Campaign Video

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Wednesday, 29 April 2026

The Creature from the Past Lagoon: a wake up call for Ottawa Voters

 


Here is a wake-up call for every voter in Rideau-Rockcliffe and across Ottawa.

Our Canadian municipalities — cities and towns alike — are “creatures of the provinces,” no matter what your local councillors may tell you.Ottawa has no independent constitutional status. Every power we exercise, every bylaw we pass, and our very existence as a city comes from provincial legislation. Ontario alone has the exclusive right to create, regulate, change, or even dissolve municipalities.The province can restructure boundaries, remove powers, or impose new rules without our consent. We saw this clearly in 2001 when the Mike Harris Conservative government forced the amalgamation of Ottawa’s regional municipalities into the single city we have today. Local school boards have just felt the same heavy hand with recent provincial oversight and governance reforms.Even a City Charter is nothing more than a provincial statute that Queen’s Park can amend or override at any time.2026 is a municipal election year. Councillors are democratically elected, but we operate entirely within Ontario’s legislative framework. Ottawa is not a “senior” or equal level of government — we are a creature of the province.The province sees Ottawa differently than a local councillor chasing votes on sidewalks. We manage a multi-billion-dollar budget (over $5 billion operating in 2026), and the big files — especially the troubled LRT — demand real results, not endless pandering.


If the province loses patience with inefficiency and delay, it can step in decisively: appoint a supervisor, upload major services like transit, or impose major restructuring. The clutching and gnashing of teeth would be loud — but by then, dear voters, it would be too late.It’s time to elect councillors who understand this reality and focus on delivering results that keep the province as a partner, not a replacement.Practical leadership matters more than ever in Rideau-Rockcliffe. Let’s work together on real solutions instead of performative local politics.

Saturday, 25 April 2026

Lead in the Water - King's wrong headed approach

 



Lead Pipes: Why Are We Waiting Decades When We Can Fix It This Year?
Councillor Rawlson King asked a perfectly reasonable question in the Environment & Climate Change Committee on April 21: Ottawa has roughly 30,000 homes with lead service pipes. 
"What’s the current replacement rate, and how many years will it actually take to finish the job?"
Staff couldn’t give him a straight answer. 
That silence tells you everything you need to know.
We’re talking about a program that sounds responsible — “replace the pipes” — but in practice is moving at the speed of a tired snail. 
Full replacement costs $5,000 to $12,000+ per household. The city offers a small rebate and only replaces its own portion when it happens to be digging up the street. The rest is voluntary. At this pace, thousands of Ottawa families, especially in older neighbourhoods like parts of Ward 13, will be drinking elevated lead for another 20 or 30 years.
This is classic government thinking: the perfect solution (rip out every inch of lead) delivered at an impossible speed. Meanwhile, kids keep getting exposed.
Here’s a better, practical question: 
Why not install point-of-use treatment right at the kitchen tap?
I’m not talking about pitcher filters you have to keep filling. I’m talking about under-sink systems that connect directly to your cold water supply line. They work automatically — whenever you turn on the dedicated filter faucet, clean water flows on demand. No manual filling, no hassle. These plumbed-in units (activated carbon or reverse-osmosis) remove lead and many other contaminants right where you need it.
Let’s put some real numbers on the table:


Health Canada already says point-of-use devices are an effective way to reduce lead exposure. Other cities have used them successfully as a bridge while doing full replacements. Why are we pretending this isn’t a valid option in Ottawa?
This isn’t about being cheap. It’s about being smart. It’s about results instead of virtue-signalling projects that take forever. We do the same thing with LRT — chase the perfect system while the basics (reliable service, clean water, functioning washrooms) get ignored.
Voters should be asking every councillor running this fall:
How many years are you willing to let lead stay in our taps while you wait for the perfect solution?

And more importantly: Why aren’t we protecting people today with automatic under-sink filters that already work?

Common sense says we can walk and chew gum. Replace pipes on a sensible schedule and install point-of-use under-sink treatment immediately. Anything less is just more Ottawa bureaucracy — all talk, no timely delivery.
Rawlson King’s Approach vs. My Approach



Councillor Rawlson King sees a problem with 30,000 lead pipes and asks staff: “How many years will it take to replace them all?”I see the same problem and ask: “How do we give every family safe water this year, not in 2045?”That single difference explains why Ward 13 needs a change.King’s mind works like most career politicians: focus on the perfect, long-term, expensive solution and hope the timeline works itself out. Ask questions, support the process, wait for staff reports.My mind works like a project manager who actually delivers: get measurable results for people now, while still doing the permanent fix on a realistic schedule. Install automatic under-sink plumbed filters for immediate protection. Subsidize them aggressively. Replace pipes as part of normal infrastructure work instead of a never-ending special program.One approach sounds responsible but leaves kids exposed for decades.
The other delivers safe water immediately and fixes the root cause over time.
This isn’t about left or right. It’s about results versus process.
It’s about practical thinking versus bureaucratic thinking.
That’s why my work as Councillor would be a vast improvement. Different mind, different outcomes. Ward 13 deserves someone who solves problems in real time, not just studies them.

Peter Karwacki
Managing Director, Peer Metrics
Candidate for Ward 13 (Rideau-Rockcliffe)