Sir John A. Macdonald Waterfront Linear Park Plan Workshop – May 5

http://www.ncc-ccn.gc.ca/about-ncc/urbanism-lab/calendar-events/workshop-plan-sir-john-a-macdonald-parkway-waterfront-linear

http://www.ccn-ncc.gc.ca/a-propos-de-la-ccn/le-labo-durbanisme/calendrier-activites/atelier-sur-le-plan-du-parc-lineaire-de

A workshop on the plan for the proposed park along the Ottawa River

Tuesday, May 5, 7 pm to 9 pm

The National Capital Commission (NCC) is pleased to invite the public to participate in a workshop on the plan for the proposed Sir John A. Macdonald Waterfront Linear Park.

The proposed concept takes advantage of the corridor landscape, views, river heritage, ecology and experiences that reconnect people with the river. The park plan consists of diverse, accessible, attractive and complementary sectors that include protected areas, spaces for activities and events, and improved multi-modal connectivity and mobility.

The purpose of this second workshop is to view the overall draft concept for the park, strategic pillars, principles and objectives, as well as the draft concept for the individual park sectors. We will also be seeking feedback on the priorities for the next five years.

Format

The format of the event is a roaming workshop.

Each of the five segments of the Waterfront Linear Park will be presented at a station, and participants will be free to go to the stations of their choice and complete a questionnaire.

BOOK EARLY, limited space. Please RSVP at info@ncc-ccn.ca. Registration is on a first-come, first-served basis.

Universally accessible. Please let us know if you have any special needs.

NCC Headquarters
Capital Urbanism Lab
40 Elgin Street, 5th Floor
Ottawa

613-239-5000
info@ncc-ccn.ca
http://ncc-ccn.gc.ca/calendar
@NCC_UrbanLab

This event is part of the Capital Urbanism Lab program, an initiative of the National Capital Commission.

Seniors Achievement Award

From: ynaqvi.mpp.co@liberal.ola.org
Subject: Seniors Achievement Award
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2015 20:05:48 +0000

Dear friends,

Each year, our government celebrates the accomplishments and contributions many of our wonderful seniors make to communities across Ontario. This year, the Senior Achievement Award will once again highlight the significant voluntary and professional achievements made by individuals after they have reached the age of 65.

I encourage you to participate in the 2015 Senior Achievement Award Program by nominating a deserving senior. Please find attached the nomination forms and note that the completed nomination form and necessary documents will need to be submitted no later than June 15, 2015.

Please consider taking the time to put forward the name of a special senior in your community. If you have any questions, or need any help completing your application, please do not hesitate to contact my Community Office.

Sincerely,

Yasir

Yasir Naqvi, MPP
Ottawa Centre


http://www.citizenship.gov.on.ca/english/citizenship/honours/saa.shtml

Street Sweeping Operations now in effect

http://ottawa.ca/en/residents/transportation-and-parking/road-and-sidewalk-maintenance/street-sweeping

The city’s annual spring sweeping of streets and sidewalks is now underway and may result in noise and dust in your neighbourhood.

Residents in neighbourhoods in the downtown core of the city, such as Vanier, New Edinburgh, Sandy Hill and the Glebe are reminded that day and night on-street parking restrictions will be in effect between Tuesday, April 14 and Friday, April 17. Please note that dates are weather dependant and are subject to change without notice.

These restrictions apply to all vehicles, including those with on-street parking permits, to allow for effective sweeping of the roads. Temporary no-parking signs will be posted prominently in these areas. Vehicles parked where temporary no-parking signs are posted could be ticketed and towed to nearby streets.

Your patience and cooperation in keeping vehicles off the streets during the spring cleanup is appreciated.

Street and sidewalk sweeping improves public safety and helps prevent catch basins from becoming blocked with debris. Annually, the City sweeps over 6,000 kilometers of roadway and over 2,000 kilometres of sidewalks to keep Ottawa clean and green.

The City of Ottawa’s winter overnight parking restrictions are now completed for the 2014-2015 season. The City would like to thank you for your cooperation in making our streets safer throughout the winter season.

Kitchissippi Parking Strategy

Subject: Blog Post about Kitchissippi Parking Strategy
Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2015 20:01:52 +0000
From: Leiper, Jeff <Jeff.Leiper@ottawa.ca>

Hi all

For your information, the following blog post is going to be going up on our website shortly. We intend to talk about this at the Forum next week, and also to invite people to come to the public consultation. Of course, my door is always open and I welcome your thoughts on these matters.

Jeff


Parking in the Westboro Village retail area has been a persistent issue for years – and more recently, it seems to be growing along Wellington West as well. Businesses are concerned that they’re losing customers to suburban malls that offer easy car access, and even some residents find that parking is scarce when they need or want to drive to a local merchant.

When there’s parking pressure, cars begin circling the block for in order to find a spot. This creates traffic congestion and wasted time, increased air pollution and decreased pedestrian and cyclist safety.

Particularly in Westboro, the studies in 2011 and preliminary numbers I’ve seen from a 2014 study seem to bear this out. Parking demand already seems to be outpacing supply. One of the options we have at our disposal is paid parking, which could help create greater parking availability. As a growing urban area, we need to look at this carefully and seriously. But let me be clear about three things:

  • First, I will work to ensure that paid parking is not the only option: we must look at ALL options, including creative solutions not currently on the table.
  • Second: previous discussions of this issue have been hampered by a lack of public discussion and information sharing.
  • Third: in discussing whether paid parking or other tools are warranted in our neighbourhood, I will ensure we don’t look at one area alone. Westboro and Wellington West are different areas with different needs, but they are also tightly connected and serve many of the same customers.

So, when I found out that this summer, a new parking study was to be conducted for Wellington Street West, I asked the Parking Services department to ensure that both the existing Westboro studies and the newer data from Wellington West be considered together as one master strategy.

Kitchissippi Parking Strategy.

This innovative new approach meets my three criteria, which I’ll repeat: 1) full consideration of options, 2) broad consultation, and 3) a strategic, Ward-wide approach.

Westboro Parking will be the theme of Part one. I hope you’ll join us for a public consultation on Saturday, May 2 at the Churchill Seniors Centre from 1 to 3 pm to explore approaches to parking challenges including paid parking in Westboro. We’ll have the most recent parking numbers for Westboro on hand. In addition to your thoughts on how, when, and whether paid parking should be implemented, we also want to know what you think of the parking “levers” that can be pushed and pulled. For example:

  • What would be the appropriate time limits, and where? 90 minutes? 2 hours?
  • What time of day and on which days should paid parking be in effect?
  • How much should it cost?
  • With paid parking, Parking Services could provide more revenue to community projects relating to alternate forms of transportation. If this becomes available, what kind of improvements could we do with these new resources?

These are a just a few of the questions I’m sure we’ll all have.

We’ll look to integrate the same consultation with Wellington West after the numbers come out, probably in September or October of 2015. And if the numbers from the study support the introduction of paid parking, it could begin in November 2015, with the ward-wide introduction of paid parking from Golden Avenue in the west to the O-Train line in the east. From the outset, I’ll be thinking about the whole main street rather than in terms of separate sections.

Of course, I’m committed to continually reviewing paid parking if it’s implemented, and I’m keen to get the feedback on this topic from all of you who live, work and play in Kitchissippi.

Rosemount Library Branch Renewal

Date: Tue, 7 Apr 2015 10:44:32 -0400
Subject: Rosemount Library Branch
From: rvl2701@gmail.com

The Rosemount library branch is the local library for thousands of near west Ottawans. It is one of the busiest branches in the city. It is also one of the least up to date. It was built in 1918 and last renewed in 1982.

​ It is small, busy, well loved, crowded…and nearly obsolete. The Ottawa Library Board recognized this in 2012, placing Rosemount second only to the main branch as a priority for renewal. But there are still no plans for that renewal. If it is to continue to serve our communities we need to work together, and with the Library Board, to ensure action.

The Rosemount Expansion and Development (READ) group has been formed by concerned local citizens to make this happen. READ has representatives of several of our local community associations as well as library users at large as members. It is chaired by Richard Van Loon – that’s me – and has been meeting monthly since November. It has set out objectives which are attached, as is a fact sheet prepared by the group.

There are 13 community associations in the area served by the branch. READ needs their support if it is to succeed. Some of you are already active in this work. This note is to request the support of those who are not yet involved and to express the need for all of us to continue to work on this project.

We would like to have representatives of every Community Association in our area as members of READ. To date we have representatives from Civic Hospital, Carlington, Dalhousie, Hintonburg, Wellington Village and Westboro Beach. Our next meeting is Monday April 13 in the basement of the Hintonburg Community Centre at 1064 Wellington St. Future meetings will be on the second Monday of each month at locations to be announced.

READ also requests that you post our objectives and our fact sheet on your web site, together with this note if you think it appropriate.

I, or another member of READ, will also be pleased to meet with your association at one of your upcoming meetings to explain further what we are doing and to, hopefully, elicit your strong endorsement and support. If this is of interest to your association please just get in touch with me by return email.

Richard Van Loon

READ one pager Feb 7, 2015.pdf

Objectives for READ.pdf


Subject: RE: Rosemount Library Branch
Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2015 12:52:46 -0400
From: Dennis Van Staalduinen

My wife Jeanette is on the committee, so the neighbourhood is represented. But please do join them if you have time and talents to offer.

Dennis

Second Kitchissippi Ward Forum Posters

Please see the original post for information about the meeting.


Subject: RE: The 2nd Kitchissippi Forum – Posters
Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2015 18:11:40 +0000
From: Leiper, Jeff <Jeff.Leiper@ottawa.ca>

Good afternoon everyone,

Please find attached the poster for the forum. Your assistance is greatly appreciated for circulating on your websites and blogs, but more importantly, throughout your community. The people who benefit the most from meetings and discussions like the forum are often those who do not have the means to engage online, so any assistance you can provide with publicising this to your community is much appreciated.

Two pdf documents are attached – one is the poster, one is a double handbill (good for printing for small handouts) and there is also one jpeg file of the main poster which can be used for any online publicity.

As you will notice on the poster, 6 not-for-profit organisations in our ward have been invited to do trade show style presentations at this forum, and many of them will be taking donations as well of goods or cash. Profiles of each of the organisations will be going up on the website in the weeks leading up to the forum.

To better gauge numbers we also encourage people to register on the Eventbrite page at: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/kitchissippi-forum-tickets-16160922755

Thank you very much and hope to see you on 18 April

Jeff

KForum April 2015 Poster.pdf
KForum April Double Handbills.pdf
KForum April 2015 Poster.jpegKForum April 2015 Poster.jpeg

Second Kitchissippi Ward Forum – April 18 – Registration Requested

As part of my election commitment to you, I promised to hold quarterly open, public forums for the whole ward. The first ward forum, on 17 January 2015, ended up being standing room only.

We’re pleased to announce the details of the 2nd Kitchissippi Forum.

Date: Saturday, 18 April 2015
Time: 9:30am to 12:30pm
Place: Tom Brown Arena, 141 Bayview Road

We’ve taken some of the feedback you gave us from the first forum and will be incorporating your feedback into this forum.

Please register to attend:

To help us better estimate numbers for catering, we ask that you please register your interest on the Eventbrite page here:
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/kitchissippi-forum-tickets-16160922755

Looking for volunteers

In addition, we would like to call for volunteers to help with posting. It’s very difficult with our small staff and all the work we have to also poster the ward – and it’s also not possible for us to be everywhere. So, if you go to a gym, or you know there’s a noticeboard in your doctor’s surgery, or your church has a community noticeboard and you don’t mind putting up a poster for us, please email us at jeff.leiper@ottawa.ca stating you would like to be a volunteer and we will note your name down.

We want to engage as many citizens of Kitchissippi as we can, but we need your help to do so. We may also ask for help with organizing community events, street or park clean-ups or any other kind of thing which may require manpower during Jeff’s term.

If you have a particular skill you can contribute, please feel free to make a special note of that too.

We look forward to seeing you all on the 18th of April!

Thanks,
Jeff Leiper
Councillor, Kitchissippi, City of Ottawa | Conseiller, Kitchissippi, Ville d’Ottawa
613.580.2485 | @jleiper | ottawa.ca / kitchissippiward.ca
110 Laurier Avenue West | Ottawa ON K1P 1J1

 

 

LRT West Extension Feedback – March 30

From: City of Ottawa <westernLRT@ottawa.ca>
Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2015 10:59 AM
Subject: City invites feedback on Confederation Line West Extension

The City of Ottawa invites residents to take part in a public consultation on Monday, March 30 about plans for the Confederation Line West Light Rail Transit (LRT) Extension.

The City and the National Capital Commission (NCC) Working Group recently announced an agreement in principle that would allow a portion of the LRT extension between Dominion and Cleary stations to be fully buried under the Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway. The public consultation about the recommended corridor will take place in Jean Pigott Place at City Hall (110 Laurier Avenue West) and will offer residents the opportunity to learn more about the proposal and to provide feedback. The event will run from 5 to 8 p.m., including a presentation at 6:30 p.m.

The preferred integrated transit solution meets the NCC’s criteria while protecting the Byron Linear Park and Rochester Field and meeting the City of Ottawa’s affordability requirements. The solution also:

  • Maximizes greenspace by re-instating existing Parkway lanes of traffic closer together
  • Develops a park of national significance along the shoreline
  • Protects the trees and landscaped buffer between the Parkway and adjacent urban areas
  • Enhances existing pathways and creates new pathways and two new crossings under the Parkway
  • Reduces annual bus trips on the Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway by more than 450,000
  • Increases useable shoreline park space by 38 per cent

The Western LRT extension is one of three environmental assessment studies currently underway as part of Stage 2: the City’s plan to add 19 new stations and 30 kilometres to our LRT network, extending it farther east, west and south by 2023.

This is a map that shows the future Confederation Line West LRT extension alignment between Dominion and Cleary Stations. It provides a synopsis of the key features of the 100 Day Solution identified for this portion of the alignment and jointly announced by the City of Ottawa and National Capital Commission.
This is a map that shows the future Confederation Line West LRT extension alignment between Dominion and Cleary Stations. It provides a synopsis of the key features of the 100 Day Solution identified for this portion of the alignment and jointly announced by the City of Ottawa and National Capital Commission.

A further public consultation to review the overall recommended plan for the Stage 2 Confederation Line West Extension is scheduled for Wednesday, April 29. Additional information about upcoming and future public consultation opportunities, project updates and contact information can be found on ottawa.ca/stage2. Materials presented at all public consultations will also be posted on the website for those unable to attend.


This document is also available at http://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/public-consultations/transit/information-session-march-30-2015

Central Library Discussion – March 31

From: jim.watson@ottawa.ca
Sent: 23/03/2015 8:00:57 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Central Library Discussion – March 31

The Ottawa Public Library (OPL) is holding initial discussions on a Central Library. The public will be invited to provide input into the spaces and services of the future building.

Public input will be used to shape the functional building requirements (spaces and services) of a Central Library. The results of the public input will be made available through a report to the Ottawa Public Library Board in June 2015.

There are three ways the public can get involved:

1. Attend a public session

Tuesday, March 31, 2015
7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
City Hall, Jean Pigott Place
110 Laurier Avenue West

Registration for the public session starts on Friday, March 6, 2015. Interested citizens can register at http://www.OttawaCentralLibrary.ca/. Spaces are limited.

2. Participate in an online forum

The public session will be available through a live webcast of the presentations at http://www.OttawaCentralLibrary.ca/. The broadcast will be available on March 31at 7:00 p.m. After the presentation, participants will be given options for submitting their input online through April 6, 2015. The webcast will be available for viewing during the entire online submission period.

3. Visit the Main branch

Visit the Main branch of OPL at 120 Metcalfe St. from March 21-27, 2015 to write comments on an idea board located on the Ground floor. Children can also participate by providing input on a board available in the Children’s area on the second floor.


Premières discussions sur une Bibliothèque centrale

La Bibliothèque publique d’Ottawa mène actuellement des discussions sur une Bibliothèque centrale. Le public sera invité à faire part de son opinion au sujet des espaces et des services de ce futur bâtiment.

L’opinion du public sera utilisée afin de déterminer les besoins fonctionnels (espaces et services) de la Bibliothèque centrale. Les résultats des commentaires du public seront dévoilés dans un rapport destiné au C.A. de la Bibliothèque publique d’Ottawa en juin 2015.

Il y a trois façons dont le public peut participer.

1. Assister à une séance publique

Le mardi 31 mars 2015
De 19 h à 21 h
Hôtel de ville, Place-Jean-Pigott
110, avenue Laurier Ouest

L’inscription pour la séance publique débute le 6 mars, 2015. Les citoyens intéressés peuvent s’inscrire au http://www.BiblioCentraleOttawa.ca/. Le nombre de places est limité.

2. Participer à un forum en ligne

Les présentations livrés durant la séance publique seront disponibles en direct à http://www.BiblioCentraleOttawa.ca/. La diffusion sera disponible le 31 mars à 19 h. Après les présentations, les participants auront des options pour soumettre leurs opinions en ligne jusqu’au 6 avril. La vidéo de la diffusion sera disponible pour la durée des soumissions en ligne.

3. Visiter la succursale Centrale

Rendez-vous à la succursale Centrale au 120, rue Metcalfe, entre le 21 et le 27 mars 2015, et inscrivez vos commentaires sur le babillard à suggestions situé au rez-de-chaussée. Les enfants peuvent aussi participer en soumettant leurs idées sur un babillard situé dans la section pour enfants au deuxième étage.

Capital Illumination Workshop – March 31

This may be of interest, from http://www.ncc-ccn.gc.ca/capital-planning/public-meetings/calendar-events/capital-illumination-workshop Hope they come up with something more reliable than the Place du Portage bridge and park (lots of recessed lights hidden behind concrete, probably looked nice when new, now almost all broken).

– Alex


The NCC invites you to attend a workshop to assist in the development of an illumination plan for the core of Canada’s Capital.

This presentation will highlight UNESCO’s 2015 International Year of Light and Light-based Technologies, which is raising global awareness about how light-based technologies promote sustainable development and provide solutions to global challenges in energy, education, agriculture and health.

Workshop participants will be invited to discuss the mission and objectives of the NCC’s Capital Illumination Plan, identify specific sites that should be illuminated, and complete a survey.

The workshop will include the following:

6 pm Introductions by Dr. Mark Kristmanson, CEO of the NCC
6:10 pm Presentation by Louise Filiatrault, Secretary-General, Canadian Commission for UNESCO on the 2015 International Year of Light and Light-based technologies
6:20 pm Overview of the Capital Illumination Plan, by Stephen Willis, Executive Director, Capital Planning, NCC
6:30 pm Workshop
8:35 pm Discussion and plenary
9 pm End

We look forward to your input which will help us create a holistic Plan for nighttime illumination of both public and private buildings, as well as infrastructure and public art in the urban core.

Space is limited. Please RSVP at info@ncc-ccn.ca by noon, on Monday, March 30.

Simultaneous translation will be available.
Universally accessible. Please let us know if you have any special needs.

When?
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
6 pm to 9 pm

Where?
NCC Headquarters
Capital Urbanism Lab
40 Elgin Street, 5th Floor
Ottawa, Ontario

Thank you for your interest in the National Capital Commission.

Questions or Comments?

If you have any questions or comments, please contact us.

Telephone: 613-239-5000 or 1-800-465-1867 (toll-free)
TTY: 613-239-5090 or 1-866-661-3530 (toll-free)
Fax: 613-239-5063
Email: info@ncc-ccn.ca