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Monday, 29 June 2026

The Ottawa Food Policy Council

Commitments to Good Food and the priorities highlighted help to develop sustainable food systems for all in the City of Ottawa. 


As individuals who care deeply about the health and sustainability of our community for all residents equitably, we will be happy to work with you to realize these goals.



Good Food is defined as: fresh, accessible, affordable, culturally relevant, minimally processed, as local as possible, ecologically produced, and processed by people with sustainable livelihoods.


Enhancing City supports for community food sharing programs (i.e. access to City facilities for food programming; increased mobile community markets and farmers’ markets; increased community kitchens, etc)
Increasing deeply affordable, viable housing for individuals and families
Expanding public active, deeply affordable, and accessible transportation
Increasing municipal financial support - indexed to inflation and need - to social and community services, understanding it as a critical and under-resourced sector in Ottawa, which also serves as prevention
Leading advocacy at the provincial and federal levels for sufficient, income-based solutions to meet the cost of viable housing and daily access to adequate food , which are not being met at current levels of financial assistance
Establishing needs-based funding models (based on food insecurity indicators) rather than performance-based metrics, ensuring that operational efficiencies or cost-saving efforts do not result in future budget reductions
Working to increase funding for community agencies that work towards ending food insecurity, particularly with economically marginalized communities
Increasing access to affordable, nutritionally & culturally relevant, food particularly in food deserts and/or priority neighbourhoods, as part of work towards 15 minute neighbourhoods

Based on my blog, peterKarwacki.blogspot.com
Enhancing City supports for community food sharing programs (i.e. access to City facilities for food programming; increased mobile community markets and farmers’ markets; increased community kitchens, etc) Increasing deeply affordable, viable housing for individuals and families Expanding public active, deeply affordable, and accessible transportation Increasing municipal financial support - indexed to inflation and need - to social and community services, understanding it as a critical and under-resourced sector in Ottawa, which also serves as prevention Leading advocacy at the provincial and federal levels for sufficient, income-based solutions to meet the cost of viable housing and daily access to adequate food , which are not being met at current levels of financial assistance Establishing needs-based funding models (based on food insecurity indicators) rather than performance-based metrics, ensuring that operational efficiencies or cost-saving efforts do not result in future budget reductions Working to increase funding for community agencies that work towards ending food insecurity, particularly with economically marginalized communities Increasing access to affordable, nutritionally & culturally relevant, food particularly in food deserts and/or priority neighbourhoods, as part of work towards 15 minute neighbourhoods

My analytical framework includes food security and food policy.
My consistent approach to governance
Establishing needs-based funding models (based on food insecurity indicators) rather than performance-based metrics.
When systems are designed to optimize for outputs rather than outcomes, they fail residents. A needs-based model aligns funding to actual deprivation, not operational efficiency metrics. This is exactly the kind of structural fix for which I would advocate.

Increasing municipal financial support indexed to inflation and need
Real accountability requires sustained resourcing.  Budget levels themselves must be recalibrated to match actual delivery requirements.
I am skeptical of purely performative expansions (community food sharing programs, markets, kitchens) without the underlying funding structure and accountability mechanisms to sustain them.
What changes if these programs don't actually reduce food insecurity? What's the feedback loop?
I focus on municipal structural accountability, not provincial/federal advocacy. So "leading advocacy at the provincial level" would matter only if it's tied to a municipal accountability mechanism for what Ottawa actually delivers.

Will any councillor commit to publishing quarterly food insecurity metrics (by neighborhood), tied to the actual funding allocated, with public reporting on whether the gap is closing?

That's is my test for commitment vs. theater.
Actively support City policies that Increasing the ability of residents and communities to grow, produce, and harvest their own food?
Based on my blog, peterKarwacki.blogspot.com

Specifically, will you support (check all that apply): Enhancing City supports for community food sharing programs (i.e. access to City facilities for food programming; increased mobile community markets and farmers’ markets; increased community kitchens, etc) Increasing deeply affordable, viable housing for individuals and families Expanding public active, deeply affordable, and accessible transportation Increasing municipal financial support - indexed to inflation and need - to social and community services, understanding it as a critical and under-resourced sector in Ottawa, which also serves as prevention Leading advocacy at the provincial and federal levels for sufficient, income-based solutions to meet the cost of viable housing and daily access to adequate food , which are not being met at current levels of financial assistance Establishing needs-based funding models (based on food insecurity indicators) rather than performance-based metrics, ensuring that operational efficiencies or cost-saving efforts do not result in future budget reductions Working to increase funding for community agencies that work towards ending food insecurity, particularly with economically marginalized communities Increasing access to affordable, nutritionally & culturally relevant, food particularly in food deserts and/or priority neighbourhoods, as part of work towards 15 minute neighbourhoods
Food security and food policy have not been directly addressed in the published posts so here they are.

• Establishing needs-based funding models (based on food insecurity indicators) rather than performance-based metrics — This directly mirrors my critique of institutional incentive structures. I've repeatedly shown that when systems are designed to optimize for outputs rather than outcomes, they fail residents.


A needs-based model aligns funding to actual deprivation, not operational efficiency metrics, which is exactly the kind of structural fix you which I would advocate.
• Increasing municipal financial support indexed to inflation and need — I've emphasized that real accountability requires sustained resourcing. My transit post highlighted that voting for $938.7 million while the system deteriorates shows budget levels themselves must be recalibrated to match actual delivery requirements.
Less likely alignment:
• I am skeptical of purely performative expansions (community food sharing programs, markets, kitchens) without the underlying funding structure and accountability mechanisms to sustain them. I want to know: what changes if these programs don't actually reduce food insecurity? What's the feedback loop?
The missing piece: I focus on municipal structural accountability, not provincial/federal advocacy. So "leading advocacy at the provincial level" would matter only if it's tied to a municipal accountability mechanism for what Ottawa actually delivers.
Will the councillor commit to publishing quarterly food insecurity metrics (by neighborhood), tied to the actual funding allocated, with public reporting on whether the gap is closing?


That's your test for commitment vs. theater.
Does that align with how you'd approach this issue?
Would I Actively support City policies that increase the ability of residents and communities to grow, produce, and harvest their own food? Would I support Proactively increasing the number of community gardens and growing plots on City lands, including incorporating targets similar to other initiatives outlined in the RCFS Master Plan Enabling residents to produce their own food through a Residential Poultry Policy (which Gatineau and Carleton Place already have, with others such as Smiths Falls piloting?) Proactively planting fruit/nut/berry trees and bushes on City-stewarded lands for community harvest Allowing food-producing plants to be grown in City-managed planter boxes Recognizing there are 100s of people in Ottawa who want to grow fresh, culturally relevant, nutritious food for Ottawa residents as a viable business venture, continuing to support New Farmer programs

I would likely actively support all of these—but with a crucial caveat about framing.
Here's why they align with my platform:
Strong alignment:
These policies share my core critique: they remove institutional barriers and distribute agency rather than centralizing services.

I have  consistently opposed institutional inertia dressed as prudence. For example, my Patrick/Vanier blog item made this explicit: the city can build roundabouts (St. Joseph proof), but resists reopening past decisions without data justification.
• Gatineau and Carleton Place already have residential poultry policies. That's precedent. No innovation risk.
• If "Ottawa says no": "publish the actual constraint or it's bureaucratic inertia."
• Fruit trees on City land cost almost nothing after planting. This isn't a major budget decision. Resistance is purely bureaucratic friction.
• Community gardens on City land = distributed food production (resident agency), not another City program to fund and defend.
• New Farmer support = you're enabling economic producers, not creating dependency on council.
Why this matters to my governance framework:
These are the opposite of what I critiicized with 24 Sussex and OC Transpo: they don't create long-term institutional debt or require perpetual budget justification.
A planter box that grows food doesn't need an audit three years later. A resident with chickens doesn't require ongoing council oversight.
The caveat—and this matters:
These things are all necessary but insufficient.
A resident with a backyard garden still can't afford housing. Fruit trees don't solve income inequality. New Farmer programs don't address zoning costs that prevent commercial food production.
These are enablers, not solutions to structural food insecurity.
They're what residents can do for themselves. They're not a replacement for the systemic fixes (needs-based funding, housing affordability, municipal resource allocation)

The test question you'd ask:
"Will  councillors remove these barriers because it's the right policy, or as performative gesture while avoiding the harder structural questions about housing, income support, and long-term food security funding?"


1. Reducing and diverting food waste while increasing composting and recycling?
Specifically, would I support Establishing opportunities to residents across Ottawa for composting that closes the food waste loop, with food scraps being returned to local food production (e.g. backyard compost literacy programs, neighbourhood composting solutions on City land - creating viable compost to be returned to community/resident gardens, connecting local farmers with businesses to reduce waste) Community harvesting and food sharing programs on City lands City of Ottawa modelling its food waste across its own services in a way that produces viable compost back to the community.
I'd likely support these proposals, but with some important qualifications that reflect your accountability-focused framework.

1. Structural incentive alignment: These create positive feedback loops rather than relying on individual behavior change or bureaucratic mandates. Waste becomes a resource that benefits residents directly—that's a structural solution, not exhortation.
2. Decentralized over centralized: Neighbourhood composting and community gardens resist the "warehouse solution" approach that often masks institutional failure. They require the City to actually enable community action rather than outsource the problem.
3. Accountability via City practice: The City modeling its own waste and producing compost is the clearest test—it forces the institution to prove the system works. If the City can't manage its own cafeteria waste into viable compost, the whole framework is performative.
4. Measurable outcomes: Unlike vague sustainability commitments, these have tangible outputs: compost volume, garden productivity, diversion rates. Easy to track success or failure.
• Is the land actually available? Neighbourhood composting "on City land" only matters if the City isn't just designating a small corner nobody uses. How many sites, where, and who gets access?
• What's the accountability structure? Who reports annually on compost produced vs. food waste diverted? Or does this become another initiative that launches with fanfare and quietly fades?
• Is this actually reducing landfill burden? Or are these programs symbolic while 80% of residential food waste still goes to the $95M landfill?
• Why hasn't this happened already? What institutional resistance are you removing, or are you just asking the same bureaucracy that failed on these items before to suddenly succeed?
And concerning Reducing and diverting food waste while increasing composting and recycling?
Specifically, would I support Establishing opportunities to residents across Ottawa for composting that closes the food waste loop, with food scraps being returned to local food production (e.g. backyard compost literacy programs, neighbourhood composting solutions on City land - creating viable compost to be returned to community/resident gardens, connecting local farmers with businesses to reduce waste) Community harvesting and food sharing programs on City lands City of Ottawa modelling its food waste across its own services in a way that produces viable compost back to the community.
1. Structural incentive alignment: These create positive feedback loops rather than relying on individual behavior change or bureaucratic mandates. Waste becomes a resource that benefits residents directly—that's a structural solution, not exhortation.
2. Decentralized over centralized: Neighbourhood composting and community gardens resist the "warehouse solution" approach that often masks institutional failure. They require the City to actually enable community action rather than outsource the problem.
3. Accountability via City practice: The City modeling its own waste and producing compost is the clearest test—it forces the institution to prove the system works. If the City can't manage its own cafeteria waste into viable compost, the whole framework is performative.
4. Measurable outcomes: Unlike vague sustainability commitments, these have tangible outputs: compost volume, garden productivity, diversion rates. Easy to track success or failure.
The critical questions:
• Is the land actually available? Neighbourhood composting "on City land" only matters if the City isn't just designating a small corner nobody uses. How many sites, where, and who gets access?
• What's the accountability structure? Who reports annually on compost produced vs. food waste diverted? Or does this become another initiative that launches with fanfare and quietly fades?
• Is this actually reducing landfill burden? Or are these programs symbolic while 80% of residential food waste still goes to the $95M landfill? (A very Peter-style question, given your landfill acquisition post.)
• Why hasn't this happened already? What institutional resistance are you removing, or are you just asking the same bureaucracy that failed on these items before to suddenly succeed?
Implementing policies for densification and preventing continuous urban boundary sprawl onto all prime farmland without exception Effective preservation of farmland within the City, including: (A) increased protection of small landholdings to enable the production of Good Food; AND/OR (B) an unassailable embargo on the removal of any land from the Agricultural Resource Area for any purpose Increasing investment into farmers’ markets, promotions of local food, and training/economic opportunities for new farmers Supporting Indigenous Food Sovereignty by revising or eliminating, where possible, policies that restrict Indigenous peoples from hunting, fishing, growing, and preparing foods that are traditional to their culture


The farmland/sprawl issue is exactly the kind of structural incentive problem with which I'd engage. It's not about individual choices—it's about whether the City's growth model profits from sprawl or discourages it. Densification + farmland protection are genuinely incompatible with endless sprawl, so there's real teeth here, not just rhetoric.

The Indigenous Food Sovereignty piece would probably resonate most strongly—it's about removing restrictions rather than launching another program. That's structural reform. It says: stop criminalizing or regulating Indigenous food practices and let sovereignty function.

1. What removes farmland in practice?
◦ The "unassailable embargo" sounds strong, but Ottawa's Greenbelt failed. What actually stops developers from lobbying Council to reclassify Agricultural Resource Area land? Is this policy or fantasy? What happens when a developer comes to Council with a proposal—does the embargo hold or does it get negotiated away?
2. Densification vs. Farmland:
◦ These can conflict. If you're densifying everywhere, where's the farmland? And in Ward 13 (Rideau-Rockcliffe), how does densification actually get managed—in the urban core only, or are rural wards being pressured to accept it too? (This ties to your ward boundary analysis: does farmland protection favor rural power hoarding, or is it genuine?)
3. Farmers' markets and "local food promotion":
◦ Are these subsidizing farmers, or subsidizing affluent neighborhoods' feel-good Saturday mornings? Do they help farmers compete against industrial agriculture, or are they prestige projects? What's the actual economic impact on working farmers vs. hobbyist producers?
4. Training/opportunity for "new farmers":
◦ Who becomes a farmer if you need to buy or lease land in an inflated market? Is this program actually enabling working people to farm, or is it aspirational messaging? How many people graduate and actually farm vs. decide it's not viable?
5. Indigenous Food Sovereignty—implementation:
◦ Which policies actually restrict Indigenous practices? Are you revoking hunting bans in urban parks, allowing traplines on City land, changing property regs to allow traditional practices? Or is this a proclamation without enforcement mechanism?
Property tax models and development cost recovery incentivize sprawl and farmland conversion. If the City is funded partly by development charges and property taxes, farmland protection policies conflict with the revenue model. So you'd ask: What's being changed about the actual incentive structure, or is this policy just a brake on an accelerating process?

So I support the direction of these policies as principles, but I'd run them through my accountability filter. My platform position would be: "Farmland protection and Indigenous sovereignty yes—but only if we're actually removing the institutional incentives for sprawl and respecting sovereignty in policy, not just rhetoric. Show me the amendment that stops reclassification. Show me which hunting/fishing restrictions are being struck. Otherwise, this is a garden plot poster that looks good while development marches on."
likely I would say "Yes, but conditional on clarity about what 'leading' means and whether this is the best use of your political capital as a Ward councillor."
The case for investing time:
1. Feasibility study already in motion – You don't start from zero. The motion exists, the study is funded. That means someone has already cleared initial bureaucratic resistance. The decision is whether to execute something that's already been deemed feasible.

1. 23 cities as proof of concept – Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver all have strategies. This isn't experimental.  Point to outcomes, compare results. That's my kind of evidence.
2. Existing evaluation infrastructure – FLOW Partnership is already measuring impact. We're not inventing accountability from scratch; we're plugging into a system that works. That passes my structural test.
3. Emergency Food Security Response Plan formalization – Moving from "draft" to "policy" is a concrete governance outcome you can track. Not aspirational.
But the complicating questions:
1. What's your role as Ward 13 councillor?
◦ Is "leading investment in Food Strategy" a city-wide initiative (which belongs to whoever has the portfolio—maybe not me) or is it something I own because Rideau-Rockcliffe residents are demanding it? If it's the former, I might be volunteering for work that dilutes my ward focus. If it's the latter, I'd do it because constituents are driving it.
2. What was the motion's timeline?
◦ When was the feasibility study supposed to complete? What was the deadline? If the study is due in 6 months and we're 3 months in, investing now makes sense. If it's delayed 18 months already, why? ( what institutional dysfunction is blocking progress?)
3. "Formalization" of the Emergency Food Security Plan
◦ Why is it still in draft mode? Food security is urgent. If it's not formalized by now, what are the barriers? Political resistance? Resource constraints? Unclear jurisdiction? Naming the barrier tells me whether my effort will actually move it forward or get stuck in the same place.
4. Whose priority is this?
◦ Are we supporting a staff proposal, a community coalition demand, or a political opening? The political energy behind it matters. If it's genuinely community-driven (food banks, community gardens orgs, Indigenous groups), investing my time signals we are listening. If it's bureaucratic-led, it might not have teeth.
Given that I am building a campaign around structural governance failures and accountability, a Food Strategy could serve my narrative if:
• We are closing the loop between the $95M landfill, food waste diversion, and circular economy (
• Formalization of the Emergency Plan is a concrete governance reform, not just a program
• We can show measurable outcomes against FLOW's metrics within the term
But it could also distract if:
• It becomes a feel-good initiative that absorbs my time without addressing structural ward issues
• The feasibility study already sets the direction and I am just executing someone else's plan
• The real work is systemic (farmland policy, Indigenous sovereignty) and a Food Strategy becomes substitute activism
• "I'll lead this if the feasibility study shows it's a priority for food-insecure residents in this ward, and if we're using it to address the circular economy failures identified in my landfill analysis, and if the Emergency Plan formalization is real reform, not bureaucratic busy-work."






Dear Candidate:



We would like to introduce the Ottawa Food Policy Council (OFPC) as a resource and ask you to demonstrate your commitment to Good Food in your campaign and in your future work as Councillor or Mayor by completing the following brief survey.


Ottawa residents need a Mayor and Councillors who will champion Good Food in our communities and on City Council. With continued rising food insecurity as a serious issue, we strongly encourage you to incorporate a Good Food lens into your platform and to champion policy and decision-making that prioritizes Good Food for all.


Good Food is defined as: fresh, accessible, affordable, culturally relevant, minimally processed, as local as possible, ecologically produced, and processed by people with sustainable livelihoods.


our ofpc-cpao.ca website.


If you have a video containing information related to these questions, we can post a link to that.


The OFPC aims to hold the newly-formed City Council accountable to their commitments to Good Food and the priorities highlighted above, as they will help to develop sustainable food systems for all in the City of Ottawa.



As individuals who care deeply about the health and sustainability of our community for all residents equitably, we will be happy to work with you to realize these goals.


The Ottawa Food Policy Council





Sunday, 28 June 2026

How Council Votes

Ottawa Council Votes: Accountability Tracker

How Your Council Votes

Lansdowne 2.0: Where Rideau-Rockcliffe Stands

Your Ward: Rideau-Rockcliffe (Ward 13)

Your councillor: Rawlson King (voted NO)

Ward housing pressure: 19.4% of households in core housing need. In Overbrook specifically: 26% of renters in housing need, 30% spending 30%+ of income on rent.

The question: Council voted 15-10 to approve a $419 million Lansdowne project. Your councillor argued the money depended too heavily on speculative revenues. Given your ward's housing crisis, was he right?

November 7, 2025 Final Vote

15
In favour
10
Opposed
Loading vote data...

Sorry, not sorry

 


They Just Don't Care About Us: What Tokyo's 20-Second Apology Reveals About Ottawa

In November 2017, Japan's Tsukuba Express issued an official apology. The transgression? A train departed Minami Nagareyama Station 20 seconds early.

No passengers complained. No one missed the train. The impact was negligible. The railway company apologized anyway, posted the statement to its website, and committed to preventing it from happening again.

Six months later, JR West did the same thing: apologized publicly for a 25-second early departure that actually did cause a handful of passengers to miss their train and arrive six minutes late at their destination.

Most people outside Japan find these apologies absurd. But they're not absurd—they're a message. And that message is: we care enough about your time to maintain discipline even when no one would notice if we didn't.

The Contrast Ottawa Commuters Live With

Here's what an OC Transpo commuter experiences instead.

A bus scheduled for 8:15 arrives at 8:35. Or doesn't arrive at all. You check your phone: no alert, no update, no acknowledgment that anything is wrong. The next bus is in 25 minutes. You're late for work. The institution's message is different: your schedule doesn't matter enough for us to plan for it.

It's not that individual bus drivers are careless. It's that the system tolerates enough chronic failure that passengers know—reliably know—that the published timetable is aspirational. That's not a technical problem. That's a care problem.

When OC Transpo's contract negotiations roll around, the public hears about budget constraints and operational challenges. What they don't hear is: We're going to be so systematically late that we owe you an apology for the inconvenience. Because that would require treating lateness as a breach of public trust, not an inevitable cost of the service.

Why This Extends Beyond Transit

The care problem in Ottawa isn't unique to buses.

Look at 24 Sussex Drive: a building identified as structurally derelict, owned by the public, deteriorating for decades while bureaucratic processes moved at their own pace. The message wasn't subtle. A national heritage property matters less than the machinery of institutional inertia. We'll get to it eventually. Or we won't. Your expectations shouldn't be that high.

Look at the St. Patrick Street / Vanier Parkway intersection: identified as dangerous, studied repeatedly, and left unchanged year after year while the city inconsistently enforced safety measures. Commuters and residents didn't need an official analysis to understand the message. The intersection was dangerous because the institution had already weighed the problem against the cost of fixing it—and chose not to.

These aren't random failures. They're patterns. And patterns reveal values.

The Difference Between Accident and Tolerance

This is the crucial point: Tokyo's railway companies didn't apologize for 20-second deviations because they're perfectionists with too much time on their hands. They apologized because they operate under a standard that treats small failures as warnings that process discipline is breaking down.

That standard is expensive to maintain. It requires:

  • Enough staff to actually execute procedures
  • Enough attention to detail that small deviations get caught
  • Enough accountability that breaking procedure triggers a response
  • Enough respect for commuters' time that you don't normalize lateness

Ottawa's institutions have made a different choice. They've chosen to tolerate enough chronic failure that small lapses become invisible. A bus 10 minutes late? Normal. A building deteriorating for years? We're studying options. A dangerous intersection left unchanged? We're evaluating the data.

That tolerance is also expensive—but the cost is paid by commuters in lost time, stress, and the knowledge that the institution isn't actually organized to serve them.

What Care Actually Looks Like

Commuters in Ottawa don't expect perfection. They expect evidence that someone is trying.

Evidence looks like: published schedules that are realistic because the system is actually organized to meet them. It looks like: immediate, specific acknowledgment when those schedules aren't met. It looks like: treating a failure as a problem to solve, not a feature of the service.

The Tsukuba Express didn't apologize because it's Japanese. It apologized because the institution's message to commuters is: your time matters enough that we've built this system to honor it, and when we fail to, we're admitting that failure to you.

OC Transpo's message is the opposite. Not deliberately—but clearly. The message is: the system works the way it works, your expectations should adjust to it, and you should be grateful when it shows up at all.

That's not a transportation problem. That's a relationship problem. And commuters feel it every time they check the app and see the bus is 15 minutes behind schedule with no explanation, no apology, no sense that anyone at the institution recognizes they've wasted someone's time.

The Institutional Choice

Here's what matters: Ottawa's commuters aren't stupid. They understand budgets are constrained. They understand operations are complex.

What they understand better is this: an institution that tolerates chronic failure is an institution that has decided its own convenience matters more than commuters' time. That's not incompetence. That's a choice.

And they've stopped expecting better because they've learned that the institution doesn't care enough to change it.

Tokyo's railway companies cared enough to apologize for 20 seconds. It's time to ask why Ottawa's institutions don't care enough to apologize for 20 minutes.

Transit...what actually needs to happen

On the 95

What a Councillor Actually Needs to Do: 

From Votes to Reliability

Transit is fixable—if a councillor is willing to do the work that voting and motions only pretend to accomplish.

We have had seven years of advocacy, record budgets, passed motions, and public commitments. And the system is measurably worse. Why?

Only 20 per cent of frequent routes meet regularity targets. 96 per cent of non-frequent routes miss punctuality targets. The bus fleet is undersized. Run times haven't been recalibrated since 2023.

The Illusion of Action

Here's what passes for councillor work in Ottawa: 

  • you identify a problem, 
  • you vote for a budget increase, 
  • you move a motion requiring staff to study it, you get a public commitment from management, and then 
  • you move on to the next issue.

Each of these looks like action. Each of these can be pointed to in a newsletter as evidence of advocacy. 

Each creates plausible deniability: "I voted for this. I passed that. I pushed for the other thing."

And none of them guarantee that residents on Route 18 get a bus that arrives on time.

 There is a difference between:

  • Voting to increase transit funding (a Council decision)
  • Passing a motion requiring notification protocols (a staff directive)
  • Receiving a commitment from management (a promise)

And 

  • actually delivering reliable transit service.

What Needs to Change: The Accountability Framework

Voting, then overseeing delivery, and publicly reporting results.

This means:

1. Demanding Specificity Before the Vote

When OC Transpo says they need $433 million for reliability improvements, don't just vote yes. 

Get a detailed breakdown first:

  • Which routes are being fixed, in what order, and by when?
  • What does "recalibrated run times" mean operationally, and when does it happen?
  • How many buses will arrive, when, and at what cost per vehicle?
  • What metrics define success—and who measures them?

Put this in writing. Make it part of the budget approval. Tie it to specific deliverables, not vague commitments.

2. Establish a Delivery Oversight Schedule—and Make It Public

Once the budget passes, don't disappear. Create a formal, scheduled process for tracking implementation:

  • Monthly or quarterly progress reports from OC Transpo staff
  • Public tracking of milestone completion (buses delivered on schedule? Run times recalibrated by the promised date?)
  • Documented delays with explanations
  • Published metrics showing actual service performance against the promised improvements

Make this visible. Post it on the ward website. Reference it in the ward newsletter. It is no longer just a a staff matter—this is now public accountability.

3. Identify the Actual Bottleneck

When things don't materialize (and they won't, consistently), the councillor's job is to ask why and demand answers that matter:

  • Is this a procurement problem? (Buses can't be ordered fast enough, or aren't arriving on schedule)
  • Is it a planning problem? (Run times calculated wrong, route designs flawed)
  • Is it a labor/scheduling problem? (Not enough drivers or shifts to execute the routes)
  • Is it a management problem? (Staff aren't enforcing deadlines or holding themselves accountable)

A councillor's job is to figure out which one it is and push for the actual solution—not just accept "we're working on it."

4. Use Test Cases as Evidence

Route 18 in Rideau Rockcliffe is perfect for this. OC Transpo committed to improving it by September 2026. Here's what a serious councillor does:

Before September:

  • Get a copy of the new run-time estimates. Review them with a transit planner or engineer.
  • Ask: are these based on current traffic data? Are they realistic?
  • Demand to know the implementation plan—how will drivers be notified? How will the system track compliance?

In September:

  • Don't just assume it happens. Verify it actually changed.
  • Get the updated schedule. Compare it to the old one.

After September (60-90 days):

  • Pull actual performance data. Is Route 18 actually running on the new schedule?
  • Are buses arriving within 5 minutes of the posted time?
  • Are stops being skipped or is the route running reliably?
  • How does this compare to other routes? Is the investment working?

Publish the findings. If Route 18 succeeds, that's data showing the system can deliver. If it fails, that's evidence that the problem isn't money—it's execution. Either way, you have a fact, not a promise.

The Broader Test: Can Ottawa Actually Govern?

This matters beyond transit because it's the same pattern everywhere: infrastructure gaps, identified problems, budget approvals, management commitments, and persistent failure to deliver.

24 Sussex decayed for 15 years. The St. Patrick/Vanier Parkway intersection sits unchanged despite documented safety concerns. The road network deteriorates because every available dollar goes to LRT—which has its own delivery problems.

These aren't failures of individual councillors or staff. They're failures of an institutional machinery that treats approval as equivalent to completion. That confuses voting for something with making sure it happens.

A councillor who wants to actually govern needs to break that pattern. Not by voting harder or passing more motions. By shifting from the illusion of action to accountability for results.

The Real Job

Here's what I'd do if elected to represent Rideau-Rockcliffe:

I'd treat every budget vote as the start of oversight, not the end. I'd demand specific deliverables tied to spending. I'd track implementation publicly. When OC Transpo, Public Works, or Parks and Rec promise something, I'd verify it happened—and report the results (success or failure) to residents.

I'd publish the data. I'd call out delays with explanations. I'd ask why when things don't materialize. And I'd make it clear that governance isn't about voting—it's about making sure the voting produces actual results.

King says he'll continue pushing for specific route improvements and monitor implementation closely. That's the right posture. The advocacy piece is done. Votes are recorded.

What matters now is whether he—or whoever serves this ward—actually does the monitoring. Publicly. With data. And with willingness to demand answers when the system fails.

That's the difference between a councillor and a representative. That's what Ottawa needs.


Watch for: Whether Route 18's September improvements materialize, whether the promised bus fleet additions arrive on schedule, and whether the next council will treat budget votes as the beginning of accountability—or the end of conversation.

This time around, inform yourselves, vote9

This time around, inform yourselves, vote differently, vote wisely.  Vote for Peter Karwacki for Rideau Rockcliffe



King on transit - much about nothing achieved

 


The Transit Promise Gap: What Ottawa's Budget Votes Actually Deliver

King has been on council for 7 years.

Councillor Rawlson King's June 26 newsletter is worth reading carefully. 

It tells a story that's become distressingly familiar in Ottawa governance: a cascade of identified problems, legislative action, record budget approvals, and public commitment—followed by a gap between what was promised and what residents actually experience on the street.

Something has to change.

King frames his newsletter around self validation

The Auditor General's recent audit confirms what he warned about in 2023: that Ottawa's "New Ways to Bus" redesign was driven by budget cuts, not network optimization. 

The audit is damning. By early 2026, only 20 per cent of frequent routes meet regularity targets. 

96% of non-frequent routes miss punctuality targets. The bus fleet remains chronically undersized. Run times haven't been recalibrated since the 2023 redesign. 

Three years of his advocacy, and the metrics show deterioration, not improvement.

Yet King's response is to point to votes and commitments. He voted against inadequate transit budgets in 2023 and 2024 (prudent). He voted for record transit investments in 2025 and 2026 ($856 million and $938.7 million respectively—genuine achievements). 

He passed motions: one requiring standardized cancellation notices to councillors, another directing staff to identify high-need neighbourhoods. He supported a $7.08 million reliability package including new buses and preventative maintenance funding. And OC Transpo has committed to fixing Route 18 by September 2026.

Here's the problem: the transit system is still broken, and these actions haven't fixed it.

The Gap Between Intention and Delivery

King's newsletter inadvertently illustrates a critical distinction that matters for any resident relying on transit. There is a difference between:

  • Voting for increased funding (a Council decision)
  • Passing a motion requiring notification protocols (a staff directive)
  • Receiving a commitment from management (a promise)

And:

  • Buses arriving reliably (an aoʻctual service outcome)

All four of King's listed actions fall into the first category. None of them are in the second. That's not a failure on King's part—it's a failure of the institutional machinery to translate intent into delivery.

Consider the 2025-2026 budget narrative. King voted for a historic $88 million increase in 2025 and a 10 per cent increase in 2026, with $433 million explicitly dedicated to reliability improvements. That's substantial political commitment and real money. Yet the audit was released after these budgets were passed, and it concluded that the system cannot deliver its current schedule unless funding is brought in line with requirements. 

Translation: we just approved record budgets, and they're still described as necessary-but-insufficient to fix existing problems.

The $7.08 million reliability package—two new buses, heat tracing for the LRT catenary, and ward-councillor transit priority measures—sounds substantial until you do the math. The bus fleet needs systematic renewal. Heat tracing is one failure mode among many. Transit priority measures are scattered across wards. This is patch work, not system reform.

The Route 18 Test Case

King's specific focus on Route 18 (St. Laurent Station to Billings Bridge) offers a useful window. Residents have flagged it as unreliable. At the June 11 Transit Committee meeting, OC Transpo committed to improving Route 18 by correcting its running times, with changes expected by September 2026.

This is helpful. It's also exactly the kind of commitment that has characterized Ottawa's transit governance for years: 

  • identify a problem, 
  • secure a pledge, 
  • announce it publicly as a win, 
  • wait for implementation.

The real test isn't the commitment. It's whether Route 18's running times are actually recalibrated in September, whether those changes are based on current travel data (not old assumptions), and whether reliability actually improves afterward. 

King says he'll monitor implementation closely. That monitoring matters, because without it, the commitment evaporates into the institutional backlog.

The Broader Pattern

Councillor King clearly tracked the issue and pushed for action. It's a story about Ottawa's structural capacity to convert policy intention into consistent service delivery.

Three years ago, King warned that the transit redesign lacked "a consistent technical framework to guide service provision" and was driven by budget pressure rather than resident needs. 

The Auditor General reached the same conclusion. 

In 2025 and 2026, Council approved record budgets in response. 

Yet here we are, with the audit confirming that service is worse, the bus fleet is undersized, and run times are still wrong.

At some point, the pattern suggests the problem isn't inadequate advocacy or insufficient budget approval. It's institutional. 

OC Transpo management operates under chronic constraints—labor costs, fleet capacity, aging infrastructure, and what appears to be persistent difficulty in translating operational policy into consistent execution. The councillor votes for money. The staff commits to improvements. The system delivers degradation.

That's not a transit problem. That's a governance problem.

What Actually Changes This

For residents on Route 18 waiting for buses that don't arrive on schedule, none of this—not King's votes, not the audit's findings, not the $7 million package, not even the September commitment—matters until there's a bus that shows up reliably.

That requires something deeper than budgets and motions. It requires OC Transpo to actually have the technical capacity to recalibrate run times correctly, to sustain that recalibration across multiple seasons and route variations, and to maintain fleet deployment at levels that let drivers execute those schedules without chronic pressure to skip stops or run late.

King's newsletter suggests he understands this.

. His closing line is blunt: "I will continue pushing for specific route improvements" and "I'll be monitoring its implementation closely." That's the right posture. The advocacy piece is done. The votes are recorded. What matters now is whether the machinery actually works.

By September, we'll know if Route 18 is one data point in a pattern of follow-through—or one more entry in Ottawa's long list of committed-but-never-delivered transit improvements.


Watch for: Whether the September Route 18 changes materialize, whether the promised bus fleet additions arrive on schedule, and whether the $433 million allocated to 2026 reliability actually moves the needle on the 96% of routes missing punctuality targets.

On the 95


Just for fun I will add that the road infrastructure in Ottawa is...abominable.

Every available dollar has gone into LRT.

As Neil suggests, Soon this Will become a safety issue.




This time around, inform yourselves, vote differently, vote wisely.  Vote for Peter Karwacki for Rideau Rockcliffe