Campaign Video

Https://youtu.be/zBxbnuPAazE

Monday, 25 May 2026

Rockcliffe Park

 


MacKay Lake is a very good example of just how welcoming the neighborhood is.

• The Pond: Limited unsupervised public swimming is allowed daily from 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. (typically June–September). 

Student monitors patrol in summer to enforce the hours and protect the habitat. rockcliffepark.ca


No beach facilities (no washrooms, change rooms, or picnic areas).Hazards: Rocky bottom and a steep drop-off at the designated access point—children must be closely supervised by adults.Rules: No watercraft, inflatables, dogs (or pets in the water), fishing, or digging in the sand (to prevent erosion). Stay in the marked shoreline area.

• Water quality (E. coli) is monitored and has been good in recent years.

Other Rules and Tips

This is an Urban Natural Area—stay on the paths, respect private neighbouring homes, keep dogs on leash, and avoid disturbing wildlife. No fishing, boating, fires, camping, alcohol, or loud noise.

• Volunteers (including students) help with trail maintenance and invasive plant removal if you’re interested in giving back—email environment@rockcliffepark.ca.

A low-key gem for locals—quiet, beautiful, and protected. If you’re planning a visit soon (late May 2026), the trails are open year-round (weather permitting), 

• This City of Ottawa map clearly shows:Purple lines = the stone-dust Corridor of Public Passage (COPP)

 footpaths (the main public trails, ~2–4 km total).

McKay Lake (larger body of water on the left).The Pond (smaller body on the right, with the supervised swimming area).

Green shaded areas = the conservation lands and woodland.Access points and parking (limited roadside spots marked with “P”).

Nearby streets for reference: Hillsdale Rd., Acacia Ave., Hemlock Rd., etc.

You can download the full high-resolution PDF version directly from the City of Ottawa here:
https://documents.ottawa.ca/sites/documents/files/documents/caldwellcarver_conservationarea_en.pdf (815 KB).

Trails mainly follow the eastern shoreline of McKay Lake and loop around The Pond.
They’re easy, flat walking paths through mature forest—perfect for birdwatching and peaceful strolls.
No bikes allowed on the trails (leave them at the entrance).
The western side of the lake is private (lined with homes), but the public “Dog Walk” path runs along Lansdowne Road between the north and south sections.



Sunday, 24 May 2026

Karwacki versus King

 


This gives voters a clear choice: 

King's defensive opposition vs. My proactive separation of issues with constructive alternatives. 

It's fact-based, ties directly to daily resident pain (trucks rattling windows downtown vs. highway backups), and avoids NIMBY accusations.

Earlier terms (pre-2022): Voted No on several key files, including certain development approvals and budget elements (per 2022 election analyses).

Anti-racism role: Opposed motions seen as weakening policy language (e.g., 2025 racism/colonialism definitions debate). While clamouring for DEI inituatives for policing he quits his role on the OPS board during a policing crisis.

Served as Deputy Mayor (June–Dec 2024)—a leadership role that likely reinforced majority alignment on procedural items.

Promise Fulfillment (Core Accountability Metric)

14 tracked promises for the current term.

43% completed (per Ottawa Accountability as of early 2026).

This is above the city-wide average (around 12% across all councillors) but still modest—over half remain unfulfilled or in progress. 

This fulfilment record offers a direct hook for my "accountability" platform: voters can see measurable gaps between campaign commitments and results on issues like housing, infrastructure, or ward services.

Key Votes & Patterns

Budgets & Taxes (2025–2026 cycle)

KING supported the 2026 budget overall (3.75% property tax increase: ~$166–$237 extra for average homeowners, including transit levy and police hikes).

King voted against elements like the transit fare hike and the large police budget increase (one of the biggest in recent years).

King presented the draft positively in ward newsletters and consultations but voiced dissent on specific cost drivers. 

This shows some restraint on user fees and policing costs while backing the broader spending package.

Lansdowne 2.0 (Nov 2025 – high-profile fiscal test)  Voted No (but project passed 15-10).

King's Strong statement: Cited Auditor General concerns over optimistic revenue assumptions, $418M+ public spending, and 45-year debt servicing on speculative returns. He called it fundamentally risky. Vote carried anyway.

This is one of his clearest "accountability" moments in a losing cause. Pushing back against a mayor-backed megaproject on financial grounds rather than popularity.  I argue that insufficient politicking led to the defeat.

Development, Heritage & Ward Issues

As Chair of the Built Heritage Committee, King consistently prioritizes preservation (e.g., heritage protections in Rockcliffe Park/New Edinburgh).

Manor Park sidewalks (2025): King deferred construction after resident opposition—responsive locally but drew criticism for overriding staff/planning timelines.

General pattern: 

King supports intensification/housing tools city-wide but defends ward character on heritage and traffic/parking.

Other Notable Positions

Earlier terms (pre-2022): Voted No on several key files, including certain development approvals and budget elements (per 2022 election analyses).

Anti-racism role: 

King opposed motions seen as weakening policy language (e.g., 2025 racism/colonialism definitions debate). He resigned from OPS, a missed opportunity in my opinion.

Served as Deputy Mayor (June–Dec 2024)—a leadership role that likely reinforced majority alignment on procedural items.

Overall Assessment for My Campaign Lens

Strength for accountability/anti-pandering: The Lansdowne No and partial budget dissents show independence on fiscal risk and spending priorities. 

Promise completion at 43% gives voters pause They can ask "Where are the other 57%?" No spin just the facts.

Challenge: King votes with the majority on most big budgets and tax increases, and his ward work (newsletters, consultations, heritage chair) keeps him visible and "present." 

While KING has no pattern of rubber-stamping every developer wish, he has no consistent anti-spending crusade either.

Rideau-Rockcliffe relevance: 

Votes often balance city-wide growth (housing, transit) with local pushback (heritage, sidewalks). Intensification pressures in Overbrook and infrastructure complaints are areas where I  contrast "results vs. relationships."

King's Position (Direct from His Statements)

In his March 2025 column and June 27, 2025 newsletter, King reiterated firm opposition:

  • Minimal impact on truck traffic: 
  • Studies (e.g., 2021 NCC/IBI Group report) show it would divert only ~15% of King Edward Ave. trucks by 2050 — the core problem remains unsolved.
  • Shifts problems eastward: Would push more car traffic into east-end neighborhoods (Manor Park, Rockcliffe Park, Vanier), increasing noise, pollution, and safety risks.
  • Induced demand: New capacity often generates more traffic, worsening congestion overall.
  • Environmental harm: Disrupts Ottawa River ecosystems, green spaces, and wildlife; undermines climate goals. Impacts on seniors, Montfort Hospital patients, etc.
  • Staggering cost: $2–4 billion misallocation — better spent on transit, housing, infrastructure repairs, homelessness, etc.

He has encouraged residents to oppose it in federal consultations and highlighted alignment with MP Mona Fortier. This stance aligns with long-standing community opposition in parts of his ward (especially Manor Park and Rockcliffe areas).

King positions himself as a community defender here, but I contrast it with the broader city needs for congestion relief and practical infrastructure.

The bridge is needed for Ottawa's future.

"Needed" framing: 

Many in Ottawa (including some east-end voices and other councillors like Stéphanie Plante in Rideau-Vanier) argue a 6th crossing is essential to remove trucks from downtown/Lowertown, improve interprovincial flow, and support growth. Proponents see King's opposition as NIMBY protection of quieter ward pockets at the expense of city-wide relief.

 

Anti-pandering angle: King's stance prioritizes vocal local subsets (e.g., heritage/quiet residential areas) over evidence-based regional solutions. 

I Ask: Does blocking a long-planned crossing (debated for 50+ years) equate to accountable leadership, or pandering to immediate resident pushback while trucks continue rumbling through vulnerable areas?

MY differentiation: 

I emphasize data-driven priorities — e.g., support a crossing (or ring-road alternative) that truly diverts trucks, paired with transit investments, without the downsides. 

Potential vulnerabilities for King: 

His opposition is popular in affected ward pockets but I paint it as obstructionist BECAUSE traffic/truck issues are bad and will worsen and if federal momentum is building to complete it.

Low turnout in municipal races means energized supporters of the bridge can matter.

These differences give voters a clear choice on a tangible, high-stakes issue affecting daily commutes and quality of life.

My Other policy planks include 

  • Avoiding low cost housing ghettos
  • A new public washroom policy
  • More seperation on bike lanes
  • Immediate "at point of use" lead filtration
  • SelF driving shuttle PILOT on St. LAURENT
  • No pandering and no slush funds
  • If elected...I will not run again! No pandering!


I am trained and experienced in data analytics and project management. King has a Master degree in communication yet can rarely speak without his notes. He is quick to remind you that he is black. What's that got to do with anything?

Its time for a change. The facts are clear and the difference between candiates never more stark.
If you consider yourselves informed then vote. 

This time, vote wisely. Vote for Peter Karwacki.






Madou..objects but Kettle Island Rules

 



The following is an analysis by 

Roland Madou, translated into english. He is against the Kettle Island Crossing.

I publish it here because in his objections he also lists every reason to support it.



Revival of the Idea for a New Interprovincial Bridge (March 2019)

Kettle Island Still Under Consideration: How Is This Possible?

Gatineau MP Steve MacKinnon has once again revived the idea of ​​a new interprovincial bridge crossing Kettle Island. Since then, other politicians, journalists, and citizens have weighed in on the matter, seemingly without fully understanding the situation. It therefore seems worthwhile to understand why so many people believed, and are still convinced, WRONGLY, that the Kettle Corridor was undeniably the best solution! That is the purpose of this note.

As a Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries and a retired mathematician, my passion for numbers led me to spend hundreds of hours studying this issue in depth over several months, as I wanted to understand the core of the NCC's recommendations.  (I should clarify that no one asked me to do this study and that, whatever solution was chosen, it made no difference to me. I therefore acted alone, and in a completely objective and disinterested manner).

1. What did the NCC engineers’ figures say?

The NCC engineers themselves highlighted that the Kettle Corridor was the worst of the 12 corridors considered for two of the seven criteria, as well as for the combined environmental and social criteria (see table in Appendix 1).

And this is not just my interpretation: these are the engineers’ own figures! Moreover, engineer Steve Taylor of Roche-NCE, who was the lead engineer for the NCC studies, confirmed this on two occasions.

First, in a personal letter he sent me on December 18, 2008 (and according to Adel Ayad, who was a member of the NCC Board of Directors, I am the only member of the public to have received a personal reply), Steve Taylor wrote: “I do note that you have correctly interpreted the evaluation methodology and the numerical scoring of the alternatives.” He added that “we added an ability for members of the public to provide comments on what they thought the weighing of the factor groups should be”, but “these weights were not utilized by the evaluation committee”. “The outcome of the evaluation is a function of the weights assigned for the evaluation sub-factors and factors”. “We note that you place a large importance on effects to the human environment. However, none of the 25 members od the evaluation committee place enough weight on these specific evaluation criteria. You are correct to identify that using different weights can lead to a different outcome”.

 ·       Then, at the meeting of the Transportation Committee of the City of Ottawa, on January 12, 2009. Here is an extract from the Minutes (26) of this meeting, published by the City of Ottawa: “Responding to a question posed by Councilor Legendre, Mr. Taylor confirmed that Kettle Island was not the first choice in all seven categories”. He also confirmed that "if the weighing values ​​were changed, it would alter the results of the study," but that "it was determined not to change those values" despite "the number of public comments" regarding the lack of importance given to cultural and social factors. During this meeting, it was also emphasized that "the Evaluation Committee is made up of people with technical backgrounds, and the people bringing this proposal forward have a transportation background," which explained the Committee's emphasis on non-environmental factors!

Steve Taylor therefore confirmed that the table in Appendix 1 is correct and that the Kettle Corridor was only recommended because the Evaluation Committee had given much more weight to non-environmental factors than to environmental ones. However, the governments had demanded an environmentally focused study, and the public consulted had expressed the same wish. One might therefore have expected the NCC to reject the Kettle Corridor on its own. However, it did the opposite!

Let's try to understand the reasons for this surprising recommendation.

1. Possible Political Pressure and Transgression of Provincial Requirements

To be able to recommend the Kettle Corridor, the engineers had to deviate from the requirements of the provincial governments and gave negligible weight to environmental factors when ranking the twelve corridors considered in Phase 1 of the study. In the central part of the table in Appendix 2, it is clear that it was thanks to the disproportionate weight (over 69%) given to non-environmental factors that the Kettle Island Corridor received the most points.

At the time, some whispered that Lawrence Cannon, the (Conservative) minister in charge, favoured the Kettle Corridor because he wanted to help his friend Bob Labine, with whom he had served on Gatineau City Council, and who still had real estate interests in the Paiement Road area.

Like me, some members of the NCC Board of Directors (such as the scientist Adel Ayad) had raised objections to the recommendations.  What's curious is that the mandate of these administrators was not subsequently renewed by the Conservative government! This looked very much like a desire for absolute control!

1. Worthless Sensitivity Tests

Aware that the Kettle corridor recommendation would be heavily criticized, the engineers stated that they had “validated the reliability of the selection process” by conducting a sensitivity analysis.

Thus, in the brochure distributed at the press conference on September 4, 2008, during which the CCN recommendation was announced, there was a page entitled “Sensitivity Analysis” (see Appendix 3).

The first problem with this analysis is that these tests prove absolutely nothing, because they do not test what should be tested, namely, a different weighting philosophy. In all the hypotheses tested, the total of environmental factors remains well below 50%. The “NO environmental” factor always dominates! And in this case, Kettle obviously wins, since it is the best for the “NO environmental” factor!

Kettle is very weak (see Appendix 1) in what Mr. Taylor calls "cultural" (including, in particular, the social environment, recreational activities, etc.). As long as the weight of "1. Misleading Presentation of Sensitivity Test Results

But it's not just the poor quality of the sensitivity tests that's shocking. There's something even worse!

In the table in Appendix 3 summarizing the sensitivity tests, the number ONE appears next to each of the 7 factors in the Option 5 column (Kettle Island). This is indeed the exact result for the tests designed by the engineers, but they are meaningless given the biased way in which these tests were designed. However, the most shocking thing is the conclusion of the table, written in large red letters: "The Kettle Island link (Corridor 5) receives the highest score for each factor category"!!! This is simply absurd! (See the true meaning in point 5 below).

This is a completely misleading way to present the results of these tests, which already lacked any probative value! And this misleading conclusion undoubtedly had the effect some were seeking: those who read it deduced that the Kettle Corridor was indisputably the best. Here are a few examples.

In Le Droit on September 5, 2008, the editorialist (Pierre Allard) wrote that, for ALL the criteria studied, “everywhere the Kettle Corridor obtained the best ranking.” He concluded that “at this stage, the opponents no longer have any arguments capable of turning the tide. All that remains are the ever-present ‘not in my backyard’!”

The City of Gatineau’s resolution of January 20, 2009, endorsing the Kettle Corridor recommendation, also referred to this conclusion (“Considering that the sensitivity analysis clearly demonstrates that the chosen option always ranks first regardless of the weighting of the criteria”).

 On January 8, 2009, live on Ottawa community television, an Ottawa city councillor (Bob Monette) peremptorily made the same erroneous statement, refusing to believe his colleague Jacques Legendre's explanations!

At the meeting of the City of Ottawa's Transportation Committee on January 12, 2009, I personally intervened to point out this misunderstanding. The only reaction I received was a reprimand from the Chair for daring to publicly address an error made by a city councillor! Welcome to public consultations!!!

" is not significantly increased, Kettle remains in first place. Even when Mr. Taylor increases the "cultural" weight to its maximum (22%), the environmental NO remains at 59%! This is far too much for Kettle to be dethroned!

And when he reduces "Traffic" to its minimum (15%), since this reduction is distributed across the other criteria proportionally to the base percentages, the total for Environment remains stuck at 37%. Here again, this is far from enough to unseat Kettle from first place.

These sensitivity tests are therefore biased. Steve Taylor did not test what was important. He should have tested different weighting philosophies, and not simply vary ONE percentage while merely adjusting the others to maintain 100%.  What happens, for example, if we want a study focused on the environment and the population (which was, incidentally, its mandate!) rather than on traffic? In other words, what happens if the weighting of the environment is increased to 50% or 75%? We don't know. Yet, given the initial requirements set by the governments, it was ESSENTIAL to at least test these weighting philosophies. Because then, everything changes! For example, by reducing the environmental "NO" from 69% to 50%, and increasing the environmental weighting from 31% to 50% (which is far from excessive, considering the requirements of the study), Kettle finishes third, not first (see the lower part of Appendix 2)!

This shows, at the very least, that contrary to what Steve Taylor claimed, we are very far from an indisputably necessary solution!  This may also show that Steve Taylor was either being remotely controlled to recommend Kettle, or was incompetent outside his limited field of construction!

1. Misleading Presentation of Sensitivity Test Results

But it's not just the poor quality of the sensitivity tests that's shocking. There's something even worse!

In the table in Appendix 3 summarizing the sensitivity tests, the number ONE appears next to each of the 7 factors in the Option 5 column (Kettle Island). This is indeed the exact result for the tests designed by the engineers, but they are meaningless given the biased way in which these tests were designed. However, the most shocking thing is the conclusion of the table, written in large red letters: "The Kettle Island link (Corridor 5) receives the highest score for each factor category"!!! This is simply absurd! (See the true meaning in point 5 below).

This is a completely misleading way to present the results of these tests, which already lacked any probative value!  And this misleading conclusion undoubtedly had the effect some were seeking: those who read it deduced that the Kettle Corridor was indisputably the best. Here are a few examples.

In Le Droit on September 5, 2008, the editorialist (Pierre Allard) wrote that, for ALL the criteria studied, “everywhere the Kettle Corridor obtained the best ranking.” He concluded that “at this stage, the opponents no longer have any arguments capable of turning the tide. All that remains are the ever-present ‘not in my backyard’!”

The City of Gatineau’s resolution of January 20, 2009, endorsing the Kettle Corridor recommendation, also referred to this conclusion (“Considering that the sensitivity analysis clearly demonstrates that the chosen option always ranks first regardless of the weighting of the criteria”).

On January 8, 2009, live on Ottawa community television, an Ottawa city councillor (Bob Monette) peremptorily made the same erroneous statement, refusing to believe his colleague Jacques Legendre's explanations!

At the meeting of the City of Ottawa's Transportation Committee on January 12, 2009, I personally intervened to point out this misunderstanding. The only reaction I received was a reprimand from the Chair for daring to publicly address an error made by a city councillor! Welcome to public consultations!!!

1. End of Phase 1

The Kettle Corridor's decisive advantage was therefore not at all related to the environment or the quality of life of residents, even though that was what the provinces had demanded.

  What had propelled it to first place was that it was the most advantageous for trucks (which was obvious, even before the analyses began, since it was the closest to the city centers).

Note: The irony is that when Gatineau City Council endorsed (January 20, 2009) the recommendation identifying the Kettle Island Corridor as the sole option, it unanimously passed a resolution stating that "This council is of the opinion that it is unacceptable for all heavy vehicles to be transferred from King Edward Avenue to Paiement Road." This effectively negated one of the few advantages of the Kettle Corridor!

 The provinces were not fooled and rejected the NCC's recommendation, as it conflicted with their environmental requirements.

However, they agreed to proceed to Phase 2 of the study, provided that the NCC retained three possible corridors, not just the Kettle Corridor. The NCC therefore kept the three corridors that received the highest ratings in Phase 1: Kettle Island, Lower Duck Island, and the Gatineau/Baie Laurin Airport.

Phase 2

Phase 2 was launched in May 2011. Despite objections from some directors (such as Adel Ayad, which ultimately cost him his position on the Board!), the NCC retained the same engineering firms that had served it so well during Phase 1.

The engineers had promised to take the wishes of the governments and the public more into account than in Phase 1. However, the hope for greater objectivity was dashed. Two years later, in That settled the debate, because the NCC knows perfectly well that I'm right! And François Lapointe (who had been there for over 20 years) then preferred to "change careers," and he left the NCC at the end of 2013!

I therefore hope that we won't relive this same kind of sterile discussion during this election campaign. It would once again be a source of division and bitterness between different groups of citizens. We would see statements like "the wealthy taxpayers of Manor Park don't give a damn about Gatineau," or "perhaps we, on the Quebec side, should block Ontarians who own cottages in Quebec from crossing our bridges" (Le Droit, September 27 and 28, 2008)!

CONCLUSION

Sooner or later, there will probably be one (or two) other bridges, particularly to facilitate public transit between the two shores.  We can dream, for example, of a light rail system that would run in a loop around the urban centers of Ottawa and Gatineau. And I share the opinion of the mayors of Ottawa and Gatineau that the number one priority right now is connecting the public transit systems on both sides of the river.

However, if it is a road bridge, it will have to be located further away from residential areas if it is to meet environmental and social requirements. Ideally, two bridges should be built, at the eastern and western ends of the residential areas, to create a ring road around the downtown cores of Ottawa and Gatineau.

It should be noted that, in 2009, the idea of ​​a sixth bridge was accepted by everyone. If certain prominent Gatineau residents hadn't insisted that the new bridge pass over Kettle Island, this new bridge would probably already be built, but in a location that complies with the requirements of the provincial governments.

The feasibility studies will therefore undoubtedly resume sooner or later. As mentioned above, the engineers' analyses to evaluate each of the possible corridors were conducted professionally, and I see no reason to start from scratch, as the problem lay solely in the weighting and presentation. However, the expansion of inhabited areas since 2009 will need to be taken into account.

One thing is certain: if the Kettle corridor did not meet the environmental requirements in 2009, it certainly does not meet them today. It would be inconceivable that, in 2019, when environmental awareness has become so strong, environmental requirements would be less stringent than they were 10 years ago.

Roland Madou, Mathematician, M.Sc.

Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries

Certified Member of the French Institute of Actuaries

Knight of the Order of the Pleiades

Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medalist

Ottawa


March 26, 2019 2013, the NCC concluded Phase 2 by once again stating that the Kettle Corridor was the best option! And, predictably, the provinces once again rejected this recommendation, which contradicted their environmental requirements! A complete fiasco!

The NCC therefore had no choice. On June 27, 2013, the NCC Board of Directors unanimously adopted a motion ending funding for the environmental impact assessment (sic) for the Kettle Island corridor, but it placed the blame for this rejection on the Ontario government. This was completely unfair!

I felt compelled to set the record straight. On July 6, 2013, Le Droit published my letter, “Chronicle of a Fiasco,” in which I restored the truth.

This led to a heated exchange between the NCC’s Vice-President, François Lapointe, and myself in Le Droit, after he attacked me on Rachel Gaulin’s show on Radio-Canada, accusing me of insulting the NCC. I have attached the following:

• Appendix 4: My article published in Le Droit on July 6, 2013 (“Chronicle of a Fiasco”)

• Appendix 5: François Lapointe’s response in Le Droit on July 10, 2013 (“Two Very Rigorous Processes”), where he states that my accusation is “a real insult.”

• Appendix 6: My detailed scholarly response published in Le Droit on July 12, 2013 (“A Scheme, Really?”).

That settled the debate, because the NCC knows perfectly well that I'm right! And François Lapointe (who had been there for over 20 years) then preferred to "change careers," and he left the NCC at the end of 2013!

I therefore hope that we won't relive this same kind of sterile discussion during this election campaign. It would once again be a source of division and bitterness between different groups of citizens. We would see statements like "the wealthy taxpayers of Manor Park don't give a damn about Gatineau," or "perhaps we, on the Quebec side, should block Ontarians who own cottages in Quebec from crossing our bridges" (Le Droit, September 27 and 28, 2008)!

CONCLUSION

Sooner or later, there will probably be one (or two) other bridges, particularly to facilitate public transit between the two shores. We can dream, for example, of a light rail system that would run in a loop around the urban centers of Ottawa and Gatineau. And I share the opinion of the mayors of Ottawa and Gatineau that the number one priority right now is connecting the public transit systems on both sides of the river.

However, if it is a road bridge, it will have to be located further away from residential areas if it is to meet environmental and social requirements. Ideally, two bridges should be built, at the eastern and western ends of the residential areas, to create a ring road around the downtown cores of Ottawa and Gatineau.

It should be noted that, in 2009, the idea of ​​a sixth bridge was accepted by everyone. If certain prominent Gatineau residents hadn't insisted that the new bridge pass over Kettle Island, this new bridge would probably already be built, but in a location that complies with the requirements of the provincial governments.

 The feasibility studies will therefore undoubtedly resume sooner or later. As mentioned above, the engineers' analyses to evaluate each of the possible corridors were conducted professionally, and I see no reason to start from scratch, as the problem lay solely in the weighting and presentation. However, the expansion of inhabited areas since 2009 will need to be taken into account.

One thing is certain: if the Kettle corridor did not meet the environmental requirements in 2009, it certainly does not meet them today. It would be inconceivable that, in 2019, when environmental awareness has become so strong, environmental requirements would be less stringent than they were 10 years ago.


 Roland Madou,

Mathematician, M.Sc.

Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries

Certified Member of the French Institute of Actuaries

Knight of the Order of the Pleiades

Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medalist

Ottawa

March 26, 2019

Saturday, 23 May 2026

Campaign Artifacts

 










This time, vote wisely. Vote for Peter Karwacki for City Council.




Kumbaya

 



Bridging the gap one photo op at a time!

It's not like I have any advice for the Norweigians or for Rideau Rickcliffe for that matter. The historic colonial powers all have their presence in Rockcliffe..British, French and American. Sure, they want to 'maintain the character' of their neighborhood.

We must continually remind ourselves of our history, as painful as it might be and find new and creative ways to find reconciliation. 

Some have cited calls to action, others restitution but on a practical day to day basis it is simply the acknowedgement that wrongs were done, must not be forgotten and at the very least we ALL owe respect, appreciation and brotherhood if not love to the colourship.

Direct Call to Action

Residents, parents, voters, and community leaders in Rideau-Rockcliffe must step up:

  • Acknowledge the real problems instead of ignoring them 
  • Push for changes to current affordable housing policies 
  • Demand alternatives to concentrated low-income ghettos 
  • Put money and time into effective, direct initiatives like Roots & Culture Canada 

Hold your councillor accountable — oppose building more low-cost housing ghettos in only certain parts of the ward

Visit rootsandculturecanada.org or attend their upcoming events. Together we can build a safer, more empowered Rideau-Rockcliffe.

And Vote for Peter Karwacki for City Council




Hibou's Craig pops a question

 


Are you looking for Horizon Ottawa’s support?

Not particularly. They align with my platform but I will not pander to them.


Any beefs with Rawlson King’s voting record?

Kings pandering is annoying. He voted against sidewalks.

The big issue? Trucks downtown. He is strangely against the east end crossing proposal. I am a proponent.

There are other matters.

King is largely ineffective on council. His biggest asset apparently is that he is a black person.



  I am white so that is awkward.



..but I am not going to shy away from that.

Any thoughts on who’d make the best mayor?

Neil is my guy.




Regarding Horizon Ottawa

It is a progressive, municipal-focused grassroots organization (and incorporated not-for-profit) dedicated to advocating for socially and economically progressive policies at the City of Ottawa level.

I certainly cannot argue about that

Its stated mission is “to cultivate local solidarity around socially and economically progressive priorities so that Ottawa can become a city where everyone can thrive.” 

This is uncontestable.

In practice, the “point” of the group is to build community power, influence local elections and decision-making, and push the city toward priorities such as:

Stronger public transit (e.g., major bus fleet expansion campaigns demanding service levels based on population growth rather than current ridership).

Affordable and inclusive housing / “better urbanism” (increased density, walkability, mixed-use development, fighting urban sprawl).

Environmental protection and climate action, with emphasis on the needs of marginalized communities.

Greater public ownership/control of infrastructure and services (opposing privatization trends).

Reducing developer influence at City Hall.

Inclusion, equity, anti-oppression work, and meaningful reconciliation with Indigenous peoples.

More democratic and transparent municipal decision-making (less centralized power in the mayor’s office and senior bureaucracy).

If you check my blog I am in alignment.  


Horizon Ottawa pursues this through petitions, public campaigns, research/analysis, community events, and acting as a registered third-party advertiser in municipal elections (endorsing candidates they view as aligned with their values). 

This endorsement will likely just go to King. Why? Incumbents are favoured.

They have a detailed “Basis of Unity” document that outlines their core principles, including grassroots organizing, environmentalism, decolonization, inclusive urbanism, public ownership, and working with labour and social movements. 

Horizon Ottawa exists as an activist / advocacy group on the progressive/left side of Ottawa municipal politics, aiming to shift city policy and council composition toward outcomes they believe will make the city work better for ordinary residents rather than developers or entrenched interests. 

It has been active in recent election cycles and continues to run issue-based campaigns (transit, development, etc.).

My problem is not so much the "what" of Horizon Ottawa but the "how" . King's current methods are based on re election pandering and not what is best for the city.

A note about Bell"s Corners blog

Craig McCauley (online handles: Le Hibou / ottawaowl) runs the bellscorners WordPress blog (bellscorners.wordpress.com).He is a retired school teacher, longtime Bells Corners (Ottawa) resident, grassroots community activist, and local political figure who has run as a fringe/independent candidate in Ottawa municipal elections (including Ward 8 in 2014 and at least one mayoral race). The blog serves as a community news and views site focused on Bells Corners issues, and he also operates a free bike-taxi service there.On the blog, he posts and comments under the display name/avatar Le Hibou (French for “the owl”) with the username ottawaowl. His contact email on the site is ottawaowl2@yahoo.ca, and he is active on social media as
@ottawaowl
(including X/Twitter, Bluesky at bellscorners.bsky.social, YouTube, and Instagram).
Note that “Le Hibou” also historically refers to a famous 1960s–1970s Ottawa coffeehouse/venue on Sussex Drive (unrelated to this blog except for the shared name). The blog itself is a local community outlet, not connected to the historic café.
Craig's ward  rideau-rockcliffe history lesson
https://bellscorners.wordpress.com/rideau-rockcliffe-by-election-apr-15-2019/

Friday, 22 May 2026

At'l Soak Ya -Something that doesn't show up in the newsletter

Credit CBC's Crummey


Rawlson King is a trustee on the Ottawa Public Library Board, the one that is expected to exceed budget for the new main branch by up to a quarter billion dollars after the thing is actually up and running.

Guess who pays the larger part of this. Affordable housing anyone?

Well maybe he is not responsible, but he and the other trustees are accountable. This is not something you can really brag about either.

The board has to approve the design scope, select the architect, approve the schedule, budget, approve the contract. Do they get away clean then?

Here is a history lesson. When Colonel By went over budget on the Rideau Canal they held a public inquiry. One is needed for this mess for the new main branch.

Make them accountable. I would.



Ādisōke (Central Library) Capital ProjectThe main area of budget pressure is the joint Ādisōke library project on LeBreton Flats (a partnership between the City of Ottawa, OPL, and Library and Archives Canada). This is a separate capital project, not part of the core operating budget.p
  • Current forecast: The project is now projected to cost $352 million.
  • Latest overrun: An additional $18.5 million is being requested (primarily for oversight, support services, and contingency). The City of Ottawa is expected to cover most (but not all) of this.
  • Previous approved budget: $334 million (itself already well above the original ~$175 million target from years earlier).
  • Status: Construction is ~85% complete, with further delays; current contractor schedule points to completion in December 2026 (about 12 months behind the prior contractual date). No confirmed public opening date yet.