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Thursday, 16 July 2026

Post Election Councillor Education Program Proposal

Ottawa City Council Councillor Education Program

Ottawa City Council

Councillor Education Program

2026–2030 Term Ready
Education Expert Design • 2026

Comprehensive
Councillor
Education Program

A modern, blended, and outcome-focused curriculum for new and incumbent councillors. Builds directly on Ottawa’s existing orientation model while adding depth in Public Health, Police & Fire, Planning, and Parks & Recreation.

NC
IC

Designed for New Councillors (NC) & Incumbents (IC)

Part 1: New Councillor Orientation

Intensive 3–6 month onboarding program • ~50–70 hours structured learning

Starts November after election

1. Governance Foundations & Role Clarity

Week 1–2 • 6 hours

Learning Objectives:
  • Understand council as board of directors vs. operational role
  • Master council-staff boundaries and statutory duties
Core

2. Ethics, Integrity & Legal Responsibilities

Week 2 • 4 hours

Includes:
  • Code of Conduct (By-law 2025-99)
  • Conflict of Interest (MCIA)
  • Integrity Commissioner role

3. Public Health & Community Wellbeing

NEW • Week 3 • 5 hours

Public Health
Learning Objectives: Understand Ottawa Public Health mandate, social determinants of health, emergency health response, and councillor role in health equity.
  • Ottawa Public Health structure & priorities
  • Health equity, mental health, substance use, and housing as health issues
  • De-escalation & crisis supports (integrated with existing training)
  • Pandemic preparedness and climate-health links
Delivery: In-person with Ottawa Public Health + self-paced modules

4. Police, Fire & Public Safety Services

NEW • Week 4 • 6 hours

Police & Fire
Objectives: Governance of police & fire services, community safety, resource deployment, and oversight responsibilities.
  • Ottawa Police Service governance & Police Services Board role
  • Ottawa Fire Services operations & training centre tour
  • Community safety & well-being plans
  • Emergency coordination and incident command
  • Police governance refresher (as per existing August session)
Includes: Tours of Fire Training Centre & Paramedic HQ

5. Planning, Development & Housing

Week 5 • 7 hours (Expanded)

Enhanced content: Official Plan, Zoning By-law, inclusionary zoning framework, scattered-site affordable housing models, landlord supports, and development approval process.
Planning + Housing focus

6. Parks, Recreation & Community Assets

NEW • Week 6 • 4 hours

Learning Objectives:
  • Parks & Recreation master planning and asset management
  • Equity of access to parks and recreational programs
  • Climate-resilient parks design and urban forestry
  • Community engagement in park renewals (e.g., Alvin Heights, Bathgate)
  • Recreational programming and public health linkages
Delivery: Session + site visits to parks in Rideau-Rockcliffe and city-wide

7. Public Works, Infrastructure & Resource Deployment

Week 5–6 • 6 hours

In-house vs. contracted methods, “right-sized” deployment, project coordination challenges, combined sewer resilience, and post-storm lessons.

8. Emergency Management & Climate Resilience

Week 6 • 5 hours

Includes tabletop simulations, after-action review of July 1, 2026 storm, and climate adaptation strategies.
Additional Experiential Components
OC Transpo facilities tour
Fire Training Centre tour
Paramedic HQ tour
Parks site visits (ward-focused)

Part 2: Continuing Education Curriculum

For all councillors (incumbent & newly elected) • Ongoing throughout the term

Core Annual Tracks (Required)

Track A Governance & Oversight
  • • AI tools for oversight & data transparency
  • • Project accountability & performance measurement
  • • Annual Code of Conduct & ethics refresher
Track B Finance & Infrastructure
  • • Budget analysis & infrastructure gap management
  • • Resource deployment optimization (in-house vs. contracted)
  • • Long-range asset planning

Enhanced & New Tracks (Core + Elective)

NEW TRACK

Public Health & Community Wellbeing

  • • Social determinants of health & housing as health policy
  • • Mental health crisis response systems
  • • Climate change & public health impacts
  • • Health equity in decision-making
  • 2–4 hours annually
NEW TRACK

Police, Fire & Public Safety

  • • Police governance & oversight best practices
  • • Fire service resource deployment & prevention
  • • Community safety & well-being plans
  • • Inter-agency emergency coordination
  • 2–4 hours annually
NEW TRACK

Parks, Recreation & Green Infrastructure

  • • Parks master planning & equity of access
  • • Climate-resilient parks & urban forestry
  • • Recreational programming and public health links
  • • Community engagement in park renewals
  • 2–3 hours annually
ENHANCED

Planning & Housing Policy

  • • Advanced zoning & Official Plan updates
  • • Inclusionary zoning implementation progress
  • • Housing supply strategies (scattered-site & infill)
  • • Development charge & growth financing
  • 3–5 hours annually

Implementation & Delivery Model

Delivery Methods

  • • In-person workshops & tours (enhanced existing model)
  • • Self-paced micro-learning via dedicated LMS
  • • Virtual live sessions & cohort workshops
  • • Experiential (site visits, simulations, ride-alongs)
  • • External partnerships (AMO, FCM)

Tracking & Incentives

  • • Dedicated Councillor LMS portal
  • • Integration of existing $1,000 annual training credit
  • • Completion certificates & personalized development plans
  • • Recognition for advanced completion

Evaluation

  • • Pre/post assessments
  • • Participant feedback & application surveys
  • • Annual program review with councillor input
  • • Link to real council outcomes (e.g., better-informed motions)

Key Benefits of This Enhanced Program

Directly addresses public health, police/fire governance, parks equity, and advanced planning
Integrates public works resource deployment & methods
Builds on existing Ottawa orientation sessions and tours
Practical, ward-relevant (including Rideau-Rockcliffe examples)
Designed as an education expert • February 2026
Ready for immediate implementation or customization for the 2026–2030 term

Priority List

 ✅ Prioritized To-Do List for an Ottawa City Councillor (Efficiency-Optimized Framework)

This is a high-leverage action plan for any councillor, with strong tailoring to Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward realities and my documented priorities from peterkarwacki.blogspot.com 

  • governance/oversight with AI/tools, 
  • dispersed affordable housing + landlord supports, 
  • emergency preparedness post-flooding, 
  • data transparency, and 
  • big-project accountability).

Prioritization draws directly from:

  • The July 1, 2026 Canada Day storm (≈5,000+ basement flooding reports, power outages for 36,000+, response gaps in combined-sewer areas like parts of Rideau-Rockcliffe).
  • My recent blog posts (AI oversight, scattered-site housing, landlord incentives, mock-disaster drills, LRT/transit accountability).
  • Ongoing council matters (Planning & Housing Committee on zoning/inclusionary zoning with 0% set-aside until ~2028 reassessment, LRT East delays, budgets, heritage/ward projects, emergency coordination).

Efficiency principles applied:

  • Focus on policy, oversight, and systems (not casework — delegate to staff/office).
  • Use committees, data requests, and AI pilots for leverage.
  • Track ward/city KPIs (e.g., flood reports resolved, housing units permitted by type/location, transit reliability).
  • High-impact, low-effort first: motions, inquiries, collaborations, pilots.
  • Cross-ward/rural-urban cooperation (as you’ve advocated previously).
  • Measure everything: Request dashboards, before/after metrics, after-action reviews.

1. Governance, Oversight & Accountability (Highest Leverage Area — My own Core Strength)

Why high priority: Staff capacity gaps on complex projects (Lansdowne 2.0, hospital, Ādisōke); limited councillor information control; need for transparent systems. Recent big-project votes given my “oversight not popularity” stance.

High Priority To-Dos:

  • Immediately propose/pilot AI tools for oversight (plain-language report summaries, variance tracking, pattern detection in service data, vote accountability checks). Request staff report on auditable, transparent AI procurement (reference my July 16 post).
  • File targeted inquiries/motions for open data dashboards on infrastructure assets, road/sidewalk conditions by segment, capital plan spending by ward, and service performance (build on my FOIA/open data post).
  • Push for strengthened committee oversight (e.g., active role or enhanced scrutiny on Emergency Preparedness; request after-action report on July 1 storm).
  • Demand pre- and post-project accountability on major capital items (e.g., independent reviews or KPIs for Lansdowne 2.0 and LRT).

Medium Priority:

  • Advocate public reporting of all affordable housing locations and inclusionary zoning progress.
  • Support motions for service standards and organizational transparency (e.g., public-facing staff directories).

Efficiency Tip: Join or influence Finance & Corporate Services or relevant sub-committees. Use AI to summarize voluminous reports before meetings.

2. Housing & Affordable Development / Planning (High Priority)

Why high priority: Chronic affordability crisis (ward data shows high core housing need, e.g., Overbrook); my ⁷strong advocacy for scattered-site/dispersed models over concentration; landlord risk mitigation to boost supply; criticism of delayed inclusionary zoning (0% set-aside approved April 2026, reassessment ~2028).

High Priority To-Dos:

  • Advocate immediate activation or acceleration of inclusionary zoning framework (push for earlier market reassessment or pilot in transit-oriented areas).
  • Promote and expand landlord supports city-wide: scale Rent Supplement, Housing First partnerships, Landlord Damage Fund, master leasing, rental guarantees, and streamlined TIEGs for infill/small-scale projects (align with provincial Bill 60).
  • Push scattered-site policy for affordable/supportive housing (small infill near transit/schools; public reporting of locations). Oppose large concentrated sites.
  • Support missing-middle and gentle density via the new Zoning By-law while protecting neighbourhood character/heritage (e.g., Rockcliffe Park, Lindenlea, Overbrook).

Medium Priority:

  • Request ward-specific housing needs data and pipeline tracking (permitted vs. built units).
  • Collaborate on incentives for family-sized units and seniors housing.

Efficiency Tip: Work through Planning & Housing Committee. Track metrics: % dispersed units, landlord participation rates, time-to-occupancy. Partner with provincial/federal programs.

3. Emergency Management, Climate Resilience & Infrastructure (Very High — Driven by Recent Event)

Why highest urgency: July 1, 2026 storm exposed gaps (slow activation, limited drills, combined sewers in Rideau-Rockcliffe areas, post-storm accommodation issues). My July 15 blog directly calls this out.

High Priority To-Dos:

  • Demand comprehensive after-action review of July 1 storm (response timelines, committee oversight, communication, debris/waste handling, temporary shelter quality). Present at next relevant committee.
  • Advocate mandatory regular mock disaster drills and pre-tested protocols (especially for flooding/sewer backup).
  • Push long-term resilience: accelerated combined sewer separation/separation studies in vulnerable wards; basement flood prevention grants/retrofits; climate-adaptive infrastructure in capital plan.
  • Request ward-level vulnerability mapping and prioritized investment (Rideau-Rockcliffe specifics).

Medium Priority:

  • Improve 311/My ServiceOttawa integration and public dashboards for flood reporting/status.
  • Support debris collection streamlining and provincial disaster relief advocacy (ongoing post-storm efforts).

Efficiency Tip: Leverage Emergency & Protective Services; request real-time dashboards. Focus on prevention (capital) over reaction.

4. Transportation & Transit (High/Medium Priority)

Why priority: Ongoing LRT East Extension delays (substantial completion March 2026, no firm opening timeline as of June 2026 due to fleet/equipment issues); historical performance shortfalls; my critiques of oversight gaps. Local road/sidewalk renewals and safety projects active in ward (Manor Park, etc.).

High Priority To-Dos:

  • Demand enhanced Transit Committee oversight and clear timelines/KPIs for LRT East (trial running, reliability fixes, spalling/bearing issues).
  • Push compensation mechanisms or service guarantees for disruptions (build on past council discussions).
  • Support/monitor local traffic calming, sidewalk renewal, and road safety projects (e.g., via Road Safety Initiatives Fund).

Medium Priority:

  • Advocate active transportation improvements and integration with new development.
  • Request performance dashboards (on-time performance, ridership by corridor).

Efficiency Tip: Focus questions on measurable outcomes. Collaborate with rural councillors on regional transit needs.

5. Parks, Recreation, Environment & Heritage (Medium Priority)

Ward-specific activity is high (Alvin Heights Park, Bathgate Park renewals, Centennial Garden, speed zones, etc.).

Medium Priority To-Dos:

  • Monitor and support community-engaged park renewals with clear timelines and resident input (surveys already underway in ward).
  • Advocate bird-friendly/ climate-resilient design in projects.
  • Protect heritage character in development reviews (Rockcliffe Park, etc.) while enabling appropriate infill.

Efficiency Tip: Delegate detailed engagement to ward office/staff; focus on policy consistency and budget alignment.

6. Budget, Finance & Asset Management (Medium/High Priority)

Ongoing capital planning ($13B+ 10-year plan) and annual budgets.

Medium/High Priority To-Dos:

  • Request granular ward/city asset condition data and prioritized renewal plans (tie to your open data advocacy).
  • Scrutinize big-ticket items for value-for-money and risk.
  • Support efficient use of federal/provincial housing and infrastructure funding.

Efficiency Tip: Use data/AI for variance analysis; focus on outcomes over inputs.

7. Public Safety, Community Services & Social Issues (Medium Priority)

Ongoing issues include encampments, mental health, crime prevention programs.

Medium Priority To-Dos:

  • Support balanced approaches (social services + targeted enforcement).
  • Advocate data-driven prevention (e.g., expand successful programs like mental health crisis response).
  • Monitor ward-specific safety initiatives (Gateway Speed Zones, etc.).

8. Ward Engagement & Constituent Services (Ongoing — Efficiency Focus)

Efficiency To-Dos:

  • Shift from reactive casework to systemic fixes (track recurring issues → motions).
  • Use efficient tools: regular newsletters, targeted surveys, AI-summarized feedback.
  • Build cross-ward coalitions on city-wide issues.
  • Maintain transparent communication on trade-offs (your “real choices” approach).

Overall Efficiency Recommendations for Any Councillor:

  • Time allocation: 40% oversight/governance, 30% high-priority policy (housing/emergency/transit), 20% committees/budget, 10% constituent/systemic fixes.
  • Tools: Request AI pilots immediately; build personal/staff dashboards for KPIs.
  • Metrics of Success: Reduced repeat flooding complaints; increased dispersed affordable units permitted; improved transit reliability scores; faster after-action implementation.
  • First 30–60 Days Actions (if newly elected or resetting): Storm after-action motion, AI oversight proposal, housing dispersal/landlord supports motion, open data request.
  • Collaboration: Engage Planning & Housing, Transit, Environment & Climate Change, and Emergency committees. Work with mayor’s office and provincial/federal partners.

This list is actionable, prioritized by real-world urgency and my platform, and designed for maximum impact with minimal wasted effort. It positions a councillor as an effective overseer and problem-solver rather than event-attender.

This can be refined further into a 90-day action plan or motion templates. 


 Rideau-Rockcliffe and Ottawa need strong, data-driven oversight.

AI in city managent

 


The Job Has Outgrown the Tools: Why Council Oversight Needs AI

Watching this council term, it's tempting to look for a villain. A councillor who isn't trying hard enough. A staffer who dropped the ball. A process someone designed badly on purpose. It's a satisfying story because it has a fix: replace the person, and the problem goes away.

It's also mostly wrong.

What I actually see is three separate, unglamorous problems stacking on top of each other — and none of them get solved by electing a more virtuous individual to do the same job with the same tools.

Three failures, not one

Staff capacity is uneven — because it's always uneven. Any organization the size of the City of Ottawa has strong performers and weak ones. That's not a scandal. It's a normal distribution. The real problem is that there's no systematic way to catch where capacity gaps intersect with the decisions that actually matter — the ones with nine-figure price tags and multi-year timelines, like Ādisōke, the new Civic Hospital campus, or Lansdowne 2.0. A gap in a low-stakes file is a rounding error. The same gap in a high-stakes file becomes a public inquiry two years later.

Councillors don't control the information they act on. They get what staff decides to put in front of them, framed the way staff frames it, on the timeline staff sets. A councillor with every intention of providing real oversight still can't act on what they never see. This isn't a character flaw. It's what happens when your only lens on a file is the report someone else chose to write.

Individual capacity is real, and it isn't a moral failing. Councillors are generalists asked to render expert-level judgment across planning, finance, transit, policing, environmental policy, and procurement — with a small staff budget and a punishing schedule. Expecting every councillor to personally out-analyze a professional staff report, on every file, every week, isn't a standard. It's a fantasy that lets us avoid asking why the system depends on it.

Put those three together and you get a council that looks paralyzed, staff who look inconsistent, and a public that assumes bad faith — when the actual diagnosis is bandwidth. Nobody in this system, staff or council, has the capacity to see everything at the scale the city now operates at. ($5.2 billion cad!)

What I already found by hand

I didn't come to this argument in the abstract. Earlier this year I ran an analysis of the city's 311 open data looking for patterns in how service requests get handled. What I found wasn't a ward-level story. It was a data integrity story: over 123,000 tickets bulk-closed in a six-day window. Not resolved — closed. That's the kind of anomaly that's invisible in a spreadsheet review and completely obvious the moment you run the numbers systematically.

Nobody assigned me to find that. I found it because I looked, and looking at data of that volume by hand is exactly the kind of work a human being should not have to do to catch a problem that size.

That's the argument in miniature. The oversight gap on this council isn't a motivation problem. It's that the tools available to councillors and their small staff teams are built for a city half this size, moving half this fast.

What AI-assisted oversight actually looks like

Not a chatbot bolted onto the city website. Not a generic "innovation" line in a platform. Specific, boring, auditable applications:

  • Automated variance tracking on capital projects — flagging budget and timeline drift the moment it happens, not in a post-mortem report two years after the fact.
  • Pattern detection across service data — catching data integrity problems like the 311 bulk-closure before they become a footnote nobody notices.
  • Plain-language summarization of staff reports — so councillors, and the public, can actually parse what they're voting on instead of relying on the executive summary staff chose to write.
  • Systematic cross-referencing of votes against public statements over time — the kind of accountability check I've been doing manually, file by file, that should be routine infrastructure instead of one person's spare-time project.

None of this replaces judgment. It replaces the manual grunt work that currently stands between a councillor and having enough information to exercise judgment in the first place.

The obvious objection — and why it doesn't undercut the case

AI in government can absolutely become another opaque process, bolted on without transparency, that nobody outside city hall can question. That risk is real, and I'm not interested in trading one black box for another.

The answer isn't to avoid the tool. It's to insist that it serves the open-data and accountability framework rather than replacing it — every flag it raises has to be traceable, every method has to be published, and the output has to be something a member of the public can check, not just trust. If it isn't auditable, it isn't accountability. It's just a new place to hide.

The point

This council isn't struggling because the people in it are uniquely unqualified or uniquely lazy. It's struggling because the job of overseeing a city this size, with this much capital spending and this much data, has outgrown the manual tools we still expect councillors to use. Fix the tools, and you fix a problem that no amount of finger-pointing at individual councillors or individual staffers will ever touch.

That's the platform. Not "trust me more than the other guy." Build the infrastructure that makes trust unnecessary, because the numbers are checking themselves.

Wednesday, 15 July 2026

Calling Mock Disaster- where are you?

 


We Drill for Disaster in Hospitals. Ottawa Just Waits for the Real Thing.

Before I ran for council, I spent years as a hospital administrator. Every accreditation cycle, one requirement never moved: we had to prove — not promise, prove — that our emergency response actually worked. That meant running a mock disaster. A full mock code, with staff pulled from real duties, decision points scripted in, gaps written up, and a corrective action plan due before the next survey. You don't get to keep your accreditation by having a binder called "Emergency Plan" sitting on a shelf. You get to keep it by demonstrating, under simulated pressure, that the plan survives contact with reality.

Ottawa doesn't work that way. And on July 1, we all found out what that costs.

Like Nostrodammus, I wrote about this back in 2023.



I have skills man.

The Test We Didn't Choose to Run

The Canada Day storm wasn't a drill. It was real: over 100 mm of rain in a matter of hours, basements filling with sewage and stormwater, thousands of residents without power, the National Canada Day fireworks cancelled outright. In Britannia, 167 millimetres fell in about five hours — a rainfall total the city's own general manager of infrastructure and water services called a one-in-200-year event. By the time the city tallied it up, nearly 5,800 basement flooding reports had come in and crews had hauled away more than 2,500 tonnes of storm debris.

That's not a criticism of the weather. Storms like this are becoming the norm, not the exception, and no city can engineer its way out of a 200-year rainfall event overnight. What's fair to ask is a different question entirely: when the storm hit, did the systems the city has spent years building — the Emergency Plan, the Emergency Operations Centre, the escalation protocols — actually activate the way they were supposed to?

By the account of a sitting councillor, the answer was no.

A Colleague Says the Quiet Part Out Loud

College Ward Councillor Laine Johnson didn't mince words. In an email to fellow councillors, she called the city's response "unacceptable," writing that Ottawa has "an emergency services department and an emergency response program," but that "the city was slow to make the decisions that would activate that response." She said the city's senior leadership team "took way too much time to [do] what they needed to do in an emergency response, and residents were left holding the bag." More than 40 percent of storm-related service requests came out of her ward alone.

This isn't a challenger's talking point. This is a member of council, from inside the tent, telling the public that activation was too slow, and that the delay had a real cost measured in flooded basements and residents left waiting.

That's the sentence that should worry anyone who cares about how this city is actually run: an emergency response program existed on paper, but nobody could say with confidence it had ever been tested to see whether it would work under pressure — until it was tested for real, on thousands of people's basements.

Where Was the Practice?

Here's where my hospital background is directly relevant, not just analogous.

In healthcare, disaster preparedness isn't a nice-to-have. Under Accreditation Canada's Required Organizational Practices, disaster response is a required organizational practice — meaning a hospital cannot be accredited without it — assessed against specific, measurable, scientifically driven standards. Crucially, the standard doesn't stop at having a plan. It requires that facility training include periodic exercises covering all components of the disaster response, objectively assessed for quality improvement. You run the drill, you document what broke, you fix it, and you run it again next year.

To be fair, this isn't a perfect analogy and I won't pretend it is. Critics inside emergency medicine have pointed out that Accreditation Canada's own standards for what counts as an adequate exercise are fairly rudimentary compared to evidence-based disaster-medicine tools, and that accreditation alone doesn't guarantee a hospital will perform well in an actual crisis. Paper compliance isn't the same as real readiness, even in a system that requires drills.

But that's exactly the point. Even a flawed, rudimentary drill requirement produces something Ottawa's municipal emergency system doesn't appear to have: a documented rehearsal, with an after-action report, before the real event arrives. The City of Ottawa's Emergency Plan is reviewed annually, on paper. What's not evident anywhere in the public record is a documented, scenario-based activation exercise — of the Emergency Operations Centre, of the decision chain that determines when a storm response gets escalated — run and assessed before residents needed it to work.

We found out how the system performs by living through it.

The Accountability Gap Nobody's Naming

This is where it gets specifically relevant to who's been sitting where at City Hall.

The body responsible for overseeing the City's Emergency and Protective Services — including Ottawa Fire Services and the Ottawa Paramedic Service — is the Emergency Preparedness and Protective Services Committee. For this entire term of council, that committee has been chaired by Riley Brockington. Rawlson King, Ward 13's incumbent councillor, has not sat on it. Not once, in four years.

That's not a coincidence worth glossing over, and it's not the first time this pattern has shown up. It's the same structure I've pointed to before on LRT oversight: repeated public calls for stronger accountability, from a councillor who never took a seat on the committee that could have delivered it directly. Emergency preparedness now joins that list. You don't get to call for a stronger response after the storm if you weren't in the room, for four years, where the readiness of that response was actually being built and reviewed.

I'd also note the timing on the one concrete step the city has taken. A pilot Extreme Weather Preparedness Grant Program, meant to help community groups prepare for climate emergencies, only went to council for approval on June 24, 2026 — one week before the storm hit. It's a good program. It's also proof the city knew there were gaps: the survey behind it found that fewer than one-third of the 72 community organizations surveyed had a community emergency plan at all. That's not a new problem discovered on July 1. It's a known gap that took until a week before disaster struck to produce a funded response — and even then, only a pilot.

What Accountability Actually Looks Like

I'm not arguing Ottawa needs to become a hospital. Municipal emergency management is a different discipline with different constraints, and no accreditation body is going to walk into City Hall with a survey checklist. But the underlying principle isn't healthcare-specific — it's basic project management, and it's basic government accountability: you don't wait for the real disaster to find out whether your plan works. You test it, you document what fails, and you fix it before the stakes are real people's homes.

Residents in West Rockcliffe and Manor Park already live with a combined sewer system that makes this ward more exposed than most to exactly this kind of event. That's not a hypothetical risk. It's the specific, documented vulnerability our own infrastructure carries into every major storm.

Four years is enough time to have run that test. It's enough time to have sat on the committee where readiness gets built. It's enough time to have asked, before the storm — not after — whether Ottawa's emergency systems would hold. That test didn't happen. The storm ran it for us, and Ottawans paid the difference.

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

Affordable Housing - 4 here, 4 there - not 8 in one place













Concentration Isn't a Strategy: Why Rideau-Rockcliffe Needs Affordable Housing Spread Across the Map, Not Stacked in One Corner

Every few months, Ottawa announces another affordable housing project. A capital allocation, a funding round, a groundbreaking. The press release always reads the same way: X units, Y million dollars, a ribbon somewhere. What it never tells you is where — and more importantly, whether "where" was ever asked as a real question, or just a default answer to "which parcel does the city already own."

That's the problem. Not affordable housing itself. The pattern of how we site it.

The default is concentration, not a choice

When a municipality builds affordable housing, the path of least resistance is almost always the same: find a large, already-assembled, already-zoned, city-owned or easily-acquired parcel, and put a big development on it. It's cheaper to plan. It's cheaper to build. It clears a capital budget line in one motion instead of ten.

But cheaper to build is not the same as better for the people who will live there — or for the neighbourhood absorbing them. Concentrating low-income housing in a handful of large sites has a well-documented downside: it clusters need in the same place it clusters need, entrenching under-resourced pockets rather than solving them. A cross-program review of U.S. assisted housing programs found that residents of large-scale public housing consistently end up in more disadvantaged surrounding neighbourhoods than residents of almost any other housing model — vouchers, tax-credit developments, mixed-income redevelopment all perform better on this measure. That's not an accident of history. It's what concentration does, structurally, regardless of the good intentions behind the funding.

The alternative — scattered-site development, where affordable units are distributed in smaller numbers across many streets and many neighbourhoods — is not a fringe idea. It has a research base, and the findings point in a consistent direction. Studies of scattered-site public housing find higher resident satisfaction and stronger community integration, without the drag on nearby property values that concentration critics often assume will follow. Some scattered-site models — duplexes and small multiplexes with private outdoor space instead of one large complex — even expand housing choice for the tenants themselves. One Philadelphia model reclaiming vacant rowhomes block by block found something counter-intuitive: distributing the affordable units drove noticeably higher home-value appreciation in the surrounding area than concentrated new-build projects did — the opposite of the "affordable housing drags down property values" argument city hall quietly worries about but never says out loud.

Dispersal also does something concentration structurally cannot: it lowers stigma. A resident of six units folded into an existing block is a neighbour. A resident of a 250-unit complex everyone in the city already refers to by a nickname is a data point in someone else's political argument.

What this means for Rideau-Rockcliffe

Rideau-Rockcliffe is not exempt from this pattern — it is, arguably, a textbook case of the two extremes the city keeps toggling between. On one end, large single-site developments concentrated in specific pockets. On the other, wards and neighbourhoods that see essentially none, insulated by geography, zoning history, or simple political friction. Neither extreme is a housing strategy. Both are the absence of one — the city defaulting to whatever parcel is easiest to move, rather than asking where affordable housing should go to actually integrate people into the life of the ward: near transit, near schools, near the grocery store, distributed enough that "affordable housing" stops being a place on a map and starts being a scattering of addresses indistinguishable from any other.

This is where Ottawa's own inclusionary zoning file becomes relevant, and not in a flattering way. The city's own recently approved inclusionary zoning framework — the tool explicitly meant to fold affordable units into ordinary market developments as they're built, rather than warehousing them separately — was approved with the mandatory set-aside rate set at zero per cent, pending a market reassessment years down the road. In other words: the framework exists on paper, but the mechanism that would actually force dispersal into new buildings across the city, unit by unit, building by building, has been suspended before it ever activated. The tool built for exactly the outcome housing-integration research supports has been shelved for "market feasibility," with no firm date for it to come back into force before a 2028 reassessment.

That's not a technical footnote. That's the accountability gap. A council can vote for a policy framework and simultaneously vote to make sure it does nothing, and both actions get filed under the same press release about "progress on housing." Nobody is lying, exactly. But nobody is being held to an outcome either — which is the whole pattern this campaign keeps documenting, from the Ādisōke library to the landfill purchase to LRT oversight: commitments made in public, and the actual mechanism for delivering them quietly deferred, diluted, or left for a future council to sort out.

What accountability looks like here

I'm not arguing against affordable housing in Rideau-Rockcliffe. I'm arguing against the version of it that shows up as one large announcement in one location, satisfies a capital target, and calls the file closed. A real integration strategy means:

  • Setting an explicit dispersal target for the ward — not just a unit count, but a distribution requirement across multiple sites and multiple neighbourhoods within Rideau-Rockcliffe, not concentrated near the ward's boundary with more receptive council votes.
  • Treating small-scale infill and adaptive reuse (converting existing underused buildings, small parcels, laneway and secondary suites) as a first option, not an afterthought to the big-parcel default.
  • Actually activating the inclusionary zoning mechanism the city already voted to create, rather than letting a zero-per-cent set-aside sit indefinitely as a box-checking exercise for federal funding eligibility.
  • Reporting dispersal outcomes publicly and specifically — not "units delivered," but where, so residents can see whether integration is actually happening or whether the same easy parcels keep getting reused.

Affordable housing that works isn't measured only in units. It's measured in whether the people living in it are genuinely part of the neighbourhood around them — not set apart from it by the very design of where the city chose to put them.



More on affordable housing


 Protecting Landlords to House More Ottawans: A Smarter Path Forward

Ottawa faces a stubborn housing and homelessness challenge. Landlords are being asked to step up with infill units, secondary suites, and spaces for people who need them most. Yet many hesitate — and their concerns are understandable.

They worry about difficult tenants, property damage, unreliable payments, and eviction processes that feel slow and one-sided. These aren’t abstract fears; they’re business realities. When perceived risk outweighs reward, private landlords pull back. The result? Fewer units available, longer shelter stays, and a housing supply that fails to keep pace with need.

The good news? Ottawa already has several strong, landlord-friendly programs in place. With targeted expansion and a few smart additions, the city can turn hesitation into willing participation — protecting landlords while dramatically increasing housing options for vulnerable residents.

Ottawa’s Existing Strengths

Rent Supplement Program
This is one of the most straightforward tools available. Landlords who participate receive full market rent every month. The tenant pays their affordable portion directly to the landlord, while the City covers the difference through a direct subsidy payment.

During vacancies, the City can cover up to two months of full rent. Agreements can be short-term or ongoing, giving landlords flexibility. It’s a win-win: stable income for landlords and affordable housing for low- and moderate-income residents without the landlord absorbing the full affordability gap.

Housing First Partnerships (via Options Housing and similar providers)
Housing First isn’t just about giving someone a key — it’s about pairing housing with intensive, ongoing support. Programs like Options Housing actively recruit private landlords and provide a dedicated team that helps with tenant matching, move-in coordination, and 24/7 problem-solving.

Landlords report significantly less hassle. Rent is often paid directly by the City through housing allowances, and tenant retention rates are impressive — around 88% of clients remain stably housed after two years. This model directly addresses the “difficult tenant” concern by putting professional support in place from day one.

Landlord Damage Fund
For landlords participating in Housing First programs, the City offers a discretionary fund that reimburses significant damages beyond normal wear and tear. Proper documentation (photos, move-in/move-out checklists, and estimates) is required, but when approved, it provides meaningful financial protection.

This fund has already helped retain landlords who might otherwise have walked away after a problematic tenancy. It turns a major risk into a manageable one.

Ontario Renovates – Forgivable Loans
Landlords renovating existing units (or creating new infill space) can access interest-free loans of up to $15,000 per unit. The loan is forgiven over 15 years if rents are kept at or below Average Market Rent.

It’s an excellent tool for smaller landlords and infill projects, helping cover accessibility upgrades or essential repairs while committing to long-term affordability.

Adding Powerful New Protections

While these programs are solid foundations, Ottawa can go further by layering on tools that more aggressively reduce landlord risk:

  • Master Leasing models — A nonprofit or city partner signs a master lease with the landlord and then sublets to tenants. The landlord receives guaranteed rent from one reliable payer, faces minimal vacancy risk, and deals with far less day-to-day tenant management. The master lessee handles screening barriers and provides support services. This model has worked well in other Canadian and U.S. cities and is already being piloted in Ottawa through groups like HousingWorks.
  • Expanded risk mitigation — Building on the existing Damage Fund, the City could add limited rental guarantees or signing incentives for new units leased to supported tenants. Small bonuses or short-term lost-rent coverage (with reasonable conditions) can make the difference between a landlord saying “yes” or “no.”
  • TIEGs (Tax Increment Equivalent Grants)
    Under Ottawa’s Affordable Housing Community Improvement Plan, developers who include affordable units can receive annual grants of $6,000–$8,000 per affordable unit for up to 20 years. These grants are funded by the increased property taxes the new development generates. They directly offset the revenue loss from lower rents and can be stacked with development charge waivers and other incentives. Making TIEGs more accessible to smaller infill projects would be a game-changer.

Recent Provincial Tailwinds

Ontario’s Bill 60 changes (phased in during 2026) have shortened non-payment notice periods and improved some Landlord and Tenant Board processes. These reforms give landlords faster recourse in clear cases of non-payment while still preserving important tenant protections. Council should actively educate landlords about these changes and ensure local programs complement them.

What Ottawa City Council Should Do Next

To move from “strong foundations” to real scale, here are practical next steps:

  1. Aggressively promote and simplify existing programs — Many landlords don’t know about the Rent Supplement Program, Housing First partnerships, or the Damage Fund. Targeted outreach, clear one-pagers, and landlord forums would increase uptake.
  2. Expand and formalize master leasing — Scale the existing pilot and make it a core offering for both new infill and existing units.
  3. Enhance the Landlord Damage Fund — Increase visibility, consider modest funding increases, and explore adding limited rental-loss coverage.
  4. Streamline TIEGs for smaller projects — Reduce administrative barriers so more infill and missing-middle developments can access these grants.
  5. Integrate supports across programs — Make it easy for a landlord using rent supplements to also access Housing First-style case management and the Damage Fund when needed.
  6. Track outcomes and landlord satisfaction — Measure participation rates, retention, damage claims, and feedback. Use the data to refine programs and demonstrate success to the broader landlord community.

A Balanced, Evidence-Based Approach

Social science is clear: when landlords face high perceived risk, housing supply for vulnerable populations shrinks. When risks are shared through direct payments, professional supports, and financial backstops, participation rises — and housing retention improves dramatically.

Ottawa doesn’t need to choose between protecting tenants and supporting landlords. The most effective path forward does both. By building on programs that already exist and adding stronger risk-sharing tools, the city can encourage more landlords to say “yes” to infill and supportive housing.

The result? More units brought online, fewer people experiencing homelessness, and a rental market that works better for everyone involved.

Landlords aren’t the enemy in this crisis — they’re essential partners. It’s time Ottawa treated them that way.


Also refer to my Renters Responsibilities post.



Landlords need help in providing housing



I can confirm that landlords' concerns about difficult or irresponsible tenants and eviction challenges are common, rational, and well-documented across Canada and similar jurisdictions. 

These perceptions directly affect housing supply: when risks (financial losses from damage/non-payment, legal delays, or management burdens) outweigh rewards, private landlords—especially smaller ones—opt out of renting to vulnerable populations or participating in affordable/supportive programs. 

This reduces overall supply elasticity and exacerbates homelessness.

Social science evidence (including randomized trials like Canada's At Home/Chez Soi Housing First study) shows that with proper supports, many formerly homeless or vulnerable tenants achieve high housing retention rates (often 80-90%+ after 1-2 years) and become stable renters. 

The key is shifting from a purely punitive landlord-tenant dynamic to one with shared risk, third-party supports, guaranteed elements, and incentives. 

Mandates or overly tenant-favorable rules without offsets deter participation; affirmative encouragement through "carrots" (financial security, reduced hassle, supports) works better.

Ottawa already has strong foundations in its Rent Supplement Program, Housing First partnerships (e.g., via Options Housing), the Landlord Damage Fund, forgivable renovation loans (Ontario Renovates), Tax Increment Equivalent Grants (TIEGs), tax exemptions via the Municipal Housing Facilities By-law, and recent federal/provincial deals waiving development charges and property taxes for affordable/supportive units.

Provincial changes via Bill 60 (Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025, with phased 2026 implementation) have shortened non-payment notice periods (14 to 7 days in many cases), adjusted LTB processes for faster resolutions in some arrears cases, and made other procedural improvements for landlords. These help address "hard to evict" concerns without fully dismantling tenant protections.

Here is targeted, evidence-based advice for Ottawa City Council to affirmatively encourage and protect landlords while expanding infill, scattered-site, and supportive housing options:

1. Expand Risk-Sharing and Guaranteed Payment Mechanisms (Highest Priority for Landlord Protection)

  • Scale and promote the existing Rent Supplement Program: Landlords already receive full market rent (tenant portion + direct city subsidy), up to 2 months' vacancy payments, and unit inspections/support. 
Market this aggressively to private landlords for infill or existing units. Highlight predictable cash flow.

  • Expand the Landlord Damage Fund(already used for Housing First clients): It reimburses significant damages beyond normal wear and tear with proper documentation (photos, move-in/out checklists, estimates). Increase awareness, potentially raise caps or funding, and tie it explicitly to new infill or supportive placements. 
This directly mitigates the "property damage" fear.
  • Adopt or expand Master Leasing models: A nonprofit, social enterprise, or city partner (building on Ottawa's existing HousingWorks pilot) signs a master lease with the landlord for one or more units and subleases to tenants. The landlord receives guaranteed rent from a single reliable payer, faces minimal vacancy risk, and deals with fewer individual tenant issues. The master lessee handles screening barriers, provides supports, and manages problems. This model has proven effective in reducing landlord reluctance in U.S. and Canadian examples.
  • Add limited rental guarantees or signing incentives: Offer bonuses for new units leased to supported tenants or partial coverage of short-term lost rent (with conditions like allowing early support intervention or a short cure period before eviction filing). These lower perceived risk without unlimited liability.

Why this works: Landlords respond to reduced financial exposure. Direct payments and third-party backing turn "risky tenants" into more predictable arrangements.

2. Strengthen Supportive Services and Landlord Partnerships

  • Deepen partnerships with organizations like Options Housing (which works with 135+ landlords and 1,700+ tenants in Housing First). They provide direct housing allowances paid to landlords, 24/7 tenant support, move-in coordination, mediation, and access to the damage fund. Retention rates are strong (88% stably housed after 24 months in their programs).
  • Fund more wrap-around case management, life skills support, mental health/addiction services, and mediation. Evidence shows these reduce "difficult tenant" issues dramatically in Housing First models.
  • Create or expand landlord toolkits/training (adapting federal Housing First landlord engagement resources) on working with vulnerable tenants, plus peer networks or advisory input from participating landlords.

3. Tie Infill and Development Incentives Directly to Landlord-Friendly Models

  • Continue and expand TIEG*s ($6,000–$8,000 per affordable unit/year for 20 years), tax exemptions, development charge waivers, fee relief, and fast-tracked approvals for infill projects (including missing middle, ADUs/laneway housing, or conversions) that commit to affordable units, rent supplements, master leasing, or supportive partnerships.
  • Offer additional density bonuses or priority processing for projects incorporating risk-mitigation features or set-asides for Housing First/rent-supplemented tenants.
  • Use Ontario Renovates-style forgivable loans more broadly for private landlords renovating infill or existing units in exchange for long-term affordability commitments and program participation.

4. Leverage and Supplement Provincial Processes

  • Educate and assist landlords on Bill 60 changes for faster non-payment pathways and other efficiencies.
  • Enhance local eviction prevention (rent banks, emergency assistance) to reduce filings while preserving recourse for serious issues.
  • Consider targeted local supports (e.g., mediation before LTB, pre-inspections) without overriding the RTA. Avoid measures that increase perceived eviction difficulty.

5. Implementation, Monitoring, and Collaboration

  • Pilot and scale: Start or expand master leasing and enhanced incentives as targeted pilots, then evaluate landlord participation, tenant retention, damage claims, and costs.
  • Data-driven approach: Track landlord satisfaction, unit turnover, outcomes for vulnerable tenants, and overall housing supply impact. Use this to refine programs and demonstrate success (countering stigma).
  • Partnerships: Work closely with the Province (RTA/LTB advocacy if further balanced reforms are needed), federal funders (Housing Accelerator Fund), nonprofits, and landlord associations. Coordinate with existing Ottawa initiatives like the Affordable Housing Pipeline and Action Ottawa.
  • Communication: Host landlord forums, share anonymized success stories and data, and position participation as low-risk, community-positive, and financially sound.

Expected Outcomes and Rationale

These measures affirmatively protect landlords by addressing core risks (payments, damage, hassle, eviction timelines) while encouraging more units for infill and vulnerable populations. Social science indicates incentive-based, voluntary programs with risk-sharing outperform mandates or pure tenant protections in expanding supply. They align with Housing First principles proven effective in Canada.

Ottawa is already ahead with tools like rent supplements and the damage fund—scaling and layering master leasing/risk guarantees on top would be transformative. This balanced approach respects tenant rights (stability reduces homelessness cycles) while making landlord participation attractive and sustainable.

Council should prioritize funding these enhancements in upcoming budgets, leveraging senior government dollars where possible. 

If implemented thoughtfully with evaluation, this can increase housing options, reduce street homelessness, and build a more resilient rental market. 

I recommend consulting local stakeholders (landlord groups, service providers like Options Housing, and the Social Housing Registry) for tailored rollout details.

TIEGs stand for Tax Increment Equivalent Grants.In Ottawa, these are a key financial incentive under the city’s Affordable Housing Community Improvement Plan (CIP). They are designed to make it more financially viable for developers and landlords (including those doing infill or new rental projects) to include affordable rental units.

How TIEGs Work
  • When a new development is built, it typically increases the property’s assessed value and therefore generates higher property taxes for the city (the “tax increment”).
  • Instead of keeping all of that extra tax revenue, the city returns a portion of it to the developer/landlord as an annual grant.
  • In Ottawa’s program, this takes the form of a fixed grant of $6,000 to $8,000 per affordable unit per year, paid for up to 20 years.
  • The grant helps offset the lower rents charged on the affordable units, so the overall project remains profitable.
Key Conditions (Typical Requirements)
  • A minimum percentage of units in the building (often at least 15% overall and per unit type) must be rented at or below Ottawa’s Average Market Rent (AMR) as defined by CMHC.
  • The affordability commitment usually lasts for the full 20-year grant period.
  • The grant amount is capped at 50% of the actual municipal property tax increase generated by the project.
  • Units must comply with the Residential Tenancies Act (including rent increase rules).
Why This Matters for Landlords and Infill HousingTIEGs are one of the main “carrots” Ottawa uses to encourage private landlords and developers to participate in affordable housing. They provide ongoing, predictable revenue support tied directly to the new development, which helps de-risk projects that include below-market units or units targeted at vulnerable populations (when combined with rent supplements, Housing First supports, or master leasing).These grants can often be stacked with other incentives such as:
  • Development charge exemptions/waivers
  • Reductions in parkland dedication or community benefit charges
  • Property tax exemptions under the Municipal Housing Facilities By-law
Recent examples include approvals for multiple projects (e.g., along Rideau, Carling, Somerset, etc.) where TIEGs helped deliver hundreds of affordable units alongside market-rate ones.