Campaign Video

Https://youtu.be/zBxbnuPAazE

Saturday, 18 July 2026

Pop goes the bubble

 


The Hidden Tax: What Flooding Does to Your Home's Value — Even After the Water's Gone

You can pump out the basement. You can rip out the drywall, replace the flooring, run the dehumidifiers for three weeks straight. You can do everything right. And your home will still be worth less than it was before the water came in.

This is the part of the flooding story that doesn't make the news cycle, because it doesn't happen on the day of the flood — it happens quietly, over months and years, in the form of a discount that shows up whenever an affected property finally sells. It's a cost the City doesn't put on any balance sheet, doesn't disclose in any staff report, and doesn't take responsibility for. But it's real, it's measurable, and in parts of Rideau Rockcliffe Ward , it's a cost some residents are paying through no fault of their own.

Why "cleaned up" doesn't mean "worth the same"

There are three mechanisms at work, and none of them care how good your remediation job was.

Disclosure. Once a property has a documented flood or sewer backup event, that history follows it. A buyer who asks directly is legally entitled to a truthful answer, and in practice, insurance claims records and municipal 311 history have a way of surfacing during due diligence even when nobody asks the right question out loud. A freshly painted basement doesn't erase the file.

Insurance. Overland flood coverage and sewer backup coverage are optional add-ons in Ontario, not standard inclusions — and insurers price them based on risk, including a property's own claims history. A home that has already made one claim can see that optional coverage get more expensive, more restricted, or harder to find at all. That's a real, recurring cost that shows up in a buyer's math the moment they run the numbers on total cost of ownership.

Comparables. Real estate values are set by what similar homes nearby actually sell for. When a flood-prone street starts accumulating a track record — even one event, even years apart — appraisers and buyers start treating that street differently than the one two blocks over that's never had water in a basement. The gap doesn't close on its own. It tends to widen with each additional event, because now there isn't just a rumour, there's a pattern.

None of this requires a single dramatic flood. It just requires a documented risk that a rational buyer, lender, or insurer has to price in.

This isn't hypothetical for Rideau Rockcliffe Ward 

West Rockcliffe and Manor Park are named by the City's own Ottawa River Action Plan as among the largest remaining areas still on combined sewers — the older infrastructure that carries stormwater and sewage in the same pipe. Roughly 60% of the original combined sewer area across the city has undergone separation, with West Rockcliffe and Manor Park identified as two of the largest areas still waiting. That's not a footnote. That's an infrastructure decision, made and re-made in budget cycles for years, that leaves specific streets in our ward more exposed to sewer surcharge flooding than neighbourhoods where separation has already happened.

During the recent July 15th meeting, King was selectively muted on this topic.

And when that flooding hits a basement, the City's own guidance is blunt about who's on the hook. Water damage in a basement from sewer backup is only covered by home insurance if a homeowner has purchased optional sewer backup coverage — it's not part of a standard policy. Provincial disaster assistance doesn't reliably fill that gap either: the province's own disaster recovery program generally excludes sewer backup damage, with only a narrow low-income exception. The City's own compassionate grant tops out at a fixed $1,000 payment for a property owner or tenant affected by basement flooding from sewer surcharging, conditional on proof of at least $1,000 in damage — a program explicitly designed around the reality that this kind of flooding happens on infrastructure the City itself hasn't finished upgrading.

So here's the sequence, plainly stated: the City has known for years which streets are on old combined sewers. Those streets flood more often when the system surcharges. When they flood, standard insurance often doesn't cover it, provincial disaster relief usually doesn't cover it, and the City's own grant covers a fraction of the damage. And once that happens, the property carries a value discount that no amount of cleanup reverses — a discount that isn't compensated by anyone, anywhere in this chain.

Separation alone won't fix this

It's worth being precise about what actually solves the problem, because "sewer separation" on its own is only half the picture. Splitting sanitary and storm flows into two pipes stops the two from mixing — but on a hard rain, the storm side can still surcharge if there's nowhere for that peak volume to go before it overwhelms the system. The piece that actually protects basements during those peak events is underground storage: subterranean tunnels or tanks built to hold stormwater temporarily until treatment or discharge capacity catches up, instead of letting it back up into the streets and into people's homes.

Until that storage capacity exists for the areas still carrying this risk, separation projects reduce the frequency of the problem without eliminating it. That distinction matters for how the City frames its own progress: a "60% separated" headline number can create the impression that the remaining risk is a rounding error, when in practice the neighbourhoods still waiting are waiting for the two things — separation and storage — that together are what actually stop the flooding, not either one alone.

The part nobody puts a number on

If you ask the City what a delayed sewer separation project costs, you'll get a construction estimate. You won't get an answer that includes what it costs the resident whose home is now worth less because of a decision made in a budget committee they never sat in on.

That's the definition of an externality: a cost that's real, that falls on someone specific, and that never shows up in the accounting of the people who made the decision. It's the same pattern I've traced through the Taggart landfill vote, through Lansdowne 2.0, through the LRT oversight gap — decisions made by people who don't bear the consequence, at the expense of people who had no seat at the table when it was made.

Infrastructure neglect doesn't send a bill. It just quietly reduces what you own, and waits for you to notice at closing.

What accountability actually looks like here

This isn't a call for panic or for residents to start distrusting their own homes. It's a call for the City to be honest about the tradeoff it's making every time a sewer separation project gets deferred another budget cycle: it isn't just deferring a construction cost, it's deferring it onto specific residents' net worth, with their name on the mortgage and someone else's name on the vote.

If we're serious about infrastructure oversight in this ward, that has to include naming this cost out loud — and asking why streets that have waited years for separation should keep waiting, while the discount on their homes compounds every year the project stays on a list instead of a schedule.

— Peter Karwacki, PMP, candidate for Ward 13 (Rideau-Rockcliffe)

Friday, 17 July 2026

Gatineau Park..think the unthinkable



FireSmart principles apply to us in Ottawa.

Bottom line: In a hypothetical extreme wildfire with perfect wind alignment and an ignition near the park’s southern edge, flying embers could reach Rockcliffe Heights — making it a serious concern for spot fires or structure ignition. However, this is an edge-case scenario. Typical or even moderately severe fires would not produce spotting that far. The bigger everyday risks from such a fire are smoke, park closures, and potential threats to closer communities on the Quebec side.

FireSmart principles around properties (clear debris from roofs/gutters, use ember-resistant materials), and report any smoke or fire immediately. 

For the latest conditions, check sopfeu.qc.ca or ncc-ccn.gc.ca. Stay safe!

  • Worst-case scenario (prolonged drought, high winds pushing embers toward populated edges, slower initial attack): A larger fire with extensive spotting. Embers could ignite homes, decks, roofs, dry landscaping, or outbuildings in nearby communities (e.g., Chelsea or Gatineau outskirts). This could trigger evacuations, property damage, and major smoke impacts. Suppression costs would be high, tourism disrupted, and the fire harder to contain due to terrain and multiple fronts.

Gatineau Park  is a large protected area of more than 361 km² in Quebec’s Outaouais region, part of Canada’s National Capital Region

It features hilly terrain (Gatineau Hills and Eardley Escarpment), mixed hardwood forests (sugar maple, beech, oak, eastern white pine), some mixed/boreal elements, wetlands, and areas close to urban development in places like Chelsea, Old Chelsea, and Gatineau. The southern sectors are nearer to populated areas, while northern parts are more remote.

Lightning is a common natural ignition source for wildfires in forested regions like this (Quebec sees dozens of lightning-caused fires annually). A strike can ignite a tree, duff, or dry vegetation, starting a small fire that may smolder or grow depending on conditions.

How a Lightning Fire Could Develop and Spread

In typical summer conditions (especially July, when the park often has fire bans), the fire starts small. It can spread as a surface fire through leaf litter, grass, or understory. In conifer areas or with wind, it can transition to a crown fire (burning through treetops), which is faster and more intense. Hilly terrain accelerates spread uphill due to pre-heating and convection (the “chimney effect”).

Flying embers (also called firebrands or spotting) are burning pieces of bark, twigs, pine needles, or other debris lofted high by the fire’s heat and carried by wind. This is one of the most dangerous aspects of wildfire behavior:

  • Typical distances: Embers often travel an average of about 2 km (roughly 1.2 miles), but can go 5+ miles (8+ km) or, in extreme documented cases, up to 17 km under strong winds, updrafts from topography, and favorable ember size/shape.
  • Smaller, lighter embers stay airborne longer; larger ones are more likely to ignite when they land.
  • They create spot fires ahead of (or flanking) the main fire front. This can happen across roads, trails, small water bodies, or even firebreaks, making containment much harder. In wind-driven fires, embers can create an “ember storm” that overwhelms defenses.

In Gatineau Park’s mixed forests and varied topography, embers could easily ignite new spots within the park or, if winds blow toward the south/east, push them toward the wildland-urban interface (WUI) near residential areas.

How Serious Could It Get?

It depends heavily on conditions — fuel moisture (drier = worse), wind speed/direction, temperature, humidity, time of detection, and exact ignition location. Here’s a realistic range:

  • Best/moderate case (quick detection, moderate winds, good response): The fire stays relatively small (tens to a few hundred hectares). SOPFEU (Société de protection des forêts contre le feu) monitors lightning strikes and responds rapidly with ground crews, helicopters, and water bombers. Most fires in Quebec are contained early.
  • Serious but manageable case (dry conditions, moderate-to-strong winds): The fire grows to hundreds or low thousands of hectares. Multiple spot fires from embers complicate control lines. The park could see significant ecological impacts (burned forest, effects on wildlife and biodiversity — though fire is a natural process whose role in these ecosystems is still being evaluated). Smoke could affect air quality across the Ottawa-Gatineau region.
    • Worst-case scenario (prolonged drought, high winds pushing embers toward populated edges, slower initial attack): A larger fire with extensive spotting. Embers could ignite homes, decks, roofs, dry landscaping, or outbuildings in nearby communities (e.g., Chelsea or Gatineau outskirts). This could trigger evacuations, property damage, and major smoke impacts. Suppression costs would be high, tourism disrupted, and the fire harder to contain due to terrain and multiple fronts.

The park’s proximity to urban areas in the south increases WUI risk — embers are responsible for a large percentage of home ignitions during wildfires. However, there are no records of recent catastrophic large-scale wildfires burning through Gatineau Park itself (fire bans are frequently imposed when SOPFEU rates are Very High or Extreme, and response capabilities are strong).

Key Mitigating Factors

  • Rapid response: SOPFEU handles wildfire suppression in Quebec; the National Capital Commission (NCC) manages the park and coordinates. Lightning detection systems, aerial resources, and ground access via park roads help.
  • Preparedness: Fire bans prohibit campfires and charcoal when risk is high (gas grills often allowed). Public reporting of smoke or fires is important.
  • Forest type: Mixed hardwoods are generally less prone to extreme crown fires than dense boreal conifer stands, though white pine can support intense burning.

In short, a lightning-started fire with significant ember activity could get quite serious — potentially burning a meaningful portion of the park, creating spot fires that jump ahead, impacting air quality regionally, and threatening nearby homes or infrastructure if conditions align poorly and winds carry embers toward developed areas. 

It would likely cause evacuations, closures, and economic/ecological costs in a bad scenario. That said, Canadian wildfire agencies are experienced and equipped; most fires do not reach catastrophic scales when attacked early.

Wildfire risk is real and increasing with climate trends (hotter, drier summers). If you’re in or near the area, follow NCC and SOPFEU advisories, practice 

FireSmart principles around properties (clear debris from roofs/gutters, use ember-resistant materials), and report any smoke or fire immediately. For the latest conditions, check sopfeu.qc.ca or ncc-ccn.gc.ca. Stay safe!

What's Really going on at Alvin Heights?

 


Alvin Heights Park: A Small Case Study in How "Investment" Gets Framed

Councillor Rawlson King's 2025 year-end message lists Alvin Heights Park among the wins for Manor Park: double basketball keys, a resurfaced pool deck, a new accessible ramp, shade tables, an outdoor ping-pong table. 

On paper it reads like proactive stewardship — a councillor identifying a community asset and investing in it ahead of need. The capital numbers are real: $410,000 for the park improvements, another $59,000 for the pool deck replacement and accessibility ramp, plus $15,000 tucked into the 2026 budget just to audit the condition of the storage building.

The framing is the part worth examining.

What the newsletter says, and what the neighbourhood says

The Manor Park Chronicle's own year-in-review tells a different version of the same story. 

In their account, the money allocated at Alvin was initially closer to patchwork repairs than a real upgrade — and it took a direct meeting between nearby residents, the councillor's office, and city park staff before there was genuine recognition of how much the site actually needed. 

Only after that meeting did the scope expand into something residents would call an upgrade rather than a repair job.

That's not a minor difference in tone. It's the difference between a council office identifying a problem and fixing it, versus a council office responding to sustained resident pressure and then presenting the outcome as foresight.

This matters because it's a pattern, not an isolated incident. It's the same shape as the sidewalk deferral on Arundel, Farnham, and Jeffrey — where a plan moving through the Integrated Renewal Policy only shifted after eight months of consultation and a visible community pushback campaign, not because the underlying planning logic changed on its own. 

It's the same shape as LRT oversight, where public calls for stronger accountability arrived without the councillor ever having sat on the Transit Commission or the Light Rail Subcommittee. 

The public-facing statement and the institutional lever pulling it are two different things, and the gap between them is where accountability actually lives.

A basketball key isn't the issue. The sequencing is.

None of this is a complaint about the park improvements themselves. 

New basketball keys, better pool deck seating, an accessible ramp — these are good, ordinary, overdue municipal maintenance items, and Manor Park residents should get them. The question a PMP-trained eye asks isn't "is this a good deliverable," it's "what was the process that produced it, and does the public narrative match that process."

A capital plan built on responsiveness to squeaky-wheel advocacy isn't a capital plan — it's triage dressed up as planning. When residents have to organize a meeting to get a park's actual condition acknowledged before scope gets set, the system worked despite the process, not because of it. 

That's worth naming plainly, because "the councillor delivered $410,000 for your park" and "residents had to force a reassessment before the councillor's office understood what the park needed" are both true, and only one of them shows up in the newsletter.

The structural fix

The recurring theme across capital file after capital file in this ward — Alvin Heights, the Manor Park sidewalks, the sewer and watermain integrated renewal — is that outcomes depend heavily on whether a given street or park has an organized resident group willing to escalate. 

That's not a criticism of residents organizing; it's exactly what they should do. It's a criticism of a planning process that seems to require it. A ward that runs on squeaky-wheel prioritization instead of a transparent, published condition-assessment schedule will always produce winners and losers based on who shows up to meetings, not on where the actual need is greatest.

  • If elected, my approach is the boring, PMP one: 
  • publish the condition audits for every ward asset on a fixed cycle, 
  • publish the criteria that move a line item from "audit" to "repair" to "upgrade," and 
  • make that criteria public before the ribbon-cutting, not after. 


Residents shouldn't have to organize a meeting to get their park's condition acknowledged. The city already has the data — the $15,000 storage building audit at Alvin proves the mechanism exists. It just isn't being used as a planning tool; it's being used as a budget line that shows up after the fact.

Sources: Councillor Rawlson King's 2025 Year-End Message and "Issues" capital plan page (rideau-rockcliffe.ca); Manor Park Chronicle year-in-review.

Stanley Park - " oh, is this an election year?"

 



Out meeting the dog walkers and bird watchers.

One woman asked, " are you an enviromentalist?"

I am a member of the RCEN and sit on the environmental impact sub committee.

I recently summitted a paperr to the Canadian Dam Association on the topic of The cummulative Impacts of projects on the kipawa River.

So yes, I am a river preservationist...good for the birds.

See


Since 2007

One older fellow says,'"youre white" how do people know about you?  ...then refused to take my card while candidly saying he thought most disapproved of the job incumbents are doing.

Its why I run.


Vote for Peter Karwacki.


Acclamation or Real Contest in Rideau-Rockcliffe? Why Opposition Makes the Ward Stronger | Peter Karwacki

Acclamation or Real Contest in Rideau-Rockcliffe?
Why Opposition Makes the Ward Stronger

By Peter Karwacki • Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward 13 • July 2026

In Rideau-Rockcliffe, it’s easy to get comfortable with the status quo. An incumbent who faces little real pushback can settle into a rhythm of announcements, ribbon-cuttings, and committee work that looks busy on paper but often leaves the hard files sitting.

That comfort comes at a cost. When opposition is thin or missing, execution slips. Infrastructure waits. Oversight on big projects gets softer. Neighbourhood concerns — from the east end crossing to everyday issues in Overbrook or Manor Park — get managed instead of solved.

Real opposition changes the equation. It doesn’t have to win to deliver value. It forces sharper focus, clearer answers, and better preparation for the work that actually moves the ward forward.

Complacency shows up in the details

When there’s no serious contest, a few patterns tend to appear:

  • Decisions get made with less pressure to justify timelines or trade-offs.
  • Big projects (LRT oversight, road repairs, park upgrades) drift because no one is pressing for measurable progress.
  • The gap between Rockcliffe Park and the rest of the ward stays unaddressed because the political cost of inaction feels low.
  • New ideas and fresh project-management approaches stay on the sidelines.

Rideau-Rockcliffe deserves better than management by default. Residents in every neighbourhood — New Edinburgh, Lindenlea, Castle Heights, Overbrook — feel the difference when files drag or promises stay general.

Opposition is the test that improves the result

A real challenger doesn’t just criticize. They make the incumbent defend the record in public, under pressure. That process does three practical things:

  • It surfaces weaknesses before the general election does it the hard way.
  • It forces clearer answers on specific ward priorities — noise policy, east-end connectivity, transparency on community assets.
  • It builds campaign muscle and organizational sharpness that carries into the next term, win or lose.

Think of it like any project you’ve managed. The version that never faces tough questions or competing ideas rarely improves. The one that gets stress-tested comes out tighter, better scoped, and more likely to deliver.

Even when the challenger doesn’t win the seat, the incumbent walks away with better-honed arguments, identified gaps in delivery, and a stronger sense of what residents actually expect. The ward benefits either way.

False unity doesn’t build strong wards

Some will say any contest creates division. In Rideau-Rockcliffe we’ve seen enough of that argument. Real unity isn’t the absence of debate — it’s the result of debate that produces clearer priorities and accountable execution.

When competition is discouraged or downplayed, the default becomes continuity over improvement. That’s how we end up with strong communicators who open events but weaker results on the unglamorous work: shepherding projects through planning, enforcing standards, closing files instead of just starting them.

Rideau-Rockcliffe needs doers who treat the subcommittee work and the oversight as urgent as the next community profile piece.

The challenger’s real contribution

When someone steps up with opposition, they’re not just running for themselves. They’re giving the ward a service: a live test of ideas, a public record of where the incumbent stands on concrete issues, and pressure that keeps everyone sharper.

I see it every time I knock on doors. People want results on the things that affect daily life — safer streets, better transit connections, accountable spending. A contest brings those conversations into the open. It gives residents more information and more reason to engage.

Even a strong loss leaves the eventual councillor better prepared. They’ve had to listen harder, tighten their plans, and prove they can handle pushback. That preparation serves Rideau-Rockcliffe long after election night.

Acclamation feels clean and unified. A real contest feels messy but produces better outcomes. Rideau-Rockcliffe has waited long enough for the version that actually closes files and delivers on the ground.

If you want a ward that keeps improving instead of managing expectations, support the conditions that make improvement necessary. Inform yourselves. Ask the hard questions. And when the time comes, vote for the approach that treats this place like a project worth finishing properly.

Something needs to be done. Let’s make sure it actually gets done.

This time around, inform yourselves,

 vote differently, vote wisely. 

Vote for Peter Karwacki for 

Rideau Rockcliffe.



The devine right of Kings?

The Letter - Hold them to account



In 2022, of the over 100 challengers to incumbents exactly none were successful.

Accountability comes but once in four years. 


Go to court over the time-line?

doubling of the original cost slated in the contract scope changes?

 PCL pointed to ‘evolving’ expectations.
“As with any large and complex project, evolving requirements and requests can influence your ....

So go ahead, write them- a letter
rideaurockcliffeward@ottawa.ca
Start with King, he sits on the Library Board.

The over runs will impact your street, your taxes, your parks.

Voters, hold them to account - 🙏 please?


Councillors and incumbents
Carr, Marty <marty.carr@ottawa.ca>; Brockington, Riley <Riley.Brockington@ottawa.ca>;ĺ Sutcliffe, Mark (Mayor/Maire) <mark.sutcliffe@ottawa.ca>; 
Luloff, Matt <Matt.Luloff@ottawa.ca>; Dudas, Laura <Laura.Dudas@ottawa.ca>; Hill, David <david.hill@ottawa.ca>; 
Curry, Cathy <cathy.curry@ottawa.ca>; Kelly, Clarke <clarke.kelly@ottawa.ca>; Gower, Glen <Glen.Gower@ottawa.ca>; Bay Ward / Quartier Baie <bayward@ottawa.ca>; 
Collegeward / Quartiercollege <Collegeward@ottawa.ca>; knoxdalemerivale <knoxdalemerivale@ottawa.ca>; 
Bradley, Jessica <jessica.bradley@ottawa.ca>; 
Tierney, Timothy <Tim.Tierney@ottawa.ca>; 
Plante, Stéphanie <Stephanie.Plante@ottawa.ca>; RideauRockcliffe Ward <rideaurockcliffeward@ottawa.ca>; Troster, Ariel <ariel.troster@ottawa.ca>; Leiper, Jeff <Jeff.Leiper@ottawa.ca>; Capital Ward <CapitalWard@ottawa.ca>; Kitts, Catherine<Catherine.Kitts@ottawa.ca>; Darouze, George <george.darouze@ottawa.ca>; 
Ward21 / Quartier21ĥ <Ward21@ottawa.ca>; 
Desroches, Steve <STEVE.DESROCHES@OTTAWA.CA>; 
Lo, Wilson <wilson.lo@ottawa.ca>

Media

Challengers


Vote for Peter Karwacki.


Acclamation or Real Contest in Rideau-Rockcliffe? Why Opposition Makes the Ward Stronger | Peter Karwacki

Acclamation or Real Contest in Rideau-Rockcliffe?
Why Opposition Makes the Ward Stronger

By Peter Karwacki • Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward 13 • July 2026

In Rideau-Rockcliffe, it’s easy to get comfortable with the status quo. An incumbent who faces little real pushback can settle into a rhythm of announcements, ribbon-cuttings, and committee work that looks busy on paper but often leaves the hard files sitting.

That comfort comes at a cost. When opposition is thin or missing, execution slips. Infrastructure waits. Oversight on big projects gets softer. Neighbourhood concerns — from the east end crossing to everyday issues in Overbrook or Manor Park — get managed instead of solved.

Real opposition changes the equation. It doesn’t have to win to deliver value. It forces sharper focus, clearer answers, and better preparation for the work that actually moves the ward forward.

Complacency shows up in the details

When there’s no serious contest, a few patterns tend to appear:

  • Decisions get made with less pressure to justify timelines or trade-offs.
  • Big projects (LRT oversight, road repairs, park upgrades) drift because no one is pressing for measurable progress.
  • The gap between Rockcliffe Park and the rest of the ward stays unaddressed because the political cost of inaction feels low.
  • New ideas and fresh project-management approaches stay on the sidelines.

Rideau-Rockcliffe deserves better than management by default. Residents in every neighbourhood — New Edinburgh, Lindenlea, Castle Heights, Overbrook — feel the difference when files drag or promises stay general.

Opposition is the test that improves the result

A real challenger doesn’t just criticize. They make the incumbent defend the record in public, under pressure. That process does three practical things:

  • It surfaces weaknesses before the general election does it the hard way.
  • It forces clearer answers on specific ward priorities — noise policy, east-end connectivity, transparency on community assets.
  • It builds campaign muscle and organizational sharpness that carries into the next term, win or lose.

Think of it like any project you’ve managed. The version that never faces tough questions or competing ideas rarely improves. The one that gets stress-tested comes out tighter, better scoped, and more likely to deliver.

Even when the challenger doesn’t win the seat, the incumbent walks away with better-honed arguments, identified gaps in delivery, and a stronger sense of what residents actually expect. The ward benefits either way.

False unity doesn’t build strong wards

Some will say any contest creates division. In Rideau-Rockcliffe we’ve seen enough of that argument. Real unity isn’t the absence of debate — it’s the result of debate that produces clearer priorities and accountable execution.

When competition is discouraged or downplayed, the default becomes continuity over improvement. That’s how we end up with strong communicators who open events but weaker results on the unglamorous work: shepherding projects through planning, enforcing standards, closing files instead of just starting them.

Rideau-Rockcliffe needs doers who treat the subcommittee work and the oversight as urgent as the next community profile piece.

The challenger’s real contribution

When someone steps up with opposition, they’re not just running for themselves. They’re giving the ward a service: a live test of ideas, a public record of where the incumbent stands on concrete issues, and pressure that keeps everyone sharper.

I see it every time I knock on doors. People want results on the things that affect daily life — safer streets, better transit connections, accountable spending. A contest brings those conversations into the open. It gives residents more information and more reason to engage.

Even a strong loss leaves the eventual councillor better prepared. They’ve had to listen harder, tighten their plans, and prove they can handle pushback. That preparation serves Rideau-Rockcliffe long after election night.

Acclamation feels clean and unified. A real contest feels messy but produces better outcomes. Rideau-Rockcliffe has waited long enough for the version that actually closes files and delivers on the ground.

If you want a ward that keeps improving instead of managing expectations, support the conditions that make improvement necessary. Inform yourselves. Ask the hard questions. And when the time comes, vote for the approach that treats this place like a project worth finishing properly.

Something needs to be done. Let’s make sure it actually gets done.

This time around, inform yourselves,

 vote differently, vote wisely. 

Vote for Peter Karwacki for 

Rideau Rockcliffe.

Thursday, 16 July 2026

Ward 12's Edgewood is Every wards nightmare

 


When the Home Itself Disappears: What Edgewood's Closure Reveals About a Blind Spot in City Oversight

Just over 100 adults living with significant mental health or cognitive disabilities have been told, by letter, that the only home many of them have known for years — in some cases decades — is closing by September 30. 

Edgewood Care Centre, established in 1983 and operating on Stevens Avenue in Overbrook, is a Residential Services Home under contract with the City of Ottawa. 

Its owner, Precision Health Group, has been unable to find a buyer.

This is not a story about one facility's bad luck. It's a story about what the City's own oversight framework was — and wasn't — built to catch.

The Program, in Brief

The City of Ottawa has administered Residential Services (formerly Domiciliary Hostel) funding since the 1970s. Today the Housing Services Branch provides subsidies to roughly 980 residents through purchase-of-service agreements with 26 privately owned and five not-for-profit homes across the city. These are not incidental placements. 

Residents are typically living with a psychiatric, developmental, or physical disability, and the homes provide 24-hour urgent response, medication management, meals, housekeeping, and money management — the full scaffolding of daily life for people who often cannot rebuild that scaffolding on short notice.

The City's own Residential Services Standards document — the framework that forms part of every service agreement — runs to 53 pages. It is thorough. It specifies bedroom square footage, mattress width, water temperature limits, meal timing windows, staff-to-resident ratios, and exactly how a resident's trust account must be reconciled after death. 

It requires annual fire inspections, annual public health inspections, and an annual operational review conducted by City staff.

What the Standards Actually Require

Operators are required to report "serious occurrences" to the City within 24 to 48 hours — fires, deaths, critical injuries, and incidents likely to attract media coverage all trigger mandatory disclosure. 

Operators must also flag anything that will disrupt services to tenants for an extended period, the example given in the standards being major building repairs.

There is also a discharge and termination process — but it is written entirely around the individual resident. 

If one person is being evicted or transferred, the operator must follow the notice requirements of the Residential Tenancies Act, and the City is looped in by phone as soon as a discharge date is known, ideally with a discharge meeting involving the resident, the operator, and a City caseworker before the move.

What the Standards Don't Require

Search the document for a section on what happens when the entire facility shuts down, and there isn't one. 

The 53 pages cover eligibility, staffing, insurance, monitoring, complaints, tenant rights, physical safety, activities, and financial management — eight provincial categories, each dutifully addressed. Whole-home closure isn't one of them.

There is no requirement that the City monitor an operator's financial solvency between annual reviews. 

There is no minimum notice period the City requires before a facility closes its doors entirely — only the RTA notice owed to individual tenants, which is a different thing from planning a coordinated wind-down for over 100 people at once. 

There is no continuity obligation on the operator if they can't find a buyer — no requirement to hand off residents to a successor operator, no requirement to give the City advance warning before residents receive their letters. 

And there's no evidence of a standing overflow capacity plan: a list of beds across the other 30 partner homes that could be activated the moment a facility the size of Edgewood goes offline.

The annual operational review — the City's core monitoring tool — is built on an assumption: that the facility being reviewed will still exist next year to be reviewed again. 

Edgewood's closure is the proof that assumption doesn't always hold, and that when it doesn't, there's no mechanism designed to catch it.

Why This Matters Beyond Overbrook

Edgewood sits in Rideau-Vanier, not Rideau-Rockcliffe — but the program that failed to see this coming operates the same way in every ward, including this one. 

Any of the Residential Services Homes serving Rideau-Rockcliffe residents operates under the identical standards document, with the identical gap. 

If an operator here ran into the same financial trouble, the City would learn about it the same way it learned about Edgewood: after the letters had already gone out.

That's the pattern worth naming plainly. Not negligence by any one person, but a structural blind spot — a monitoring system exhaustively detailed on bedroom dimensions and silent on business continuity, for a population that has the least capacity of anyone in the city to absorb a sudden loss of housing.

The families and residents affected by Edgewood's closure deserve more than caseworkers scrambling in response. They deserve a program that was built to see this coming.


Sources: City of Ottawa Residential Services Standards (December 2010, revised March 2016); CBC News, "Ottawa residence for adults with special needs to close in September"; City of Ottawa Residential Services Homes program listing.

Samaritan's Purse - a process solves the problem



The Real Question Isn't Samaritan's Purse. It's Whether Anyone Vetted Them.

Ottawa is once again cleaning up after flooding, and once again a familiar disaster relief organization has shown up to help: Samaritan's Purse, the evangelical Christian charity that has assisted with cleanup in this city after nearly every major flood or storm since 2017. 


This week, two local politicians — Somerset Councillor Ariel Troster and Ottawa Centre MPP Catherine McKenney — publicly raised concerns about the organization's presence, citing its documented history in the United States of excluding queer volunteers and requiring a "statement of faith" from participants in past disaster response work.

Samaritan's Purse pushed back, calling the concerns a "non-issue" and stating there is "no discrimination whatsoever" in its current Ottawa operations.

The reaction to this exchange, predictably, split into camps. One side hears "don't let them help." The other hears "how dare you turn away free labour when people's basements are full of sewage." Both reactions are understandable. Both are also, I'd argue, missing the more useful question.

Nobody's Being Cancelled Here

Samaritan's Purse is on the ground in Ottawa, doing cleanup work, right now. 

Nobody blocked them. Two elected officials asked pointed public questions about an organization's track record and the city's judgment in bringing them in. That's scrutiny, not cancellation — and conflating the two lets everyone skip past the actual gap in this story.

The Question Nobody's Asked Publicly: Was There a Written Agreement?

Cities that bring in outside relief organizations during declared emergencies typically do so through some kind of memorandum of understanding — a document that spells out scope of work, conduct expectations, and often explicit non-discrimination terms. 

That's not an unusual or onerous ask. It's standard practice in disaster response partnerships, faith-based and secular alike, precisely because it protects both the city and the organization from exactly this kind of dispute.

So the question worth putting to the City of Ottawa isn't "should Samaritan's Purse be allowed to help flood victims." It's:

  • Did the city require a written agreement before inviting Samaritan's Purse to operate under its emergency response umbrella?
  • Does that agreement — if one exists — include a non-discrimination clause covering both who gets served and who can volunteer?
  • Does it address whether religious content, statements of faith, or "spiritual care" components (Samaritan's Purse's Canadian operations are explicitly linked with Billy Graham Evangelistic Association chaplains) are opt-in only, and clearly separated from the cleanup work itself?
  • Is there any complaint mechanism if a resident feels a line was crossed in their own home?
  • Who, specifically, made the call to bring this organization in, and was that decision made with council awareness or without it?

A Samaritan's Purse spokesperson told CBC the organization doesn't currently require volunteers to sign a statement of faith — but declined to say whether that applies to managers. That's not a resolved answer. That's an ambiguity a written clause exists specifically to close.

Why This Framing Matters More Than the Culture War Version

If the answer is "yes, there's a written MOU with clear terms," then the concerns raised by Troster and McKenney are addressed by process, not by public argument — and residents can be told, concretely, what protections exist. 

If the answer is "no, the city just said yes because the organization has capacity and has helped before," then that's a real gap, and it's one that will resurface the next time Ottawa floods, regardless of which organization shows up.

Either way, the answer is knowable. It's not a matter of opinion about faith-based charities or queer rights in the abstract — it's a matter of public record that the city can produce or fail to produce.

That's the accountability test that actually matters here: not whether residents personally approve of Samaritan's Purse, but whether the city has a documented, consistent standard for who it invites into people's flooded homes on its behalf — and whether that standard gets applied before the disaster relief unit rolls into town, not debated on social media after it's already there.


Have information on whether the City of Ottawa has a formal partnership agreement with Samaritan's Purse for this response? I'd welcome it — this piece will be updated if that documentation surfaces.