&#x153;At this point all we know is that we had to temporarily suspend service at this location as a result of the construction which will take approximately two years,â&#x20AC;? Ferguson said. As they watched the doors close at the centre, parents with SOS Beausoleil vowed to keep fighting to see it reopen. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The city has underestimated the community and the lengths weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re willing to go to continue to fight for these francophone spaces in our community,â&#x20AC;? Millington said.
Sept. 21
Sept. 26
ALEX ROBINSON/METROLAND
Parents stand outside the shuttered Beausoleil Day Care Centre the day it closed. The centre closed its doors on Aug. 31, despite attempts by parents to save it.
Oct. 3
PUBLIC MEETINGS
! & & $ ! %
All public meetings will be held at Ottawa City Hall, 110 Laurier Avenue West, unless otherwise noted. For a complete agenda and updates, please sign up for email alerts or visit ottawa.ca/agendas, or call 3-1-1.
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64
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Follow us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ottawasenators and on Twitter: @Senators
Crime Prevention Ottawa Board Meeting 5 p.m. Honeywell Room R0013453375
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Ottawa Public Library Board Meeting 5 p.m., Champlain Room Tuesday, September 15 Accessibility Advisory Committee 6:30 p.m., Champlain Room Thursday, September 17 Community and Protective Services Committee 9:30 a.m., Champlain Room
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Amrinder Dhaliwal stands next to his Blueline cab the morning of Sept. 2 after it was vandalized overnight in Barrhaven.
Blueline taxi drivers angry after cars vandalized overnight Joe Lofaro Metro Ottawa
Taxi drivers say they will not be intimidated from picking up passengers from the airport during the ongoing labour dispute after their cabs were vandalized. Blueline taxi drivers woke up the morning of Sept. 2 to find their car windows smashed and tires slashed. Two of the incidents happened in Barrhaven on Mancini Way. Another cab was damaged in the south end on Mozart Court in Blossom Park. Ottawa police are investigating the three incidents, but don’t have a suspect. But Amrinder Dhaliwal and Varun Walia, whose cars were vandalized in Barrhaven, suspect it could be related to the airport taxi drivers who have been protesting for the past four weeks against the airport pickup fee increase. Blueline taxis have been picking up passengers and paying the
$4.50 fee, much to the chagrin of airport taxi fleet drivers who have been walking the picket line. Some protesters have been throwing eggs at Blueline cars and making threats as they drive by. “I’m working (at the airport) continuously, he’s working there. Every cab driver (from Blueline) is working at the airport and they don’t like it,” said Dhaliwal. Shattered glass littered the street as his kids played on the sidewalk. He suspects the damage is worth about $2,000. Both of their cars had to be towed away Sept. 2 as they tried to figure out their next steps. “We have to stop working two, three days. So, it’s a big loss,” added Dhaliwal. All four of his tires were slashed and his windows were smashed in. “We don’t know what the motive was, so we can’t assume,” said Ottawa police
spokesman, Const. Marc Soucy. People driving along Mancini Way stopped their cars to apologize to the Blueline drivers as they waited for the tow trucks to arrive. One man stopped his car, rolled down his window, and said, “Excuse me, on behalf of us that aren’t idiots, I apologize for what happened to your cars and I hope they catch the idiots that did it.” A few minutes earlier, another man driving a truck for a heating and air conditioning company also apologized and said he would give a “whooping” to anyone he sees vandalizing cars. The loss of work for Dhaliwal and Walia will be another blow to their business as Uber continues to operate in the city. Taxi drivers said they have been losing customers to the ride-sharing company which connects riders to independent drivers through a GPS-based smartphone app.
Rink Eye Development Centre to open doors
in the mail? Order them today!
Megan DeLaire
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Diane Diane Deans Deans Councillor/Conseillère Quartier Gloucester-Southgate Ward
Ali and Branden
Submitted
Former Ottawa Senators player and Rink Eye founder Randy Robataille is one of several NHL alumni on the list of staff at the new Rink Eye Development Centre in Kanata. The centre aims to teach players professional level hockey skills while fostering strong work ethics and healthy attitudes. to Be Me. So having them kind of choose us and ask us to be a part of it was a great honour and I’m just happy to help support them.” Rink Eye was founded by Robitaille – a former Senator player with 15 years’ experience in the NHL – to help develop the skills and professional attitudes of players in Ottawa. Among the centre’s coaching staff are former NHL players Fred Brathwaite, Dan Mcgillis, Matt Bradley
and Robitaille. In addition to a synthetic ice rink, staff will coach clients using a virtual simulator, a stick handling area with timed courses and six different shooting stations including radar, tic-tac-toe and heavy puck shooting stations. The centre’s grand opening will be held at Rink Eye’s Kanata facility – 50 Frank Nighbor place – on Sept. 12 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Training programs will begin on Sept. 13.
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Application for Rezoning and Site Plan Control Proposal for a six story hotel at 3605 Paul Anka Drive The City of Ottawa’s Planning & Growth Management Department has received an application for zoning by-law amendment and site plan control proposal for a six story hotel and associated parking at 3605 Paul Anka Drive. The site is located at the northeast corner of Paul Anka Drive and Dean Martin Crescent (south of Hunt Club Road). The vacant lot previously had site plan approval for the construction of a residential building; however the applicant is now seeking re-zoning to allow for a hotel use and construction. The proposed six story (17 metre) hotel will accommodate 93 hotel rooms plus associated amenity space. The main entrance for the proposed hotel is located on the north side of the building which will lead to the parking lot with vehicle access via Paul Anka Drive. For further details please visit www.ottawa.ca/devapps and search 3605 Paul Anka Drive. I would like to invite you to attend a public information meeting where I have asked the applicant to present their application to the community. Please join me on Monday, September 21st, 2015 (doors open at 6:30 p.m. with a presentation at 7:00 p.m.) at the Hunt Club Riverside Community Centre (Hunt Club Room) at 3320 Paul Anka Drive. Ward 10 Safety Series Public Meeting – Traffic & Roadway Safety I am happy to announce that I will be hosting the second chapter of my Safety Series on Tuesday September 22nd, 6:30 p.m. at the Greenboro Community Center. The focus of this meeting is Traffic and Roadway Safety. I have requested the presence of the Ottawa Police Service, the Safer Roads Ottawa group, City of Ottawa Traffic Services, and the Cycling & Pedestrian Safety group. This is an important opportunity for you to receive information, ask questions and to meet the community partners who are working hard to keep our neighborhood roads safe. For more information please contact my office at 613-580-2480 or Diane.Deans@ottawa.ca. OC Transpo wants to hear from you OC Transpo is currently reviewing its policies for both Para Transpo customer eligibility and booking processes, and OC Transpo would like to hear from residents about this matter. Public consultations will take place on September 17, 22, 30 and October 6, 2015, at Ottawa City Hall. There are a total of 16 sessions, four per day, with a registration limit of 20 people per session. Those interested in attending one of the consultation sessions are required to register at octranspo.com, by phone (613-8423636 ext. 2652), by email (consultations@ottawa.ca) or by fax (613-244-4329). If you are unavailable to attend a consultation session, but still want to contribute, please provide your feedback by filling out a questionnaire between now and October 9, 2015. This questionnaire will be available on Para Transpo mini buses and accessible taxis, at octranspo.com, by email (consultations@ottawa.ca), over the phone (613-842-3636 ext. 2652), or by fax (613-244-4329).
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Hockey enthusiasts will have the opportunity to lace up their skates and test Rink Eye Development Centre’s synthetic ice and specialized training areas for free on Sept. 12. The hockey training facility will open its doors to the public that day for the facility’s official launch, giving prospective clients a chance to meet its staff of NHL alumni and tour the building. “It’s a synthetic ice and there are different training stations that are in there so it’ll be an opportunity to go and see what the facility has,” said Rink Eye spokesperson Cindy Cutts. “It’s a good chance to showcase all the things that are going to be available to the public.” Cutts said that Ottawa Senators alumni Shean Donovan, Todd White, Radek Bonk and Rink Eye founder Randy Robataille are scheduled to attend the opening and that, for a fee, anyone can soak a former NHL player by scoring on a hockey puckactivated dunk tank. Organizers have also planned a barbeque, 50/50 draw and attractions for children. Funds raised by food and 50/50 ticket sales will go to the event’s official charitable partner Proud to be Me. The not-for-profit organization addresses issues from PTSD in veterans – working with the Canadian Canine Training Academy to raise funds to train companion dogs for soldiers with PTSD – to underfunded school programs and bullying management. In addition to working with Rink Eye, Cutts is the spokesperson for Proud to be Me, which she founded in 2011. “We do an annual dinner, which we’ve sold out every year, and the past four years we’ve raised about $78,000 for local schools and programs that receive no funding right now.” Proud to be Me works with Ottawa area schools on a case by case basis, assessing the needs of each school. The organization supplied utensils for one school’s breakfast club program and has established anti-bullying programs and trigger management workshops for children with anger management issues in other Ottawa schools. “We sent a whole school for tennis lessons after school to keep them off the streets from 4 to 6 p.m.,” she said. Cutts said support from Rink Eye for Proud to be Me is just the most recent act of charity from the local hockey community that has continually supported the organization. “I’m super honoured to have them choose us,” she said. “The hockey community has been great for Proud
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sports
Connected to your community
Body building siblings bulk up their trophy case Emma Jackson
emma.jackson@metroland.com
When Chris and Melissa Bumstead started body building in a serious way about two years ago, their parents didn’t know what to think. “It’s confusing to see your kid dieting so hard and switching one lifestyle for another,” said Melissa, the older of the Kanata siblings who both started building their bodies around the same time in 2014. Preparation for a body building competition is long and intense. It requires strict diets, hours of weight lifting and a constant eye on body fat and muscle mass ratios. But for both Bumsteads, the effort has been worth it – to an outsider, one might assume it was rather effortless. At their very first competition in May 2014, for example, they both won overall for their genders – not
bad for first-timers. “I saw a switch in my mom, especially, in terms of pride,” Melissa said. “They were a bit skeptical at first I think. But they’ve seen how much we enjoy it. They’ve come around.” TOP BUILDERS
That quick success hasn’t slowed. The siblings both took home national awards this summer. Melissa, 23, won the top spot in the Canadian Figure Nationals in Halifax this July. Chris went to Edmonton to take first place in Mr. Canada Junior – a category for body builders aged 22 and under – before placing third overall in the men’s category. That’s all very impressive, but the real shocker came when Melissa was handed her pro-card from the International Federation of Body Building, the ultimate goal of most serious
builders and her ticket to international competitions including the Olympias. “It’s a big … deal,” she laughed. “I honestly didn’t expect to achieve this so early, on my first try.” Neither did her coach and boyfriend, Iain Valliere, who first convinced her to try body building a few years ago. “Chris was really motivated and into the training, whereas when Melissa started she was just doing it for health,” said Valliere, who trains builders for competition. “It’s been a big change in Melissa in that respect.” Perhaps they should have all seen it coming, considering Melissa’s work ethic. “I never feel satisfied with mediocrity,” said Melissa, who said setting and achieving goals is “like a drug to me.” With her pro-card in hand, Melissa
will now be able to work towards the “Superbowl of body building,” the Olympias, which made stars out of builders such as Arnold Schwarzenegger. And Chris is likely not far behind; Valliere said he expects Chris to get his pro-card next summer at the nationals. BUILDING BLOCKS
For both Bumsteads, adjusting to a body building physique took some time. Melissa, especially, said she faced more criticism from strangers, and in fact was nervous to put on so much mass herself. “I was scared of muscle,” she said. “When I first started, I was self-conscious because of the stares from being a more muscular woman.” But now that’s she’s considered a professional builder, she’s learning to
ignore the occasional rude comment directed her way. “After I’ve accomplished what I’ve accomplished, I know my strength serves a purpose,” she said. Melissa said she’s looking forward to proving her mettle even more next year. “I’m excited to step on the pro stage and see how I stack up,” she said. But, she admitted, it’s a lifestyle she may not keep up forever. “I’m always going to give 110 per cent to what I do, but I don’t change my outside life to fit my body building,” she said. “If in five years I wanted to settle down and have babies, I would do that. But right now it’s making me happy.” For now she said she’s excited that she and Valliere – who also has his pro-card – can plan to travel to the same competitions next year.
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Yellow means hello at Carleton’s new friendship bench Metro Ottawa
Most strangers sitting on a bench reading a book probably want to be left alone – but sitting on Carleton University’s new friendship bench is an open door for a friendly chat. Another bench added to the campus quad seems ordinary, but Sam Fiorella thinks this one could save a life. Fiorella unveiled the bench Wednesday in memory his son, Lucas Fiorella, a second year robotics student at Carleton who died by suicide in October 2014. “In the aftermath of that we had a lot of students reach out to us, saying ‘You need to know something about your son,’” he said. The students who called him wanted to let him know that even while Lucas was suffering in silence, he was assisting others in getting help for their mental health issues. “Many people have told us that he saved them from taking their own life. He couldn’t ask for help himself but he was reaching out to others, so those stories inspired us,” he said. Fiorella started the Friendship
Bench non-profit to encourage people to support each other and talk about mental health on school campuses. “We created the friendship bench as a visual reminder to students on college campuses to talk to each other, the way that my son talked to others,” said Fiorella. “The bench being a place where people can stop and sit together.” Lucas’s sister Vanessa and mother Susan where also at Carleton to see the first bench unveiled. Carleton is the first school to receive one, but soon the benches will be at Niagara College, Holy Trinity High School and Simon Fraser University. Fiorella is hoping eventually every college and university in Canada will have one. The bench is one part of the campaign, but the Friendship Bench organization is also working on an awareness campaign asking people to reach out with the hashtag “#YellowIsForHello.” The organization is also fundraising to improve mental health services in high schools and universities. Geographically-specific resources for those who have mental health problems or are thinking about suicide are available on their website.
Pet Adoptions
Maddie (id#a183521)
Haley Ritchie/Metro
Carleton President Roseann Runte, Friendship Bench founder Sam Fiorella and Carleton University Student Association vice-president Maddie Adams unveiled the new yellow bench at Carleton University on Wednesday.
Meet Maddie (ID#A183521), a sweet, quiet girl looking for her purr-fect match. Maddie has a beautiful coat and a long mane. She can be little shy at first, but once you get to know her, she’ll jump up on your lap for cuddles and pats. She’s an inquisitive girl who likes to play with a variety of different toys. Maddie would prefer to be the only cat in the home so she can have all of the love and attention of her new family to herself. Could you be the one Maddie has been waiting for? For more information on Maddie and all the adoptable animals, stop by the OHS at 245 West Hunt Club Rd. Check out our website at www.ottawahumane.ca to see photos and descriptions of the animals available for adoption.
PET OF THE WEEK
Why obedience training?
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Though lovable, dogs have some tendencies —like jumping up to greet you, barking, and digging—that can make it difficult to live with them. To grow your your relationship with your dog, it is very important to teach her some important skills that will help her live harmoniously in a human household. It is easy to get all kinds of advice about training your dog. Some people will tell you that the key is to use a “firm hand” to make sure your dog doesn’t think she can get away with naughty behavior. The Ottawa Humane Society and most experts argue that you should only use rewards in dog training and not punish your dog in any way. You should reward behaviour you like and makes sure you are not rewarding the behaviours you don’t like. The “how” advice is everywhere. What about the why? The American Dog Trainers Network (ADTN) remind us that obedience training is
one of the most important aspects of raising a dog. Their website sums it up beautifully: A well trained dog is by far a happier dog! Why? Because a trained dog requires fewer restrictions. The more reliable the dog, the more freedom he is given. For example, many stores and businesses that normally won’t allow dogs on their premises will make an exception for a puppy or a dog that will heel nicely by his owner’s side, or will do a sit-stay or down-stay without hesitation. The ADTN reminds us that training may save your dog’s life: Obedience training also gives the dog owner the voice control necessary to prevent numerous potential tragedies. For instance, should a dog slips out of his collar in the middle of a congested traffic intersection, he can be safely heeled across the street, then given a sit command to facilitate putting his collar back on. Or should someone accidentally leave the front door open, and you spot your
Please note: The Ottawa Humane Society has many other companion animals available for adoption. Featured animals are adopted quickly! To learn more about adopting an animal from the Ottawa Humane Society please contact us:
Website: www.ottawahumane.ca Email: Adoptions@ottawahumane.ca Telephone: (613) 725-3166 x258
dog leaving, he can be safely called back to you using the recall command. The consequences of misbehavior are many: Without proper training, many dogs are likely to misbehave. And when owners allow their dogs to misbehave, everyone suffers: The owner, because he or she lives with a dog, the dog, because everyone’s down on him for misbehaving; the dog’s owner’s neighbors, because living next to a difficult dog is no one’s idea of fun; and ultimately every dog owner, because each incidence where a dog creates a nuisance increases anti-dog sentiment, and contributes to the likelihood that tough legal restrictions will be placed on all dogs. A wellbehaved, obedience trained dog is a pleasure to own because he can go virtually anywhere without being a risk or nuisance to others. For more information about obedience classes at the Ottawa Humane Society visit www.ottawahumane.ca.
Pikachu
Hi, my name is Pikachu, but my friends call me Chu-Chu. I’m a Maltese, but my Mommy calls me a Malteezer cuz I’m so fun & I love to play tickle! I have lots of FOPS (Friends Of Pikachu.) I’m known for my barks... ask anyone in the hood.
Do you think your pet is cute enough to be “THE PET OF THE WEEK”? Submit a picture and short biography of your pet to find out! Simply email to: dtherien@perfprint.ca attention “Pet of the Week” Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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Local events and happenings over the coming weeks — free to non-profit organizations Fax: 613-224-3330, E-mail: Ottawasouth@metroland.com
Mondays
Babies from birth to 18 months are welcome to the Alta Vista library branch for stories, rhymes and songs on Mondays, until Oct. 26, from 10:30 to 11 a.m. and on Mondays, from Nov. 9 to Dec. 7, from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. No registration is required.
Tuesdays
Family storytime at the Alta Vista library branch takes place on Tuesdays until Oct. 27, from 10 :30 to 11 a.m. and from Nov. 10 to Dec. 8, from 10
:30 to 11 :30 a.m. The session will feature stories, rhymes, and songs for all ages. No registration required.
Wednesdays
will be a faith story, door prizes, refreshments and child care will be available. Admission is $6. For details call 613-249-0919.
Toddlertime programming at the Alta Vista library branch will feature stories, rhymes and songs for babies, 18 to 36 months, on Wednesdays until Oct. 29, from 10:30 to 11 a.m., and Nov. 12 to Dec. 12, from 10:30 to 11 a.m. No registration required.
Sept. 10 and 24
Sept. 10
Sept. 12
The Ottawa South Women’s Connection, “Stonecroft Ministries” hosts its next event, featuring a thrift fall fashion show on Sept. 10, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. at the Fred Barrett Arena, located at 3280 Leitrim Rd. There
Teen ages 13 to 18 are welcome to drop in to the Alta Vista library branch for a Crafternoon of craftmaking on Sept. 10 and 24, from 4 to 5 :30 p.m. The branch is located at 2516 Alta Vista Dr. A community yard sale will take place on Sept. 12, on Southgate Road, between Johnston Road and Cahill Drive. The rain date is Sept. 19.
Sept. 13
Heritage Ottawa hosts a walking tour of Old Ottawa South on Sept. 13 at 2 p.m., starting at the Southminster United Church, 15 Aylmer Ave. In 1907, Nepean Township villages such as Ottawa South were annexed to the City of Ottawa. Improved city services soon followed, such as a new high level Bank Street Bridge over the canal. It allowed the privately owned Ottawa Electric Railway to extend streetcar services, stimulating housing and development of one of Ottawa’s first streetcar suburbs. Your guides will be Julie Harris and Kathy Krywicki, who both contributed to the book Exploring the Built Heritage of Old Ottawa South. Heritage Ottawa members pay $5 and non-members pay $10. For details, call 613-230-8841, email info@heritageottawa.org or visit heritageottawa.org.
Sept. 15
Are you looking for a new fall activity that provides exercise as well as fun and new friends? The Meri Squares Modern Square Dance Club invites you to two free evenings of dancing on Sept. 15, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., at Westminster Presbyterian Church, located at 470 Roosevelt Ave. No experience is necessary and singles are welcome. For details, visit merisquares.ca, or call Sharon at 613-731-0490.
Sept. 16
Heritage Ottawa hosts a free public lecture, titled “A Monumental Issue: The Long Term Vision Plan for the Parliamentary and Judicial Precincts” on Sept. 16 at 7 p.m. at the Ottawa Public Library auditorium, located at 120 Metcalfe St. Planning for Ottawa as Canada’s capital focusses on the parliamentary and judicial precincts. What is happening to these plans now? The long-term vision plan for Ottawa’s parliamentary and judicial precincts is now the focus of a national controversy, with plans for a monument on a site originally identified for the long planned for federal court. For details, call 613-230-8841 or email info@ heritageottawa.org.
Sept. 19
To kick-start the fall hiking season, the Rideau Trail Association is holding an Introduction to Hiking
course on Sept. 19 at the Nepean Sportsplex. This is a full-day session for new hikers and those interested in making their hiking experience safe and enjoyable. Topics include hike planning, preparation, packing, outfitting and on-trail procedures, plus an orientation to hiking with a guided group. The day will wrap up with a short hike. Space is limited, so register early. The cost is $75 (which includes a $25 RTA membership, valid until March 2017). To register, visit rideautrail.org, or call the club’s information line at 613-860-2225.
Sept. 21
Find your voice and build publicspeaking skills. Whether you’re a professional, student, stay-at-home parent or retiree, Toastmasters will give you the skills and confidence you need to effectively express yourself in any situation. The event, sponsored by the Riverside Toastmasters, will be held at the Greenboro branch of the Ottawa Public Library on Sept. 21 at 6:45 p.m.
Sept. 21 to Oct. 2
The ninth-annual Ottawa Peace Festival featuring 23 admission-free events takes place across Ottawa Sept. 21 to Oct. 2. The program will feature music, a film festival, photo exhibit and panels to celebrate volunteerism in peace-building. For the full program, visit ottawapeacefestival.blogspot.com or call 613-2441979 or 613-852- 4527
Sept. 23
Emmanual United Church hosts a book launch for author Jean Stairs who wrote “Soul Sisters.” The event takes place from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the church, located at 691 Smyth Rd. For details, go to emmanuelunited. ca, or call 613 733 0437.
your children start school. We have all Public Health required vaccines. No appointment required.
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Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
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You are invited to an open house and brunch at Rideau Park United Church, 2203 Alta Vista Dr., on Sept. 13, from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Come for brunch and learn about
the church’s numerous programs, activities and services, including Sunday services, community outreach programs, pastoral care and music programs for adults, youth and children, the Harmony Club for seniors, concerts, curling, quilting, euchre and yoga. All are welcome. For details, call 613-733-3156, ext. 229, or visit rideaupark.ca.
COMMUNITY news
The deadline for community event submissions is Friday at noon. Email your events to ottawasouth@metroland.com.
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71. Lubed 41. Quarter 43. Swiss capital CLUES DOWN 44. Sandhurst (abbr.) 1. Lowered in prestige 45. Golfer Snead 2. Turin river 47. Bachelor’s of Applied 3. Moves through water Science 4. Disappearing shade trees 48. A radio band 50. Assist in some wrongdoing 5. Standard operating procedure 6. A shrill cry 52. SW German state ___: 7. Japanese apricot Württemberg 8. Emergency Response 54. Rosary component Notification System (abbr.) 56. Expresses surprise 9. Sparta’s ancient rival city 57. Hot Springs state (abbr.) 10. The Ocean State 59. Soak flax 11. Jack-tar 60. Atomic #73 12. Sleeveless Arab garments 61. Exist 13. Abstains from food 62. Megabyte 63. Energy in the form of waves 14. Waxed finish 15. Conditions of balance or particles 25. Cloud of interstellar dust 66. Farm state (abbr.) 26. Turf 67. WWII flyer’s phrase: On 27. Political action committee ........ 70. Store fodder for preservation 29. Repentant act
31. B.B. King sang them 33. Salesman’s items 36. Every 38. Neither 39. African nation 41. Hindu’s creator god 42. The bill in a restaurant 43. Edict 46. Maritime 47. Small bright tropical fish 49. Cockered 51. Mountain lakes 53. No longer alive 54. Unoriginal 55. Costly 58. Finger millet 60. Aaron Spelling’s child 64. Dekaliter 65. Initial public offering 68. Not out 69. Thou
This week’s puzzle answers in next week’s issue
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LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Libra, you have a number of items on your plate right now. It may seem overwhelming, but if you work though things one task at a time, you will get through it all. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Even some bad news can’t get you down, Scorpio. Take it in stride and press on. Any obstacles only make you stronger for experiencing them. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, it may take some extra effort to work through a problem, but eventually you will find a solution. Don’t be afraid to ask for some help if you get bogged down with things. CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Capricorn, you are feeling confident and capable this week. Things at work are moving along smoothly, and you can focus more of your attention on affairs at home. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Aquarius, your ability to convey complicated messages in an easily understandable way puts you in high demand this week. Enjoy your time in the spotlight. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, take a measured approach to tasks this week. Do things in moderation so you can make progress with all of the projects on your plate. 0903
L I F E T I M E R O O F I N G S YS T E M S
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Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, you are ready to move in new and unexpected directions. Your boss or supervisor may appreciate any new ideas you have and your willingness to try new things. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 Many fun things are expected to unfold this week, Taurus. With so many people to see and errands to run, try to make some time to relax so you don’t fall victim to fatigue. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 You have a desire to take in the great outdoors this week, Gemini. Enjoy boating, swimming or even just lounging around a lake. You will return home feeling recharged. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Cancer, expect to expend a lot of energy sorting out your calendar and getting things organized this week. Make the most of any leisure time that comes your way. LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 Goals and friendships at the workplace evolve this week, Leo. This may be a time of new beginnings for you, and you find yourself enjoying all the new opportunities. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, this week you will learn to work with any limitations you may have instead of feeling boxed in by them. There is much you can accomplish when you give it a try.
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Silver Creek
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72
Ottawa South News - Thursday, September 10, 2015
Friday Night 3790 Carp Rd. Carp ON T. 613-839-2172
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THURSDAY TO SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 10-13, 2015
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NOW NOW HENCKELS ELITE 17-PC NOW CUTLERY SET WITH99 BONUS Block set made in99 Europe. BONUS 2-PACK NOW 9911 x 15” wood fibre cutting board 2-PACK includes
118 97 69 149
Uses 12 infra 75-5732-0. Reg
54-8251-6.
% SPECIAL BUY 288.88
NOW NOW NOW 9999 NOW
BONUS
4-piece set is oven, microwave, dishwasher and freezer safe. Styles may vary by store. 42-9989-4. Reg 99.99
SAVE SAVE SAVE
70 70 70 5075 29
50 50 40 50 118
%
*If bought separately, our combined price would be $979.97. *If bought separately, our combined price would KITCHENAID STONEWARE SET be $979.97.
NOW NOW NOW 4949
STEALTH CA
99
75-5732-0
Block made in Europe. BONUS Block setset made in Europe. BONUS includes x 15” wood cutting board includes 11 11 x 15” wood fibrefibre cutting board knife sharpener. While quantities withwith knife sharpener. While quantities last.last. Sorry, rainchecks. 299-2759-4. Sorry, no no rainchecks. 299-2759-4.
29
NO
Uses 12 infrared emitters that reach up to 40´ (12.19m). Six-button EZ programming. 11,000-20,000 OPM. Accessories included. SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE . Reg 239.99 Reg 99.99 SAVE SAVE %* %% % % SAVE SAVE $ %
43-1285-4. Reg 189.99
*If bought separately, our combined price would be $979.97.
%
1189 17
4-HANDSET PHONE WITH ANSWERING GE MICROWAVE OVENSOCKET 1 3 1 400-PIECE AND TOOL SET. ⁄2˝ drive sizes. 1 3⁄4˝, ⁄8˝ and 400-PIECE SOCKET AND TOOL SET. 4˝, ⁄8189.99 ˝ and 1⁄2˝ drive sizes. SYSTEM. 69-8018-0. Reg 119.99 Stainless-steel finish. 1.6 cu ft capacity. 43-1285-4 . ⁄Reg 2-PACK Slide-in trays designed to fi t tool chest over 30˝. CALLER ID. 69-8006-8. Reg 109.99 58-9295-8. Reg 699.99 Slide-in trays designed CALLER ID. fat 69-8006-8 . Regof109.99 Create lower versions the food you love. Cook French fries, chicken wings, 49.99 4-HANDSET PHONE WITH to fit tool chest over 30˝. 58-9295-8. Reg 699.99 seafood, vegetables, and more with minimum oil! 43-1400-0. Reg 299.99 CALLER ID.MASTERCRAFT 69-8006-8. Reg 109.99 STEALTH CAM P12desserts 6MP GAME CAMERA, VALUE 2-PACK 2.2 CORDED MULTI-CRAFTER
Stainless-steel finish. cu ft capacity. 43-1285-4. Reg 189.99 includes 11 xfi15” wood fibre board Stainless-steel nish. 1.61.6 cu ft cutting capacity. 43-1285-4. Reg 189.99 with knife sharpener. While quantities last. Sorry, no rainchecks. 299-2759-4.
SAVE SAVE %* SAVE %*
NOW
179 179 29
Base Artwork
69-8018-0. 69-8018-0.
%*
NOW NOW
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NOW NOWNOW NOW 99 97 99 NOW 99
NOW9999 99PHONE WITH ANSWERING NOW 4-HANDSET 4-HANDSET PHONE WITH ANSWERING SYSTEM.99 RegReg 119.99 SYSTEM. 119.99 49.99 4-HANDSET PHONE WITH SEPTEMBER 10-13, 2015 49.99 4-HANDSET WITH T-FAL 1KG ACTIFRYPHONE
Create lower versions of the love. Cook French fries, chicken wings, Create lower fat fat versions of the foodfood youyou love. Cook French fries, chicken wings, seafood, vegetables, desserts more minimum 43-1400-0. Reg 299.99 seafood, vegetables, desserts andand more withwith minimum oil!oil! 43-1400-0. Reg 299.99
GE MICROWAVE OVEN SAVE SAVE Stainless-steel finish. 1.6 cu ft capacity. $ $SAVE
507
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2.98 9 X 12 0910.R0013449340
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Handy size fo home orMAX gard 41⁄2˝ t
NO PAYMENTS FEESAVE NO INTEREST SA 2 12 EQUALSAVE MONTHLY %INTEREST %FINANCING %% FEE %INTEREST % * % 12 EQUAL MONTHLY When you spend $200 NO FEE NO NO NO When you spend $200 or more storewide % FINANCING % % % % 2 * or more storewide PAYMENTS FINANCING
60 60 70
40 5540
60 40 60 60
Accessories shown not included.
NOW NOW
2929
DE0137_02_03.indd 1
9.99 5-SETTING 9.99 5-SETTING HANDHELD HANDHELD SHOWER HEAD. SHOWER HEAD.
2015-08-06 10:59 AM
60˝ tangle free hose. 60˝DE0137-2 tangle hose. Zone 0free 63-0171-2 . Reg 37.99 63-0171-2. Reg 37.99
53.99 SHARK INTELLIGENT IRON 53.99 SHARK INTELLIGENT IRON
1550W. Powerful vertical steam blast. 1550W. Powerful vertical steam blast. Electronic gauge. 43-2503-0. Reg 119.99 Electronic gauge. 43-2503-0. Reg 119.99
DE0137-15 0 DE0137-15 0 DE0137-15 0 DE0137-15 0
DE0137_02_03.indd 1
NO
9999
HEAVY-DUTY OUTDOOR EXTENSION CORD 50´50´ HEAVY-DUTY OUTDOOR EXTENSION CORD DE0137-2
9.99 5-SETTING 12 gauge with 3 lighted outlets. 52-2321-0. Reg 75.99 2.98 X 12´ VALUE TARP 9.69 ENERGIZER BATTERIES 2.98 9 X912´ VALUE TARP 9.69 ENERGIZER BATTERIES HANDHELD ZoneDE0137-3 0 12 gauge with 3 lighted outlets. 52-2321-0. Reg 75.99 Handy size for fall projects around the Max, Eco and Alkaline in assorted sizes and 49.99 100´ CORD Handy sizeHEAD. for fall projects around the Max, and Alkaline in assortedIRON sizes1 and 2.98 9 XZone CORD SHOWER 53.99EcoSHARK INTELLIGENT 12´49.99 VALUE TARP 9.69 ENERGIZER BATTERIES Group 0 100´ home orfree garden. 40-5030-2. Reg 7.98 home or garden. 40-5030-2. Reg 7.98 60˝ tangle hose. 63-0171-2. Reg 37.99
pack sizes. 65-0081X. Reg 16.49 pack sizes. 65-0081X . Reg 16.49 1550W. Powerful vertical steam blast. Electronic gauge. 43-2503-0. Reg 119.99
gauge 3 outlets. 52-2322-8. Reg 124.99 gauge withwith 3 outlets. . Reg Handy size for12fall12 projects around the 52-2322-8 Max, Eco124.99 and Alkaline in assorted sizes and home or garden. 40-5030-2. Reg 7.98 pack sizes. 65-0081X. Reg 16.49
AVAILABLE AT ALL CANADIAN TIRE OTTAWA STORES: INNES ROAD (613) 830-7000 • OGILVIE ROAD (613) 748-0637 • COVENTRY (613) 746-4303 • HERON ROAD (613) 733-6776
• • • 12EQUAL EQUAL• MONTHLY MONTHLY• When Whenyou youspend spend$200 $200 NO• FEE FEE NO NOINTEREST INTEREST 12 NO 12 EQUAL MONTHLY NO FEE NO INTEREST * ormore morestorewide storewide PAYMENTS or FINANCING* PAYMENTS FINANCING * SENATORS SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT PAYMENTS MERIVALE ROAD (613) 224-9330
2 2
CARLING AVENUE (613) 725-3111 2
6
See inside back page for details.
BARRHAVEN (613) 823-5278 BELLS CORNERS (613) 829-9580
KANATA (613) 599-5105
FINDLAY CREEK (613) 822-1289
DE0137-15 0
5555
DE0137-15 0
70 70
Base Artwork
OPTIONS
29
50´ H
12 ga
49.9
12 ga
W or