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From YouTube: Planning Committee - February 14, 2019
Description
Planning Committee meeting - February 14, 2019 - Audio Stream
Agenda and background materials can be found at http://www.ottawa.ca/agendas.
A
B
A
You
this
is
a
public
meeting
to
consider
the
proposed
comprehensive
official
plan
and
zoning
bylaw
amendments
listed
as
items
four
to
six
on
today's
agenda.
For
the
items
just
mentioned,
only
those
who
make
all
submissions,
state
or
written
submissions
before
the
amendments
are
adopted
may
appeal
the
marriage
to
the
local
planning,
Appeal
Tribunal.
In
addition,
the
applicant
may
appeal
the
merit
of
the
Planning
Appeal
Tribunal.
A
If
counsel
does
not
adopt
an
amendment
within
150
days
of
receipt
of
the
application
of
Zoning
in
210
days
for
an
official
plan
amendment,
a
comment
sheet
is
available
at
the
door
for
anyone
wishing
to
submit
written
comments
on
these
amendments,
and
we
have
quite
a
few
motions
that
mostly
Vice
Chair
attorney
will
be
moving.
But
if
anybody
else
has
another
motion
on
any
of
the
items
listed
today,
if
you'd
give
it
to
us
in
advance,
that's
really
good
for
the
benefit
of
the
people
that
came
out
to
speak,
but
also
for
the
four-year
council.
A
Colleagues.
Okay,
any
declarations
of
interest
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
I
heard
from
both
that
councilor
Moffitt
and
councillor
blade
that
they
are
in
traffic
and
they
were
hoping
to
be
10
minutes
late,
but
we'll
see
about
that
and
I
also
wanted
to
express
our
real
best
wishes
to
our
colleague,
councillor
Jeff
leaper,
who
I'm
sure
that
we
all
heard
how
to
separate
a
heart
attack
yesterday
and
is
in
the
heart
institute
here
in
Ottawa,
which
is
best
hearted
student
will
I
hear
his
spirits
are,
as
they
always
are.
A
Chipper
and
he'll
be
back
with
us
in
good
time.
Confirmation
minutes
from
January
24th
meeting
2019
another
carry
okay.
The
first
item
will
be
holding
it's
the
Ottawa
next
be
on.
2036
second
item
will
be
holding
it's
the
site
plan
Capel,
it's
a
site
plan,
control
process
and
fees,
review
and
just
a
minute.
I've
got
an
updated
list.
I'm
just
going
to
have
a
look
at.
A
A
B
B
The
staff
may
not
be
available
for
public
consultations
that
are
asked
for
by
a
counselor
I
wanted
I
want
you
to
clarify
what
that
means,
what
circumstances
would
staff
not
be
available?
I'm
also
curious,
if
there'd
be
in
the
future,
any
thought
of
charging
counselors
for
staff
to
attend
those
meetings.
This
is
that's
what
I'm
concerned
about
I
want
to
make
sure
we
have
clarity
on
what
the
intentions
are
as
part
of
it.
Thank
you
offering
there
I'm,
certainly
not
offering
that
sometimes.
A
B
That
okay,
well,
hey!
If
you
could
ever
fight
that,
because
certainly
you
know
going
door
to
door
I,
don't
think
we
heard
from
anyone
that
they
would
want
less
consultation.
I
want
to
make
sure
that
what
we
are
supporting
today
would
not
limit
public
consultation
as
part
of
this
process
in
any
way.
Thank.
B
B
A
Okay,
so
perhaps
we
have
two
choices:
you
can
have
this
conversation,
the
rest
of
it,
because
I
think
she's
answered
her
to
the
best
of
ability
we
can
hold
the
item
till
after
we
do
other
things.
I
will
tell
you
that
one
of
the
reasons
is-
and
this
Sneden
told
me
this-
our
applications
in
January
are
up
91%.
A
We
are
the
only
municipal
that
does
what
we
do
with
site
plans.
This
is
not
throwing
out
the
baby
with
the
bathwater.
It
is
about
doing
it
better
and
managing
it
better
and
being
able
to
provide
services
so
that
people
like
the
FCA
and
the
Sierra
Perry
here
in
the
in
the
audience
who
are
rigorous
in
their
review
of
all
applications
across
the
city
can
actually
find
me.
Information
on
site
plans
that
they're
not
having
access
to
to.
B
A
B
A
A
The
next
item
is
2280
City
Park
Drive.
That's
a
zoning
bylaw
amendment
in
Vice,
Chair
Tierney
award.
Does
anyone
on
the
committee
have
any
questions?
I
have
one
speaker
and
it's
black,
it's
all
black
from
Fulton
power
year.
Okay,
if
we're
prepared
to
carry
this
item,
do
you
need
to
speak?
Thank
you.
Is
the
item
carried?
Thank
you.
The
next
item
is
301.
Palladium
Drive,
that's
in
counselor
here,
please,
ward,
I!
Don't
have
anybody
registered
at
all
to
speak
on
this
one?
That's
a
zoning
bylaw
amendment.
Does
anyone
have
any
questions?
A
Is
the
item
carry
okay?
Thank
you.
The
next
one
is
the
City
of
Ottawa
zoning,
bylaw
2008
2050
250
story
on
the
bus
amendments
q1
2019
I
have.
Does
anyone
have
any
questions?
There
was
any
was
very
well
described
by
the
way
in
the
in
the
pages
and
pages
itemized
note
here
go
you're
here,
I
think
I
saw
you
today,
a
owners
with
mental.
You
say
that
you
need
to
speak.
If
needed,
do
you
need
to
okay?
So
is
this
item
carried?
A
Thank
you.
The
next
item
number
seven
is
the
official
plan
amendment
the
180
appeal
settlement,
kanata
west.
We
have
a
motion
from
a
counselor
going
Bauer.
Do
you
notice
when
you
think
about
it?
I
always
tell
you
the
right
name,
but
when
I
get
here
and
I
look
at
Scott,
Marcos
name
thinking
like
anyway
scour
yeah
but
yeah.
Let's
put
that
on
the
table,
because
I
do
have
somebody
to
speak
if
necessary,
go
ahead.
C
B
B
The
motion
states
that,
whereas
the
report
title
official
plan,
amendment
180
appeals,
sediment
kanata,
west
states
that
councilors
aware
of
the
report
has
provided
no
comments
and
whereas
the
Alpha
mention
statement
was
an
administrative
error,
as
counsel
gar
was
actually
not
aware
of
the
report
before
publication
as
part
of
the
planning
committee
agenda
and
whereas
council
gala
has
subsequently
been
briefed
by
policy,
legal
planning
and
recreation
planning
staff
on
the
report,
therefore
be
it
resolved.
That
planning
committee
approved
the
report.
B
B
All
recreation
amenities
originally
considered
for
the
district
park
would
be
accommodated
in
the
reconfigured
space
co-locating
with
the
future
high
school
aligns
with
current
best
practices
for
suburban
design
and
will
eliminate
the
need
for
a
separate
parking
lot
and
situate
the
district
park
closer
to
a
future
transit
hub
additional
recreation
space
will
be
available
to
the
community
through
a
local
park
in
informal
areas
along
feed,
mill,
creek
and
a
future
storm.
Water
management
pond
will
create
additional
natural
areas
and
you're.
A
Going
to
be
so
proud
of
this,
when
you
see
it
all
belt,
because
we
have
an
example
from
years
ago
before
amalgamation
in
the
pmwin
mother
trace
a
high
school
open,
it
was
Jack
Stirling
tracks
over
there,
who
was
the
deputy
city
manager
of
Planning
and
Parks
Adam
Gough
Public
Works
came
up
with
a
brilliant
idea
to
share
the
space
differently,
so
took
less
space.
Remember
Rick
West
pays
for
mother
Teresa,
where
the
32-acre
Ken
Ross
Park.
Now
it's
amazing
complex
benefits
everybody.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
that
cash.
A
So,
on
the
amendment
is
that
caring
and
I'm
so
Peter
did
you
want
to
speak
Peter
humans
here?
If
you
needed
to
know
good
on
the
items
amendment
caring
okay,
then
we
have
the
settlement
of
appear
to
to
official
plan.
Amendment
180
I
have
any
motions
on
this.
One.
No
I
have
Greg
winters
from
Nova
tech.
Anyone
else
have
any
questions
around
the
table.
Then
you
need
to
hold
it
Greg.
Where
are
you
oh
hi?
B
A
You
the
next
one,
is
it's
a
councillor
Cavanaugh
motion.
We
have
a
notice
of
motion
direction
to
SAP
to
initiate
a
rezoning
of
975,
Woodruff
Avenue
and
a
councillor
Reaper
was
to
remove
it,
but
vice
chair
Tierney
is
going
to
move
that
you
want
to
hold
it
3102,
you
don't
mind.
Oh
yeah,
so
councillor
Shui
is
going
to
move
it
pretty
much
guarantees
you
win
without
many
votes.
Okay,
so
councillors
rally
he'll
pass
it
over
to.
B
C
A
A
So
everyone,
okay
with
that,
okay,
we
would
have
been
moved
by
Councillor
Moffitt,
who
was
instrumental
on
the
sponsorship
panel,
but
there
ten
minutes
has
morphed
into
20.
Now
Ottawa
traffic,
yeah,
okay,
so
mine,
we
don't
need
to
speak
to
deferral.
Okay,
thank
you
very
much
so
on
the
item.
Is
it
deferred?
Okay?
A
Okay,
we
have
the
next
number
11
appointments
to
the
built
heritage
subcommittee.
I.
Have
no
speakers
is
that
Carrie
councilor
gala
number
12.
We
have
the
built
heritage
subcommittee
terms
of
reference.
No
speakers
on
that.
A
lot
of
work
has
gone
into
that,
though,
over
the
last
couple
of
years,
certainly,
and
a
lot
of
public
consultation
with
the
members
of
the
Heritage
community
and
under
the
leadership
of
court.
Curry
are
you
here
courts
though
yeah
and
a
job
well
done,
I!
Think
and
now
you've
inherited
this,
and
are
you
comfortable
with
that?
A
Okay,
so,
on
this
item,
is
it
carried
thank
you
and
on
the
planning
committee
terms
of
reference?
I
have
no
speakers
again.
Changes
are
mostly
related,
if
not
fully
related
to
the
changes
of
built
heritage
and
how
less
of
the
items
will
need
to
come
through
Planning
Committee
as
well.
So
no
questions
on
that.
Okay,
thank
you,
okay,
and
so
we
have
a
motion
to
add
an
additional
item
vice-chair
tuning.
A
B
B
The
command
is
required
for
the
expansion
of
the
existing
settlement
area
or
identified
a
new
settlement
area
3
that
we
revoke
man
from
the
agricultural
resource
area
designation
be
considered
outside
the
comprehensive
review
where
it
is
demonstrated
that
the
man
does
not
meet
the
requirements.
Have
the
agricultural
resource
area
3a
a
municipal,
wide
assessment?
B
The
Leo
study
be
an
area
specific
assessment,
where
the
area
assessment
is
the
250
hectare
in
the
area
boundaries
agreed
to
by
the
city
and
demonstrates
one
based
upon
new
information
related
to
one
more
factors
and
the
lands
not
part
of
the
prime
agricultural
area
to
an
Erie
designation
would
avoid
the
potential
of
adverse
impacts
on
the
adjacent
agricultural
lands
of
operation
or,
if
unavailable
such
adverse
impacts,
mitigated
to
the
extent
feasible.
The
outcome
of
the
area.
B
Specific
assessment
would
be
general
rule
area
designation,
that
is
at
least
250
hectares
in
size,
or
the
smaller
area
would
be
a
logical
extension
or
the
existing
general
rules
and
designation.
If
the
different
area
designation
would
be
proposed,
then
needed
for
the
designation
within
the
timeframe
of
the
Official.
Plan
must
also
be
established
via
for
the
result
that
legal
services
be
directed
to
advance
at
the
l-pad
at
the
position
of
the
city
flowing
from
the
city's
disposition
of
this
matter,.
B
Why
this
needs
to
be
done
today,
madam
chair,
is
that
there
is
a
hearing
that
scheduled
commenced
on
March
the
4th
dealing
with
the
agricultural
issues
in
the
Official
Plan.
The
only
remaining
issue
is
in
fact,
this
modification.
In
a
nutshell,
council
adopted
a
plan
that
would
have
allowed
a
redesignate
from
agricultural
resource
lands.
At
any
time,
the
minister
modified
the
plan
to
say
no,
you
can
only
do
it
at
a
comprehensive
review.
B
The
city
up
and
others
appealed
the
minister's
modification,
a
settlement
that
has
been
reached
that
has
been
agreed
by
all
staff,
the
minister
and
all
the
other
repellents.
That
would
say
the
plan
could
be.
An
amendment
could
be
sought
to
rededicate
lands
from
agricultural
resource
at
any
time,
but
it
would
be
subject
to
the
criteria
but
by
church
Ernie
read
out
set
forth
in
policy
three.
So,
as
I
said,
this
is
going
to
a
hearing
on
March
the
fourth.
We
need
counsels
endorsement
of
a
settlement
to
have
a
position.
A
C
I'm
joined
here
just
at
the
table
with
by
John
Smith,
our
Director
of
long-range
planning
and
economic
development,
and
two
of
the
staff
who've
worked
very
very
hard
on
the
beyond
2036
report
and
they
work
plan
for
the
official
plan.
Soquel,
Reddy
and
George
Clayton
they're
here
with
me
as
well.
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
that
one
of
our
consultants
who
assisted
us
in
the
process,
mr.
Joe
beige,
who
spoke
with
some
councillors
this
morning,
is
also
in
the
audience's,
want
to
assist
us
on
this.
C
It
is
a
big
day
councillors
today
we're
asking
for
your
approval
of
the
work
plan
for
the
new
City
of
Ottawa
Official
Plan.
The
official
plan
we
have
today
is,
from
the
most
part,
a
product
of
our
malgal
nation.
Now
almost
20
years
later,
it
is
time
to
do
a
major
refresh.
This
is
an
ambitious
project.
We
don't
intend
to
tinker
at
the
margins,
but
we
will
propose
a
new
plan
that
replaces
our
current
plan,
a
plan
that
looks
forward
and
will
help
the
city
meet
future
challenges
and
seize
the
opportunities
to
come.
C
A
C
For
those
of
you
have
heard
me
speak
before
you
know.
I
was
like
talking
a
bit
about
the
history
of
planning
on
Ottawa.
It's
a
bit
of
a
thing
for
me.
So
if
you
look
back
at
our
population
and
understand
the
history
of
Ottawa,
just
see
where
we've
come
in
it
globally,
what
a
very
short
period
of
time
in
Sofia,
Rogalla,
1/4,
son,
David,
a
paragon
or
constant,
a
torque,
endpoint
and
Ashanti.
If
you
go
way
back
to
our
incorporation
in
1855,
we
were
a
small
lumber
town.
We
had
60
stores.
C
We
had
3
banks
through
insurance
offices,
three
newspapers
back
at
the
time
we
were
lucky.
We
had
more
than
one
telegraph
office
and
seven
schools
and
a
canal
connecting
it
to
Lake
Ontario.
The
decision
to
make
us
the
national
capital
was
the
big
game
changer
that
fundamentally
changed
our
trajectory
as
a
city.
It's
very
fair
to
say
that
if
Ottawa
was
not
the
national
capital,
we
would
not
be
the
city
we
are
today.
Nor
would
we
have
the
opportunities
that
we
have
in
the
future.
C
The
first
major
urban
plan
that
covered
beyond
just
the
downtown
there
were
earlier
plans,
but
they
focused
just
on
the
downtown.
So
we
think
about
a
bigger
trajectory
of
it
was
the
great
plan
of
1950,
which
was
a
federal
plan
that
was
not
a
municipal
plan
and
that
time,
there's
over
70
years
ago
now
there
were
earlier
plans
but
very
limited.
C
The
legacy
of
the
great
Bell
planned
for
us,
which
we
see
today
in
many
ways,
was
growth
in
areas
south
and
east
of
the
Rideau
River
councillor
cliches
word,
for
example,
we
didn't
even
exist
much
of
councillor.
Parkington's
word
didn't
exist
at
that
time
in
a
greater
plan
contemplated
because
in
that
area
and
and
college
Royden
council
Chiarello's,
for
example,
kind
of
byproducts
of
this
plan.
The
greenbelts
was
a
creation
of
this
plan
and
the
Riverfront
Park
waste
system
and
freight
rail
modernization
in
the
region
where
creation
of
this
plan.
C
But
this
plan
was
vastly
car
oriented.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
it
contemplated
the
removal
of
public
transportation
on
a
by
rail
in
the
city,
and
it
was
this
plan
also
vastly
underestimated.
Ottawa's
growth.
It
didn't
have
a
projection
for
about
now
about
three
times
larger,
a
city.
Then
it
had
projected.
We
would
be
at
this
stage
in
time.
C
C
It
is
the
first
of
its
kind
in
North
America
that
contemplate
of
the
idea
of
a
city
center
connected
to
satellite,
suburban
communities
in
the
West
southeast
by
high
order,
Rapid
Transit,
which
in
those
days
was
the
the
bus,
rapid
transit
system,
the
BRT,
which
is
the
transit
way
that
that
was
ultimately
built.
And
you
know
it's
interesting
if
you
think
back.
C
man,
Conant,
tells
me
we
still
get
visitors
from
a
wall
in
the
world
who
come
to
see
our
BRT
system
as
being
one
of
the
most
effective
in
the
entire
world
and
the
other
legacy
it
left.
Us
which
is
real
for
you
today,
is
that
BRT
system
was
built
with
the
idea
of
converting
it
one
day
to
rail,
so
the
grades
were
set,
so
it
could
ultimately
do
both
to
rail.
We
had.
We
did.
We
don't
have
level
crossings,
we
have
grade
separations.
C
So
today,
when
you
make
the
decision
on
stage
2
LRT,
it
is
cheaper
to
build
because
of
decisions
made
in
1974.
So
it
is
an
incredible
legacy
for
us.
So
let's
talk
about
today,
as
the
mayor
has
said
in
his
State
of
the
City
address,
we
calculate
that
before
can
delay
some
time.
We
will
pass
the
1
million
population
mark,
which
is
a
big
milestone
for
any
city.
You
know
it.
C
Oughta
wear
forms
part
of
a
bigger
region
which
statistics
Canada
calls
the
Ottawa
gotta
know
metropolitan
area
and
together
we
with
Gatineau
and
some
of
the
smaller
municipalities
are
a
population
of
1.5
million
people.
Today
we
are
one
of
Canada's,
six
largest
metropolitan
regions
and
we
have
grown
physically
in
all
that
time.
We've
gone
we've
gone
further
in
Canada
and
sticks
for
Orleans
bar
heaven.
C
Last
time
we
checked,
but
we
are
diversifying
an
economy,
and
there
are
many
many
more
businesses
in
the
city
than
there
used
to
be,
and
we
agree
with
the
many
more
sectors
will
also
diverse
in
terms
of
our
origins
for
many
of
us,
so
in
1941,
98
percent
of
Ottawa
residents
were
peon
backgrounds.
Today,
over
one
in
five
residents
were
born
outside
of
Canada.
The
vast
majority
coming
from
Asia
the
Americas
in
Africa
they're,
also
close
to
40,000
residents
in
the
city
today,
who
identify
themselves
as
indigenous
we're.
C
Also
a
much
more
vibrant
cultural
City
used
to
be
the
city
that
fund
for
God,
as
they
said
that
things
have
changed
dramatically
and
we've
seen
some
major
movement
in
that
area.
In
the
last
number
years,
investments
in
cultural
events
and
cultural
institutions
and
this
growth
and
diversity
has
led
to
a
much
more
vibrant
city
life,
so
we're
getting
a
reputation
for
arts,
culture
and
festivals
beyond
just
the
national
institutions.
We
are
in
an
urban
city.
C
So
when
you
think
about
an
official
plan,
the
main
question
is:
what
is
our
future
going
to
be
it's
fair
to
say
that
the
changes
to
the
Ottawa
of
the
past
century
have
been
dramatic
and,
of
course,
we're
continuing
to
change.
In
fact,
the
pace
of
social
technological
changes
increased
so
rapidly
in
the
last
50
years
that
the
plans
we
have
done
have
had
trouble,
keeping
up
as
a
matter
of
fact
that
the
rate
of
change.
So
what
will
be
the
drivers
for
the
next
century?
C
For
us-
and
this
is
some
of
the
work
we
looked
at
in
our
key
project
called
beyond
2036
under
Samba
dimness-
says
la
casilla,
dimande
Appel,
Sanada
entrepreneur
into
dependency,
has
shown
select
Casals
future
dylath-leen
I
found
a
popular
letter
and
put
that
question
examine
a
new
pair
of
his
yellow.
So
over
the
past
year
we
have
been
engaging
in
a
very
broad
cross-section
of
city
stakeholders
to
discuss
these
very
questions.
C
What
are
those
big
drivers
that
will
affect
us
in
the
future
that
we
have
to
use
to
frame
our
next
official
plan
in
the
resulting
planning
study
we're
presenting
today
we
looked
at
what
forces
will
drive
change
over
the
coming
decades
and
we
have
a
develops
and
plausible
scenarios
based
on
the
change
drivers.
Now,
one
emphasize
the
intention
was
not
to
portray
scenarios
and
pick
one
to
hit.
C
The
idea
is
to
put
a
broad
range
of
scenarios
of
what
might
happen
out
there
so
that
we
could
plan
accordingly
to
be
adoptable,
should
any
of
those
scenarios
hit.
Certainly,
there's
some
of
those
scenarios
have
positive
attributes
and
some
have
negative
attributes
if
we
don't
take
action,
but
the
idea
of
choosing
scenarios
is
understand.
What's
the
range
of
things
that
could
possibly
face
us
and
we'll
take
you
through
some
of
the
things
we
found,
so
economic
growth
in
contemporary
cities
will
be
dominated
by
the
knowledge
sector.
Mr.
Burge
talked
about
this
this
morning.
C
Earlier,
almost
80%
of
our
workforce
is
already
employed
in
this
area.
If
you
broadly
interpret
what
a
knowledge-based
workforce
actually
includes.
In
addition,
the
digital
revolution
is
transforming
all
sectors
of
the
economy
and
more
as
more
digital
processes.
Replace
human
functions.
Well-Trained
labor
would
be
an
increasing
demand
both
locally
and
internationally,
and
we
can't
take
for
granted
how
easy
it
is
going
to
be
to
get
that
and
councillor
suds
isn't
here,
but
she
would
tell
you
in
her
ward
in
the
Canadian
North
Business
Park.
C
They
are
struggling
to
find
talent
because
they
were
facing
a
ferocious
competition
from
around
the
world.
So
how
do
we
prepare
for
these
transformations?
How
can
Ottawa
get
a
larger
share
of
the
immigrants
that
come
to
Canada?
How
do
you
make
sure
that
the
infrastructure
exists
to
encourage
innovation?
A
competition
is
no
longer
just
Toronto,
Montreal
or
even
Calgary.
We
are
competing
to
maintain
our
existing
workforce
to
reach
and
retain
our
kids
in
the
city
when
they're,
educated
and
they're
ready
to
work.
C
One
of
the
strongest
urban
economic
forces
restructuring
the
world
is
a
system
of
cities
as
of
spike
enos.
Mr.
barish
talked
about
this
today,
where
fewer
cities
are
having
a
bigger
dominance
in
the
world
economy,
and
this
trend
towards
concentration
of
higher
economic
activity
in
fearfear
cities
is
playing
out
even
in
North
America
we're
seeing
it
so
then
you
know
if
you
look
at
New
York
City's
economy,
it's
bigger
than
Spain's
and
it's
bigger
than
Canada's.
C
So
as
we
see
this
force
coming
together
now,
it's
not
all
bad
and
we
have
the
opportunity
to
collaborate
with
our
biggest
neighbors
and
so
that
we
collectively
together
are
that
same
level
of
competition
of
the
world
and
because
Toronto
and
Montreal
both
have
advantages
of
their
own.
We
do
feel
optimistic
that,
should
we
work
together
on
this,
this
will
solidify
own
advantages,
and
you
know
this
will
be
a
mega
region
that
will
be
a
global
competitive.
So
the
questions
were
asking
in
the
Official
Plan
process.
C
That
proceed
is
how
do
we
improve
linkages
between
this
city,
its
airports,
to
the
other
cities
of
the
world
and
work
collaboratively
on
these
inter
global
transportation
systems
with
Toronto
and
Montreal?
How
can
you
give
the
Ottawa
Zone
MacDonald
Cartier
International
Airport,
the
flexibility
it
needs
to
grow
and
diversify?
Can
we
give
Ottawa
competitive
advantage
through
its
digital
infrastructure?
So
these
are
the
big
systems
of
change.
There
have
huge
economic
implications.
C
Climate
change
is
absolutely
something
we
have
to
plan
to
adapt
to
and
try
to
mitigate
in
everywhere.
We
possibly
can
we
contain
thousands
of
hectares
of
forests.
Wetlands
and
other
natural
lands
close
to
the
built-up
areas
of
the
city.
It's
very
much
what
makes
a
city
a
very
beautiful
place
to
live,
and
these
features
are
central
to
our
own
identity.
I
mean
you
can't
imagine
those
pictures
of
Ottawa
with
the
loss
of
some
of
those
important
natural
attributes
in
our
city
and
that's
true
in
every
ward
of
the
city.
It's
very
true.
C
The
population
growth
will
end
outwards
and
becoming
dense
until
you're
challenged
to
find
areas
for
urban
green
spaces
and
protect
natural
systems
close
to
the
urban
boundary.
Climate
change
will
have
a
significant
effect
on
all
of
us
natural
environment.
Provincial
estimates
say
that
Eastern
Ontario
will
see
increases
in
summer.
Temperatures
between
2
to
3
degrees,
by
2040,
1
to
2070
and
we'll
also
have
increased
stem
events,
including
flooding
ice
and
wind
storms,
snow
sonali,
laser
tech
to
set
it
at
ood
own
course.
A
toned,
impressive,
a
cruiser,
then
little
more
national.
C
Ladies
infrastructure
has
just
joined
the
situation
versus
la
santé
public
happy
one
new,
fair,
Papa,
J,
Elijah
and
Moses
passed
natural
down
a
context
to
depression
associations.
Multimatic
a
Lamaze
mo
kamo
Pavano
fell
on
circular
investors
may
differ,
structure
doctor
all
and
paint
leVoir
the
development
that
outlet
call
to
need
to
surpass
him.
C
Immigration
is
essential
to
increasing
population
and
supporting
the
growth
of
our
labor
force.
However,
many
immigrants
who
moved
ottawa
don't
stay.
They
leave
because
of
fewer
opportunities
and
the
competition
from
big
cities,
so
job
opportunities
and
skills
at
accreditation,
and
I
appreciate
that
as
not
in
a
municipal
jurisdiction,
but
that
actually
will
have
a
big
impact
in
our
ability
to
retain
people
who
come
to
Canada
to
work,
and
so
it's
important
that
we
show
that
we
care
in
these
matters
with
the
government's
who
do
control.
Those
issues
also
is
important.
C
Is
people
come
to
live
in
communities?
They
don't
come
just
to
live
in
the
big
Ottawa.
They
come
to
live
in
communities
within
Ottawa,
so
communities
are
that
backbone
of
a
welcoming
environment
for
for
people
and
whether
they
be
our
own
children
who
wish
to
stay
in
the
city
or
people
coming
to
Ottawa,
either
on
location
because
of
a
federal
job
or
coming
to
stay
permanently
through
immigration.
And
what
that
not
complete
community
involves
is
proximity
to
affordable
transportation,
to
work
to
school
shopping
places,
worship,
child
care,
clinics,
recreation.
C
C
One
of
the
things
our
study
beyond
2036
showed
is
that
there
are
pressures
on
community
cohesion
all
across
North
America
and
a
livable
city
is
one
where
communities
are
socially
economically
and
culturally
connected
community
cohesion
creates
a
sense
of
shared
belonging
for
residents
of
all
backgrounds
and
supports
diversity.
There
have
to
be
equal
opportunities
to
everyone
for
access
to
services,
employment
and
education.
Population
growth
in
well-defined
neighborhoods
creates
economies
of
scale
that
allowed
the
new
amenities
to
come.
C
This
is
what
we're
seeing
in
some
of
areas
where
we
got
intensification,
we're
actually
getting
new,
really
high
quality
amenities
in
these
areas
and
also
all
ours,
cultural
offerings
that
allows
lively
public
spaces
and
urban
diversity.
However,
growth
does
bring
some
disparities
in
some
areas
and
there
dozen
others
new,
just
differences
in
both.
It
could
also
mean
different
accesses
to
transit,
different
accesses
to
housing,
that's
affordable
employment
and
parks
and
public
spaces
and
health
and
public
services.
C
Out
of
this
future
prosperity
is
linked
to
efficient
movement
of
people
and
goods.
If
well-managed,
a
strong
and
integrated
mobility
network
will
allow
Ottawa
to
compete
with
cities
nationally
and
globally
for
growing
number
of
people.
This
is
a
shift
away
from
that
what
they
used
to
do,
which
is
taking
their
own
car
to
going
to
actually
a
suite
of
services,
not
just
one
thing
so
that
me
they
may
use
their
car
for
certain
activities
that
you
need
to
do
in
your
daily
life,
cycling,
walking
light
rail
transit
car
sharing,
ride-sharing
those
other
things.
C
People
will
use
a
combination
of
services
and
bigger
cities,
and
if
you
travel
and
you
go
to
bigger
cities,
you
see
this
plane
that
on
the
ground
we
are
already
today.
We
also
have
a
real
issue
that
same-day
delivery.
It's
changed
their
life
I,
you
know,
but
I
I
never
cease
to
be
amazed
and
I
read,
or
something
with
a
click
and
a
day
later,
it's
in
my
doorstep,
but
that
has
actual
implications
in
the
way
our
city
actually
works.
So
it's
an
online
shopping
is
creating
a
growth
in
public
expectations
and
goods
movement.
C
People
expect
that
those
goods
to
be
able
make
within
our
city's
rapidly,
so
what
we're
seeing
in
other
parts
of
the
world
is
changing
delivery
modes.
We're
seeing
new
land
use
is
called
clicking,
collect
places
where,
if
you
order
it,
it
doesn't
necessarily
come
to
your
house,
but
it
goes
to
a
Depot
very
close
to
where
you
live
and
that
make
and
it
plays
with
neighborhood
storefronts
and
they'll
change.
The
way
our
Main
streets
will
behave
over
time.
C
We
want
to
say
we
want
to
ensure
we
still
have
vibrant
Main
streets
and
we
have
to
find
a
way
to
make
both
of
these
things
happen
at
the
same
time.
So
can
we
use
these
technological
advances
and
communications
to
support
a
more
livable
city?
How
can
the
city
remain
nimble
to
a
whole
bunch
of
trends?
We
can't
predict
today
because
we
can't
predict
I.
C
Don't
we
don't
have
the
crystal
ball
for
how
this
is
entirely
going
to
play
out,
but
can
we
make
our
policies
adaptive
so
as
the
change
is
coming
were
not
caught
flat-footed,
so
the
shape
of
the
city
is
going
to
change
and
we
will
have.
There
will
be
a
reciprocal
relation
between
a
city
and
mobility.
These
things
have
to
work
together.
Much
about
our
shape
of
our
city
today
has
been
driven
by
convenience
and
moving
around,
and
that
would
become
more
and
more
significant,
as
the
city
gets
larger.
C
As
a
result,
the
city
is
going
to
continue
to
expand,
we
will
see
new
communities,
but
we
will
see
new
neighborhoods
built
and
the
strength
of
our
city
would
be
that
those
things
feel
like
complete,
neighborhoods
and
many
other
areas
of
the
city,
but
we
have
to
change
our
mentality,
we're
a
metropolitan
region.
Now
we're
not
just
a
city,
you
know,
work
has
changed.
The
need
of
businesses
and
industry
are
changing.
The
way
we
move
in
the
city
is
changing
housing.
C
We
talk,
we
if
you
read
the
papers
and
see
what
Toronto
is
facing
and
other
cities
are
facing.
Affordability
cannot
be
taken
for
granted.
We
actually
have
to
do
work
to
ensure
that
we
maintain
that
affordability
within
our
city
and
as
we
get
more
and
more
diverse,
we
have
to
make
sure
that
the
offer
and
support
that
diversity.
So
can
we
become
more
compact
and
still
affordable
and
livable?
That's
a
challenge
for
the
Official
Plan.
It's
one
of
those
big
questions.
We
have
to
get
our
hand
around.
C
C
Is
it
a
Musa
de
la
ventana
identity,
11
on
earth
under
terror
of
occupy
Catherine,
DS
%,
the
Sun
territoire,
so
that
vision
of
a
city
does
have
to
include
both
an
urban
NOL
component
and
not.
There
are
other
comparators
in
Canada
of
cities
that
have
this
mix
that
we
have
so
we
have
to
do
it
our
way
to
ensure
that
we
do
cover
both.
At
the
same
time,
a
vibrant
public
realm
is
going
to
be
very
important
to
this.
C
This
slide
says
that
all
about
what
happens
when,
when
the
offerings
are
there,
people
really
want
to
be
part
of
it,
and
you
know
we
need
to
promote
our
built
heritage,
neighborhood
identity
and
street
life.
We
need
that
a
renewed
focus
on
the
Ottawa
River
and
the
offering
what
the
enormous
potential
that
it
has
and
all
aspects
of
identity
as
a
city
that
it
that
involved
being
a
capital
and
and
mid-sized
city
at
the
same
time.
C
So
our
report,
other
one
2036,
provided
the
overall
structure
for
the
review.
It
identified
the
key
questions
we
need
to
carry
forward
into
that
next
phase.
We've
identified
those
forces
that
potentially
will
shape
us,
and
we
now
have
to
take
this
and
turn
it
into
policy
directions
and
now
I'm,
going
to
turn
to
what
the
Official
Plan
process
is
going
to
look
like.
So
once
council
approves
the
Official
Plan.
Ultimately,
it
will
be
implemented
through
zoning
city
programs
of
funding,
as
well
as
joint
action
where
their
partners
and
stakeholders.
C
So
what
is
an
efficient
plan?
I
think
it's
probably
a
base
ourselves
for
a
moment.
I'm,
not
the
official
plan.
Member
provincial
legislation
provides
the
policy
framework
to
guide
our
physical
development
in
a
talks
about
regulating
land
use,
managing
growth
and
change
in
urban,
suburban
rural
areas,
planning
for
Public,
Works
and
infrastructure
planning
for
new
communities
and
existing
areas
under
and
change
in
preserving
natural
systems
while
providing
for
wise
use
of
resources.
This
Elevens
comes
right
from
provincial
legislation,
so
forward-looking
official
plan.
We
want
to
go
from
that
2003
plan
to
a
brand
new
plan.
C
Comes
you
mention
era
on
introduction,
minutes,
appoint
official
actuate
a
press
card
and,
on
you
know,
a
take
a
dozen
ability
to
keep
it
group
a
creep.
A
owns
municipality
on
in
servile
musical
Ferran
and
Devon
provide
on
Lecavalier.
Sir
plan
may
alert,
alter
music
dr.
Miller
strategy,
depending
occasionally
Ottawa
in
strategy
keeping
up
the
Dacia
relativity
in
the
prosperity
day
days
on
trapeze
ballet
other
one
in
strategy
keep
in
a
try
and
after
weather,
then,
okay,
the
winter
time
when
the
rest
among
we're
at
today
they
survived
a
Capri
on
a
lake.
C
C
So
we
have
a
four
phase
process
for
official
plan
and
we're
asking
for
you
to
approve
your
encounter
to
approve
this
process
today.
The
first
phase
is
our
background
studies,
which
is
a
series
of
discussion
papers
and
we'll
talk
about
that
in
a
coming
slide,
and
also
pretty
little
population
employment
for
projections
which
driver
any
official
in
the
second
phase
will
be
where
we
prepare
the
policy
directions
for
councils
endorsement
and
when
council
endorses
those
policy
directions.
C
We
will
then
turn
that
actual
and
to
draft
policy
for
the
official
plan,
and
that's
when
we
were
tabled.
The
draft
Official
Plan
document
in
phase
three
at
Point
Community
Council,
and
these
will
all
have
significant
stakeholder
input.
We'll
talk
about
that
on
another
side
and
then
ultimately,
council
will
adopt
it,
and
then
it
must
go
to
the
minister
of
municipal
affairs
and
housing
who
will
approve
it.
So
is
part
of
the
engagement
presence.
C
We
want
to
use
a
combination
of
website
social
media
and
community
stakeholder
engagement
events.
We
know
that
people
are
comfortable
with
coming
to
open
houses
and
meetings
that
increasingly
many
of
our
younger
residents,
or
maybe
some
people
who
aren't
comfortable
talking
at
a
public
meeting,
are
more
comfortable,
providing
comments
online
and
several
of
our
consultations,
we've
done
or
last
year
showing
an
increase
in
demand
for
online
consultations.
So
we
have
a
dedicated
website
that
is,
live
or
will
be
momentarily,
and
it
will
provide
all
of
this
background
information.
C
My
right
go,
Hale
says
I'm
right,
it's
live,
so
the
the
information
will
be
there.
People
in
get
a
chance
to
get
it.
They'll
have
lots
of
opportunity
to
provide
it,
and
we
will
be
scheduled
in
a
series
of
consultations
over
the
next
of
the
law.
Wow,
the
concept
has
Johnson
in
a
tweet
along
the
process.
You
stated
agenda
plan
official
include
the
concept
consultation,
so
the
document,
the
travail,
the
consultation,
Sara's
orientation,
strategic,
the
consultation
so
that
there'll
in
Abdul
plan
off
his
shell.
C
So
we
are
two
waves
of
discussion
papers.
The
first
phase
are
those
papers
we
hear
that
could
have
significant
changes
in
potential
directions
of
the
of
the
city.
The
second
waiver
is
war,
improving
the
policies
that
we
already
have.
We
no
need
modernization,
but
the
policy
former
we've
got
is
a
good
starting
point,
but
it's
about
bringing
it
up
to
date,
so
we've
broken
them
into
two
bits.
So
wave
one
will
address
things
like
what
is
the
greater
metropolitan
region?
What
is
that
concept?
Where
do
we
go
from
here?
C
We're
going
to
talk
about
the
economy
working
in
close
partnership
without
a
public
health
and
dr.
Rogers
is
here
today
she's
been
working
with
me
very
cool
and
the
team
very
close
and
in
the
process
we're
going
to
talk
about
the
healthy
Ottawa
as
a
cornerstone
of
this
new
plan.
It's
really
important
that
that's
something
we
add
a
major
new
consideration
on
when
I
look
at
energy,
climate,
housing
infrastructure
and
water
management,
natural
Ottawa
in
rural
Ottawa
and
infrastructure.
C
More
broadly
includes
mobility
and
and
other
elements,
and
then
the
second
phase
is
you
know
when
we
get
into
the
nitty-gritty
of
the
land
use
designations.
We
get
into
the
specific
growth
projections.
We
get
council
concurrence,
a
growth
management
strategy.
We
finalize
the
mobility
strategy
based
on
the
growth
management
strategy,
look
at
a
housing
policy,
update
based
on
that
urban
design,
heritage
employment
lens
and
how
we're
going
to
manage
them
in
the
future,
make
them
adaptable
and
the
cultural
aspect.
C
A
A
A
A
B
Yes,
back
in
January
2018,
with
the
participation
of
senior
city
staff
about
a
hundred
people
gathered
on
a
Saturday
morning
to
discuss
planning
issues
under
the
team
of
Ottawa
a
city
of
neighborhoods.
Many
of
us
were
led
to
believe
that
the
city
had
bought
into
the
idea
of
building
up
the
new
Official
Plan
from
the
ground
up
beginning
with
asking
what
people
want
for
their
neighborhoods.
B
B
The
discussion
of
drivers
are
rarely
rises
above
generalities
and
the
planning
applications
mostly
border
on
stating
the
obvious
where
the
bias,
because,
apart
from
one
scenario
that
would
see
ottawa
essentially
remain
a
government
town
implications
of
which
are
ignored
in
the
rest
of
the
report.
The
authors
are
convinced
that
will
be
a
metropolis
of
two
to
three
million
by
the
end
of
the
century,
will
all
be
fully
digitized
knowledge
workers
and
be
able
to
zip
seamlessly
to
both
Montreal
and
Toronto
on
high-speed
trains
still
to
its
credit
staff
throughout
some
good
lessons
from
the
exercise.
B
Housing
choices
are
inadequate.
Future
modes
of
mobility
are
uncertain.
Urban
communities
that
have
been
densified
are
not
seeing
the
benefits.
We
must
strengthen
neighborhoods
as
we
renew
its
infrastructure
and
raise
its
level
of
transit
service.
I
have
no
idea
what
that
means.
Ottawa
can
leverage
its
attributes
better.
An
urban,
suburban
and
rural
communities
all
have
something
to
complain
about.
B
Unfortunately,
in
that
list
in
the
staff
report,
I
don't
see
any
urgency
to
deal
with
climate
change,
which
is
a
very
concern
and
omission
and
I'm
glad
to
hear
some
contrary
from
mr.
villas
counselors.
If
I
had
my
way,
I
would
throw
this
work
plan
out
instead,
I
would
direct
staff
to
over
the
next
two
years.
B
This
work
plan
does
not
do
that.
I
conclude
by
invoking
some
of
the
final
words
of
the
late
Paul
Dewar
code.
It
is
hard
to
know
how
to
make
a
difference.
The
secret
is
not
to
focus
on
how
to
solve
the
problem
that
you
concentrate
on
what
you
can
contribute
to
your
country,
your
community
and
neighbors
thinking.
What
this
is
my
contribution,
thinking
I,
thank
you
for
your
attention
and
I
wish
you
Godspeed
thank.
A
You
very
much
anyone
have
any
questions.
Thank
you
very
much,
I'm
going
to
have
the
obvious
motions,
so,
whether
all
the
motions
with
you
right
now
so
you'll
see
them.
Okay,
no
you're
at
least
hear
them
now
we're
putting
them
up
on
the
board
as
well.
We
will,
as
that
are
introduced
so
just
watch.
The
board's
vice
chair,
Chandi
will
move
all
of
those.
Then.
B
B
4.5
of
the
provincial
policy
statement
to
pre
authorize
the
city
to
complete
the
official
plan
on
the
basis
of
the
25-year
planning
horizon
and
the
ax
further
resolved
that
the
Planning
Committee
recommend
to
council
direct-mail,
on
behalf
of
City
Council,
to
write
to
local
members
of
the
provincial
legislature
to
solicit
support
for
the
council's
request
for
longer
planning
horizon
and
be
further
resolved.
That
the
planning
committee
recommend
the
cancer
direct.
B
The
planning
committee
chair
to
polakov
Lee
seek
meetings
with
Otto
as
political
minister
and
the
minister
of
municipal
affairs
to
advance
councils
request
two
weeks
to
extend
the
horizon
and
let
the
requests
by
City
Council
25
years
ago,
and
that
the
chair,
then
a
the
court
to
the
committee.
As
steps
were
taking
to
achieve
a
longer
horizon.
B
Then
journey
also
have
another
one.
This
is
a
just
non-technical
I.
Therefore,
if
you
resolve
the
document,
one
be
replaced
with
the
revised
version
and
distributed
to
the
community
coordinator,
I.
Think
that
addresses
something
that
mr.
garrison
brought
up
yet
another
another
motion.
Therefore,
it
be
resolved
that
the
study
title
Ottawa
next,
nine,
twenty
thirty
four
be
tabled
and
amended
as
such-
that
the
results
of
2036
apologies
be
tailored
and
amended
as
such.
B
There
is
an
elective
bit
of
achieving
the
required
densities,
the
age
and
conditions
of
the
required
infrastructure
and
transit
service
level
mappings,
which
produce
capital
budget
projections
to
support
the
housing
and
employment
NEADS
will
be
implemented
through
the
life
of
the
plan.
Be
it
further
resolved
that
the
task
for
four
be
presented
to
planning
committee
and
council
for
approval,
as
recommended
in
June
2020,
and
be
it
further
resolved
that
the
planning
committee
recommend
that
council
allow
general
manager,
panning
infrastructure
and
economic
development.
B
The
authority
to
break
the
adoption
rate
of
the
new
official
plan
in
the
two
stages
so
that
there's
a
quick
management
matters
are
adopted
by
council
in
Q
2021
and
the
policy.
Modernization
of
the
remainder
of
the
plan
be
adopted
at
the
following
dates
in
the
next
term
of
council,
be
a
further
resolve
that
planning
community
recommend
to
council
direct
general
manager
of
planning
and
information
economic
development
to
provide
a
revised
schedule
for
the
official
plan
planning
committee
by
the
end
of
Q
2019.
B
Yet
another
motion,
madam
chair
I,
had
a
final
nth,
therefore
be
resolved.
The
planning
committee
recommended
council
that
the
chair
of
the
Standing
Committee
on
the
environmental
protection,
water
and
waste
management
a
councillor
sponsor
group
for
the
official
plan
review,
and
that
is
the
motions
in
front
of
you,
madam
chair.
Well,.
A
That's
a
heck
of
a
lot,
so
just
let
me
ask
you:
would
you
would
be
easier
for
you
if
you
had
them
all
printed
for
you,
since
here
maybe
just
I
noted
on
the
screen,
but
there
on
the
screen
at
the
same
time,
so
people
would
have
to
I'm
just
asking.
Let
us
know
if
you
want
it
want
to
print
a
copy,
how
many
printed
copies
there
one
one
one!
B
Thank
you
very
much
for
calling
calling
me
so
I
speak
today
as
a
resident,
a
member
of
the
beyond
2036
sounding
board
and
as
chair
of
the
green
space
Alliance
of
Canada's
capital.
So
first
I'd
wish
to
thank
the
City
of
Ottawa
for
inviting
me
to
be
part
of
the
sounding
board.
It
was
an
enriching
experience.
The
exercise
had
provided
the
opportunity
to
meet
a
lot
of
outstanding
men
and
women
from
across
every
sector
of
civil
society
in
Ottawa,
so
well
worthwhile
exercise.
B
See
happen
so
that
alone
provides
the
guidance.
I
note
with
satisfaction
in
the
executive
summary
that
it
stated
that
the
report
2036
will
inform
the
development
of
the
new
Official
Plan,
including
a
green
space
master
plan
which
hasn't
been
updated
since
2003.
So
that
was
a
welcome
piece
of
information
and
I'm
also
struck
by
the
recognition
in
the
introduction
to
the
report
on
page
7
and
I'll
quote
from
it.
B
The
four
themes,
the
ability
in
urban
form
economic
development
environment
authority
of
life
are
not
meant
to
be
separate
and
standalone,
but
rather
should
be
read
as
interrelated
with
one
another.
Notably
the
environment
is
at
the
base
of
our
ability
to
develop
our
society
economy
are
a
polity
of
life,
so
I
like
the
idea
that
this
is
like
an
underpinning
piece
that
everything
else
is
built
on.
So
that's
a
point.
I'll
return
to
later
on
section
6.3
important
environment
theme
is
exhaustive.
B
It's
well-structured
the
planning
considerations
that
are
developed
from
that
section
alone
could
provide
a
comprehensive
framework
for
the
city's
environmental
times
and
policies
so
kudos
from
our
point
of
view
in
the
staff
report.
We
find
that
those
references
to
an
air
quality
and
climate
change
master
plan,
a
parts
plan
elsewhere,
is
a
green
space,
slash
parks,
master
plan,
it's
difficult
to
really
ascertain
from
the
report.
What's
the
real?
What's
what's
the
overall
structure?
B
We
are
now
without
a
doubt
facing
a
climate
emergency,
not
sometime
in
the
future,
not
way
out
in
scenario
timeframes,
but
right
now
and
decisive
and
effective.
Effective
action
has
to
be
taken
in
the
next
ten
years,
which
is
the
period
covered
by
this
plan
so
really
effectively.
This
new
official
plan
must
be
the
city's
climate
emergency
plan.
B
As
noted
in
the
introduction,
the
environment
p1
depends
the
success
of
all
the
other
domains,
so
this
has
implications
for
the
work
plan
that's
outlined
in
pages
17
and
18
of
the
staff
report
to
truly
put
their
climate
lens.
On
the
official
plan
on
the
next
official
plan,
wave
one
should
be
limited
to
setting
out
what
imperative
we
must
be
achieved
in
the
next
10
years
in
terms
of
reducing
our
greenhouse
gas
emissions
and
increasing
their
carbon
sinks.
B
Having
established
after
that,
phase
in
wave
two
can
be
built
around
how
to
achieve
these
goals
through
the
actions
in
your
building
form
of
mobility
built
economic
development,
environment,
quality
of
life
domains,
but
we
needs
to
be
an
overarching
theme,
I
believe
to
this
new
official
plan.
This
is
the
city's
first
official
plan
in
the
era
of
the
climate
emergency,
so
it
must
reflect
this
imperative.
Above
all,
thank
you.
Thank.
A
You
very
much
Tim.
We
have
any
questions
for
mr.
Johannes.
Thank
you
very
much,
sir.
Did
you
have
any
comments
at
all
on
that
tennis
dress.
C
Manager
just
be
really
brief.
Mr.
Johan
has
provided
some
really
helpful
contribution
to
the
process,
as
is
cryptid,
and
certainly
he
raises
the
issue
of
the
climate.
Lens
I
had
a
really
useful
meeting
with
ecology
Ottawa,
who
showed
me
the
climate
lens.
The
federal
government
is
using
now
for
their
work.
We
think
we
can
adapt
that
to
use
in
our
own
process
and
we're
actually
looking
at
the
feasibility
of
doing
that
right
now,
because
we
agree
there
needs
to
be
a
climate
lens
overlay
on
this,
and
it's
very,
very
practical
approach.
A
B
Thank
you
very
much
for
the
opportunity
to
speak,
as
you
mentioned,
I'm
president
of
the
Federation
of
citizens,
Association
and
also
chair
of
our
planning
and
zoning
committee,
which
has
over
60
members
across
the
city
and
our
community
associations,
number
50
and
over
we're
all
volunteers,
and
part
of
this
is
very
important,
obviously
for
looking
ahead
at
the
future
of
Ottawa.
So
as
a
participant
in
the
sounding
board,
we're
really
pleased
to
be
part
of
this.
I
circulated
a
letter.
Hopefully
everyone
has
and
I
just
want
to
touch
on
some
of
the
highlights.
B
The
Ottawa
next
beyond
2036
report
proposes
making
Ottawa
the
most
livable
mid-sized
city
in
North,
America
I
suggest
adding
a
neighborhood
dimension
to
that
make
Ottawa
the
most
liveable
mid-sized
city
of
strong
neighbourhoods
and
complete
communities
in
North.
America
strong
neighbourhoods
are
the
foundation
to
a
strong,
resilient
and
adaptable
City.
The
very
goals
Ottawa
next
has
rightly
identified
as
essential
to
dealing
well
with
whatever
an
unpredictable
future
may
be
in
store
for
us,
and
we
certainly
know
those
challenges:
20
little
snowstorms
etc
as
to
how
we
go
about
it.
B
Here
is
a
process
for
your
consideration.
What
follows
is
all
about
data,
what
should
be
counted,
and
how
do
you
count?
It
first
define
the
terms,
decide
what
little
oh
really
means.
What
is
a
complete
community?
What
does
this
mean?
Second
pick
the
most
livable
in
North
American
cities
to
compare
with
Ottawa
examples
might
be
calorie
partners
challenges
food,
decide
what
parameters
of
livability
you
want
to
compare.
There
are
lots
of
choices,
but
one
should
be
governance
structure
which
best
supports
the
development
of
strong
neighborhoods
and
complete
communities.
B
Fourth
assess
and
quantify
how
each
city
is
doing
using
a
common
baseline,
say
the
2017
data.
There
are
lots
of
ability,
metrics
online
to
pick
and
choose
from,
and
we
see
this
one
example
being
Toronto
and
how
they
have
their
data
listed.
And
you
see
that
with
the
neighborhood's
you,
you
have
a
very
good
baseline
to
draw
on
for
good
information.
B
Fifth,
create
a
dashboard
in
the
open
data
portal
to
track
results,
make
progress
a
term
of
council
priority
and
engage
the
soil
in
the
working
towards
this
improvement
and
six
invite
other
cities,
especially
Canadian
cities,
to
join
in
a
race
to
the
top.
There's
nothing
like
having
a
partner
in
this
and
taking
some
of
those
examples
of
other
great
progress.
B
B
A
B
That
the
theme
discussion
papers
will
help
us
come
up
with
those
answers
to
how
best
to
achieve
strong,
vibrant,
diverse
neighborhoods.
In
conclusion,
to
invent
us
what
we've
always
been
trying
to
do
all
along,
but
it
doesn't
respond
to
two
fundamental
but
under
answered
questions
first,
what
do
we
really
want
for
Ottawa
in
25
years?
What
do
we
want
it
to
be?
Have
suggested
the
vision
statement
about
livability
needs
reference
to
strong
neighborhoods
and
complete
communities?
B
B
So
in
conclusion,
on
a
number
of
things
have
been
suggested,
but
bottom
line
is
neighborhoods
matter
and,
as
one
of
the
previous
people
had
expressed,
the
fc8
wind
and
partnered
with
the
city
to
have
a
forum
in
January
2018
in
our
third
caption,
and
that
was
Ottawa
as
a
city
of
neighborhoods
and
if
we
take
that
as
a
model,
I
think
this
will
help
us
tremendously.
In
the
future,
thank
you
if.
A
B
You
very
much
mrs.
pan
for
coming
and
speaking
to
this,
and
thank
you
for
all
the
work
you
do.
Having
been
a
past
president
of
the
Community
Association
for
a
decade,
I
fully
understand
the
effort
that
it
takes
for
volunteers
to
do
this.
I
guess
I'm
just
wondering
in
the
context
of
looking
at
this,
this
report
and
us
looking
at
a
revolving
City,
you're
speaking
to
neighbourhoods
and
I'd,
really
like
to
get
a
better
understanding
of
your
definition
of
what
a
neighborhood
is,
because
you
know,
are
you
defining
that,
based
on
community
association
boundaries?
B
B
Well,
thank
you
for
the
question
neighborhoods,
very
obviously
across
the
city,
and
we
see
that
really
based
on
the
population
base,
for
example
Ottawa,
just
thinking
of
the
ward
system.
That
really
gives
you
a
confined
or
mapped
area.
If
we
look
at
the
Ottawa
neighborhood
study,
for
example,
which
we're
part
of
there's
very
clear
definitions
there
and
mapping,
that
is
critical
for
that,
because
people
know
where
that
captive
area
is
you,
you
mask
the
data
etc
from
it.
B
It's
a
fine
balance
and-
and
one
of
those
things
is
not
to
have
this
overwhelming
I
would
call
maybe
potentially
NIMBYism
it's
much
more
fluid
in
one
way
and
it's
to
have
it
bad.
So
if
you
look
at
the
complete
community
scenario,
there's
some
great
models
of
what
that
all
entails,
and
it's
everything
from
things
like
you
mentioned
mobility.
It's
that
transportation.
It's
what
are
those
facilities?
B
A
A
A
A
A
So
because
one
thing
then
I
hope
that
I'm
asking
you
if
you
would
agree
that
when
we
start
the
ward
boundaries-
and
you
mention
wards,
which
is
why
I'm
bringing
this
up,
that
will
make
more
sense
or
a
lot
of
sense
to
look
at
the
communities
as
opposed
to
the
ward
boundaries
being
a
street
and
I
think
in
the
last
go-round.
It
was
the
street
that
defined
it,
whether
it
was
the
geographic
deliver
right
and
what
it
did
in
some
of
our
decisions
was
split.
A
Communities,
I
certainly
have
that
in
bar
Haven
and
people
don't
like
it
so
I
think
it's
a
great
part
of
the
conversation
I
think
takeaway
to
folks
that
are
here
quote
you
mr.
mark,
when
we
start
the
ward
boundary
review
and
mr.
Willis
I
think
that
that's
something
that
your
neighborhood
ties
into
what
we're
talking
about
today
and
certainly
other
pieces
of
what
we'll
do
in
this
term.
So
thanks
very
much
thanks
for
coming
out.
Thank
you
very
much
and
thanks
for
all
the
work
you
do.
B
While
it
is
obvious
to
me
that
the
earth
is
a
complex
system
in
the
legal
fictions
where
I
live,
Ottawa,
Ontario
and
Canada,
there
are,
for
example,
no
functioning
water,
terrestrial
or
air
sheds.
The
Public
Interest
is
not
proven.
Nevertheless,
I
do
support
this
legally
mandated
review
of
our
juez
land
use
plan.
But,
to
me
things
hope
is
not
a
strategy
in
the
past.
I've
appealed
this
land
use
plan
four
times
to
the
entire
municipal
board
police
find
enclosed
a
PDF
of
those
appeals
that
just
gives
you
a
timeline
to
this
date.
B
However,
given
the
complexity
of
this
matter,
I
would
simply
refer
interested
parties
to
to
further
enclosed
documents.
The
first
and
introduction
to
UNESCO
is
updated
recommendation
on
science
and
scientific
researchers,
and
the
second
is
ecosystem
services,
toolkit
completing
and
using
ecosystem
service
assessment
to
decision-making
and
interdisciplinary
tool
book
for
managers
and
analysts
was
produced
by
the
federal
task
force
of
the
federal,
provincial
and
territorial
governments
of
Canada.
But
I
wish
you
good
luck
in
the
review
of
your
official
time.
Thank
you.
A
B
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
My
name
is
Alex
Cullen
and
the
chair
of
the
Federation
of
citizens,
Association
of
Transportation
Committee.
As
you
only
know,
the
transportation
master
plan
if
I
have
a
copy
here
is
115
pages
plus.
Another
15
pages
of
schedules
is
a
supporting
document
to
the
official
plan.
Is
the
blueprint
for
planning
developing
and
operating
the
city's
walking
cycling,
transit
and
rail
networks
within
the
planning
horizon.
B
B
Can
forward
with
respect
to
this
official
work
plan
and
we
were
disconcerted
to
find
within
it
that
on
page
11,
the
following
language,
a
partial
update
of
a
transportation
master
plan-
will
also
be
undertaken.
Partial
this
TMP
light
will
be
a
refresh
of
the
2015
TMP
in
order
to
update
Transit,
Road
cycling
and
pedestrian
projects
costing
affordability
and
prioritization.
We
will
be
based
on
the
existing
transit
network,
including
stage
1
and
stage
2
LRT,
an
existing
Road,
cycling
and
pedestrian
networks.
B
The
planning
horizon,
20:31
travel
patterns,
modern
and
urban
boundary
will
not
be
updated
and
there'll
be
no
significant
changes
to
policies,
mode
share
targets
or
list
of
planned
projects.
The
completion,
the
new
master
plans
will
occur
after
the
official
plan
is
completed,
so
this
means
that
there
will
not
be
a
full
TMP,
we'll
use
part
of
the
Official
Plan
process.
Yet
this
is
the
supporting
document
that
outlines
the
network's
the
infrastructure
to
support
the
opie
layers
and
objectives.
B
This
means
that
there's
no
update
on
the
travel
pattern,
despite
LRT
the
reason
that
was
given
to
us
back
in
2017,
and
we
conducted
a
full
review
of
the
TMP
and
presented
before
Transportation
Committee.
We
were
told
at
the
time
that
an
update
would
not
happen
in
2017,
because
we
would
wait
for
the
LRT
and
an
origin
destination.
That
study
would
be
required
due
to
the
impact
of
the
LRT
on
travel
patterns.
B
So
we
know
the
opie
work
plan
will
cover
growth,
projections
of
2046
expansion
criteria,
employment,
lands,
new
housing,
liberal
planning,
urban
design,
mobility,
given
these
topics
and
the
impact
LRT
will
have
in
Ottawa,
is
hard
to
imagine
all
this
not
having
an
impact
on
your
current
TMP.
How
can
one
construct
the
expansion
of
our
city
without
considering
the
transportation
linkages?
How
can
I
change
the
list
of
planned
projects
as
well?
There
are
policy
implications
that
need
to
be
considered.
How
well
did
the
2013
TMP
achieve
his
objectives?
B
While
there's
been
a
progress
in
really
walking
and
cycling,
modal
share
targets
are,
there
has
been
regressing,
not
progressing
in
terms
of
us
transit
modal
show
target
as
transit.
Ridership
has
fallen
from
100
and
3.5
million
rights
in
2011
to
97
million
rides
in
2018.
We
hope
for
better,
but
we're
far
away
from
2011.
Despite
population
and
employment,
growth
will
be
a
view
here,
provide
direction
and
how
to
better,
develop
transit
policies,
service
pricing,
etc.
To
enable
the
city
to
bear
meat
as
target
want,
the
LRT
change
travel
patterns
affect
future
rail
projects.
B
The
payroll
project
lists
from
the
2013
TMP
should
be
reviewed
for
relevancy,
given
how
old
is
this
is,
and
the
impact
of
the
LRT,
the
2013
yellow
cheek,
covers
our
t1
or
TMP
weather
covers
LRT
one
log2,
but
does
not
speak
to
the
sequencing
of
extending
elegy
to
Kannada
bar
Haven,
Riverside,
South
or
possibly
connecting
two
gotta
know.
How
can
one
develop
an
official
plan
for
future
growth
without
identifying
these
extensions
mobility?
What
about
the
implication?
Development
charges
in
the
new
growth
areas?
Alcaman
calculate
these.
B
If
the
transportation
component
component
is
out
of
date,
what
about
traffic
demand
management
policies?
They
will
sent
transit
travel,
such
as
parking
congestion
charges
excetera.
There
are
transportation
demand
management
policy
in
place
in
other
jurisdictions.
That
should
be
examined
here
in
Ottawa.
What
are
the
trends
for
vehicle
use,
give
a
lift,
Amazon,
driverless
cars,
etc.
A
review
of
changing
technology
should
be
part
of
any
plan
to
live
soon
2036.
B
So
our
ask
here,
as
I,
come
to
the
conclusion
that
statement
that
there
should
be
a
TMP
light
and
simply
refresh
on
the
2013
TV,
with
no
looking
at
the
policies.
Updating
what
have
you
is
inadequate
if
you're
doing
a
complete
official
plan,
the
two
go
hand-in-hand,
so
what
we're
suggesting
is,
you
should
be
doing
the
full
team,
P
review
as
part
of
roof,
assure
plan
process.
Thank.
A
B
C
It's
in
the
Kellett,
madam
chair,
mr.
Cohen
is
correct.
That
statement
in
the
report.
I
apologized
committee,
is
a
very
outdated
statement.
That
was
a
concept
at
one
point
in
time.
We
would
do
a
two-stage
update
during
this
term
of
counsel
to
the
transportation
plan,
an
immediate
short-term
transportation
light
and
a
more
comprehensive
review
that
thinking
is
out
of
date
and
I.
The
the
matter
will
come
before
Transportation
Committee
there
will
be
a
work
plan
for
a
transportation
master
plan
update
to
the
Transportation
Committee
and
that
information
their
pleas
were
disregarded.
It
is
not
correct.
C
B
Here
comes
no
thank
you,
madam
chair,
dr.
Ted
I,
usually
like
to
speak
to
planning
committee
from
the
heart,
but
sometimes
I
get
a
little
flustered,
so
I
wrote
down
my
thoughts
and
hopefully
I
can
get
through
them
without
sounding
like
I'm
reading
too
much.
First
of
all,
I'd
like
to
pass
on
my
condolences
to
you,
councilor
I,
know
mr.
B
Schoenberg
was
a
close
personal
friend
of
yours
and
I
think
he
would
be
interested
in
the
discussion
we're
having
today
about
beyond
2036,
because
he,
like
you,
was
a
visionary
and
always
looking
to
plan
for
the
future.
So
he's
someone
that
our
community
will
miss
so
I
just
thought
I
would
say
about.
Thank
you.
B
Secondly,
I'd
like
to
acknowledge
that
I
wish
councillor
Libra
was
here
because,
even
though
I
don't
always
agree
with
his
views
on
things,
nor
some
of
the
other
speakers
I
think
that
there's
a
lot
of
things
contained
in
the
staff
report
today
that
are
exciting
and
opportunities
for
his
input
and
I
look
forward
to
him
coming
back
to
Council
to
be
able
to
share
those
views,
because
it's
always
a
lively
conversation.
You
have
so
I
wish
him
all
the
best
and
a
speedy
return
to
the
city.
B
B
B
As
well
as
many
P
from
social
service
agencies
and
committees
and
community
associations,
I
got
the
impression
that
we
were
all
very
excited
at
mr.
Willis's
comments
and
an
opportunity
to
start
a
new
path.
Looking
to
move
the
the
City
of
Ottawa
forward
and
to
build
this
city,
there
was
so
much
excitement
in
the
air.
I
relayed
that
excitement
to
many
of
you
immediately
following
the
first
meeting
for
far
too
long,
I
think
we've
heard
from
a
few
groups
that.
B
B
C
B
That
they
can
afford
when
I
purchased
my
home
15
years
ago,
I
paid
about
two
hundred
and
twenty
thousand
dollars
for
it.
I
would
find
it
hard
to
buy
that
house
today
on
one
income,
a
situation
that
I
suspect
many
of
you
are
already
in
the
same
situation.
A
1,400
square
foot
townhouse
in
suburbia,
now
costs
over
three
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
raise
a
family,
it's
possible,
but
it
doesn't.
We
don't
have
the
same
opportunity
that
many
of
you
had
years
ago.
B
We
need
to
work
with
the
existing
communities,
as
was
mentioned
by
him
as
peri
and
others,
to
see
how
much
intensification
they
will
support
both
urban
and
suburban,
and
we
need
to
plan
where
we
will
go
from
here.
The
staff
report
speaks
to
this.
We
have
engaged
with
staff
for
four
months
now
on
a
development
charge
by
law,
they're,
calling
it
an
interim
development
charge
by
law.
B
Support
the
resolutions
put
forward
for
the
city
to
be
able
to
look
beyond
20
years.
This
city
has
a
very
sophisticated
planning
track
record.
We
have
very
capable
people
and
I
encourage
the
city
to
be
able
to
look
at
infrastructure
and
other
issues
to
take
this
to
two
million
people
and
beyond.
Finally,
in
closing,
I
would
like
to
thank
staff
for
preparing
this
report
and
the
staff
report,
which,
together,
I,
believe
outlines
many
of
the
recommendations
that
are
required.
A
I
think
it's
important,
because
I'm
going
to
tell
you
something
that
that's
the
end
of
our
speakers
and
but
I
can
tell
you
that
one
thing
that
I
find
absent
today.
We
have
a
lot
of
people
here,
but
there's
not
a
lot
of
excitement
and
I'm
grossly
disappointed
by
that
grossly
disappointed
by
that
this
is
the
most
exciting
thing
happening
in
this
city.
It's
planning
our
future,
my
grandchildren's
future.
Their
grandchildren's
future
came
my
time.
I
mean
I'm
I'm,
an
older
person
now
I'm
going
to
contribute
to
this,
but
it's
their
ideas
that
we
want.
A
I
want
my
grandchildren,
thinking
about
what
their
Ottawa
looks
like
I
want
them
talking
about
what
we
can
do
better
I
want
them
talking
about
where
they're
going
to
go
to
school
and
what
the
opportunities
that
they're
going
to
have
that
will
encourage
them
to
stay
in
Ottawa.
Okay,
I
want
ideas
about
how
we
can
benefit
from
the
major
resource
we
have,
which
is
something
we
don't
usually
talk
about,
which
is
the
City
of
Toronto.
God
knows
on
most
days.
We
don't
like
them.
Well,
I
love
them,
but
they
are
key
to
the
future.
A
Success
of
this
city
and
I
think
and
I
said
this
a
council
last
week.
We
do
not
talk
about
economic
development
enough
and
I
think
that
we
need
to
be
leaders
in
this.
I
mean
we
let
invest.
Ottawa
certainly
play
a
role,
but
not
where
we
should.
We
have
to
stop
being
complacent.
Why
are
you
not
excited
Sheila,
you
copy
the
most
excited,
Ted
I
mean
I,
know
you're
not
normally
excited,
but
that
was
kind
of
enthusiastic
for
you.
The
bottom
line
is
I
got
a
lot
of
people
out
here
eyes.
Anybody
excited.
A
Anybody
breathing
okay,
but
really
I
mean
do
you
intend
to
be
part
of
the
process
because
really
I
mean
I
feel
like
I'm
at
some
kind
of
a
weak?
You
know
I,
don't
know.
What's
going
on,
I,
don't
know
what
you're
grasping,
how
vitally
important
this
is
going
to
be.
This
is
the
river
at
the
port
of
right.
Now
we
keep
talking
about
that
from
the
50s.
This
is
mr.
Willis's
mark
on
this
city.
Leading
us
here
say
it's
not.
He
is
the
leader.
A
He
will
be
the
new
river
okay,
you
will
be
okay
and
50
years
from
now.
I
hope
people
think
for
that
guy
was
smart
and
he
had
really
smart
people
working
with
them,
because
you
do-
and
you
know
what
people
became
to
speak
today.
Where
do
we
agree
with
them
or
not
they
care
about
this
city?
We
have
an
opportunity
to
be
a
global
leader.
A
We
are
already
doing
that
and
most
of
you
don't
have
a
clue
about
it
and
we're
doing
it
right
here
in
Ottawa,
people
around
the
world
know
that
we
have
a
testbed
that
is
unique
in
the
freaking
world.
Okay,
on
more
than
one
level,
we're
going
to
tell
you
more
about
that
in
March,
we've
been
kind
of
telling
you
about
it
for
two
years,
but
nobody's
been
paying
attention.
A
I
want
people
to
wake
up,
I
want
people
to
get
engaged
and
I
told
the
staff
this
morning,
I
didn't
know
what
your
plans
are
for
connecting
with
people
this
way,
but
about
five
years
ago,
when
we
engage
the
public
in
building
a
livable
Ottawa,
we
were
excited
by
the
fact
that
3,000
people
contributed
online,
that's
peanuts
in
the
2014
election.
Those
of
us
that
were
there
know
that
this
played
nary
a
thing
really.
A
Now
it
is
everything
this
is
the
tool
to
how
we
will
get
people
engaged
in
the
climate,
a
little
kid
from
the
classes
in
school,
with
the
whiteboards
to
the
grandparents
or
in
the
in
the
seniors
homes,
to
the
people
working
in
places
to
the
people
in
the
public
service
to
the
people
that
they
say.
Why
should
I
move
to
Ottawa?
A
Why
should
I
choose
it
and,
like
I
said
to
the
mayor
after
Joe's
presentation
this
morning,
we're
going
to
have
to
not
have
a
box
that
we're
going
to
have
to
stand
in
our
sandbox
is
going
to
have
to
be
fluid,
so
please
get
excited
about
it,
because,
if
you're
not
going
to
quite
frankly,
we
might
as
well
do
a
refresh
now
that
we
do
and
we
need
to
redo
it's
long
overdue.
I
forget
to
Rick
who's
missing
now
said
to
me,
this
is
my
third
total
new
one
in
his
elective
life.
A
Now
he's
been
elected
for
over
30
years,
or
something
like
that
so,
but
the
bottom
line
is:
is
we
better
get
this
right?
Okay,
because
we're
going
to
go
from
being
the
fifth
largest
city
in
Canada
to
may
be
the
tenth
largest
city
in
Canada-
we're
not
smart
about
it,
and
that
takes
options
and
choices
away
from
you,
so
I
had
no
intention
of
speaking,
but
as
those
of
you
that
have
known
me
for
a
while
those
weren't
provoked
by
poked
I
tend
to
absolutely
be
honest.
So
please
get
excited
on
counting
on
the
councilors.
A
C
When
that
burst
of
Matabele,
thank
you
for
the
compliments
to
my
me
and
my
team.
They
do
in
vast
amount
of
work
and
I
will
absolutely
resist
being
compared
to
Jacques
about
because
Jakob
and
Mackenzie
King
wrote
that
plan
and
a
boardroom
without
talking
to
anyone,
and
that
is
absolutely
not
our
style.
We
want
significant
public
engagement
participation
in
this
process.
This
is
not
going
to
be
written
in
a
back
room
by
two
people,
so
I
will
resist
that
comparison.
Secondly,
I
welcome
the
suggestions
we
had
I'm
miss
Perry
suggestion
about
building
this
on
neighborhoods.
C
She
knows
I
agree
with
her
100%
I,
absolutely
believe
we
can
change
the
words
in
this
slide
on
the
screen
to
talk
about
neighborhoods
in
this
context,
I
really
believe
in
that
and
so
does
the
team.
So
we
will
do
that.
I
am
really
looking
forward
to
talking
to
people
all
about
this
plan.
The
team
is
very
anxious
we
really
do
want
to
hear
we
want
to
give
we
don't
usually
hear
from.
We
want
to
hear
people
in
different
formats
and
we're
going
to
be
reaching
out
there,
but
we
really
do
need
counselors
help.
A
A
B
I,
just
once
I
am
incredibly
excited
and
if
we
can
set
the
bar,
because
when
when
people
are
filling
out,
the
survey
for
whether
the
city
should
opt
in
or
out
for
cannabis
retail,
it
was
23,000.
People
filled
out
that
survey,
so
we
should
have
more
than
that.
We
should
aim
for
far
more
than
that.
So
anyway,
so
I
came
back
to
my
question.
I
have
two
questions
quickly.
B
The
first
questions
are
general.
They
ask
people
what
are
the
most
important
things
in
your
neighborhood
for
you
and
listing
off
the
things
all
the
things
that
are
important
to
livability
and
asking
them
to
I
can
say
how
does
your
neighborhood
do
it?
Do
you
have
all
these
things
that
you
need,
and
then
we
ask
similar
questions
about
the
city
for
them?
How
is
the
city
operating
for
you?
What
are
the
most
important
things
to
you?
B
What
what
do
you
see
as
issues
that
you
think
need
improving
on
and
then,
in
terms
of
the
things
that
we've
listed,
we
leave
open-ended
questions
to
for
them
to
fill
in
the
blank,
if
there's
something
that
we've
missed
in
terms
of
the
answers
offered,
because
we
want
to
really
part
of
what
we're
doing
with
these
first
range
of
discussion
papers
is
asking
people
about
these
key
key
challenges
that
we
see
that
we're
facing.
But
we
want
to
hear
from
the
public
about
things
that
we've
perhaps
missed.
B
No,
that's
great
and
I
think
that
part
of
Pete
getting
people
excited
is
knowing
that
when
we're
asking
them
for
their
input
and
they
come
back
with
something
exciting
and
they
come
back
to
something
aspirational
and
maybe
pushing
the
envelope
and
maybe
taking
a
little
bit
of
investment
pantent
that
we're
willing
to
look
at
that
as
a
very
viable
option,
because
we
don't
want
to
be
the
town
that
fund
forgot
and
find
one
more
quick
question.
I
just
wanted
to
know
what
will
be
the
big
differences
between
our
current
official
plan
and
the
new
AP.
C
It's
going
to
show
up
in
in
the
suburban
communities
as
well
around
the
town,
centers
that
we
have
been
trying
to
build
and
those
town
centers
become
much
more
being
meaningful.
Sure
header
talks
about
downtown
bar
him
and
now
I
would
expect
you
to
be
talking
about
downtown,
Orleans
and
I.
Think
downtown
kanata
is
something
people
feel
some
identification
that
that
would
become
for
real
I.
Think
what
we
want
to
address
these
issues,
a
mode
shift
and
ridership
changes.
So
we
need
to
enable
it
in
some
of
our
land
use
policies.
C
So,
as
we
talked
about
the
complete
mobility
package,
mr.
Cohen
made
some
really
good
points
said
about
what
things
are
changing.
We
have
to
anticipate
that
and
build
that
in
we
we
want
a
more
sophisticated
and
design
strategy
in
this
plan
than
we
had
today.
We
have
a
very
rudimentary
one.
We
want
more
sophisticated
one
or
stop
do
a
great
job
accomplishing
a
lot,
but
we
think
we
can
take
it
to
a
new
level.
C
We
want
to
embed
is
a
fundamental
value,
public
health
in
this
plan,
and
that
is
so
highly
linked
to
environment
and
climate.
Those
things
are
all
actually
tied
together
and
resiliency
of
our
community
on
health
and
climate
perspective
is
key
part
of
this,
and
we
see
that
and
finally,
you
know:
we've
always
never
had
a
official
plan
that
had
an
economic
development
strategy
and
if
they
always
totally
separate
things
now
we
actually
want
them
to
be
actually
one
thing.
So
it's
together.
So
if
we
got
those
five
things
accomplished,
I
think
that
success
for
us.
B
You
thank
you,
madam
chair
I.
Thank
you
both
Kyle
I'm,
so
going
on
Cavanaugh
for
mr.
Willis.
You
you
mentioned
earlier
about
the
injection,
the
villages
or
the
little
villages,
and
so
we
can
have
our
parent
state
in
those
villages
and
and,
as
you
know,
this
provincial
government,
we
still
call
them
anew
the
provincial
government
talking
about
current
that
tapes.
The
only
way
we
can
expand
and
make
their
the
world
of
villages
liveable
unaffordable
is
by
changing
some
of
the
the
service
requirement
and
provincial
policy
statement.
B
C
C
You
are
one
of
the
unintended
consequences
of
your
regulations
as
you
are
making
it
very
hard
for
multi-family
housing
in
villages
that
could
contemplate
a
retirement
home
and
that
jeopardizes
the
vitality
of
those
communities.
It
has
to
change.
So
absolutely
it's
part
of
what
we
intend
to
do.
It
is
not
something
that's
totally
within
our
control.
We
need
to
get
the
provinces
attention
to
this
issue
and
I
can
assure
you
we're
working
I'm
working
with
my
counterparts
in
other
municipalities
to
do
that
and
if.
B
B
Thank
You
counselor.
Are
you
little
interior
cancer
Cavanaugh?
Thank
you
very
much.
I!
Don't
forget
the
surprised
by
my
question.
I've
been
asking
the
same
question
in
regards
to
the
recent
draft
budget
reports,
and
that's
so
that's
asking
about
the
gender
lens.
What
thought
has
been
given
to
a
gender
lens
on
the
official
plan?
This
is
something
that's
very,
very
important
and
don't
think
of
it
as
something
isolated.
This
isn't
something
that's
just
about
women.
B
This
is
actually
about
economic
development
because
I
believe
we're
missing
a
lot
of
potential,
because
if
we
don't
put
a
gender
lens,
we
won't
see
a
very,
very
strong
part
of
our
workforce.
If
we
don't
have
facilities,
if
we
don't
plan
for
these
things
in
the
future,
such
as
childcare
and,
quite
frankly,
we're
going
to
have
to
think
more
about
seniors
care
as
well.
These
are
all
tied
in
in
terms
of
the
services
that
we
make
sure
available.
B
I
also
want
to
mention
that
the
climate
change
lens
is
also
not
mutually
exclusive
here
as
well,
but
I
just
wanted
to
bring
that
into
light.
I
know
when
I
moved
into
Ottawa
many
many
years
ago.
I
found
it
very
difficult
as
a
young
mother
to
integrate
to
get
to
know
the
community
I
want
to
know
that
if
you
in
the
future
that
as
families
come
in
here
that
they
can
integrate
really
quickly,
they
can
find
services
quickly
that
this
is
a
place.
That
is
welcoming
because
we
do
need
more
immigrants.
B
C
Counselor
thanks
I
question.
Mr.
chair,
the
councillors
question
I
anticipated
the
councillors
question
because
I
was
listening
at
the
last
council
meeting,
I
have
asked
some
of
my
staff
and
a
business
services
group
to
look
at
what
other
municipalities
are
doing
in
terms
of
gender
lens
applications.
The
land-use
planning
so
they're
doing
that
work
which
will
assist
our
team
I
see
things
is
such
as,
if
you
as
our
representative
on
this
issue,
are
willing
and
hosting
a
workshop
around.
It
was
specifically
on
that
issue,
and
this
is
no
dispute.
B
Thanks
very
much
madam
chair
and
I
might
not
sound
excited,
but
I'm
very
excited
too,
and
without
putting
any
pressure
on
mr.
Wes
I
do
think.
Council
harder
is
right
that
this
is
as
potential
and
we
hope
that
it
will
turn
out
to
be
a
very
transformational
plan
that
will
guide
the
city
for
many
decades
to
come
and
as
results,
getting
it
done
is
is
very
important.
The
recommendation
report
has
the
end
of
2021
for
the
work
to
be
complete,
which
means
the
discussion
amongst
elected
officials
likely
to
happen
in
2022.
C
What
we
call
modernizing
policy
can
come
as
a
second
stage,
but
we
get
that
foundational
work
done
and
that
staff
feel
that
time
learning
crunch
earnest,
but
we
also
know
that
a
lot
of
things
are
depending
on
it.
So
the
motion
that
Vice,
Chair
Cheney,
introduced
I
believe,
is
a
valid
compromise.
Where
we
get
we
break
their
P
into
two
pieces.
C
Now,
I
must
say:
one
of
the
things
you
lose
if
we
do
adopt
in
two
pieces
is
the
ability
to
make
that
a
10-year
adoption
free
from
requirement
for
review,
but
a
city
as
large,
as
ought
aware
that
grows
as
fast
as
Ottawa
I
can't
imagine.
Any
council
wishing
to
councils
in
a
row
would
sit
and
not
want
to
review
the
status.
C
The
official
plans
so
that
section
26
provision
of
the
the
Planning
Act
does
exist,
but
it
I'm
not
sure
we
would
ever
be
using
it
anyhow,
but
you
do
lose
that
if
you
adopt
into
pieces
but
I
understand
the
concerns
you
and
others
have
raised
it.
We
will.
We
will
adapt
our
process
accordingly
and
that's
why
we
contemplate
bringing
back
a
revised
to
choose
to
step
schedule
to
you.
B
By
how
much
does
that
accelerate
how,
by
how
much
potential
does
that
accelerate
the
completion
of
the
work
and
the
presentation
of
a
plan
so
could
could
set
the
could
session
plan?
In
that
scenario,
and
potentially
with
the
injection
of
additional
funding?
Could
that
be
contemplated
by
the
end
of
2020?
There
are
some
real.
C
Limiting
factors
in
our
ability
to
get
done
by
the
end
of
2020,
but
we
are
confident
the
first
quarter
2021.
We
can
get
that
first
part
part
one
of
the
foundational
growth
management
provisions.
You
know
we
are
dependent
on
the
release
of
the
next
tranche
of
census,
data,
which
we
will
not
have
till
later
this
year
until
till
November
is
the
earliest
date,
we'll
see
it.
C
If
statistics
Canada
releases
it
on
time,
and
then
we
need
to
hold
a
section
26
meeting
to
adopt
to
give
properly
notice
under
the
under
the
Planning
Act
to
notify
the
Ministry
of
Municipal,
Affairs
and
housing,
and
we
need
to
do
the
evaluations
technical
upon
the
scenes.
So
we're
prepared
to
do
everything
we
can
to
get
it
to
that
quarter.
One.
We
understand
the
timelines
end
of
2020.
We
don't
believe
we
can
do,
but
we
can
get
it.
The
that
first
part
significant
part.
First
quarter,
2021.
C
So
we
will
be
working
on
the
population
projections
and
try
to
land
them
as
quickly
as
we
we
can.
It
is
dependent
in
the
census,
release
of
data
and
other
work
that
we
need
to
do
that
will
feed
the
infrastructure
and
transportation
master
plans
and
I
think
by
getting
them
by
quarter
twenty
one
or
twenty
twenty
one
that
will
allow
them
the
certainty.
If
council
adopts
our
recommendations
of
growth
management.
At
that
point,
the
certainty
near
they
need
to
do
to
make
those
decisions.
C
There's
other
policy
work
in
both
those
plans,
for
example
in
the
infrastructure
master
plan.
We
need
to
do
some
updates
to
approach
on
stormwater
management
because
of
climate
change,
impacts
that
work
and
there's
nothing
stopping
that
work
from
starting
this
year.
It's
just
some
of
the
servicing
extension
issues
that
would
have
to
happen
so
certainly
appreciate
the
concern
we
work
plans
will
be
brought
forward,
the
Transportation
Committee
for
the
TMP,
and
we
will
bring
a
work
plan
for
the
infrastructure
master
plan
here
for
your
review
and
further
discussion
in
detail.
B
B
I
would
like
cities
like
Bordeaux
and
Austin
and
Manchester
to
look
to
us
in
50
years
as
a
leader
and
I.
Think
livable
is
not
strong
enough
for
where
we
need
to
be
as
a
city.
So
a
suggestion.
My
question
is
around
Gatineau.
How
do
you
plan
to
interface
with
Gatineau,
it's
clear
throughout
the
report
that
it's
an
auto
a
gap,
no
region,
that
we
need
their
cooperation?
C
Manager,
it's
an
excellent
question.
We
have
been
reaching
out
to
our
counterparts
in
gatineau
for
the
last
year
and
we've
invited
them
to
participate
in
number
of
these
sessions.
They
are
very
preoccupied
right
now,
with
a
number
of
mandate
of
provincial
planning
exercises
as
a
result
of
their
major
flooding
incidents
and-
and
we
on
a
region-
and
they
have
really
got
to
know-
has
both
a
local
and
a
regional
planning
role,
so
they're
good
partners.
They
are
very
busy
that
we
do.
C
We
are
finding
ways
mr.
Smith
and
I
had
a
meeting
very
recently.
For
example,
with
the
head
of
Economic
Development
privity
got
to
know
we
this
we
would.
We
prevents
the
framework
for
some
joint
initiatives.
We
will
do
the
same
on
environmental
issues
with
that
really
get
to
know.
Mr.
man,
Kony
has
regular
conversations
with
his
counterparts
on
the
transportation
file,
so
we
are
working
in
many
different
levels
as
well,
and
we
they're
always
welcome
at
the
table
for
these
stakeholder
groups.
We
certainly
do
extend
the
invites
because
they
are
valuable
partner
to
us.
Mel.
B
A
B
Very
much
madam
chair,
thanks
for
the
report,
I
am
I,
am
also
excited
about
the
prospect
and
what
we
can
contribute
towards
this
in
the
next
little.
While
I
just
have
a
couple
of
comments,
one
is
around
the
actual.
The
title
that
we've
got
up
here:
I
think
that
could
be
more
exciting.
The
most
livable
midsize
city
in
North,
America,
doesn't
scream
exciting
to
me,
I
mean
I,
think
and
if
you
open
to
the
change,
take
out
that
mid
sized
city,
the
most
livable
city
in
North
America
seems
like
an
aspirational
goal.
B
We
should
be
trying
to
achieve
I,
think
get
rid
of
that
midsize
piece
and
there's
nothing
I!
Think
livability!
You
could
talk
about
a
city,
that's
not
a
gigantic
City.
That
would
probably
be
more
livable,
because
it's
not
so
huge,
so
I
think
we
can
just
to
take
that
back
and
be
nice
to
change
that
title
on
the
you
know,
from
pypes
perspective
on
the
urban
boundary
question
of
VOP.
B
C
This
amount
of
chair,
first
of
all,
on
the
first
point,
we
had
a
ferocious
internal
debate
about
whether
mid
says
was
in
that
title
or
not.
Mr.
Bigelow's
would
agree
with
you
entirely
that
he
he's
not
here
today.
I
wish
he
was
he's
taking
some
well-deserved
break,
but
like
many
there's,
a
there's
agreement
that
we
shouldn't
be
limiting
ourselves
so
I
think
there's
an
openness
to
deleting
those
two
sentences.
Those
two
very
words
on
the
urban
bound
Olivia
I'm,
going
to
be
really
clear
about
this.
C
I
am
NOT
going
to
tell
you
today
what
we
think,
because
we
don't
have
the
data
yet
to
know
what
we
need
so
I
can't
today
tell
you
whether
we
will
or
will
not
have
a
need
for
an
expansion
we
may
very
well.
We
may
not
one
of
the
things
that
we
will
be
doing.
Is
the
population
employment
projections
over
the
planet
horizon
that
will
it's
a
very
regimented
process
that
the
province
sets
to
us
that
sort
of
establishes
our
growth.
C
We
will
then
look
at
how
much
growth
can
be
accommodated
through
intensification
within
the
existing
urban
boundary
and
what
those
opportunities
are,
and
we've
seen
lots
of
good
examples
lately
of
different
types
of
intensive
intensification,
whether
those
skills,
moja
gems,
intensification
redevelopment
of
all
sites,
those
sorts
of
things,
and
if
that
growth,
that
can't
be
accommodated
or
if
we
have
issues
with
housing,
choice
and
affordability
and
need
more
variety
of
different
choices.
That's
another
overlay.
B
That
answer
you
know,
I
just
think
when
we
expand
your
the
boundary,
we're
putting
more
pressure
on
our
tax
base
of
courses
more
infrastructure
to
to
maintain.
Of
course,
the
effect
on
the
environment
is
a
difficult
one.
When
we're
talking
about
livability,
one
of
the
core
concepts
that
emerges
of
livability
is
sustainability.
That
factor
across
all.
You
know
whether
it
be
within
our
budget,
financial
sustainability
or
with
actual
environmental
sustainability.
So
you
have
to
take
that
in
perspective
on
the
livability
piece
with
the
urban
boundary
expansion
I
think
is
important.
Thank
you.
A
Experian's
and
thanks
for
raising
at
that
point
as
well,
because
one
of
the
things
that
in
the
presentation,
as
maybe
people
skipped
by
but
I,
think
I
miss
Perry
talked
about
it
as
well,
was
about
complete
communities
and
what
does
that
really
mean
complete
neighborhoods?
What
does
that
really
mean,
and
would
that
have
an
influence
on
whether
there's
a
change
in
rounding
out
an
area
that
all
that
would
also
be
smart
for
the
city
to
be
looking
at
investing
and
I?
Think
that's.
One
thing
we
haven't
talked
about
today
is
smart.
A
What
is
the
smart
city
look
like
and
in
for
yourself
they're
always
talking
about
you
know,
transit
map
and
and
and
the
type
of
transit
and
the
cost
of
transit.
That
sort
of
thing
I
mean
that
could
be
part
of
your
smart
contribution.
Many
factors
will
come
into
play
where,
at
the
beginning
of
this
right,
so
I
mean
sustainable,
absolutely,
but
there'll
be
other
ways
of
okay.
If
you
go,
if
it
doesn't
require
any
more
investment
in
infrastructure
to
sustain
that,
is
that
smart
is
that
completed
community?
It's
a
big
discussion.
A
We've
got
lots
of
time
to
do
it
and
I
think
that
while
staff
are
going
to
have
their
which
they
do
have
a
work
plan,
I
think
that
we
will
be
I
missed
the
Crayola
to
the
work
plan.
Okay
and
at
the
end,
is
an
entire
something
very
exciting.
That
is
one
of
my
initiatives
and
and
I
hope
that
it's
kind
of
like
a
challenge
to
all
of
you,
I
think
we're
going
to
council,
surely
and
then
cancer
McKenney.
Thank.
B
B
Day,
okay,
so
why
one
says
when
we
set
goals
that
get
achieved,
people
will
quickly
forget
about
the
goals
and
they
don't
need
to
get
mentioned
in
more.
So
when
the
when
the
greville
plan
came
in,
one
main
goals
of
that
plan
was
to
prevent
ribbon
development
in
the
Capital
Region
right
when
the
graduate
plan
came
in.
One
of
the
main
goals
of
the
plan
was
to
prevent
ribbon
development
in
the
city,
so
prevent
areas
of
poor
maintenance,
low-income
encircled,
by
newer,
more
trendy
neighborhoods
encircled
by
so
it
will
just
continue
like
that.
B
B
That
means
you
must
get
in
there,
remove
the
snow
and
remove
the
snow
banks.
You
can't
you
can't
leave
them
like
you
can
in
other
neighborhoods
or
cars
can't
get
through.
There's
impact
on
emergency
services
and
the
costs
go
through
the
roof.
So
I'm
wondering
what
kind
of
emphasis
they're
going
to
have
on
cost
containment
on
our
basic
core
services,
while
maintaining
or
increasing
the
quality
of
them.
C
Venture
is
about
a
very
important
question
and
medified
the
motion
that
vice-chair
Chaney
introduced
one
of
the
criteria
talks
about
implications
on
capital
operating
costs,
which
is
something
we've
looked
at
capital
costs.
Before
we
haven't
looked
at
operating
costs.
We,
it
is
a
consideration.
We
have
a
constant
process
of
continual
improvement.
What
we
call
the
infrastructure
standards
review,
we
did
one
around
already.
We
need
to
do
yet
another
round
of
that
in
the
next
couple
of
years.
We
do
keep
looking
at
this.
C
We
have
to
kind
of
measure
in
that
example,
when
you
set
the
road
impact
there
is
a
trade
operate
on
one
side.
If
the
road
is
narrower,
we
have
a
low,
but
we
use
less
land
per
hectare
took
house
people
at
less
when
that
words
narrow,
when
we
have
to
repair
it
or
replace
it,
it's
cheap
and
repair
or
replace.
So
there
are
costs
on
that
side.
There
also
environmental
costs
right
of
having
the
larger
surface.
There
have
been
heat
island,
the
land,
consumption
side
of
that
as
well.
C
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
snow
clear
it
drives,
the
snow
clearance
costs
considerably
there.
These
issues
we're
also
having
trouble
with
we've,
been
trying
to
bring
housing
a
communities
closer
to
the
streets,
but
we're
losing
room
for
trees
in
certain
areas,
so
we're
working.
These
are
tug
of
wars
going
on
in
policy
that
we
are
kind
of
work
on.
So
what
we're
committed
to
continuing
to
review
this,
really
something
we
have
to
always
work
on
it,
there's
no
front
we
have
it
has.
This
has
to
be
continuous
improvement.
B
Secondly,
I
think
getting
people
interested
in
the
Constitution:
it's
it's
not
really
reliable
to
Seder,
just
because
this
is
very
important.
More
people
are
going
to
be
interested.
We
had
the
twenty
thousand-plus
interested
in
cannabis
and
taking
part
in
that,
but
the
second
biggest
public
consultation
in
terms
of
volume
of
people
writing
in
to
us
since
I've
been
here,
was
for
that
rooftop
cow
in
Orleans,
where
we
got
nearly
10,000
people
writing
in
to
save
the
thing.
B
Apparently,
they
weren't
aware
wasn't
a
living
being,
but
writing
in
to
save
this
thing
and
a
last
official
plan
got
a
tiny
fraction
of
that.
So
I
think
it's
important
that
we
realize
that
it's
not
based
on
what
we
perceive
to
be
important,
but
it's
based
on
whether
retouching
moves
with
the
public
so
that
they
actually
are
motivated.
So
what
are
you
going
to
do
or
not?
I.
C
Think,
as
ms
reti
said
earlier,
we
are
looking
at
different
consultation
techniques
through
this
process.
We've
retained
an
outside
firm
to
give
us
some
advice
on
sort
of
new
techniques
that
we
might
use
online
presence.
Digital
is
very
important.
We
will
reach
out
with
you
to
your
communities
if
there's
interest
to
do
this,
because
I
do
believe
face-to-face
has
a
lot
of
value
people.
Some
people
feel
more
comfortable
with
this.
So
absolutely
we
need
to
do
more
time
on
this.
What
we
will
do,
our
very
best
to
reach
as
many
people
as
we
can.
A
A
Last
night
I
was
saying
after
10
o'clock
at
night
that
on
Twitter
that
I
had
some
of
my
cuz
people
were
talking
about
all
my
sidewalk
hasn't
been
done
for
the
second
time,
a
no,
it
has
to
be
this
Anna
and
I
was
saying:
I
have
streets
in
my
ward
that
have
not
been
plowed
once
okay
and
there
are-
and
these
were
in
particular
around
a
mental
rec
center
in
Half,
Moon,
Bay
and
Stonebridge,
and
why?
Because
of
the
density,
because
the
roads
are
so
narrow?
A
Okay,
because
the
land
is
so
expensive,
the
Lots
are
so
small.
There
is
no
place
to
park
more
than
a
Honda
Civic.
Then
we
put
a
sidewalk
on
it.
Okay,
then
we
have
no
place
to
toss,
no.
So,
as
far
as
cost
to
snow
operations
in
this
city
of
winter,
okay,
it
indifference
between
community
and
bar
Haven,
built
in
the
later
80s,
around
Mary
Honeywell
and
st.
Elizabeth
Ann
Seton
and
the
happen
day
of
today.
It's
nine
times
the
cost
to
the
City
of
Ottawa.
For
that,
so
that's
another
factor.
A
We
have
to
take
into
consideration,
which
is
one
of
the
driving
forces
of
why
you
know
we've
done
is
have
like
that.
Maybe
an
update
for
people
who
weren't
here
during
the
five
years
we
spent
on
building
better
smarter
suburbs
and
what
we
learn
from
that.
But
what
we
still
can
do
more
because
because
they're
having
huge
pressures
for
sure-
and
you
know
what
I
mean,
if
we
try
to
make
the
city
more
livable,
it's
an
enviable
goal-
seven
more
affordable-
we
can
do
more
right.
B
Thank
You
chair
great
discussion
this
morning
and
I'll
tell
you
what
would
excite
me
and
I
don't
get
excited
very
often
about
official
plans,
but
if,
if
I
plan
included
eliminating
homelessness
at
some
point
in
this
set
in
this
stage,
I
also
think
that
and
I
have
a
question
about
that,
but
also
think
that,
when
we're
considering
what
type
of
city
we
want
to
be,
I've
always
wondered
why
we
don't
aspire
to
be
the
healthiest
city
city.
Actually,
in
the
world
healthy,
just
just
healthy,
the
healthiest,
we
walk
the
Moe's.
B
You
know
we
cycle
the
nose,
we
could
have.
You
know
the
best
recreation
programs,
the
most
trees,
the
best
green
space
we've
got
Gatineau
Park.
When
we
talk
about
the
other
side
of
the
river
we've
got
a
river
running
through
our
city.
We
could
have
food
security,
we
could
have
dozens
and
dozens
of
community
gardens
for
folks.
We
can
have
trees
and
all
the
pollinators
that
have
plants
that
we
need
for
bees
and
butterflies,
and
we
can
have
the
least
amount
of
people,
smoking,
you're,
the
lowest,
making
weight.
B
I
really
do
think
we
could
be
they're
the
healthiest
city
in
the
world,
but
that's
what
we
aspire
to
and
and
yeah
and
I
would
like
to
see
that
we
like
this
about.
If
that's
our
goal,
there's
so
much
in
that
that
we
could
do
some
of
its
small,
some
of
it
big.
That
would
lead
us
to
a
place
where,
because
either
where
this
whole
city
is,
is
taken
into
account,
because
we
are
a
large
city
and
you
do
have
you
know,
struggles
in
terms
of
you
know.
B
B
B
Complex
puzzle
of
you
know
how
we
get
to
to
reducing
and
eliminating
homelessness,
but
they
are
part
of
it
and
I.
Just
wonder
if
you
could
walk
us
through
what
the
next
steps
are
in
terms
of
you
know
absolutely
inclusionary
zoning.
How
do
you
ensure
that
the
private
development
industry
is
is
doing
its
part
through
charges
through
through
you
know,
providing
the
the
funding
and
the
resources
review
to
to
reduce
homelessness,
cementum.
C
Joe
Purcell
start
and
say
the
council
would
be
encouraged
that
two
of
the
first
discussion
papers
released
in
the
Official
Plan
one
is
on
the
healthy
City
and
the
second
is
on
housing,
both
of
which
delve
into
the
very
issues
the
councillor
raised.
So
I'll
tell
a
quick
story.
One
of
the
first
people
I
met
with
when
I
took
on
this
job
was
dr.
levy,
and
he
and
I
both
talked
about
how
public
health
and
planning
could
work
much
more
integrated
way
and
I'm.
So
pleased
to
dr.
C
etches
has
taken
that
idea
to
a
whole
new
level
with
with
us
and
that
her
team
is
working
in
quite
a
collaborative
way.
She's
been
here
both
she
may
still
be
by
me,
she's
here
as
our
partner
in
doing
this
project,
so
we
believe
in
that
very
strongly
and
that
as
a
legacy,
I
would
like
this
plan
to
leave,
for
us
is
on
that
on
the
housing
side.
As
you
as
the
councillor
rightly
said,
this
is
a
complex
puzzle.
There
is
no
one
solution
that
solves
it
all,
but
we
are
bringing
forward
proposals
to
council.
C
It's
in
our
work
plan,
which
will
be
discussed
at
a
subsequent
council
meeting,
provided
council
approves
a
budget
today
to
bring
forward
an
inclusionary
zoning
study
to
bring
four
recommendations
to
Council
that
will
have
to
be
included.
We
also
have
our
section
37
tools,
which
we
are
already
already
enabled
in
our
existing
Official
Plan.
We
can
go
further
on
that,
so
we
will
use
the
land-use
planning
tools
we
can
that
are
enabled
by
the
province
enables
us
to
use,
but
it
alone
won't
be
the
only
answer
this
is
has
to
go
beyond
anything.
B
C
The
timing
of
the
census
data
is
what
we
think
we're
going
to
see
in
the
census.
Data
is
that
our
historic
trend
may
have
changed
a
little
bit.
We
may
actually
have
had
more
increase,
but
in
this
last
round
then
we
would
have
projected
and
if
that's
the
case,
it
changes
the
projections
from
me
on
that
point,
because
it's
as
the
averaging
looks
at
it,
we
have
to
contemplate
a
bigger
population
growth,
that's
very
significant
that
census
data
is
really
important.
We
have
some
legislative
things.
C
We
need
to
do
to
meet
provincial
requirements
and
we
need
time
to
analyze
the
growth
options
to
put
them
in
front
of
council.
So
it
has
a
lot
to
do
with
getting
that
work,
projection,
work
done
and
the
staff
resources
required
to
do.
This
I
think
is
very
committed
to
moving
forward,
but
we
do
need
to
go
through
this
through
those
get
the
data
in.
So
we
can
make
evidence-based
decisions
right.
B
C
As
a
member
cherry,
what
we
discussed
in
council
attorneys
motion
helps
us
on
this.
Is
that
what
I've
committed
to
do
is
to
report
back
by
the
end
of
March,
with
an
acceleration
plan
with
the
resources
we
need
in
one
of
the
motions
proposes
a
source
of
funding
for
those
resources.
We
would
come
back
with
a
plan
and
I
do
need
to
sit
with
my
team
and
actually
construct
that
plan,
and
we
will
come
back
with
an
acceleration
appointment.
I.
A
C
C
Ottawa
next,
beyond
2036,
moved
by
Councillor
tammini,
it's
the
one
that
starts
where,
as
the
official
plan
as
a
foundational
document
motion
at
the
very
last
portion
of
that
the
second
last
be
it
resolved
actually,
the
last
to
be.
It
resolves
the
first
talks
about
breaking
official
plan
into
two
stages,
so
we
get
the
foundational
elements
done
as
quickly
as
possible
with
other
things
that
are
not
time-sensitive
pushed
further
back
and
then
the
second.
C
That
will
require
financial
resources
to
support
it
and
because
right
now,
as
you'll,
see
you'll
see
with
our
budget
as
it
comes
forward,
a
budget
is
based
on
our
existing
staff
and
resources.
It
does
not
have
additional
planning
resources
in
it
other
than
the
we
have
consulting
dollars
available
to
us
for
the
official
plan,
but
we
would
need
additional
resources.
Okay,.
C
The
end
of
March
I
mean
we
can
get
it
done
yeah.
We
will
come
back
to
you
with
the
updated
timetable.
We
do
need
your
permission
to
start
and
we
do
need
that
approval
today
if
we
wish
to
kickoff
as
we
intended,
but
we
will
bring
an
acceleration
schedule
back
based
on
the
two-part
strategy
and
we
will
bring
a
resourcing
strategy
to
use
well
because,
as
the
motions
indicate
there's
a
proposal
for
a
source
of
funding
available
to
us
and.
A
Great
because
whether
we
it's
from
our
delegations
or
whether
it's
from
the
counselors
around
the
table
or
comments,
we've
heard
elsewhere,
there's
a
number
of
variables
involved
here,
certainly
to
do
this
very
well,
because
it
matters
that
much,
but
certainly
be
cognizant
of
the
fact
that
we
are
a
four-year
term
and
with
the
largest
piece
of
work
that
we
will
do
with
regard
to
our
city
and
its
future.
So
I
don't
want
money
to
be
an
obstacle,
so
we're
going
to
I
know
that
we've
had
some
conversations
about
how
that
can
be
funded
and
I.
A
Think
that
we
need
to
further
the
conversation.
I
know
the
chair,
blade,
chair
of
Transportation
is
going
to
be
having
conversation
about
the
transportation
master
plan.
It
all
fits
together.
It
all
should
be
working
cohesively.
How
do
we
do
that
and
then
I
ask
you,
mr.
Willis?
How
can
you
assure
us
that
your
staff,
especially
if
we
find
a
way
to
fund
extra
staff
expertise?
A
How
can
we
be
assured
that
it'll
be
a
matter
of
plugging
in
the
information
you
get
from
census,
etc,
as
opposed
to
in
the
past?
From
time
to
time,
we've
been
in
situations
many
times
actually
where
the
process
was
well.
We
need
that
piece
and
we
can't
go
forward
on
that.
So
how
can
we
have
assurances
that
it
will
be
a
plug
in
as
opposed
to
a
you
know,
here's
what
we
heard.
This
is
what
we
promise
to
come
back
on,
and
this
is
what
the
census
says
and
plug
that
into
it.
C
Mnsure
has
indicated
mr.
Schmitt
and
I
will
go
back
to
our
teams.
We
will
go
construct,
a
acceleration
plan.
We
will
give
options
for
funding
to
do
that.
Acceleration
plan
to
present
that
to
you
so
I.
We
hear
you
loud
and
clear
that
there's
a
timing
pressure
that
we
get
our
foundational
elements
done
so
that
we
enable
other
projects
to
commence.
We
understand
that
that's
the
objective
so
that
our
work
is
done
so
that
the
other
pieces
can
begin.
Hear
you
loud
and
clear.
You.
A
Know
whether
it
be
the
LRT
to
bar
Haven
and
Kannada,
okay,
I
mean
we
can't
just
throw
out
there's
an
example,
but
we
need.
This
is
information
that
we
need
I
mean
we
need
the
big
big
picture,
but
for
those
people
that
are
counting
on
myself
included
people
using
transit,
the
only
way
that
we
are
going
to
see
our
numbers
go
up
significantly
is
if
we
give
people
the
transit
that
deserves
their
support
right
now,
that's
not
happening,
and
it's
not
happening
for
a
number
of
reasons,
but
I'm
not
laying
it
at
the
doorstep.
Mr.
A
C
C
Mr.
mark
can
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
the
development
charges
Act
does
permitted
to
use
for
certain
studies
that
relate
to
the
ultimate
deployment
of
capital
infrastructure,
so
that,
if
one
might
make
an
argument,
we
would
probably
need
to
be
assured
that
that
would
not
be
appealed.
Should
we
propose
to
do
that
so.
B
C
C
So,
provided
that
there
are
no
barriers
to
doing
it
in
the
legislation,
it
is
a
source
that
potentially
might
be
used
on
the
argument
that
this
foundational
work
supports
the
capital
investment
work.
We
will
be
doing
down
the
road
provided
there,
no
legal
barriers
which
we
need
to
assess.
We
could
include
the
draw
in
the
DC
by
law.
We
are
adopting
in
May,
provided
that's
viable.
C
B
I'm
sure
I
looked
ahead
to
the
budget
for
this
committee
as
well,
and
in
that
budget
it
seems
like
we're
allocating
for
the
next
several
years,
five
hundred
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
annually
within
the
capital
budget
towards
the
development
of
the
O
P.
So
with
the
discussion
that
councilor
blade
has
commenced
here,
how
does
how
does
that
at
five
hundred
thousand
dollars?
It's
already
that's
Vegas,
that's
new
in
the
capital
budget.
How
does
that
jive
with
what
we're
discussing
now
at
an
accelerated
timeframe,
because
I
think
that
goes
out
to
2024
so.
C
The
deputy
city
treasurer
could
assist
me
in
this,
but
in
the
power
the
practice
has
been
that
council
puts
aside
money
to
to
bring
forward
any
official
plan
interview
in
the
through
the
capital
budget
in
the
different
cycles
as
they
come
up.
That's
that's
anticipated
in
the
long
long
range
financial
planning
elements,
that's
where
we
traditionally
done
it.
C
What
I
understand
the
question
I'm
being
asked
by
committee
today
is:
can
we
go
beyond
that
in
order
to
accelerate
it
and
find
sources
other
than
that
for
this
and
I
think
the
indication
I'm
getting
is
looking
at
non
tax
or
tsa's,
because
our
budget
will
be
set
today
provided
and
ultimately,
council
approves
committee's
decision
today?
Lots.
We
look
in
non
non
text
supported
okay,
but
we.
B
C
A
So,
thank
you,
everybody!
Thank
you,
everyone
in
the
audience.
So
on
the
motion
on
Ottawa
next
beyond
2036,
one
that
planning
committee
recommend
council
received
the
ottawa
next
beyond
2036
report
attached
is
document
one.
The
planning
committee
recommend
that
council
approved
the
work
plan
for
a
new
city
of
ottawa
official
plan,
which
is
to
be
completed
by
the
end
of
2021.
A
The
planning
committee
recommend
council
appointed
counselor
sponsors
group,
comprising
the
chairs
and
vice
chairs
planning
and
the
agriculture
and
well
Affairs
committees
to
serve
as
a
champions
for
the
official
plan
review
project,
as
described
in
this
report,
and
we
have
a.
We
have
an
amendment
to
that.
B
A
B
Great
thank
you.
Madam
chair
I
was
just
clarifying
that
25-year
planning
horizon.
So
therefore,
the
result
that
planning
committee
recommend
the
councillors
read.
The
general
manager
of
the
planning
infrastructure
and
economic
development
to
requested
minister
of
municipal
Affairs
and
housing
to
use,
has
use
his
powers
under
Section
4.5
of
the
provincial
policy
statement
to
pre
authorize
the
city
to
complete
the
official
plan
on
the
basis
that
the
25-year
planning
horizon
and
via
for
the
result
that
the
Planning
Committee
recommend
me.
Council
direct.
B
The
mayor
on
behalf
of
City
Council
I'll,
write
to
local
members
of
provincial
legislature
to
solicit
support
for
cancers
request
for
along
the
planning
horizon
via
further
resolved
that
the
planning
committee
recommended
council
direct.
The
plan
committee
chair
actively
seek
meetings
with
Ottawa's
political
ministers
and
Ministry
of
municipal
affairs
in
advance
of
councils
request
to
extend
the
planning
horizon
to
the
request
by
the
City
Council
and
the
chair.
If
they're
paid
to
report
to
committee,
as
steps
were
taken
to
achieve
a
longer
planning
rise
before.
A
A
C
Happen
think,
yes,
sorry
did
you
compare
us
to
other
major
cities?
Calgary
has
a
30-year
point
and
a
60
year
planning
horizon
for
major
infrastructure.
Edmonton
is
not
picking
an
end
date,
they're
picking
a
planning
horizon
of
reaching
2
million
population
and
remember
they're
about
the
same
size
as
we
are
today.
Winnipeg
has
a
25-year
planning
horizon.
Vancouver
has
a
20
year.
C
Planning
horizon
in
Toronto
has
a
30
year
planning
horizon,
so
it
does
seem
odd
that
otherwise
limited
right
now
to
20
years
in
the
principal
system,
and
there
is
a
mechanism
in
the
PPS
for
the
minister
to
improve
approval,
longer
horizon
and
that's
the
basis
of
the
motion.
We
think
we
should
be
treated
the
same
as
other
big
cities
and.
C
Chose
Council:
this
term
is
faced
with
some
significant
commitments
to
major
infrastructure
investments,
particularly
in
light
rail
transit
in
phase
ultimately
phase
3.
If
you
want
to
deploy
an
amortized
costs
through
mechanisms
like
development
charges,
you
need
to
have
a
planning
horizon
that
allows
you
to
do
that.
So,
if
you
this
would
enable
council
to
make
major
infrastructure
decisions,
not
to
mention
you
can't
decide
to
do
major
trunk
infrastructure
or
transit
infrastructure
without
thinking
a
long
term.
C
B
A
B
Therefore,
B
was
all
just
go
to
the
total
advancing
the
review
process.
Therefore,
B
result
that
the
task
with
Malstrom
flow,
as
outlined
in
the
report,
Theory
alliant.
So
the
analysis
of
the
urban
land
requirements
to
meet
the
projected
2046
housing
employment
needs
and
the
criteria
by
which
the
land
was
selected.
Comprised
of
the
courthouse
for
the
affair.
B
The
Planning
Committee
recommend
the
council
direct,
the
general
manager
of
planning
infrastructure
and
economic
development
to
provide
a
revised
schedule
for
the
official
plan
review
and
planning
committee
by
the
and
cue
2019.
He
won
2019.
Okay!
Thank
you
master,
yes,
one.
This
is
a
related
to
the
addition
of
the
chosen
Stan
canoes
environmental
protection.
Wastewater
management.
Official
plan
sponsor
group
there
for
a
few
result
that
the
planning
committee
recommend
that
council
had
the
chairs
of
the
standing
committees
for
the
environmental
protection,
water
and
wastewater
management
to
the
councillor
sponsor
group
before
the
official
planners
review.
B
A
Okay,
okay,
anything
else,
another
does
anyone.
Then
let
me
see
anything
mr.
mark
done.
Everything
I
believe.
A
A
A
I
am
asking
that
the
coffee
etcetera
be
refreshed,
and
there
is
a
box
of
chocolate-covered
cookies
that
I
have
had
in
my
fridge
since
Christmas
I
did
not
make
them
the
decent,
though
in
case
you're,
starving,
okay,
anyone
that's
allowed
in
there
I
just
want
to
say
mr.
Willis
before
you
leave,
because
that's
what
I
wanted
to
say
truly
fantastic
work
to
you
and
your
team.
You
have
a
very
large
team,
we're
just
at
the
beginning
of
the
process
and
we're
all
excited
now.
A
A
A
A
A
Net
number
is
seven
hundred
thirty
six
thousand,
and
it's
mostly
cost-of-living
changes
and
the
reduction
in
the
patio
fees
in
for
planning
services
is
a
net
change
of
twenty
five
thousand.
There
is
in
there
and
increase
to
do
the
cost
of
living,
and
it's
also
offset
with
increases
in
fees
in
that
area.
The
long-range
planning
of
financial
planning,
a
net
increase
of
three
hundred
ten
thousand,
that.
A
It
so
it
is
a
net
zero
that
one
is
on
a
cost
recovery
basis
for
affordable
housing.
You
will
see
six
point:
five
million
contribution,
its
one-time
contribution
to
capital,
there's
no
capital
project;
that's
actually
been
set
up
for
it.
It's
a
cut,
just
a
contribution
to
the
reserves,
waiting
to
see
what
other
funding
may
come
in
from
other
levels
of
government
to
figure
out
what
we
will
be
doing
with
those
funds
and
she'll
USB
to
it
a
little
bit
more.
A
C
So
on
the
planning,
infrastructure
and
economic
development
component
is
budget.
Ms
Van
Buskirk
will
talk
about
the
affordable
housing
component
of
it.
We
did
is,
as
the
deputy
treasurer
indicated,
account
for
potential
contract
settlements
and
changes.
The
big
significant
change
to
our
budget.
Everything
is
largely
a
stamp
at
budget
with
inflationary
increases.
The
big
change
is
$150,000
to
increase
the
Heritage
Grant
program,
a
total
budget
now
$300,000
a
year.
This
is
based
on
a
program
review
and
project
take-up,
because
we
understand
the
incentives
we
have
today
are
not
sufficient
there.
C
We
will
be
bringing
forward
further
recommendations
for
criteria
and
this,
but
right
now
are
contemplating
a
$10,000
for
small-scale
residential
projects
and
$25,000
for
large-scale
projects,
and
it
will
continue
to
operate
as
a
matching
grant.
There's
also
a
one-time
funding
commitment
for
the
continuation
of
the
building,
better,
revitalize
neighborhoods
project
of
$250,000,
and
we
will
complete
the
instructions
from
the
previous
term
of
council
on
the
priority
neighborhoods,
the
three
that
were
identified
by
the
last
council
and
this
money
would
be
spent
in
completing
those
components.
B
The
6.5
million
in
additional
funding
for
new,
affordable
housing
development
as
part
of
the
15
million
investment
that
the
mayor
announced
at
the
taping
of
the
budget
on
February
6
I'd
like
to
acknowledge
the
leadership
of
council
in
regards
to
this
unprecedented
capital,
investment
of
10
million
of
which
is
new
funding.
In
addition
to
the
surplus
lands
that
we'll
make
available,
we
hope
to
double
the
amount
of
units
that
were
able
to
approve
on
its
own,
it
resulting
the
proof
of
approximately
125
units
by
leveraging
other
federal
and
provincial
funding.
B
Here
we
go
to
the
capital
budget,
highlights
you
see
on
the
top
low
top
road,
the
investment
in
affordable
housing
at
four
point-
eight
million
for
this
year.
Four
point:
six
million
of
that
four
point:
eight
million
is
funding
that
we
see
from
the
investing
in
affordable
housing
program
which
ran
from
2014
to
2020.
This
program
is
a
sunsetting
at
the
end
of
by
fiscal
2020.
This
4.6
million
is
supplemented
by
two
hundred
and
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
in
funding
from
the
reserve
for
project
contains
contingency
and
fee
relief.
B
C
The
other
capital
components.
The
first
is
the
land
management
solution,
which
is
our
major
IT
backbone
of
all
of
the
development
approvals
process
across
the
department.
The
system
we're
working
on
today
is
antiquated
in
and
is
at
the
end
of
its
lifecycle
for
support
from
its
vendor.
The
new
system
will
deal
with
building
code,
services,
planning,
right
away
and
committee
of
adjustment.
C
We
completed
the
procurement
process
for
phase
one
of
the
project
and
we
anticipate
a
contract
award
in
quarter
two
of
this
year
and
the
first
phase
will
deal
with
Building,
Code
Services
and
replace
its
systems
for
managing
all
of
its
applications.
The
final
component
is
the
Official
Plan
I.
Think
we've
talked
at
length
today
about
that.
So
if
there
are
any
questions,
I'm
happy
to
address
that,
but
two
questions
realized
by
councillor
Menard
earlier
that
money
goes
to
primarily
public
and
Community
Engagement,
the
population,
employment
projections,
the
GIS
information.
C
C
A
A
Affordable
housing
project,
4.6
million
coming
from
the
iah
fund
and
then
the
contribution
to
the
land
management
solutions
coming
from
building
codes
also
considered
through
revenue,
because
it's
building
codes
is
covered
by
revenue,
and
so
that's
the
most
significant
portion.
92%
is
coming
from
revenue
for
this
capital
capital
budget.
B
The
4.8
million
dollars
that
was
mentioned
in
the
previous
slide
from
the
investment
affordable
housing
program
which
a
sunsetting
will
be
invested
this
year
in
housing
subsidies,
both
let
supplements
and
housing
allowances
are
antennae,
otário'
renovates
program,
which
provides
grants
and
low-cost
loans
to
seniors
and
people
with
disabilities
for
accessibility,
related
modification
and
minor
home
repairs.
However,
in
that
4.8
million
there
is
one
point:
1,
7
million
for
new,
affordable
housing
development,
the
2019,
affordable
housing
funding
is
subject
to
adult
development
and
approval
of
the
capital
repair
plan.
We
have
a
spending
plan.
B
We
are
waiting
details
of
new
federal
and
provincial
funding
that
we
hope
to
hear
post.
The
first
budget
of
this
sound
new
provincial
government
at
that
time
will
bring
that
plan
to
committee
and
council
and
I'll
talk
about
what
our
investments
wait.
Maybe
we
may
allocate
money,
obviously
through
an
expression
of
interest,
and/or
a
formal
RFP
process.
It
will
also
include
information
on
the
surplus
lands
at
several
federal,
provincial
and
DAHS
city.
That
will
be
including
thank
you.
A
A
B
B
B
A
project
called
building
community
together,
which
was
established
to
address
the
rapid
development
in
gentrification
of
West
Center
town
and
to
advocate
for
the
retention
and
expansion
of
affordable
housing
in
our
area.
As
I
begin,
I
would
like
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
the
city
for
the
following.
Firstly,
for
obviously
the
recent
announcement.
B
B
A
B
We're
thrilled
to
hear,
as
announced
by
the
mayor
at
the
budget,
presentation,
that
one
of
the
sites
is
in
our
catchment
area
on
Albert
Street,
located
near
Tennessee
station
and
site
of
the
future
Central
Library.
This
is
a
very
promising
commitment
and
we
urge
the
city
to
continue
on
this
trajectory
and
ensure
that
this
Tod
is
affordable
to
those
living
in
poverty
in
our
community.
This
includes
housing
for
the
diversity
of
our
community,
including
seniors
and
families
with
young
children.
B
Speaking
as
a
resident
of
West
Center
town,
affordable
housing
is
a
serious
concern
for
our
community.
The
City
of
Ottawa,
more
broadly,
is
facing
a
housing
crisis
with
increasing
demands
on
the
shelter
system,
transitional
housing
and
limited,
affordable
housing
for
our
neighbors
living
in
poverty,
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
Peter,
so
our
community
has
40
percent
of
its
residents,
making
under
twenty
thousand
dollars
a
year
and
spending
in
excess
of
30
percent,
sometimes
fifty
percent
of
their
income
on
housing.
The
federal.
B
Affordable
rate
for
persons
working
under
twenty
thousand
dollars
a
year
would
be
500
immense,
but
the
average
rent
for
is
one
thousand
one
hundred
and
thirty
three
dollars
a
month.
More
than
double
our
neighbors
are
having
to
make
impossible
decisions
between
the
necessities
of
life
like
shelter,
food
and
utilities.
For
those
who
are
needed
to
find
housing,
the
situation
is
dire,
they'd
are
before
shelter
just
closed
and
emergency
shelters
are
overflowing.
B
As
our
homeless,
family
population
increases
in
West,
Center
town
near
seeing
rapid
development
of
the
some
of
these
developments
will
provide
affordable
housing,
including
purpose-built
rental
housing.
Vast
majority
of
new
construction
projects
are
aimed
at
middle
and
upper
income.
Households
may
be
a
leasing,
affordable
rental
units
at
the
other
end
of
the
pipeline.
If
you
do
not
invest
substantially
in
affordable
housing
in
our
community,
the
diversity
and
affordability
of
our
community
will
be
revenue,
Billy
changed
so,
along
with
65
of
the
organization's
networks
and
coalition's
from
across
Ottawa.
B
We
are
calling
on
the
city
to
address
the
affordable
housing
crisis
with
the
following
asks.
One
maintain
this
15
million
dollars
in
the
final
2019
budget
and
ensure
the
following
developments,
sir,
and
they
share
the
following
in
the
development
of
afraid
of
the
housing
to
pass
a
strong
citywide
inclusionary
zoning
bylaw
that
issues
that
25%
of
new
development
is
dedicated
to
affordable
housing
in
places.
B
A
special
emphasis
on
DP,
affordable
housing
within
one
kilometer
of
rapid
transit
stations
through
ensure
that
all
available
government
in
one
kilometer
of
curved
future
rapid
transit
stations
is
used
for
nonprofit
and
co-op
housing
and
for
create
a
2019
to
2020
to
10.
If
council
priority
that
integrates,
transit
and
planning
with
clear,
affordable.
A
A
B
Name
is
Aaron
Anders
I'm
from
Ottawa
and
I'm,
a
member
of
the
healthy
transportation
coalition
I'm
concerned
about
the
housing
crisis
that
Ottawa
is
facing
with
only
a
1%
vacancy
rate.
Our
study
should
make
sure
that
people
living
on
low
incomes
have
access
to
affordable
housing.
New
rapid
transit
stations,
I
grew
up
in
Ottawa,
but
I
went
away
for
university
and
moving
back
to
Ottawa
for
graduate
school.
B
My
scholarships
and
ta
positions
supported
me
through
my
masters,
but
I
started
to
find
a
good
job
upon
graduation
I'm,
currently
paying
much
more
than
1/3
of
income.
That's
deemed
affordable
for
housing.
My
rent
costs
me
more
than
half
of
my
monthly
income
I've
considered
moving
further
into
the
suburbs
or
into
a
smaller
apartment,
but
the
market
is
worse
than
it
was
when
I
found
this
place
two
years
ago,
a
smaller
apartment.
B
More
than
140
people
rallied
outside
this
building
to
demand
that
the
city
address
the
affordable
housing
crisis,
more
than
140
people
show
in
the
snow
and
in
the
cold
at
9
a.m.
on
a
weekday
to
demonstrate.
This
is
in
addition
to
the
more
than
60
organizations
that
work
to
the
city
and
the
mayor
and
the
100
M.
Sorry,
the
1600
people
who
signed
a
related
petition
residents
from
every
single
otto
award,
including
246
constituents
of
the
city
councillors
that
are
on
this
committee.
B
We
were
encouraged
by
the
mayor's
draft
budget
commitment
to
dedicate
15
million
dollars
towards
building
new,
affordable
housing.
The
Planning
Committee
must
now
act
to
make
this
a
reality.
Specifically.
What
those
1,600
who
signed
the
petition
voiced
their
support
for
is
that
the
City
of
Ottawa
passed
a
strong
citywide
inclusionary
zoning
bylaw
that
ensures
can
I
go
to
the
next
slide.
B
Over
and
above
federal
and
provincial
grants
to
to
build
new,
affordable
housing.
These
measures
are
needed
to
address
the
housing
crisis
and
to
ensure
that
all
residents
can
access
adequate
and
affordable
housing.
They
needed
to
reduce
transit
poverty
by
ensuring
that
those
who
rely
on
transit
can
afford
to
live
near
it
and
they're
required
to
promote
vibrant
communities
by
integrating
affordable
housing
with
private
housing,
avoiding
ghettos
and
assuring
ensuring
that
everyone
can
access,
transit
people
who
can
get
around
on
the
bus
can
go
to
work.
B
They
can
go
to
school
or
volunteer
opportunities,
they
can
access
food
and
medical
professionals
and
they
can
get
involved
with
their
communities
through
recreation
through
faith
or
other
interest
groups.
The
City
of
Ottawa
has
an
equity
and
inclusion
lens
that
should
be
applied
in
all
its
areas
of
work.
It
is
meant
to
be
applied,
but
it
has
no
teeth.
So
each
of
you
has
to
think
about
what
this
means
for
you.
As
members
of
this
committee,
we
need
to
make
an
equitable
and
inclusive
City
where
affordable,
housing
near
Rapid
Transit
is
prioritized.
B
You
have
a
responsibility
to
ensure
that
Ottawa
is
an
equitable
and
inclusive
City.
Housing
and
transit
are
critical
for
environmental,
social
and
economic
planning.
Fair
city
as
the
decision-makers,
you
cannot
afford
to
miss
this
opportunity
to
invest
in
our
people.
Finally,
I
wanted
to
thank
councillor.
B
Cavanaugh
I,
don't
see
right
over
there,
hello
for
bringing
up
the
gender
question
about
the
Official
Plan
presentation
earlier
and
I'd
like
to
know
if
you
and
any
other
councillors
who
would
be
interested
would
be
willing
to
meet
with
me
and
other
members
of
the
healthy
transportation
coalition,
possibly
some
of
our
organizational
members,
including
the
city
of
for
all,
wish
City
for
Women's
Initiative
and
maybe
apron
to
discuss
how
that
lens.
How
that
focus
on
gender
gender
can
be
applied
more
broadly.
B
As
we
developer
choices
with
the
budgets
and
we're
going
to
have
over
the
coming
years,
I
know
it's
desirable
to
have
housing
units
near
transit.
It's
also
desirable
to
have
a
lot
more
housing
units,
so
I'm
wondering
if
you
could
have
either
10v
housing
units
away
from
transit
or
seven
right
beside
transit,
which
would
you
pick
that's
a
very
difficult
question
for
me
to
answer
as
it's
difficult
for
me
to
answer
to
this
one.
C
B
Can
only
represent
myself
sadness,
I
would
say:
I
would
choose
to
build
seven
more
units
closer
to
transit,
because
there
are
so
many
people
who
rely
on
transit
to
get
to
the
very
important
destinations.
That
I
spoke
about
in
my
presentation,
who
don't
have
the
option
of
using
a
private
vehicle
to
get
around
and
if
they're
too
far
from
transit
to
make
use
of
that
them
are
very
limited
in
what
aspects
of
city
life
they
can
participate
in,
so
they
may
be
limited
to
a
very
small
radius.
Thank
you.
A
Okay
in
late
breaking
news
from
Council
Reaper,
who
is
not
behaving,
he
says
it
looks
like
the
site
plan
stuff
went
through
easy
peasy.
There
were
one
things
about
consultation
that
my
folks
are
sophisticated.
He
said:
I
wanted
to
be
there
to
support
it.
I
said:
will
you
relax?
I
know
it's
not
in
your
deal.
I
said:
how
are
you
he
said?
I
am
excellent.
I
want
to
go
shovel
a
bike
lane.
A
B
B
I
make
some
mistake:
oh
he's
forgiven.
My
name
is
Mohit
Khan
and
I'm
here
today,
as
a
member
at
making
versus
kind.
Where
can
I
start
work
with
City
decision
makers
to
create
a
city
for
all?
It
is
driven
by
residents.
The
coalition
of
community
health
and
Resource
Center
City
for
Rea
initiative.
The
community
partners
I,
would
like
to
express
my
red
children
to
City
Council
for
committing
to
15
million
to
create
more
affordable
housing,
I'm
hoping
that
they'll
reduce
the
wait
time
for
the
social
housing
and
hate
many
say
they
may
be
late
myself.
B
Which
I
pay
full
rent
when
man
is
too
small
to
fit
even
a
similar
sized
mattress
I
shall
one
way
with
my
daughter
and
have
no
privacy.
We
went
way
up
last
year
and
this
year
more
than
PSU
it
cost
title
inhaler
2090
my
kids
work
part
time
I
go
to
school
full-time.
They
help
pay
for
me
for
five
afternoon
and
have
to
pay
for
their
bus
passes
and
tuition
fees
to
the
food
price
has
gone
up
too.
I
am
a
a
DSP
okay,
a
half
of
my
income
point
and
the
kids.
B
Hey
where's,
the
money
left
I
will
pay
for
food
and
community
pass
I
understand.
Community
pathways
will
go
up
this
year.
It
is
so
hard
to
make
ended.
I
have
to
use
feedback,
I
feel
very
stretched
by
the
and
after
every
meal,
and
only
I
know
what
stretch
knees.
Just
like
a
hole,
a
small
blanket
all
me
and
the
men,
cold
weather,
I.
B
Live
in
the
poetry
situation
in
part,
because
to
tell
you
that
I
knew
because
sacrifices
65
is
that
that
is,
sharing
and
put
your
only
aside
to
put
healthy
food
on
the
table
for
my
children
and
the
other
thing
is
fear.
Fear
what,
if,
whenever
a
child
lived
a
job?
What
if
there
is
something
unexpected
in
my
life?
What
if
there's
something
I
health
care
that
I
is
not
colored,
so
my
ask
is
like
we
are
not
asking
for
the
dream
house.
We
are
asking
for
the
houses
that
people
like
me
can
live
peacefully.
A
B
Yeah
sure
yeah
it's
a
last-minute
change
that
I
have
decided
to
co-present,
so
I'm,
working
with
Howie
and
I.
My
name
is
Tony,
I'm,
sorry
and
particularly
working
on
making
voices
count
project.
So
on
the
ask
so
a
very
clear
up
at
the
previous,
because
we
really
want
to
ensure
a
59
capital
funding
is
in
the
final
budget
and
also
to
ensure
25
percent
of
new
performance
is
dedicated
to
a
float,
housing
and
I'm.
B
B
You
chair,
thank
you
both
for
coming
out
it's
nice
to
see
you
remember
if
you
could
just
give
us
a
sense
of
we've
heard
about
your
housing
costs
and
what
that
means
to
raising
a
family
and
how
you're
able
to
to
cope
there
today.
Can
you
cut
the
lawn
and
just
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
cost
to
you
for
getting
around
the
city,
whether
you
draw
or
take
transit
or
walk?
You
find
that
difficult
to
do.
B
B
B
Okay,
and
how
much
does
that
cost
you
$33.32
implements
and
for
you
and
for
your
kids
there's
the
hair,
you
put
us
$58
something
and
how
many,
how
many
kids
for
so
58
times,
four
plus
43,
so
you're
spending
about
$250
a
month
just
to
let's
do
just
to
travel
it's
up
to
77
she's,
the
mathematician
I
guess,
but
it's
yeah,
so
that
adds
a
log
on
to
your
cost
too.
B
B
You
very
much
for
your
presentation,
I
think
this
really
gives
us
a
reality
check
of
what
it's
like
to
to
get
by
day
by
day
and
as
a
as
a
single
mother
with
four
children
in
your
household.
It's
pretty
clear
that
affordable
housing
is
is
a
big
priority,
especially
with
the
waiting
lists,
so
I'm
very
grateful
that
the
council
is
going
to
make
that
a
priority.
I
am
the
special
liaison
person
for,
and
gender
equity
and
women's
issues.
B
It
is
simply
me
would
you
say
that
how
housing
is
proper,
your
biggest
problem?
Yes,
it
is
very
because
I
can't
afford
a
rent.
Do
you
have
to
do
with
child
care
as
well?
Okay,
no,
no!
No,
not
now
18!
That
is
a
no
living
asam
and
Joan
system.
Okay.
Alright.
Thank
you
very,
very
much
for
your
presentation.
I
think
it's
very
beautiful.
B
B
Thank
you
very
much,
madam
chair.
My
name
is
Ray
Sullivan
I'm,
the
executive
director
of
C
Co
C.
We
are
the
largest
private
nonprofit
landlord
in
the
City
of
Ottawa,
renting
out
close
to
1600,
affordable
homes
to
2500
people
and
around
50
properties
in
downtown
David
is
in
Ottawa
I'm.
Also
chair
of
the
board
of
Catco,
which
is
the
only
nonprofit
Development
Corporation
in
the
City
of
Ottawa
I'm
here
to
to
commend
you
and
the
rest
of
council
and
the
mayor
in
particular
on
the
commitment,
415
million
dollars
of
new
funding
for
housing
capital.
B
It's
an
investment
that
I
and
others
have
been
calling
for
for
many
years
and
here's
why
it's
important
and
why
it's
important
right
now
that
the
Steven
Welles's
slide
earlier
this
morning
said
the
shape
of
the
city.
Will
change
and
LRT
is
going
to
be
one
of
the
drivers
that
changes
the
shape
of
our
city.
So
we
have
an
opportunity
to
make
sure
that
that
new
shape
is
inclusive
and
balanced
and
includes
homes
for
a
wide
range
of
incomes.
To
do
this,
the
city
is
going
to
have
to
deploy
a
number
of
tools.
B
Funding
for
affordable
housing
is
crucial,
but
it
can't
be
the
only
tool
because
it's
not
just
about
affordable
housing.
It's
about
housing,
affordability.
So,
let's
look
at
how
some
of
those
dense
new
neighborhoods
will
develop
around
around
transit
stations.
We
need
inclusionary
zoning.
We
need
inclusionary
zoning
to
produce
a
modest
level
of
affordability,
especially
where
the
development
includes
intensification
and
I'm
pleased
to
see
the
city
is
taking
the
initial
steps
in
that
direction,
but
inclusionary
zoning
is
not
going
to
produce
deeply
affordable
or
below
market
rate
housing.
B
So
using
these
tools
together
to
build
new,
dense
communities
near
transit.
What's
it
going
to
produce?
Well,
mostly,
it's
going
to
produce
market
made
homes
and
that's
okay.
You
know
we
need
our
private
sector
developers
about
the
capital
and
the
expertise
to
ensure
that
growth,
but
it's
also
going
to
create
some
modestly
affordable
market
rate
homes,
also
some
nonprofit
housing
at
average,
or
slightly
below
average
market
rents
and
some
more
deeply
affordable
housing.
B
One
final
piece
of
the
puzzle
to
make
sure
we're
using
that
fifteen
million
dollars
most
strategically
integrators
effect.
It
is
a
fantastic
opportunity
that
we
have
right
now
in
this
term
of
council.
We
heard
some
of
it
earlier
this
morning.
It's
an
opportunity
to
take
a
whole
of
city
approach
to
address
housing.
Affordability,
I'm
very
excited,
madam
chair
about
the
official
plan
review
yeah,
a
fantastic
opportunity
for
us
all
in
this
city,
coupling
that,
with
the
transportation
master
plan,
I'm
glad
to
see
it's
going
to
be
a
more
complete
review
and
and
very
quickly.
B
This
spring,
the
Refresh
of
the
10-year
plan
on
housing
and
homelessness
at
city
staff
undertaken
and
I
in
my
affordable
housing
colleagues
are
very
excited
to
work
with
Shelley
Van
Buskirk
and
her
team
to
to
expand
our
work
in
that
area.
The
important
thing
is
to
connect
those
dots,
because
all
of
those
decisions
in
each
of
those
areas
are
going
to
have
an
impact
on
housing,
affordability
across
the
city.
B
So
we
are
also,
as
many
writers
have
today,
asking
you
to
make
affordable
housing
near
transit,
a
term
of
council
priority,
so
the
policy
direction
is
there
to
connect
those
things
and
if
I
have
just
one
more
minute,
I
want
to
answer
councillors.
Rally's
question
from
earlier
this
morning
about
affordable
housing
units
away
from
transit
or
closer
to
transit
unit.
Increasingly,
researchers
who
look
at
affordable
housing
are
not
just
looking
at
housing
costs,
they're,
combining
housing
and
transportation
costs.
B
So
yes,
that
home
in
Rockland
might
cost
you
$50,000
less
to
buy,
but
suddenly
you're
going
to
need
to
become
a
two-car
family
and
maintain
two
vehicles
and
when
you
add
those
costs
together,
it
starts
to
change
those
decisions.
So
the
decisions
that
we
make
about
how
we
rezone
and
how
we
plan
our
transportation
infrastructure
are
also
decisions
that
we're
making
about
where
housing
becomes,
affordable,
less
affordable
or
more
affordable.
So
I
encourage
you
to
connect
those
dots
with
us
and
build
that
city
together.
B
A
B
For
your
presentation,
mr.
Sullivan
I
wanted
to
talk
to
you
about
the
nature
of
the
housing
funding
in
this
budget.
It's
it's
largely
one-time
funding
and
I.
Don't
know
if
there's
a
better
expert
in
the
room
than
you
to
explain
to
us
how
pressure
is
only
going
to
increase
on
the
housing
sector
as
we
wind
down
those
social
operating
agreements,
the
federal
provincial
level.
B
Can
you
explain
what
kind
of
pressure
is
coming
on
horrible
housing
in
the
next
decade
or
so
that
we
need
to
address
and
why
one-time
funding
isn't
really
enough
to
to
start
addressing
that
yeah
one
time?
Funding
for
2019,
of
course,
is
a
good
start,
but
we
have
to
look
ahead
toward
the
rest
of
the
term
of
council
and
beyond,
and
for
the
past
45
years,
we've
largely
relied
on
funding
from
the
federal
provincial
government
to
create
new,
affordable
housing.
B
Much
of
that
is
tied
up
in
past
commitments
that
are
not
going
to
create
new
housing,
but
they
do
create
new,
affordable
opportunities
for
some
households,
but
that
program
itself
is
set
to
decline
over
the
next
couple
years,
as
the
federal
government
puts
a
greater
priority
on
on
portable
housing
benefits
delivered
directly
to
households
rather
than
creating
new
housing
supply
and
in
the
city
like
Ottawa,
with
a
very
low
vacancy
rate.
It's
a
supply
problem
that
we
have
so
we
have
to
make
sure
that
their
supply
answers
in
that
solution.
B
Your
presentation
rate
I've
heard
three
themes
from
all
the
speakers.
One
is
the
investment
that
you
see
in
this
year's
budget
is
good,
but
needs
to
continue
attention
to
inclusion,
Aires
owning
attention
to
transit
as
a
important
consideration
for
where
we're
locating
I've
known
you
for
20
years
and
you've
seen
how
the
city
has
made
investments
or
distributed
money.
But
where
do
you
see
other
opportunities
beyond
this
big
three
themes
of
how
we
can
spend
money
smarter
when
we're
investing
in
building
housing
and
housing?
Affordability,
yeah
I
thought
it's
a
Thank
You
councillor
gala.
B
It's
not
just
a
question
of
spending
money,
smarter!
It's
a
question
of
building
the
city
smarter.
So
this
is
why
I'm
so
excited
about
the
Official
Plan
review
is
those
kinds
of
decisions
that
we
make.
I
give
you
an
example:
an
existing
official
plan.
The
city
sets
aspirational
targets
for
affordability,
but
25%
of
new
rental
units
are
affordable
to
people
at
the
30th
income.
Percentile
25%
of
homeownership
units
are
affordable
to
people
at
before
deaath
income
presenta.
B
We
have
modest
targets,
we're
talking
about
households
between
55
and
$70,000,
a
year
of
annual
income
that
hasn't
had
the
actual
power
to
do
anything
about
those
aspirational
targets.
Inclusionary
zoning
is
an
opportunity
to
do
that.
We
were
talking
about
intensification,
we're
talking
about
up
zoning
when
we
up
zone
a
property,
we're
literally
creating
value
out
of
that
property
out
of
thin
air.
So
what
can
the
city
do
an
exchange
with
those
owners
to
try
and
read
some
of
its
goals
around
housing,
affordability?
B
There
are
lots
of
exchanges
there,
but
don't
necessarily
take
city
funding
or
city
grants
to
take
advantage
of.
So
when
we
started
looking
at
housing,
affordability
for
multiple
income
segments,
we
said:
okay,
we're
very
low
incomes.
Yes,
we
need
funding.
We
need
nonprofit
housing,
modest
incomes.
Maybe
good
planning
decisions
would
do
the
trick,
no
middle
incomes.
B
Creek,
thank
you,
madam
chair,
and
a
great
presentation
by
the
way
and
I
think
you're
hearing
a
lot
of
the
people
participating
in
the
discussion.
I
love
the
talk
around
inclusionary
zoning,
but
just
to
get
back
to
when
you
were
talking
about
councilors,
really
answering
his
question.
I
didn't
really
show
the
answer.
B
So
if,
for
example,
you
had
the
opportunity
of
10
houses
in
wonderful,
downtown
bar
Haven,
2
kilometers
from
transit
versus
7
downtown
or
on
directly
on
a
transit
station,
is
your
preference
about
getting
more
units
and
getting
people
into
them,
or
is
that
I
understand
the
the
economies
of
scale
and
looking
at
the
additional
items
you
would
have
to
have
but
I'm
just
looking
from
yourself
in
your
group?
What
would
they
prefer
pretend
you're
sitting
around
this
table?
B
B
You
very
much
for
your
presentation.
I
know,
you've
done
a
lot
of
work
in
terms
of
making
affordable
housing
possible
in
our
community
and
obviously,
we've
got
a
lot
to
work
on
in
the
future.
My
question
has
been
about
the
gender
lens
and
I'm,
just
asking
you
from
your
personal
experience
in
terms
of
working
in
this
field,
what
you've
observed
and
how
we
can
do
better
on
that.
B
Just
in
your
experience,
I
also
have
the
honor
of
chairing
the
board
of
directors
of
the
Ottawa
social
housing
registry,
which
is
the
independent
nonprofit
that
manages
the
centralized
waiting
lists
on
behalf
of
the
city,
and
we
look
at
the
statistics
on
the
social
housing
waiting
list.
You
see,
obviously
how
poverty
and
housing
affordability
affects
women
differently,
and
there
is
a
large
difference
in
in
terms
of
women
versus
men
applying
to
the
waiting
list.
Particularly,
you
could
see
the
effect
of
single
and
single-parent
families,
I
female-led,
single-parent
families
on
the
waiting
or
so
so.
B
Great
and
thank
you
very
much
for
your
presentation.
It
was
very
informative,
as
well
as
the
people
that
come
before
you
I
have
a
question.
We
talked
about:
affordable
housing,
there's
a
wide
variation
on
whether
for
boys.
My
question
is:
what
is
the
level
that
you
think
like?
What
is
that
for
the
housing
that
the
City
of
Ottawa
needs
most?
If
we
were
to
direct
funding?
What
is
it
that
we're
really
really
lock
him
in
and
then
how
do
we
start
addressing
those
other
levels
as
we
go
and
the
question
around
housing?
B
Affordability
is
always
affordable
to
whom
and
that's
what
it
really
comes
down
to.
But
the
thing
is,
there
is
one
housing
market.
You
know
whether
it's
households
on
on
the
lower
end
of
the
income
spectrum
of
households
on
the
higher
income
spectrum.
It
is
one
markets,
there's
a
lot
of
pressure
right
now
on
apartments
rental
apartments
that
are
in
the
middle
of
the
range
you've
got
people
who
can't
afford
those
apartments
trying
to
find
them
and
you've
got
people
who
could
afford
a
lot
more
but
are
looking
for
good
value
in
their
housing
dollars.
B
So,
even
if
the
city
were
to
create
policies
or
planning
tools
that
would
increase
the
supply
of
rental
housing
at
the
middle
end
of
the
market,
that
is
going
to
help
people
as
well
on
the
lower
end
of
the
market.
But
there
are
those
for
whom
the
the
incomes
just
have
them
priced
right
out
of
the
market
and
that's
why
there's
always
an
important
role
for
nonprofit
and
co-op
housing
to
make
sure
the
people
who
can't
even
afford
no
modest
average
market
rents
still
have
good
quality
safe
places
to
live.
B
So
the
city's
strategy
has
to
look
at
both
of
those
things:
people
who
are
priced
out
of
the
market
and
the
answers
there
are
often
nonprofit
in
coop
housing,
but
also
creating
a
greater
supply
of
rental
housing
in
the
middle
end
of
the
market.
That
leads
into
my
my
follow-up
question,
in
that
we
hear
there's
a
lot
of
conversation
about
inclusionary
zoning,
and
that
has
a
lot
of
opportunities
attached
to
it.
My
only
question
is:
we've
been
talking
about
transit,
oriented
development,
we're
talking
about
putting
people
closer
amenities.
B
Are
you
advocating
or
do
you
have
a
thought
in
respect
to
does
inclusionary
zoning
apply
to
all
new
developments
because
some
of
them
are
very
far-flung,
I
mean
you
know.
We
could
look
to
comfort
here
on
some
of
our
suburban
communities.
Is
that
the
best
place
to
have
25%
so
I
guess
the
question
to
ask
is:
are
there
communities
where
we
don't
want
a
diversity
of
incomes,
and
my
answer
is
automatically
going
to
be
no
and
when
we're
talking
about
inclusionary
zoning,
we're
talking
about
middle
modest
market
affordability?
B
If
it
was
a
rental
development,
it
would
around
average
market
rent.
You
know
if
it
was
an
ownership
development,
it
would
be
around
average
prices,
you're
not
getting
to
lower
income
levels,
you're
getting
into
modest
and
middle
income.
I
can't
imagine
a
community
in
the
city
that
should
not
include
homes
that
are
a
teacher
or
firefighter
or
public
servant
starting
their
career
could
afford
no
and
I
appreciate
that
I.
Don't
think
anybody
is
is
speaking
that
I
think
it's
more
so
Justin.
B
We
want
people
to
be
have
access
to
those
complete
communities
that
you're
speaking
about
and
we're
still
building.
Those
I
was
just
curious
as
to
whether,
as
we're
kind
of
transitioning
towards
that
you
know
vision
of
our
future.
Should
we
really
be
focusing
on
specific
areas
of
our
city?
More
so,
and
we're
speaking
about
inclusionary
zoning
I
think
inclusionary.
Zoning
is
one
of
the
tools,
but
when
we're
looking
at
prioritizing
affordable
housing
around
trans
that
we
want
to
use
additional
tools
to
get
to
more
deeper
levels
of
affordability
as
well.
A
C
Chair
two
significant
points,
one
is
that
we
will
be
bringing
a
report
to
fedko
as
a
result
of
the
work
of
the
interdepartmental
task
force
on
transit
near
affordable
housing,
which
involves
stuff
from
community
social
services,
planning
real
estate
and
transportation
that
reporters
to
go
to
the
March
fedko
meeting.
So
that
addresses
that
one
point
that
relates
to
land
and
then
in
our
work
program,
which
we're
presenting
a
planning
committee
later
this
month,
we
will
be
providing
the
inclusionary
zoning
piece
as
part
of
the
this
year's
work
plan.
Provided
the
council
adopts
our
budget.
A
B
To
consume
and
inspire
me
that
that
is
this:
at
the
pizza,
Sarah
Shourd
me
Janelle
and
ray
about
fool
I'm
on
the
board
of
City
for
Women's,
Initiative,
Cali
and
I'm.
Here
speaking
on
behalf
of
our
women,
reducing
poverty
together,
mama
lay
the
vision
and
network
of
women's
organizations
working
to
reduce
women's
poverty
in
our
city
in
the
community
research
that
we've
conducted,
we've
determined
the
lack
of
deeply
affordable
housing,
be
the
key
reason
why
women
in
Ottawa
are
finding
themselves
in
poverty.
B
The
violence
against
women
shelters
who
are
part
of
our
network
are
finding
that
women
are
returning
to
abusive
relationships
and
shelters
are
full
and
there's
no
place
to
go.
This
is
due
in
part
to
the
fact
that
women
living
in
violence
against
women
shelters,
I'm
unable
to
find
affordable
housing,
so
those
beds
are
not
freed
up
other
women
seeking
shelter.
For
all
these
reasons,
we
are
very
pleased
with
the
15
million
in
the
draft
city
budget,
which
is
dedicated
to
capital
funding
of
affordable
housing.
B
Additionally,
we
know
that
there
are
increasing
the
increasing
number
of
families
in
other
shelters,
many
of
whom
are
immigrant
families.
What
we
don't
know
is
how
many
of
them
are
single
mothers
struggling
to
make
ends
meet.
We
need
to
have
a
more
clear
gender
disaggregated
statistic
on
homelessness
of
a
diversity
of
women
in
comparison
to
men.
We
have
a
Silpat
trust,
have
a
full
picture.
We
hope
that
in
future
with
the
women
and
gender
equity
strategy,
such
two
statistics
will
be
made
to
us
to
the
general
public.
B
We
do
know
that
the
housing
to
work
for
many
women
it
needs
to
be
safe,
with
supports
and
located
where
there's
access,
as
you
heard,
to
transit,
grocery
stores,
social
services,
to
name
a
few.
This
connectivity
is
key,
especially
meeting
the
needs
of
a
family.
For
these
reasons,
we
urge
you
to
support
steps
being
taken
by
the
city
to
identify
land
near
transit.
We
refer
to
the
housing
will
be
built.
B
We
cannot
allow
for
those
neutrons
with
most
to
be
pushed
away
from
our
new
transit
system,
as
condos
are
being
built
as
I
see
the
mother
who
juggles
many
tasks
in
caring
for
my
youngest
daughter,
I
understand
how
stressful
it
can
be
when
you
know
for
many
others
as
well,
you
have
to
choose
between
France's
food
or
transit
opening
event.
This
is
knowledge
as
well.
That
I
did
via
my
interaction
with
many
residents
via
my
civic
engagement.
B
Finally,
given
both
the
depth
of
the
housing
crisis,
we
ask
that
you
do
all
possible
to
ensure
that
the
building
of
this
new,
affordable
housing
moves
quickly.
We
know
that
15
million
is
only
a
small
portion
of
funds
needed
the
organizations
participating
in
the
women
pot,
reducing
poverty
together,
momily
we
already
home
on
elected
officials
at
the
provincial
level
and
federal
level
and
we're
willing
to
contribute.
You
know
we
want
to
know
what
the
village
conjugate
from
their
part
to
address
Ottawa's
housing
prices.
Please.
A
B
We
have
a
civic
engagement
to
event.
That
means
we
have.
We
have
things
already
outlined
that
we'd
love
to
share
with
members
of
council
with
regards
to
going
forward.
Let
you
guys
have
a
better
idea
as
to
what
we
I
mean:
I,
particularly
I,
facilitate
to
residents
all
around
the
city,
so
I'm
meeting
with
women
men
on
the
regular
day,
sisters
divorcing
their
needs
to
you
personally
and
I'm.
Here.
Definitely
with
respect
to
representing
them
with
going
forward
with
the
gender
issue.
B
You
know,
I
have
statistics,
I
didn't
think
that
we'd
have
to
get
into
it,
but
you
do
you
yourself
have
statistics
on
your
website
with
regards
to
what's
going
on
with
the
housings,
with
what's
going
on
with
regards
to
the
women
shelters,
we've
done
up
and
I,
don't
know
if
you
already
had
the
the
opportunity
to
take
a
look.
This
advancing
gender
equity
in
the
City
of
Ottawa
take
a
look
at
that.
B
That
will
give
you
a
quick
gun
since,
what's
needed
with
regards
to
the
women
in
violence
risk
in
Ottawa,
we've
got
solutions
we
can
discuss
with
you.
We've
got
in
true
solutions:
we've
got
the
barriers,
we've
got
opportunities.
You
know,
we
know
what
we
documents
are
needed
with
ragazza
mergency
shelters.
B
We
know
the
statistics
here
and
just
knowing
this
just
this,
forgive
me
not
all
the
statistics
are
here,
because
not
everything
is
documented
when
the
City
of
Ottawa
that's
a
phone
call
and
somebody's
looking
for
a
shelter
if
that
person
is
turned
over
to
X,
Y
Z
and
it
hasn't
been
documented
by
the
city.
You
don't
know
where
that
person
may
have
fallen
through
the
cracks.
In
order
for
you
to
accumulate
proper
documentation,
then
you
have
to
show
up
sure
yourselves
within
the
city.
A
A
A
A
A
B
A
B
B
C
B
B
A
Year,
we're
projecting
the
reserves
dropping
slightly,
but
that's
primarily
because
of
the
transit
reserve.
We've
been
putting
money
aside
as
stage
one
completes
and
knowing
that
we're
going
to
have
large
amounts
to
pay
out
as
part
of
substantial
completion,
ready
service
availability.
So,
overall
it's
staying
fairly
stable,
except
for
that
piece
of
it.
Okay,.
B
A
B
C
C
B
Well
good
afternoon,
madam
chair
and
members
of
the
committee,
my
name
is
ebony
and
I
am
a
member
of
acorn
acorn
Zuleika
and
national
independent,
not-for-profit
member-driven
organization
made
up
of
low
and
moderate
income,
families
and
individuals
who
are
active
in
fighting
for
social
and
economic
justice.
We
are
independent
because
we
do
not
rely
on
corporate
or
government
contributions.
B
Our
members
paid
membership
dues
and
this
allows
us
to
vapor-liquid
representatives
and
decide
the
campaigns
for
vacant
such
as
disability
rights,
payday
lending,
intimate
access
for
all
and
for
the
day
and
healthy
housing
for
a
pond
and
six
other
organizations
city
by
ordinance
initiative.
Making
voters
can't
the
Alliance
to
End
Homelessness
are
today
the
health
of
transportation
coalition,
CCAC,
auto
a
district
labor
council
and
the
coalition
of
community
health
and
user
centers
United
to
start
a
campaign
on
affordable
housing
near
Rapid
Transit.
B
We
held
a
rally
in
front
of
City
Hall
last
week
right
before
the
presentation
of
the
city's
draft
budget.
Today,
favor
some
of
the
organizations
have
endorsed
our
campaign
and
over
1,600
individuals,
I've
signed
a
petition
for
affordable
housing
near
that
the
transit.
The
first
amount
of
our
campaign
they
fed
the
housing,
the
Rapid
Transit
called
on
city
council
universities,
12
million
dollars
open
about
federal
financial
grants
in
2019,
so
veget
we
were
surprised
to
hear
the
city
could
be
contributing
15
million
dollars
for
fertilizing.
B
At
the
rally
he
heard
the
lived
experiences
and
the
women
well
spent
four
months
now
and
attend
by
14
million
in
their
kids.
They
made
how
the
kids
did
not
even
have
space
to
pay
and
again
a
man
a
DSP.
Did
he
see
the
mayor?
This
event
could
be
going
up.
She
suffers
high
blood
pressure
and
this
did
not
head
another
women
last
year
has
been
in
the
motel
room
for
over
five
years.
B
Then
I
aim.
If
10,000
people
baby
housing,
there
are
45,000
households
in
Ottawa
who
are
poor
housing
need,
which
means
they
pay
over
30%
of
their
income
on
housing.
This
means
that
make
sacrifices
at
varying
degrees.
In
some
cases
it
is
a
question
of
cutting
down
on
any
or
all
of
these
expenses.
Food
clothes,
medicine,
fancy
home.
B
B
B
No
income
people
cannot
afford
a
car
and
all
the
expenses
tied
to
that
ownership.
Then
you
access
to
close
by
efficient
transit.
This
is
why
I
can't
plant
available
housing
without
the
transit,
also
Carson
City
Council
to
and
you
played
it
17
from
other
members
of
the
group
pass.
A
strong
City,
Radha
Krishna's
that
ensures
25%
of
new
development
is
dedicated
to
affordable
housing
in
places.
B
Township
priority
that
integrates
transit
and
painting
this
pier,
affordable
housing
toilets
sigh.
Thank
you
for
providing
upon
this
opportunity
to
present
these
demands,
and
we
hope
you
all
vote
in
favor
of
this
first
15
million
dollars
and
for
ongoing
the
future
investments
in
affordable
housing
and
the
wait
this
time
to
provide
safe,
affordable
family
housing
goes
to
rapid
transit.
Thank.
A
B
I'm,
just
wondering
there's
been
an
increase
this
year
over,
what's
been
spent
in
the
past,
so
I
looked
at
the
2017
budget,
the
2018
budget
and
now
this
budget
and
we're
not
spending
close
to
what
we're
putting
into
the
budget
this
year
for
2019
for
materials
and
services.
In
specific
the
to
be
specific
excuse
me,
page
51,
the
long-range
planning
budget,
we're
budgeting
six
hundred
and
twenty
six
thousand
dollars
for
materials
and
services.
B
Previously,
this
has
come
in
around
three
hundred
thousand
I
think
we're
on
track
for
around
three
hundred
thousand
this
year,
and
this
is
happening
in
every
single
tab
that
I've
gone
through
in
the
budget,
the
materials
and
services
there's
a
bit
of
extra
padding
there
so
I'm
just
why?
What
what
extra
we
are?
You
almost
doubling
that
line
item
is
a
reserve
explanation
for
it.
So.
C
B
A
B
A
B
I'll
be
raising
this
at
other
committees
as
well.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
we're
targeting
it,
even
with
the
250,000
we're
actually
over
what
we've
been
spending
before.
So
it
should
be
more
like
300,000,
based
on
what
I've
seen
so
we're
still
overspending
from
what
I
can
tell
over
budgeting
I
guess
on
those
line
items
there's
the
and
again
there's
several
throughout
the
budget.
So
just
one
thats
been
interesting,
researching
it,
but
even
with
the
250,000
we're
going
above
and
beyond
what
was
there
before.
C
Remember
if
I
may
respond
to
that,
I
must
say
that
we
have,
over
the
last
number
of
years,
cut
substantially
in
that
area
and
so
the
area
that
the
budget
deals
with
long-range
planning
has
dramatically
deteriorated.
Its
budget
for
additional
outside
services
and
those
materials
are
also
materials
used
for
public
consultations
engagement
when
we
have
to
apply
translation
services
for
some
of
the
materials
we
produce.
That
budget
has
actually
been
deteriorated
considerably
over
time
and
if
mr.
C
B
B
There
was
a
overspend
over,
there
is
a
there
is
an
under
spend
right
at
$100,000
and
they
made
reduction,
but
yeah.
So
I
understand
it's
important.
It's
an
important
line
item,
but
if
we're
not
spending
what
we're
allocating
there
in
the
first
place,
I,
we
I,
you
know
I
just
want
to
say,
and
it's
not
I
don't
want
to
pick
on
this,
particularly
long-range
planning
piece.
It's
just
a
trend,
I'm
noticing
across
several
of
the
pages
I'm
going
to
send
you
a
note
as
well
to
indicate
where
these
are
happening.
B
I
get
it's
an
important
line
item
you
don't
want
to
cut
something.
That's
important
that
the
spend
on
it
is
is
I,
think
a
little
bit
of
a
variance.
So
the
other
question
I
had
was
around
the
affordable
housing
one-time
contribution
out
of
the
15
million
dollars.
How
much
is
actually
one-time
contribution
versus
continuation
of
funds.
B
Madam
chair,
so
if
you
look
up
at
the
the
screen
over
here
in
the
corner,
so
wait
now
five
point:
five
million
dollars
is
a
one-time
contribution.
1
million
of
that
is
going
to
be
an
annual
contribution
to
the
reserves.
If
you
look
towards
the
bottom,
where
you
see
the
5
million,
you
see
our
land
sales
or
land
sales
out
that
those
reserves
in
our
development.
B
The
five
million
is
one
time
for
this
year.
However,
what
I'm
trying
to
indicate
is
that
those
accounts
will
continue
to
replenish,
so
the
five
million
out
of
the
development
charge
account
and
out
of
our
reserves
is
also
one
time
for
the
this
year,
but
those
accounts
will
accumulate,
continue
to
accumulate
funding
a
number,
but
we.
C
B
Different
priorities
in
the
next
year
that
those
reserves
may
go
to
around
the
solution,
but
that
may
be
the
case:
okay,
so,
but
so,
if
I
add
those
in
it's
about
what
four
million
three
million,
that's
that's
continued
funding
or
is
all
of
it.
One-Time
funding,
so
out
of
the
15
million
1
million
is
the
ongoing
piece.
B
Thank
you,
madam
chair,
therefore
be
resolved
that
the
Planning
Committee
adapt
the
attached
amendments
pages,
21
and
22
of
the
draft
2019
planning
committee
budget
bill,
which
reflects
the
site
plan
control
process.
Infuse
report
via
FURTHER
RESOLVED,
with
the
plan
committee
direct
finance
staff
to
prepare
a
further
revised
site
plan,
control
fees
scheduled
to
be
adopted
by
committee
of
the
whole
on
March
6
2019.
As
part
of
the
roadmap
motion,
which
reflects
the
amendments
and
disappoint
control
process
and
the
fees
review
report
approved
by
the
planning
committee
and
council.
That.
A
A
B
Plans
and
approvals.
Be
it
resolved
to
the
planning
committee
recommend
to
council
approved
that
the
planning
infrastructure
and
economic
development
department
be
directed
to
bring
forward
to
planning
committee
in
accordance
with
the
notice
requirements
of
the
Planning
Act
city,
initiated
official
plan
and
zoning
bylaw
amendments
to
align
the
city's
official
plan
and
zoning
bylaw
with
the
federal
campus
master
plan
2015
and
the
NCC
federal
lands
approval
2016
for
the
rcmp
site
at
14,
2006
San,
Jose,
F,
Boulevard,.
A
So
that's
a
notice
of
motion
twenty-eight
the
February.
That
is
good
news
and
congratulations
to
everybody.
That's
been
involved
in
that
okay,
any
employees,
none
can
ease
your
business.
None
goodbye,
see
I'm
28,
that's
going
to
be
a
big
agenda
and
I
would
ask
you
to
keep
that
into
account
we're
at
their
form
right
now.
Thank.