Campaign Video

Https://youtu.be/zBxbnuPAazE

Monday, 8 June 2026

The Nail that Sticks Up

 


The Japanese proverb warns, "Do not be the nail that sticks up"

The challenging candidate needs name recognition, media coverage, and the notice of the voting public. Less than 40% of eligible voters actualy vote in municipal elections.

My objective is to present my candidacy, challenge the incumbent, stimulate debate and discussion, and inform the voters so that they make the best decision.

At the recent manor park flea market a neighbor said, "no thanks" when I offered her my card. "King is my guy" she said.

I asked her if she knew my policies. 

"No, but he is my guy"

That is the challenge of the incumbent.

So naturally, I have to be the nail that sticks up.

How do I do so?

1. I support the new east end crossing

2. I advocate for sensible public washroom strategy

3. I am advocating for animation of the JetForm Park 

4. I am advocating for true open data

5. I am advocating for increased us of Artificial Intelligence

6. I am advocating for physical seperation in bike routes

7. We are different candidates, I offer different skills and abilities.  I am a professional project manager and administrator. King is a pandering communicator. 

8. If elected I will not run again. I want to get in and get stuff done, then get out.

9. Get those 18 wheelers out of the downtown.

10. Noise control

11. Road repair.

12. North South cohesion

It's a productive tension, because a challenger has to stand out to win, yet the proverb warns against standing out. Here's how it applies across several dimensions of a Canadian municipal race:

The core tension An incumbent has structural advantages: name recognition, a record, established relationships with local media, developers, unions, and community organizations. When a challenger "sticks up" recklessly, those forces unite to hammer them down. So the discipline is about how and where you differentiate — not whether you do.

Claude said:

Where it applies most directly

  • Tone and aggression. Municipal voters in Canada skew older and community-oriented. A challenger who goes hard negative, attacks the incumbent personally, or comes across as angry tends to absorb the backlash rather than the incumbent. People know each other. Harshness reads as a character flaw, not a strength.

  • Controversial wedge positions. Taking a strong ideological stance on a polarizing local issue (aggressive densification, defunding, etc.) energizes a narrow base but creates organized opposition from everyone else. You become easy to define and target.

  • Ego and self-promotion. Seeming too ambitious or self-aggrandizing in a local context is a liability. "Who does he think he is?" is a genuinely damaging sentiment at the ward or municipal level. Humility and community rootedness are currency.

  • Giving opponents ammunition. Misstatements, inconsistencies, or poorly researched claims get amplified fast in a small media ecosystem. Every overreach is a nail waiting to be hammered.

The strategic implication The smart challenger sticks out on safe ground — competence, listening, specific local grievances (the pothole on Elm, the closed rec centre) — and stays disciplined on everything else. You differentiate on the incumbent's weaknesses, not on your own bold personality or ideology.

The paradox The proverb ultimately pushes a challenger toward structural differentiation rather than personal flamboyance: run a better ground game, knock more doors, build a broader and quieter coalition. You want to be the nail that belongs — placed deliberately — not the one that's visibly out of place and inviting a hammer.

In short: be distinct enough to win, but never so exposed that you hand your opponents a clean target.

Sunday, 7 June 2026

Rideau Rockcliffe


Marilyn would be 100 this year.

Rockcliffe Park (the northern anchor of the ward) is a nationally recognized historic district designed in 1864 in the English/American Picturesque tradition.
162 years ago.


Fair's got nothin' to do with it.


The great circle route involves paddling down the Rideau River

1. Start at the RSC
2. Portage around 24 sussex to the ottawa river
3. Paddle past Rideau Falls to the locks
4. Portage the locks
5. Paddle up the canal to Dow's Lake
6. Portage at Carlton Universty
7. Run the rapids at Carlton U
8. Paddle back to the RSC

Time allowed, about seven hours.

The RSC, Rideau Sports Centre is in Overbrook.
Overbrook is about 104 years old, tracing its roots back to 1922 when it was officially constituted as a police village. 

Give Overbrook another 58 years. It will build up and exceed Rockcliffe Park to become a new center of growth and development for Ottawa.



NIMBY..it is part of the history and fabric of Rideau Rockcliffe

 













Claude finished the response

In Ottawa Rideau Rockcliffe, why did Legendre fight against building the new baseball stadium?

16:23
Unearthed historical opposition rooted in community concerns

The question refers to Jacques Legendre, a city councillor who represented Rideau-Rockcliffe. 

The main issue in his 1991 election was the creation of a new baseball stadium in the ward. His opponent, incumbent councillor Kelly was successful in getting it built, but 

Legendre complained that residents were not consulted and that the stadium would cause traffic and noise problems for the area.  ( pandering) Wikipedia

Once elected, however, 

Legendre was unable to get the city out of its contract with the stadium developer. ( Imagine wasting time even trying to do so!)


 The stadium was ultimately built — it opened in 1993 as JetForm Park (now known as Ottawa Stadium on Coventry Road) and became the home of the Ottawa Lynx. Wikipedia

So in short, Legendre's opposition centred on two key concerns: lack of community consultation and 

the impact on the neighbourhood in the form of traffic and noise.









Think about the times in which we live.
Are we going to work together for the betterment of Ottawa, or not?

Back then Ottawa had landed a Triple-A International League franchise as part of the 1993 MLB expansion, and building the stadium was a condition of getting that team. It was also a moment of peak baseball enthusiasm in Canada — the Blue Jays were back-to-back World Series champions and the Expos were competitive. The general civic argument would have been about bringing pro baseball back to Ottawa for the first time in decades and the economic and civic pride benefits that come with it.

But in Rideau Rockcliffe, there will ALWAYS be 
"resistance to change."

Can you think of any similar issue today? 

There is the proposed East End Crossing at Kettle Island. The NIMBY crowd will be Trumping up some rare and threatened habitat, some traffic issue...but the current councillor doesn't want to talk about it.

I, on the other hand, am all for it!

This time around, vote differently, vote wisely, vote for Peter Karwacki for Rideau Rockcliffe

The new East End Crossong.. I am ALL  for it!

Get those trucks out of the downtown core!!!


This time around, vote differently, vote wisely, vote for Peter Karwacki for Rideau Rockcliffe



Community Associations

 


In this 2026 Ottawa municipal election (voting day October 26, 2026) in Ward 13 Rideau-Rockcliffe, and Peter Karwacki is running for city councillor. Here are the practical alternatives if one association president won't do one-on-one candidate meetings:

Other Community Associations in the Ward The ward has several associations — Cardinal Glen, Lindenlea, Manor Park, New Edinburgh, Overbrook, Rockcliffe Park, and Wateridge Village. In the 2019 byelection, the presidents from several of those associations collectively interviewed declared candidates, and as recently as April 2025, those same associations jointly organized a federal "Meet the Candidates" event at Manor Park Community Centre. Reaching out directly to the presidents of other associations, or proposing a multi-association joint forum (which has precedent), is a strong avenue. RockcliffeparkRideau-rockcliffe

A Full Candidate Forum In 2019, a candidate forum at Rockcliffe Park Public School was organized by local community associations, and organizers allowed breakout sessions for people to speak directly with candidates. Proposing or pushing for a similar open public forum — rather than one-on-one meetings — sidesteps the issue entirely. CBC News

Media Questionnaires CBC Ottawa sent a detailed questionnaire to candidates in each ward in the 2022 election, and they'll likely do the same this cycle. Ottawa Citizen and Ottawa Matters also cover local races. Getting responses on the record through media is a credible alternative to association-mediated access. cbc

The City's Own Candidate Tools Ottawa.ca has a "Who is running in my ward?" tool that lists all candidates with their information, updated throughout the nomination period. This at least ensures public visibility. City of Ottawa

Candidate's Own Events Running door-to-door canvasses, hosting a community coffee chat, or organizing a public town hall doesn't require association permission. That kind of direct outreach can actually be more effective than a filtered association interview.

Direct Contact Peter Karwacki's blog lists his email as peterkarwacki.overbrook@gmail.com — voters (or other organizations wanting to host him) can reach out directly without going through an association gatekeeper.

The key leverage point is that no single association president controls all public access in the ward. A coalition of the other associations, or a media-organized event, would be harder to  BLOCK


Association
Key Contact(s)
Email
Phone / Address
Notes / Best Way In
Carson Grove Community Association
President: Allen Nelson
Via Facebook group (message admin or board)
Facebook: facebook.com/groups/1889395631318004
Active group; board listed publicly. Message the group directly.
Crichton Community Council (New Edinburgh)
President: Chris Straka
CrichtonCommunityCouncil@gmail.com (mailto:CrichtonCommunityCouncil@gmail.com)
Field House, 203 Stanley Ave
Board meets 2nd Monday of every month. Email is very responsive.
Lindenlea Community Association
General inquiries
info@lindenlea.ca (mailto:info@lindenlea.ca) (or contact form on site)
lindenlea.ca
Check site for current board/volunteer email; very event-focused.
Manor Park Community Association
President
president@manorparkcommunity.ca (mailto:president@manorparkcommunity.ca)
manorparkcommunity.ca
Direct to president — perfect for formal requests.
Manor Park Community Council
General / Centre
mpcc@manorpark.ca (mailto:mpcc@manorpark.ca)
613-741-4776 ext 4 100 Braemar St / 1805 Gaspé Ave
Runs the community centre — very operational.
New Edinburgh Community Alliance
General
info@newedinburgh.ca (mailto:info@newedinburgh.ca)
newedinburgh.ca
Shared site with Crichton; handles broader neighbourhood news.
Overbrook Community Association
General / Board
info@overbrook.ca (mailto:info@overbrook.ca)
overbrook.ca
Very active; recent 2026 priorities survey posted.
Rockcliffe Park Residents Association
Secretary
secretary@rockcliffepark.ca (mailto:secretary@rockcliffepark.ca)
rockcliffepark.ca 380-A Springfield Rd
Formal and heritage-focused; great for structured meetings.