Solutions and recommendations should be aimed at preventing failures in the future.
1. Modern Protection Systems
Aging infrastructjure should have layered protections including leak detection systems, automatic shutoff controls, isolation valves, monitored alarms, drainage redundancies, emergency containment procedures, and after-hours engineering response protocols.
2. Faster Detection and Emergency Response
Questions should be raised about how quickly problems can be detected, whether alarms activate properly, and whether shutoff systems work. Stronge overnight monitoring, better engineering response protocols, and faster emergency isolation systems need to be in place.
3. Replace Aging Infrastructure
A central theme is that Ontario continues operating critical infrastructure beyond their intended lifespan. Accelerating replacement construction and replacing aging plumbing, HVAC, electrical, and structural systems are needed before catastrophic failures occur.
4. Increase Preventative Maintenance
Infrastructure systems often “age silently until they fail.” Suggested solutions include more proactive inspections, earlier replacement of vulnerable systems, and increased preventative maintenance funding.
5. Full Public Transparency
Detailed public review including the exact cause of the failures, incident timelines, safeguard performance, repair costs, adverse impacts, and what preventative measures will now be implemented.
6. Review Renovation and Inspection Processes
Recent renovations or infrastructure changes need stricter inspection protocols, better documentation, and improved risk assessments during modifications.
7. Province-Wide Infrastructure Reform
The issue is framed as larger than any one single infrastructure matter. Ontario must invest more aggressively in infrastructure and stop relying on aging, increasingly fragile facilities.
8. Better Service Redundancy and Continuity Planning
Because serviceds and functionality can be disrupted, communities need stronger redundancy planning, compartmentalized infrastructure, and continuity strategies to avoid widespread shutdowns from localized failures.
9. Stronger After-Hours Risk Mitigation
Communities should improve 24/7 engineering oversight, remote monitoring systems, automatic alerts, and escalation procedures to reduce overnight infrastructure risks.
10. Recognize the Human Cost of Infrastructure Failure
Infrastructure failures create real human consequences including delays, additional travel, lost wages, childcare costs, and increased medical risk. It argues infrastructure planning must account for adverse impacts — not just repair budgets.
Ward 13 (Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward) in Ottawa is located in the east end includes a mix of historic, affluent, and more working-class or redeveloping neighbourhoods.
It is non-partisan at the municipal level. Ward has distinct communities/ neighbourhoods, each represented by active community associations.
Based on recent councillor reports, community advocacy, news, and planning documents as of mid-2026). It is officially non-partisan at the municipal level (like all Ottawa wards), so "parties" do not formally exist for city council races. However, the ward has distinct communities/ neighbourhoods, each represented by active community associations that advocate on local priorities usually housing, infrastructure, safety, transit, parks, and environment are recurring themes.
City-wide priorities
housing affordability,
cost of living,
transit reliability, and safety
preserving exclusivity in wealthy pockets while adding supply and co-op options without concentrating poverty.
Developer influence, taxes, public washrooms, and climate/infrastructure resilience.
Wakeup call
A recent city report reveals that as of March 2026, there were more than 660 families in Ottawa living in hotel rooms, including 1,220 children.( up 76% since 2023)
The city says families in the shelter system stay for an average of 11 months — and 76 per cent of them are living in overflow locations such as hotels and motels (cost $30 million in 2025)
For a family of four living in one room, the city spent an average about $5,800 a month. 3100 households in 2025!!!!
This is due to several factors, including
reduced housing benefit funding from senior levels of government,
limited availability of social housing units, and
a lack of dedicated affordable housing pathways for families experiencing homelessness,"
Kale Brown, director of housing and homelessness services for the City of Ottawa says Ottawa received $4.3 million and supported 382 new households in 2023-2024. In 2025-2026, the city only got $2.08 million and supported 205 new households.
Brown says social housing offers for families are also limited, despite “very high” demand. As of the end of 2025, there were more than 16,000 households on the social housing waitlist, of which nearly 6,000 had dependents.
Thanks to Cameron Mahler of the CBC.
What a mess!
Voter priorities often split along urban/rural or class lines within the ward, with lower turnout in some areas.
Incumbent King emphasizes infrastructure, environment, and housing plans;
Challenger Peter Karwacki highlights EAST END bridge, free transit or lower fares for vulnerable groups, and COUNCILLOR accountability.
Issues WILL evolve with ongoing projects like road rehabilitations.
Key community associations
Carson Grove Community Association,
Crichton Community Council,
Lindenlea Community Association,
Manor Park Community Association/Council,
New Edinburgh Community Alliance,
Overbrook Community Association,
Rockcliffe Park Residents Association,
Wateridge Village Community Association.
City-wide priorities like housing affordability, cost of living, transit reliability, and safety also shape the ward, but local nuances vary by neighbourhood's character (e.g., affluent/heritage vs. social housing/redeveloping areas).
Ward-wide issues of importance
• Housing affordability and development: Push for more moderate-income and supportive housing units; redevelopment of existing stock; concerns over renovictions and gentrification.
Recent investments include thousands of new/affordable units in areas like Cummings/Presland and social housing upgrades.
• Transit and transportation: Improvements to bus routes (e.g., in growing areas), fare affordability, LRT reliability, active transportation (bike/pedestrian paths), traffic calming, and speed zones.
• Parks, recreation, and community facilities: Investments in park upgrades, fieldhouses, lighting, pools, and sports amenities (e.g., pickleball, fitness equipment)
Emphasis on accessibility and youth/senior programming.
• Infrastructure and public realm: Road/sewer/water renewals, sidewalks, street lighting (LED retrofits), and bridge work.
• Public safety and community well-being: Neighbourhood safety meetings, policing model updates, mental health supports, anti-racism/equity initiatives (including Black community collaboration), and harm reduction.
• Environment and heritage: Tree planting, EV charging, waste diversion, climate action; strong focus on protecting historic districts and adaptive reuse. rideau-rockcliffe.ca
Ward-Wide Cross-Cutting Issues • East End Crossing / Kettle Island Bridge: Debates over routing trucks out of downtown (candidate Peter Karwacki strongly supports one option). peterkarwacki.blogspot.com
• Transit (LRT/OC Transpo): Reliability, cost (proposals for free transit for students/seniors funded by tolls), and sunk costs.
• Housing & Affordability: City-wide
Groups frequently engage with the current councillor on issues like housing, infrastructure, safety, transit, parks, and environment.
The ward's neighbourhoods are:
New Edinburgh,
Manor Park,
Rockcliffe Park,
Wateridge Village,
Overbrook,
Lindenlea,
Viscount Alexander Park,
Quarries,
Rockcliffe Mews,
Forbes,
Castle Heights
Associatiions
Carson Grove Community Association, Crichton Community Council,
Lindenlea Community Association,
Manor Park Community Association/Council,
New Edinburgh Community Alliance,
Overbrook Community Association,
Rockcliffe Park Residents Association, and
Wateridge Village Community Association.
Castle Heights, Carson Grove areas
• Growth pressures, new development integration, and infrastructure (roads, transit links).
• Community building, parks, and balancing urban expansion with livability.
• Access to services, especially for families and newer residents.
Carson Grove / other smaller areas
(Carson Grove Community Association and others like Viscount Alexander Park)
General infrastructure (roads, sewers), park improvements (e.g., Alvin Heights, Hemlock Park), and access to social services. These areas often align with broader ward priorities around affordability and safety.
Housing affordability and development:
Push for more moderate-income and supportive housing units; redevelopment of existing stock; concerns over renovictions and gentrification.
Recent investments include thousands of new/affordable units in areas like Cummings/Presland and social housing upgrades.
Transit and transportation: Improvements to bus routes (e.g., in growing areas), fare affordability, LRT reliability, active transportation (bike/pedestrian paths), traffic calming, and speed zones. Parks, recreation, and community facilities: Investments in park upgrades, fieldhouses, lighting, pools, and sports amenities (e.g., pickleball, fitness equipment).
Emphasis on accessibility and youth/senior programming.
Infrastructure and public realm:
Road/sewer/water renewals, sidewalks, street lighting (LED retrofits), and bridge work.
Public safety and community well-being: Neighbourhood safety meetings, policing model updates, mental health supports, anti-racism/equity initiatives (including Black community collaboration), and harm reduction.
Environment and heritage:
Tree planting, EV charging, waste diversion, climate action; strong focus on protecting historic districts and adaptive reuse. rideau-rockcliffe.ca
General infrastructure (roads, sewers), park improvements (e.g., Alvin Heights, Hemlock Park), and access to social services.
These areas often align with broader ward priorities around affordability and safety and evolve with city budget processes,
Wateridge Village (Wateridge Village Community Association) Transit service expansion (new routes as the area grows). New park development (e.g., Veterans’ Park). Community infrastructure for a newer/redeveloping neighbourhood. Housing and recreational opportunities to support families.
Lindenlea (Lindenlea Community Association) Sidewalks, traffic calming, and pedestrian safety. Park and community centre maintenance (e.g., furnace/AC upgrades). Integration with broader ward transit and housing goals while preserving the mature residential feel
New Edinburgh (New Edinburgh Community Alliance / Crichton Community Council) Parks and greenspace protection/enhancement (e.g., New Edinburgh Park upgrades, protective boulders, winter maintenance). Active transportation and public realm improvements along corridors like Beechwood. Heritage and community character amid infill pressures. Community events and social services via the Rideau-Rockcliffe Community Resource Centre.
Manor Park (Manor Park Community Association and Manor Park Community Council)
Debate over sidewalk additions and traffic calming on quiet residential streets (some residents oppose changes that could alter the area's character; city/councillor push for pedestrian safety). Infrastructure like park improvements and ski trailheads. Balancing growth with neighbourhood feel in this established area.
(Manor Park Community Association and Manor Park Community Council) Debate over sidewalk additions and traffic calming on quiet residential streets (some residents oppose changes that could alter the area's character;
city/councillor push for pedestrian safety). Infrastructure like park improvements and ski trailheads. Balancing growth with neighbourhood feel in this established area.
Overbrook (Overbrook Community Association)
Focus on redevelopment of aging Ottawa Community Housing stock (shallow-lot public housing renewal for better density and energy efficiency). Public safety (historical concerns with crime, gangs, and shootings, though addressed via community policing). Park and community centre upgrades (e.g., Overbrook Park, Rideau River Centenial Kiosk). Transit access and affordable housing options for vulnerable residents.
Issues by major community/neighbourhood
Overbrook Community Association Focus on redevelopment of aging Ottawa Community Housing stock (shallow-lot public housing renewal for better density and energy efficiency). Public safety (historical concerns with crime, gangs, and shootings, though addressed via community policing). Park and community centre upgrades (e.g., Overbrook Park, Rideau River Centennial Kiosk). Transit access and affordable housing options for vulnerable residents.
Rockcliffe Park
(Rockcliffe Park Residents Association)
Heritage preservation (National Historic Site status; concerns over zoning inconsistencies and adaptive reuse). Property maintenance (issues with neglected or abandoned homes). Traffic/speed management (e.g., 30 km/h zones and winter walking trails). Environmental upgrades like LED lighting and tree canopy. This is one of Ottawa's most affluent, low-density areas, so priorities lean toward protecting character and livability.
Rockcliffe Mews?
Rockcliffe Park (Rockcliffe Park Residents Association) Heritage preservation heavy weight (National Historic Site status; concerns over zoning inconsistencies and adaptive reuse). Property maintenance (issues with neglected or abandoned homes). Traffic/speed management (e.g., 30 km/h zones and winter walking trails). Environmental upgrades like LED lighting and tree canopy. This is one of Ottawa's most affluent, low-density areas, so priorities lean toward protecting character and livability
New Edinburgh (New Edinburgh Community Alliance / Crichton Community Council)
Parks and greenspace protection/enhancement (e.g., New Edinburgh Park upgrades, protective boulders, winter maintenance). Active transportation and public realm improvements along corridors like Beechwood. Heritage and community character amid infill pressures. Community events and social services via the Rideau-Rockcliffe Community Resource Centre.
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Lindenlea (Lindenlea Community Association)
Sidewalks, traffic calming, and pedestrian safety.
Park and community centre maintenance (e.g., furnace/AC upgrades).
Integration with broader ward transit and housing goals while preserving the mature residential feel.
Wateridge Village (Wateridge Village Community Association)
Transit service expansion (new routes as the area grows). New park development (e.g., Veterans’ Park). Community infrastructure for a newer/redeveloping neighbourhood.
Housing and recreational opportunities to support families.
Carson Grove / other smaller areas (Carson Grove Community Association and others like Viscount Alexander Park) General infrastructure (roads, sewers), park improvements (e.g., Alvin Heights, Hemlock Park), and access to social services.
Ward 13 (Rideau-Rockcliffe), Ottawa —
Key ward-wide themes: housing affordability/gentrification, transit reliability, park/facility upgrades, infrastructure renewal, public safety/mental health, heritage protection, and climate action (tree canopy, EV charging).
Ward-Wide Priorities (2025-2026) • Housing & Development: Affordable units, supportive housing, anti-renoviction measures, balanced intensification (opposition to excessive upzoning in low-density areas). Zoning bylaw debates focus on height/setback limits and 15-minute neighbourhoods
• Transit & Mobility: Bus optimization, active transportation (bike/ped paths), traffic calming, winter maintenance. • Parks & Recreation: Fieldhouses, play equipment, pools, fitness circuits, splash pads, lighting, waste diversion. Recent investments: Eugène Martineau Park (Wateridge), Alvin Heights/Hemlock upgrades, Veterans’ Park. rideau-rockcliffe.ca • Infrastructure: Road/sewer renewals, sidewalks (controversial in some areas), LED lighting, EV chargers. • Safety & Well-Being: ANCHOR mental health expansion (Overbrook 2026), community policing, Post-Incident Support, anti-racism/equity initiatives. • Environment/Heritage: Tree planting (270+ since 2023), salt runoff reduction, bird-friendly policies, heritage district protections. rideau-rockcliffe.ca
Granular Issues by Neighbourhood/Association
Overbrook (Overbrook Community Association) • Redevelopment of aging Ottawa Community Housing (energy-efficient, higher-density units without displacing residents). • Public safety: Violent crime/gangs (historical); expanded ANCHOR crisis response ($700k in 2026). • Park upgrades: Presland Park renewal, Rideau River Centennial Kiosk, St. Paul’s Park fitness equipment/lighting. • Community centre improvements (fire doors, etc.); transit access for vulnerable residents.
Castle Heights
More of a generalized area.
Vicount Alexander Park
Ottawa’s NIMBY Bandwidth TrapIn growing cities like Ottawa, big-ticket priorities — solving the housing crisis via zoning reform and density, fixing sewage tunnels/infrastructure, advancing transit, and managing regional growth — constantly lose bandwidth to hyper-local fights in affluent pockets like New Edinburgh (Ward 13). Vocal residents defend “neighborhood character,” heritage views, and street-level gripes (potholes, traffic calming, blocking NCC/Sussex redevelopment), flooding council with petitions and demands. The incumbent will pander for votes knowing he will lose at the council table. The result: city-wide problems drag on while parochial priorities dominate the agenda. Classic tension — everyone wants preserved charm in their backyard, but also expects the city to deliver affordable housing, smooth roads, and modern services everywhere else. New Edinburgh’s riverfront prestige and political proximity just amplify the dynamic.
Thought The City of Ottawa has several realistic, actionable levers under its direct control—primarily through zoning, development approvals, fees, incentives, and land use—to increase the supply of affordable housing. These build on recent progress like:
refreshed 10-Year Housing and Homelessness Plan (2026–2035).
Municipalities can't solve the entire crisis alone (major funding and some regulations come from the province and federal government), but Ottawa can meaningfully accelerate supply by
removing barriers,
lowering costs for developers/non-profits, and
prioritizing affordable units.
Here's what can realistically be done, grounded in what Ottawa is already implementing or has the power to expand: 1. Continue and enforce pro-density zoning reforms (already a big win)What it does: Allow "as-of-right" permissions for more housing types without lengthy rezoning applications—e.g., duplexes, triplexes, four-to-sixplexes ("missing middle"), and small multi-unit buildings (8–16 units) in existing neighbourhoods.Ottawa's actions: The new Zoning By-law (approved January 2026) is explicitly the "most housing-friendly in the city's history." It streamlines rules by building size/location (not use type), eliminates most minimum parking requirements (market-driven instead), allows higher heights near transit, eases infill/gentle density, and reduces restrictions on modular/prefab housing. It also supports family-sized units and seniors housing. Realistic next steps: Fully implement transit-oriented zoning amendments, further standardize approvals, and monitor uptake to hit provincial targets (e.g., part of Ontario's 1.5 million homes goal, with Ottawa's share at ~151,000 by 2031). 2. Streamline and speed up development approvalsCut red tape, standardize requirements, and set firm timelines for permits—especially for affordable and non-profit projects.Ottawa's actions: The HAP and HAF commitments focus exactly on this (90% of HAF funds go to the Affordable Housing Pipeline Strategy). This has already supported faster processing for projects in the pipeline (hundreds of units under construction or nearing start). Impact: Shorter timelines reduce holding costs, making projects more viable and attractive to builders. 3. Reduce or waive fees, development charges, and taxes for affordable projectsLower (or eliminate) development charges (DCs), permit fees, and property taxes for non-profit, co-op, and mixed-income affordable developments.Ottawa's actions: Already doing this via the Affordable Housing Tax Increment Equivalent Grant program, HAF-funded incentives, and partnerships (e.g., fast-tracking 2,000+ units on federal lands with waived charges/fees/taxes as part of the 2025 federal agreement). The 2026 budget includes $23.3 million in capital funding to advance ~436 affordable/supportive units. Realistic expansion: Tie more incentives to income-based affordability (the new 10-Year Plan defines "affordable" as ≤30% of household income for very low/moderate incomes) and extend to more projects. 4. Leverage city-owned land and strategic partnershipsSell, lease, or donate surplus municipal land at below-market rates for affordable housing. Partner with non-profits, developers, and higher governments.Ottawa's actions: Municipal Land Strategy has identified sites (e.g., 14 for ~500 units). Strong federal partnership via Build Canada Homes and HAF for mixed-income units on public lands. The 10-Year Plan emphasizes "leverage land, partnerships, and planning tools" under Goal 1.2 (increase community housing supply). Realistic next steps: Accelerate site identification and prioritization in the annual workplans. 5. Expand inclusionary zoning and targeted incentivesRequire or incentivize a percentage of affordable units in new market developments (via density bonuses or community improvement plans).Ottawa's actions: Proposals underway to design rules for moderately affordable units in some new buildings; HAF supports inclusionary zoning and multi-unit intensification amendments. 6. Support preservation and non-market supplyProtect existing affordable stock and fund non-profit/co-op projects through the pipeline strategy.The refreshed 10-Year Plan shifts to an income-based affordability definition (better targeting low/moderate incomes) and sets directional targets for more community housing unitsThese measures are realistic because they align with provincial mandates (e.g., Bill 23), federal funding incentives (HAF requires results on permits/supply), and Ottawa's own recent council approvals. They focus on unlocking private and non-profit development rather than relying solely on city subsidies. Progress is already visible: new zoning, pipeline advances, and federal deals for thousands of units. Challenges and realism check: NIMBY opposition can slow things politically, infrastructure costs are real (though HAF and province help), and deep affordability for the lowest incomes stillneed senior-government operating subsidies. Long-term, increasing overall supply (market rate+ deeply affordable) is the most effective way to ease prices—zoning and approvals are the city's strongest tools to achieve that.
Not mentioned above:
Vagrance
Squatting
Begging at street corners
Litter and trash
Oh yes, please, let's "maintain the character of the neighborhood"
24 Sussex Drive: Rideau-Rockcliffe Deserves a Voice
Prime Minister Carney is about to announce the future of 24 Sussex Drive, the long-empty official residence in our ward. The federal government and NCC (led by CEO Tobi Nussbaum, our former ward councillor) hold primary responsibility — they own and manage the property, and any decision on renovation, rebuild, or relocation rests with them. But that doesn’t erase the real municipal impacts on Rideau-Rockcliffe. Years of federal delay turned a heritage asset into an eyesore. Now, construction traffic, noise, expanded security perimeters, or shifts in neighbourhood character from changes along the riverfront will hit our streets and daily life directly. As Chair of the Built Heritage Committee our councillor, Rawlson King needs to step up now - if I was councillor, I would! ( the same applies to the East end Crossing)
Federal ownership doesn’t mean our neighbourhood should get ignored. We need proactive engagement: public consultations, clear impact studies on traffic, greenspace, and livability, plus full transparency on costs and timelines from the NCC and feds. King should demand a seat at the table and push for answers before the plan is locked in. Residents who will live with the consequences every day must be heard. This is how local governance can and should engage. Let’s not stay silent concerning our ward’s built heritage. Over to you Mr.King? Will you step up, or stay selectively mute?