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From YouTube: Ottawa City Council May 27, 2020 - Part 2
Description
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A
B
A
C
Thank
You
mr.
mayor
and
hello,
everyone
from
still
on
the
western
edge
of
the
current
urban
boundary
I
just
wanted
to
mention
I'm,
calling
in
today
from
my
home,
which
is
a
block
away
from
three
transit
routes,
a
short
walk
to
a
grocery
store
in
pharmacy
and
a
quick
bike
ride
to
my
favorite
coffee
shop,
quitters
along
the
trans-canada
trail.
So,
yes,
communities
like
this
are
not
only
possible
in
the
suburbs.
They
also
already
exist.
I'm
gonna
read
a
line
from
the
report:
the
council
crew.
C
Back
in
December
about
the
Official
Plan
policy,
Direction
staff
wrote
there
is
no
automobile
centered
solution
to
maintaining
livability,
while
growing
to
1.4
million
and
beyond.
My
motto
over
the
past
few
weeks
has
been
it's
not
about
where
we
grow,
but
how
we
grow,
and
the
decision
today
about
where
we're
going
to
grow
is
important.
But
the
next
stage
in
the
official
plan
is
even
more
significant,
where
we
actually
finalize
the
policies
that
tell
us
how
we're
going
to
grow,
and
there
are
two
areas
that
we
really
need
to
keep
our
focus
on.
C
First,
residents
want
to
live
in
a
place
where
they
don't
have
to
travel
far
to
get
to
work
or
groceries,
but
often
our
suburbs
fall
short
of
this
ideal.
We
need
funding
for
transit,
especially
and
other
infrastructure,
to
shorten
the
gap
between
what
homes
are
built
and
when
there
are
amenities
to
support
them
and
that's
how
we're
going
to
achieve
fifteen-minute
communities
and
complete
communities,
and
the
second
area
that
we
need
to
keep
focusing
on
is
mobility,
how
we
get
around
our
city
within
our
neighbourhoods
and
beyond,
and
this
is
so
important
to
get
right.
C
If
we're
growing
to
1.4
million
people,
we
need
to
shift
people
from
cars
to
buses
and
trains
and
to
bikes
and
walking,
and
that
means
we're
going
to
need
a
major
shift
in
how
we
think
about
things
and
paper.
Things
in
our
city
and
I
support
the
staff
recommendation
for
balanced
growth
based
on
the
five
big
moves.
The
division
and
the
policy
that
we've
already
adopted,
but
I
have
a
real
concern
about
approving
expansion
and
seeing
future
councils
turn
away
from
these
best
intentions.
Because
we've
done
that
in
the
past
and
I.
C
Don't
think
the
way
that
a
lot
of
the
parts
of
our
cities
have
developed
in
the
last
50
years
has
been
a
good
thing,
so
there
is
a
risk
here.
We've
already
approved
an
excellent
set
of
policy
directions
from
staff
from
the
five
big
moves:
growth
around
transit
and
15-minute
neighborhoods
and
denser
more
walkable
communities,
I,
don't
think.
There's
anyone
in
this
council
would
disagree
with
these
ideas.
We
need
to
make
sure
we
actually
follow
through
on
these
concepts.
C
We
have
to
ensure
the
new
development
doesn't
fall
prey
to
short-term
vision
and
return
the
patterns
of
sprawl
and
car
dependency
that
we've
seen
over
the
past
few
decades,
and
we
can
do
that.
We
actually
have
to
do
that
if
we're
going
to
live
in
a
livable
city
at
1.4
million
people,
expansion
does
not
have
to
equal
sprawl.
Our
staff
has
done
some
excellent
work
on
this.
It's
up
to
us
on
council
and
future
councils
to
make
sure
that
what
what
gets
written
into
the
Official
Plan
is
actually
implemented
and
executed.
C
We're
going
to
need
some
really
strong
leadership
from
this
council
and
future
councils
to
see
this
through.
So,
just
to
wrap
up,
thank
you
to
all
the
public
and
residents
and
stakeholders
who
provided
feedback.
We
had
a
great
meeting
back
in
October,
both
the
official
plan
at
Johnny
Lu
arena
and
their
6o
Main
Street
had
a
huge
turnout,
great
discussion.
Thank
you
to
my
team
we've
over
the
last
year
for
a
week,
so
many
late-night
phone
calls
and
weekend
phone
calls
about
this
to
Steve
Willis
and
his
staff.
C
B
Thank
you
very
much.
Councillor
and
I
are
encourage
everyone
to
go
visit.
Quitter
is
a
great
business
in
your
ward.
I
want
to
begin
my
remarks
by
thanking
chair,
harder
and
Centuri
for
their
leadership.
I
can't
think
of
a
better
team
to
lead
us
through
the
city
building
discussion
because
of
their
years
of
experience.
I'd
also
like
to
thank
the
sponsors
group
consisting
of
counselors
harder,
Alshon,
teary,
Lee,
/,
Tierney,
Moffat
and
Gower.
B
Thank
you
for
the
months
of
hard
work
that
have
gone
into
this
comprehensive
review
that
started
in
April
of
2019
I
also
want
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
staff
for
their
professionalism
and
dedication
and
for
putting
up
with,
quite
frankly,
a
lot
of
abuse
over
these
last
18
months
as
they've
Shepard
at
this
complex
process,
particularly
I
want
to
thank
Stephen
Willis
for
his
professional
and
diligent
leadership
of
this
process,
and
please
extend
counsels
thanks
to
your
team
for
their
tremendous
work
to
date.
On
the
official
plan,
mr.
B
B
The
extensive
citywide
consultations
on
the
official
plan-
you
know,
I've
heard
you
know,
and
you
read
through
social
media.
Oh
this
is
being
rushed
well,
this
is
the
78th
meeting
that
has
been
part
of
this
process.
Staff
have
overseen
dozens
and
dozens
of
stakeholder
meetings
with
committee,
Association,
industry
stakeholders,
ambassador
groups,
traditionally
underrepresented
communities
and
representatives.
Indigenous
groups
involved
with
treaty
discussions
with
other
levels
of
government.
B
The
joint
meeting
of
planning
in
Iraq
in
May
set
a
historic,
a
record
for
a
non-traditional
meeting
held
electronically
with
over
100
delegations,
hurt
and
I've
received
nothing
but
positive
feedback
about
how
effective
that
meeting
was
run.
It
was,
according
to
the
vast
majority
of
participants,
a
very
democratic
gathering,
demonstrating
that
our
municipal
democracy
is
alive
and
well
even
during
the
Cova
19
pandemic.
B
I
also
want
to
take
this
opportunity
to
thank
the
over
100
public
delegations
that
participated
in
the
joint
planning
and
agricultural
rural
affairs
committee
meetings
in
May
and
the
over
45,000
residents
and
stakeholders
that
have
been
part
of
the
process
through
open
houses
and
the
like.
I
had
the
opportunity
to
listen
to
much
of
the
debate
at
the
joint
committee.
I
was
impressed
by
the
time
and
thoughtfulness
that
went
into
public
presentations
and
the
engaging
and
insightful
questions
asked
by
members
of
committee
jakku
te
de
ba
AG.
B
Strengthened
by
competing
media
stories,
social
media
commentary
and
opinion
polls
in
the
last
few
days,
we've
heard
about
two
polls
with
apparently
conflicting
results.
One
was
sponsored
by
the
Greater
Ottawa
Home
Builders
Association.
The
other
poll
was
sponsored
by
a
handful
of
local
councillors
in
the
core,
a
poll
whose
findings
eCos
had
to
issue
a
clarification
about
here's.
What
the
president
of
the
polling
company
had
to
say
once
he
had
reviewed
the
conflicting
interpretations
over
his
data
and
I
quote
quote:
well,
maybe
we
should
be
modestly
expanding
the
urban
boundary.
B
In
quote
many
in
the
development
industry
wanted
much
more
land
added
to
the
urban
boundary
in
many
community
and
environmental
activists
wanted
zero
land.
Add
it
to
the
upper
boundary.
That
tells
me
the
council
is
landing
exactly
where
it
should.
In
the
middle
of
these
competing
extremes,
the
recommendation.
B
Black
and
white
survey
filled
with
yes-or-no
questions
that
provide
elected
officials
and
a
public
with
a
perfect
outcome.
Most
members
of
council
know
that
this
is
not
what
we
have
before
us
today.
What
we
have
is
a
test
of
leadership
about
the
future
of
our
city.
It's
a
test
of
our
ability
to
juggle
the
competing
demands
and
interests
that
come
from
government
governing
a
fast-growing
city,
a
city
that
is
attracting
literally
tens
of
thousands
of
people
every
month
come
and
live
here.
New
de
Ville
prendre
upon
this
is
your
port.
Okay,
we.
B
And
when
that
happens,
we
see
tens
of
thousands
of
homes
being
built
outside
our
city,
and
these
same
households
will
contribute
even
greater
congestion
to
a
road
and
transit
infrastructure
while
contributing
absolutely
nothing
to
the
city's
coffers,
and
that
is
not
a
good
deal
for
Ottawa
residents,
nor
taxpayers
and
here's
another
fact
to
take
into
account.
People
want
to
live
here
in
greater
and
greater
numbers,
as
I
said
earlier.
It's
a
tremendous
city
to
live
in
with
great
neighborhoods
amazing
green
spaces
that
are
the
envy
of
many
Canadian
cities.
B
Money
money,
cents
magazine
listed
us
for
two
years
in
a
row,
the
best
city
to
live
and
raise
a
family.
No
wonder
we
have
an
important
debate
about
managing
growth
too
much
of
this
debate
appears
to
have
been
driven
by
hard
ideological
and
philosophical
positions
and
that's
unfortunate,
something
that
seems
to
have
been
somewhat
ignored
and
torqued
to
score
ideological
points
on
that
issue
of
affordability,
I
heard
and
read
during
this
debate
and
expansion,
urbanizationproject.org.
B
Price
we're
becoming
all
too
common.
I'm
surprised
that
some
members
of
council,
with
all
the
fresh
evidence
around
us,
do
not
see
what
happens
when
there
is
not
enough
market
supply
for
housing.
It
hurts
first-time
homebuyers
new
Canadians
and
low-income
families
disproportionately.
This
is
another
good
reason
to
support
the
balanced
scenario
as
presented
by
staff,
but
this
is
your
own
canoe,
pran
olds,
the.
B
As
members
of
council
to
ensure
that
the
neck
generation
has
housing
choice,
and
then
we
have
an
obligation
to
do
our
best
to
support
housing,
affordability
that
includes
both
market
housing,
social
housing
and
affordable
rental
housing.
The
balanced
plan
does
that.
Well,
today,
we're
being
asked
to
set
the
direction
for
our
growth
management
strategy,
the
strategy
that
will
guide
our
city
and
how
it
will
grow
to
2046
and
beyond.
B
We've
heard
from
residents
that
they
want
our
city
to
grow
in
a
way
that
minimizes
the
need
to
expand
the
urban
boundary
by
making
the
most
efficient
use
of
the
urban
lands
we
already
have.
However,
our
city
will
have
to
accommodate
more
than
400,000
new
residents
by
2046,
just
think
about
that
for
a
minute,
400,000
new
residents,
that's
bigger
than
Nepean
when
it
joined
the
new
city
of
ottawa,
bigger
than
canada,
bigger
than
Goulburn
bigger
than
than
Vanier.
That's
40%
more
people
than
our
current
population.
B
The
balanced
strategy
that
is
being
recommended
by
staff
and
carried
by
the
joint
committee
by
a
vote
of
10
to
1
accomplishes
two
goals.
It
provides
for
a
very
modest
expansion
of
our
existent
Orban
air
urban
area,
roughly
three
to
four
percent
growth.
The
balanced
scenario
ensures
that
the
majority
of
our
city's
growth
takes
place
in
already
established
neighborhoods.
B
In
this
balanced
scenario,
51
percent
of
new
dwelling
units
will
need
to
be
in
existing
built-up
areas,
with
an
intensification
target
that
rise
to
rises
to
60%
by
2040
six
at
a
60
percent
intensification
rate
Ottawa
will
have
one
of
the
most
aggressive
intensification
targets
in
all
of
Canada.
A
small
handful
of
members
of
council
consistently
talk
the
talk
and
support
of
intensification
while
opposing
it
when
it
comes
into
their
ward
and
I,
gave
examples
in
the
past
and
them,
and
you
can
see
them
all
over
the
Planning
Committee
minutes.
B
We
have
heard
from
the
vast
majority
of
residents
that
they
support
intensification,
but
they
want
it
to
be
done
thoughtfully
with
good
design
while
respecting
the
character
of
established
communities
and
I.
Think
that's
something
that
councillor
leaper
spoke
eloquently
of
a
few
moments
ago.
No
I'll
play
the
density
residents.
B
See
intensification
accompanied
by
the
appropriate
infrastructure
investments
to
support
growth.
The
funding
for
this
infrastructure
will
be
refined
through
these
important
planning
documents.
After
today's
vote.
Some
of
you
would
like
to
delay
the
vote
until
after
the
financial
analysis
completed,
but
that's
not
the
way
to
go
to
get
an
accurate,
as
mr.
Willis
pointed
out
a
meaningful
financial
analysis,
we
need
to
define
the
specific
requirements
that
will
guide
growth
in
each
of
our
unique
communities
and
neighborhoods,
as
identified
through
the
upcoming
master
planning
process
and
remember.
B
This
plan
doesn't
open
up
development
on
new
lands
overnight,
as
our
GM
indicated,
planning
for
new
lands
can
take
a
decade.
We've
also
heard
from
residents
that
they
want
intensification
and
urban
expansion
to
be
targeted
to
areas
near
existing
or
planned
transit
hubs.
That
is
what
our
balanced
strategy
does
and
is
key
priority
of
our
TMP
and
our
commitment
to
sustainable
transportation.
B
That
will
help
to
not
only
bring
more
people
on
all
RT
but
revitalize
the
Gloucester
Center,
which
is
just
across
the
street,
and
we've
received
positive
community
feedback
with
the
idea
of
compact
15-minute
neighborhoods
across
our
city,
thanks
to
the
direction
and
motion
from
councillors,
Gower
and
hubely
I'm
pleased
that
staff
will
strengthen
the
tools
to
put
15-minute
neighborhoods
at
the
center
of
decision
making
from
the
outset
of
new
development
plans.
The
focus
on
a
15
minute
neighborhood
will
expand
the
number
of
areas
where
people
can
live
without
a
car.
B
B
B
The
strength
and
protection
of
the
city's
prime
agricultural
land
land
that
is
critical
to
our
rural
communities
and
to
our
local
economy
and
thanks
to
the
strong
teamwork,
an
input
from
our
rural
councilors,
DeRoos
and
Moffat,
and
the
never-ending
support
by
Councillor
harder
for
rural
Ottawa.
The
recommended
approach
also
maintains
the
one
kilometer
buffer
around
existing
rural
villages
to
help
ensure
the
unique
character
of
our
villages
remains.
Distinct.
Much
of
the
development
will
be
through
intensification,
with
some
modest
growth
to
the
boundary
on
lands
that
are
not
agricultural,
wetlands,
floodplains
or
other
important
natural
areas.
B
It's
important
that
we
find
a
balanced
approach
that
considers
affordability.
Community
needs,
smart
growth,
opportunities,
responsible
intensification
and
protections
of
our
food
supply.
The
balanced
plan
is
presented
by
staff,
achieves
these
goals
and
I
strongly
support
it
chef
we
folk
master
plan,
Kia,
Duvall
and.
B
Council
recognized
that
a
no
expansion
scenario
was
unrealistic
as
it
reduces
housing
choices
across
our
city.
Today
is
an
important
step
rather
in
providing
high-level
direction
of
the
staff
on
preparing
a
new
Official
Plan
for
our
city
staff
will
take
high-level
directions
today
and
do
more
work
to
write
a
full
document
with
more
refined
policies,
maps
and
implementation
details.
The
next
time
council
sees
the
plan
which
we
can
expect
sometime
in
2021.
It
will
be
complete
document
which
will
replace
the
outdated
Official
Plan.
B
I
J
B
Honda
motion,
carried
motions
of
which
have
been
previous
notice,
have
been
previously
given
motion.
Don't
vit
Daniel,
tell
MA
motion
by
myself
and
my
counselor
Tierney
just
a
couple
of
brief
comments,
so
we're
almost
three
months
into
the
global
kovat
19
pandemic
and
the
depth
of
this
crisis
and
the
corresponding
economic
impact
to
municipalities
are
starting
to
sink
in
Newcomb.
B
We
must
also
consider
the
impact
of
this
pandemic
on
future
budgets,
as
I
think
we
all
know
that
recovery
will
take
time,
unlike
the
provincial
and
federal
government's
municipalities,
of
course,
are
not
allowed
or
permitted
by
law
to
run
a
deficit
residents
expect
municipalities
to
deliver
the
core
services
needed
to
keep
our
city
moving
and
its
people
safe.
Nobody
wants
to
cancel
or
delay
existing
and
planned
capital
projects
to
say
solvent.
B
I'm
sure
everyone
agrees
that
we
need
to
continue
maintaining
our
roads,
filling
potholes,
keeping
our
assets
in
the
state
of
good
repair,
not
to
mention
that
we
need
to
keep
the
momentum
going
on
large
infrastructure
projects
like
LRT
and
the
new
Central
Library
to
fuel
economic
recovery
from
this
pandemic
in
the
full
public
progress
relay
project
of
Malaysia.
Let's.
B
Ridership,
as
we
heard
today,
the
closing
of
recreation
facilities
and
libraries
and
a
significant
decrease
in
revenues
across
the
board
have
left
municipalities
facing
short-term
cashflow
problems
and
long-term
financial
plans.
Add
to
this
the
rising
costs
and
the
complex
operational
realities
of
protecting
the
most
vulnerable
in
our
community.
B
That's
why
today,
councillor,
Tierney
and
I
are
moving
this
motion
to
support
the
FCM
and
a
MoU
and
Lum
Co
and
B
CMC
in
their
respective
lobbying
efforts
with
the
federal
and
provincial
governments
for
this
crucial
one-time
emergency
transit
and
operating
funding
for
our
city
and
all
municipalities
across
Canada.
For
example,
the
Federation
of
Canadian
Municipalities
FCM
is
calling
on
the
federal
government
to
commit
to
emergency
operating
funding
of
at
least
10
billion
dollars
in
a
one
time
transfer
for
local
governments
to
use
as
needed.
B
This
would
allowed
cities,
towns,
villages
across
the
country
to
continue
keeping
residents
safe
and
supported,
and
we
need
this
emergency
funding
sooner
rather
than
later.
Councillor
terry
and
I
are
all
are
asking
members
of
council
to
please
support
this
motion
and
the
efforts
of
a
moe
FCM
and
lemco
and
big
city
mayors,
caucus
I'd
like
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
councillor
Brockington
for
his
work
on
the
city's
behalf
on
this
issue.
B
With
a
moe
as
our
representative
on
the
board,
we
need
to
acquire
this
much-needed
federal
and
provincial
funding
for
emergency
operations
and
transit
recovery.
This
funding
is
key
to
our
local
and
national
economic
recovery.
By
working
together,
we
can
ensure
that
the
residents
of
Ottawa
continue
to
receive
world-class
essential
services
and
that
Ottawa
remains
in
a
solid
financial
position.
Cities
are,
as
we
know,
the
engines
of
the
economy
and
we
can't
move
towards
a
meaningful
economic
recovery
phase
without
the
help
of
our
federal
and
provincial
partners.
H
Great
Thank
You
mr.
mayor
I'll,
keep
it
brief.
You've
really
summed
it
up,
but
you
know:
fcm
representing
two
thousand
member
municipalities
across
the
country.
I
speak
with
my
board
on
a
regular
basis.
As
Ontario
caucus
chair
I
speak
to
many
others
me
there
it's
becoming
more
of
a
challenge.
We've
heard
it
with
Mayor
John
Iverson
in
Edmonton,
all
the
way
to
John
Tory
and
nobody
wants
to
see
massive
tax
increases.
We
need
this
one-time
help
and
so
much
so
that
I
even
had
a
great
conversation
with
Sean
McKenney
of
the
Labor
Council.
H
A
Thank
you,
your
worship
and
thank
you
to
yourself
and
councillor
Tierney
for
the
motion.
The
association
of
municipalities
of
Ontario
is
actively
engaged
in
advocating
for
municipalities
across
Ontario,
similar
to
what
we've
heard
from
both
the
mayor
and
councilor
tyranny.
Municipalities
are
in
a
very
tight
financial
situation
and
comparable
municipalities
to
Ottawa
face
challenges,
so
they
are
absolutely
in
agreement
with
this
motion
and
are
advocating
for
the
City
of
Ottawa
as
well.
So
we
need
this
motion.
K
B
I
E
I
E
Drug
use,
overdoses
and
addiction
continue
to
increase
costs
to
government's
for
services
such
as
shelter,
health
care
and
emergency
services,
and
whereas
addiction
issues
have
also
been
destructive
to
communities
in
their
economic
well-being.
Due
to
rising
crime
and
violence
associated
with
drug
trade,
been.
I
Destructive
to
communities
and
their
economic
well-being
due
to
rising
crime
and
violence
associated
with
drug
trade,
whereas
Ottawa
inner
city
health,
as
a
community
health
partner
of
the
City
of
Ottawa,
aims
to
improve
the
health
and
access
to
health
care
for
people
for
chronically
homeless
and
integrated
health
care
services,
so
that
homeless
individuals
can
receive
the
same
quality
of
healthcare
as
other
Canadians,
whereas
since
August
2017,
dr.
Jeff,
Turnbull
and
Ottawa
inner
city
health
successfully
launched
Canada's
first
ever
managed
opioid
program
in
Ottawa
providing
controlled
amounts
of
pharmaceutical-grade
narcotics.
I
I
19
by
Katherine
Latham
covered
the
positive
impacts
and
individual
successes
of
the
small-scale
pilot
project
and
its
positive
impact
on
stabilizing
the
lives
of
those
with
addictions
in
Ottawa,
whereas
the
Cova
19
pandemic,
as
further
demonstrated.
The
lack
of
supports
for
our
communities
for
our
city
is
most
vulnerable
and
has
also
highlighted
the
vulnerabilities
in
communities
where
petty
crime
and
panhandling
our
main
source
of
income
to
fuel
addictions,
which
are
increasingly
impacting
small
businesses
in
residence
dependency.
On
that
provision.
Master
on
dog,
easy
cantata.
I
To
expand
the
supply
of
drugs
to
the
population
in
Ottawa
that
meets
the
criteria
for
those
most
in
need.
By
asking
the
mayor
to
write
to
the
provincial
and
federal
ministers
of
health,
asking
them
to
implement
and
fund
the
expansion
safe
supply
in
Ottawa,
to
provide
immediate
supports
to
people
who
use
drugs
and
decrease
burdens
on
communities
experiencing
the
impact
of
addiction.
G
L
Thank
you
and
thanks
to
councillor
flurries
for
bringing
this
forward.
You
know
this
obviously
on
that
on
the
street
and
when
we're
thinking
about
the
impact
on
neighborhoods,
it
does
affect
our
neighborhoods,
probably
more
than
anywhere
else.
We
see
those
impacts
every
day
and
residents,
certainly
in
the
war
that
I
represent,
want
to
support
people
who
have
addictions.
L
Who
are
you
know
under
house
on
how
and
and
need
treatment
centers
and
need
supervised
consumption,
but
they
also
recognize
that
we
cannot
in
any
way
police
our
way
out
of
the
circumstances
that
we
find
ourselves
in,
and
they
don't
want
that.
We
want
something
different.
We
want
to
support
people
who
use
drugs
and
I
believe
that
that's
the
case
across
the
city
this.
L
So
I
think
you
know
it's
I'm,
not
sure
that
there's
a
another
group,
another
demographic,
that
we
would
allow
to
parish
allowed
to
die
at
the
same
rate
that
we
do
with
people
who
have
addictions
and
it
happens
daily.
We
just
don't
fear
about
it.
I
had
about
12
people
since,
in
that
the
last
four
or
five
weeks
who
have
died
of
overdoses
that
I
know
of
and
it's
it's
heartbreaking,
it's
heartbreaking
for
them
for
their
families
for
the
community,
and
this
is
just
asking
for
a
safe
supply.
L
This
is
ensuring
that
people
with
addictions
like
any
other
illness.
If
you,
if
you
need
help,
if
you
need
medication,
you
can
get
a
safe
supply
of
medication.
If
you
we
would
never
allow
for
dirty
needles.
For
somebody
who
needed
to
you
know
I
inject.
For
for
any
other
reason,
we
would
not
accept
an
unsafe
supply
of
drugs
for
anyone
else
and
I.
L
Think
that
asking
for
us
to
go
to
the
federal
government
to
ask
for
this
to
be
extended
into
our
city
is,
is
a
humanitarian
and
meet,
and
it
shows
that
that
we
we
care
about
everybody
in
this
city.
So
I
thank
all
my
colleagues
for
considering
this
in
a
very
thoughtful
way
and
I
think
that
you
know
what
I
think
about
our
city
and
where
we
move
from
over
the
last
15
years
on
this,
it's
been
exceptional,
and
this
is
the
next
step
that
we
can
take.
So
thank
you
for
that.
Thank.
G
You
mr.
mayor
and
and
thank
you
to
my
two
colleagues
for
moving
this
motion,
I
just
wanted
to
for
anybody
who
is
concerned
about
this
motion
or
as
questions
about
this
motion,
I
can
say
that
Ottawa
Public
Health
has
been
engaged
on
this
file
and
on
this
project
and
is
supportive
of
it.
Absolutely
we've
seen
the
successes
we
actually
are.
What
public
health
has
been
in
the
process
for
some
time
of
seeking
additional
funding
from
other
levels
of
government
to
assist
on
this
on
this
very
file.
So
again,
Ottawa
Public,
Health
again
is
aware.
G
K
G
You
mr.
mayor
I
agree
with
Councilman
Kenny
that
we
can't
police
ourselves
out
of
this
issue
that
it
requires
more
than
a
single
approach
to
it
personally.
I
believe
that
treatment
and
supports
for
users
of
drugs
are
needed
and
need
to
be
expanded
beyond
what's
available
today.
I
do
not,
however,
believe
that
municipal
taxpayers
should
take
on
the
role
of
basically
being
the
drug
dealer.
G
I,
don't
like
the
idea
of
using
tax
dollars,
especially
at
this
time
when,
as
you
know,
the
treasurer
is
updated
as
on
how
much
money
we're
losing
a
million
dollars
a
day
and
in
this
pandemic
situation,
I
really
don't
feel
comfortable
with
tax
dollars
going
towards
buying
drugs.
Therefore,
mr.
mayor
I'm
going
to
decide
on
this
issue.
Thank
you.
Thank.
K
You
mr.
mayor
and
I'm
wondering
if
my
colleagues
will
have
moved,
emotion
and
second
emotion
will
accept
a
friendly
amendment
and
I'm,
not
speaking
about
competing
interests
or
group
against
another
group.
We
hear
time
and
time
again
some
of
our
senior
some
of
our
folks
who's
on
fixed
income,
some
of
the
folks
who
who's
having
a
challenged
even
by
the
stripes
for
their
diabetes
or
would
they
be?
K
Would
they
be
open
to
include
in
your
request
for
for
help
and
this
one
to
include
all
farmers
farmer
care
and
need
for
our
community
again
I'm
not
trying
to
compete.
One
against
the
other
I
understand
I
was
on
a
police
boat
for
15
years
and
surely
to
God.
We
know
we
cannot
police
our
way
out
of
it.
We
have
to
deal
with
it
and
face
it,
but
I
can't
honestly
with
a
clear
conscience,
say:
yeah
I
will
support
this,
but
we'll
reach
the
seniors
in
a
rural
area
who's.
K
I
I
as
much
as
I
recognize
the
issue
of
farmer
care
and
that's
a
national
debate,
that's
happening
now,
I'm
glad
to
support
any
motion
that
my
colleagues
would
bring
on
that
front.
I
also
don't
want
to
confuse
the
issue.
There's
a
lot
of
costs
that
today,
as
a
society
were
enduring
by
the
by
by
the
illicit
drug
use
and
addictions
from
our
police
response
to
emergency
rooms,
to
paramedics
to
court,
so
I'm
not
proposing
any
new
dollars
on
this
I.
I
K
G
F
G
B
C
You
very
much
mayor
this
is
the
most
time
to
move
some
money
out
of
an
envelope
that
I
have
affordable
housing
in
the
ward
that
is
made
up
for
section
37
money
in
order
to
help
fund
a
sidewalk
elsewhere
in
the
ward.
So
a
bit
of
a
shuffle
within
the
section
37
agreement,
I,
a
developer
has
offered
to
partially
fund
a
sidewalk
and
I've
been
scrambling
to
find
a
funding
source
to
get
the
whole
thing
funded
so
I'm
getting
into
the
affordable
housing
part
of
this
section.
C
37
agreements
I
do
have,
though,
in
a
few
weeks
I'll
be
supporting
the
Trinity
proposal,
that
is,
that
Gladstone
Loretta
and
that
will
give
my
affordable
housing
fund
a
big
boost.
It's
not
spoken
for.
Currently,
there
are
no
projects
that
are
anticipated
to
use
that
money
immediately.
So,
whereas
the
owner
of
land,
1916
Scott
Street,
was
parties
of
section
37
agreements
with
the
City
of
Ottawa
elsewhere,.
B
B
C
G
B
B
Sorry,
no
okay,
so
I'm
not
gonna,
read
the
be.
It
therefore
resolved
because
you
all
have
a
copy
of
it.
This
is
to
help
the
restaurant
industry,
so
it's
be.
It
resolved.
A
council
approved
the
following:
waive
the
daily
rate
for
right
away,
patios
and
tourist
kiosks,
and
the
annual
permit
fee
for
cafe.
Sitting
seating
permits
for
2020,
however,
continue
to
collect
the
permit
application
fee
of
$62
to
ensure
that
permits
are
required.
Fund.
The
282,000
shortfall
and
budget
revenue
from
unfilled
vacancies
and
piee
d
amend
the
right
away.
B
Patio
bylaw
that
for
2020
only
an
applicant
to
the
cafe
seating
program
may
request
an
unlimited
amount
of
cafe
seating
permits
to
expand
beyond
the
four
table:
8
seat
cap,
where
space
exists
at
the
discretion
of
the
general
manager
of
p
IE
d,
amend
the
right-of-way
patio
bylaw
for
2020.
Only
such
that
new
applications
within
90
metres
of
residential
properties.
The
required
public
consultation
will
pay
a
fee
of
$340
modeled
on
the
first-time
patio
permit
fee,
rather
than
the
current
fee
of
567.
H
Thank
You
mr.
chair,
as
this
has
been
circulating,
I've
heard
from
many
businesses
that
are
pretty
thankful
to
see
some
kind
of
assistance
from
the
city
on
this
I've
even
spoken
to
some
businesses
on
Okin
Street
that
have
some
parking
lot
space.
In
fact.
That
hope
to
take
advantage
of
this
and
just
try
to
keep
the
lights
on
by
servicing
some
other
people
within
the
community,
so
I
hope
to
have
a
unanimous
consent
from
Council
on
this
and
I
look
forward
to
what
to
staff
will
bring
forward
to
Transportation
Committee
next
week.
Ok,.
C
C
G
C
B
B
K
K
So
first
of
all
is
a
step
in
the
right
direction
and
I
hope
this
will
not
be
the
only
one
we
can
do,
because
if
we
can
do
other
things
to
help
those
business,
especially
the
one
with
the
patio
and
and
certain
on
that
patio
they're
gonna
be
they
are
suffering
now,
the
most.
So
what
anything
we
shall
do
not
just
waving
the
pad.
You
see
perhaps
make
it
easy
for
reopening,
try
to
help
them
to
find
protective
equipment
for
themselves
and
their
staff
and
their
customers.
J
But
we
need
to
do
everything
we
can
within
our
ability
to
support
our
small
businesses,
our
local
businesses,
but
because
we
can't
we
can't
sit
back
and
watch
them
close.
These
are
business
owners
that
live
in
our
community
and
support
employees
that
work
and
thrive
in
our
commune.
So
I'm
very
happy
to
see
this
I'm
glad
it's
the
first
in
many
steps
and
I
know
the
city
will
be
taking
to
address
this
and
I
wanted
to.
Thank
you
for
that
great.
B
C
K
B
G
B
Thank
You,
our
next
motion,
the
require
suspension
of
the
rules
of
procedure
is
moved
by
Councillor
brockington
seconded
by
myself.
There's
a
timeliness,
obviously
because
of
the
road
safety
action
plan
has
to
get
get
moving
on
suspension
carried
I
need
a
sense
councillor
Brogdon.
You
want
to
introduce
your
motion.
Please
Thank.
A
Operation
overwatch
issued
a
presser
today
that
for
the
first
months
of
their
work,
eight
hundred
and
twenty
three
speeding
tickets
issued
36
charges
for
stunt
driving
one
hundred
and
twelve
warnings
in
the
first
month
alone,
and
we
know
that
road
safety
and
speeding
is
one
of
our
number-one
issues
in
our
residential
communities.
So
this
complements
what
the
police
are
doing.
Deputy
Chief
Bell,
who
I
spoke
with
yesterday,
supports
this
motion.
A
He
appreciates
that
it
will
complement
the
work
they're
doing
and
whatever
we
can
do
as
a
city
using
our
existing
resources
through
our
communications
and
media
department,
to
get
the
message
out
when
you're
in
residential
communities,
especially
now
when
so
many
people
are
home,
you've
got
a
slowdown
and
obey
those
speed
limits.
So,
mr.
mayor
that,
in
essence
of
the
motion
that
I
am
proposing
today,.
G
B
A
sense,
okay,
next
motion
requiring
suspension
of
the
rules
was
a
motion
by
councillor
Daru
second,
by
councillor
lulav,
with
respect
to
electronic
continuation.
Remote
community
council
meeting
so
on
suspension
carried
need
a
sense
councillor
de
Roos.
Do
you
want
to
introduce
the
motion?
Please
Thank.
N
N
On
top
of
that,
we
will
be
expanding
extending
further
those
meetings
till
August
31st,
because
we
have
the
state
of
emergency
salon,
and
we
also
you
notice
that
we
also
added
to
be
it
resolved
that
also
the
city
clerk.
We
directed
him.
Of
course.
After
so
many
councils
has
been
talking
with
us
and
I
know,
counsel
attorney
has
been
pushing
us
for
zoom
meeting
or
some
other
tools
like
team
or
Skype.
So
will
the
clerk
will
be
looking
onto
those
and
come
back
to
us.
N
C
I
J
Mr.
mayor
I,
don't
think
a
point
of
clarity
is
required.
I
sent
out
a
memo
yesterday
to
all
members
of
council
I
believe
with
regards
this
matter,
but
the
new
direction
should
council
pass.
It
would
require
me
to
bring
back
report
with
regards
to
a
possibility
of
a
zoom
Skype
where
Microsoft
team
is
meeting
in
the
future.
Okay,
anything.
B
L
J
But
I
was
not
yet
being
able
to
finalize
building
permits
and
where
the
developers
indicated
a
willingness
to
pay.
The
full
amount
of
the
June
14th
2017,
approved
ailment
charge
amount
in
advance
to
the
building
permits
being
issued
for
the
city
to
hold
and
drop,
therefore
be
resolved.
Council
approve
the
advance
payment
of
development
charges
for
1229
duardo
Road
in
the
amount
of
two
thousand
one
hundred
eighty
dollars
and
fifty
cents.
The
sensor
board
prior
to
May
31st
2020,
considered
as
satisfying
the
requirements
better
than
the
report.
B
I
think
they
solve
it.
Okay
does
anyone
else
wish
to
speak
to
the
motion
so
on
the
motion
carried
any
dissenters?
No
dissents.
Okay
next
is
City
of
Ottawa
food
garden
project,
obviously
time
sensitive,
because
it's
planting
season
on
suspension
carry
any
dissents.
Hey
counselor
Cavanaugh
moved
the
motion
signed
by
councillor
service
councillor
Kavanagh
thank.
M
Given
the
short
growing
season
and
need
for
planting
to
happen
in
the
next
few
weeks,
whereas
just
food
has
confirmed
the
purchase
of
$5,000
worth
of
seed
or
distribution,
daughter
loss
family
with
the
goal
of
serving
a
minimal
3,000
families,
whereas
just
booths
have
sourced,
confirmed
supplies
for
this
project
with
partners,
including
really
sand
and
gravel,
who
has
committed
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
donation
in
soil.
Whereas
city
through
its
unit,
needs
task,
force,
has
funded,
volunteer,
Ottawa,
recruit,
train
and
place
volunteers
during
the
pandemic,
whereas
accessing
seed
and
soil
is
the
barrier
for
many.
M
Resiliency
long
term,
whereas
Ottawa
food
security
partners
of
established
community
and
social
networks
to
outreach
to
low-income
families
struggling
with
food
insecurity,
whereas
the
food
Ottawa
Food
Policy
Council,
is
supportive
of
the
City
of
Ottawa,
providing
koba's
19
emergency
support
for
household
food
production,
in
addition
to
opening
community
gardens,
particularly
for
families
with
long
term
and
new
incomes
in
security
security.
Accordingly,
whereas
similar
strategies
have
been
usually
successful,
that's
my
addition
in
municipalities
across
kin,
including
Brampton
Ontario
Victoria
BC,
therefore
be
it
resolved
that
human
needs
task.
M
Force
worked
with
just
boots
to
identify
solutions
to
funding
the
required
purchase
of
soiled
soiled
bag
and
feed
envelopes
and
identify
immediate
human
resource.
Volunteer
solutions
required
to
support
the
communications
with
families
delivered
to
family
packaging
of
seed
and
soil
and
coordinating
locations
across
Ottawa
for
pickup,
for
those
families
who
can
and
I
want
to
thank
my
second
dear
counselor
Ruth
or
for
that.
N
Thank
you.
Your
worship
I
just
want
to
thank
councilors
governor,
also
for
working
with
on
this
project,
just
food
and
my
cell
phone.
We
have
a
few
other
partners.
This
is
a
very
hard
hard
time
for
a
lot
of
people
in
the
community
and
I
just
want
to
mention
that
a
greedy
sand
and
gravel
approached
me
when
in
the
urine
coverage
and
they
want
to
make
sure
our
community
garden
accelerate
and
be
able
to
plant
as
usual.
We
live
in
rural
community
and
we
have
a
lot
of
farm
in
our
community
again.
N
N
K
G
B
Ok
notices,
a
motion
for
consideration.
Subsequent
meeting
evades
motion
parties
American
no
subsequent
counselor,
myself
seconded
by
Councillor
dude
asks
I'll
just
go
over
it.
Basically,
we
will
we'd
like
to
put
forward
a
motion.
That's
required
to
ensure
that
counselor
Brockington
has
the
right
to
stand
for
election
to
the
amo
board
of
directors
as
a
director,
regional
and
single
tier
caucus.
So
I,
don't
think,
there's
time
a
time
sensitivity
to
this.
So
we
can
deal
with
this
at
the
next
meeting.
E
D
J
D
C
Mayor,
it's
meeting
on
May
27th
Council
approved
to
rezoning
to
permit
a
fourth
you
lifted
and
triplex
already
built
at
341
and
343
to
ignore
in
this
and
similarly
zones
when
a
building
permit
has
already
been
granted
prior
to
the
rezoning
our
development
charges
paid
on
the
newly
approved
unit.
What
is
the
mechanism
in
place
for
ensuring
that
the
required
fees
are
paid
in
these
instances
throughout
the
city?
Okay,.