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Gatineau councillors want more public influence in the next phase of the bridge study

February 28th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

As noted in the Ottawa Citizen (Feb. 28. Ottawa Citizen: Letter calls for public input on bridge study), five Gatineau councillors have asked the National Capital Commission to include members of the public on a committee that will study three possible sites for a new interprovincial bridge.

The worrying part of this, in my mind, is the response given my Kathryn Keyes, a spokesperson for the NCC:

“With Phase One we had a number of public consultations, so that is planned for the second part and there certainly will be opportunities for the public to provide their comments,” said Kathryn Keyes.

We all know the extent to which pubic comments were taken into account in Phase 1, where consultants went through the motions of public consultation processes, but where public feedback had little to no influence on the results.

Going forward, we need to have a stronger voice and more opportunity to influence the final results and recommendations. Residents of the National Capital Region, the primary stakeholders, deserve a prominent role in the analysis and decision-making process during the next phase of the study.

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NCC Watch – Genies and truck routes

February 27th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

The NCC Watch is a blog dedicated to monitoring the activities of the NCC.  I urge you to have a look at their compilation and criticism of questionable NCC decisions and actions over the years:

http://www.nccwatch.org/

In particular, be sure to read the February 24 posting: Genies and truck routes.

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Letter to Rick Mercer re: Genie Awards at the Aviation Museum

February 22nd, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

In case you missed it, Ottawa will be hosting the 2009 Genie Awards at the Canada Aviation Museum.  From the NCC press release issued on January 14:

The NCC has worked since 1899 to make the Capital an expression of the Canadian identity. Thanks to the steady, persistent and focused efforts of generation after generation of planners and landscape architects, Canada’s Capital is today a model of unspoiled shorelines, scenic parkways and boulevards, preserved heritage, monuments and expansive parks. Just as importantly, the Capital has become a place for national encounters, commemorations, learning and celebrations such as the Genie Awards.

The following was submitted by a concerned citizen to Rick Mercer at info@rickmercer.com to let him know what might be in store for the 2009 Genie Awards venue down the road.  As you are probably aware, Rick never misses an opportunity to question some of the bizarre decisions made by politicians and decision makers in this great country of ours.

Who knows…he might just take an interest in a proposal to transform the unspoiled shorelines and a scenic parkway in our nation’s capital into a trucking route that would just happen to run within a few hundred meters of the “Canada Aviation Museum, one of the country’s most visually stunning landmarks.”

Feel free to send Rick an email yourself if you think this is something he should know about.
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Hi Rick,

Are you coming to Ottawa for the Genie Awards on Sunday, April 4, 2009?

If so, maybe you could do yet another Ottawa rant—only this time take a dig at the NCC.

The Genies are being held at the Canada Aviation Museum, which the NCC calls “one of the country’s most visually stunning landmarks.”

In fact the NCC, in a great gesture of support, has recently given the museum a grant of $7 million to improve its visibility and accessibility and enhance its “wow” factor.

The only problem is that, at the same time, the NCC is also spending 9 million taxpayer dollars to study the idea of building a truck route on the scenic parkway right by this museum. The guardian of our beautiful capital city doesn’t see the problem or the contradiction in any of this.

Trucks aren’t beautiful. They don’t do anything for tourism. They also don’t improve visibility or accessibility. Tourists from all over the world could be sharing a roundabout with as many as 4,000 trucks a day trying to find their way to the museum.

Of course, the neighbours aren’t thrilled about this plan either because the truck route would skirt past front driveways and back yards and come within 25 metres of a hospital and 15 metres of an elementary school. We call it Ottawa’s Spadina Expressway. It goes by the name of the Kettle Island Bridge and we have been fighting the proposal for decades.

If you want to find out more, check out www.stopthebridge.org.

Oh, and by the way, the NCC is doing this to be a model for the rest of Canada. I kid you not. So this could come to a city near you.

Love your show,

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Not in Canada’s front yard

February 20th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

We just came across the commentary below within Ken Grays’ ongoing dialogue with Ottawa citizens:  The Ottawa you want: Your responses

This commentary was posted by concerned citizens on Jan. 28 (within Ken Gray’s published dialogue) and is somewhat dated in that, since this posting, the decision has been made to take forward three options to the next phase of analysis.  However, the comments about the unsuitability of Kettle Island are still extremely relevant, well written, and worthy of note for anyone interested in this issue.

Thanks to John Grant for bringing this to our attention and even greater thanks to the authors for their submission to Ken Gray’s dialogue.
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From: Ottawa Citizen: The Ottawa you want: Your responses

Please: “Not in Canada’s front yard!”
January 28, 2009
10:42 AM

Although cynics are likely to say “when Hell freezes over”, it’s not totally inconceivable that Canadians-at-large (at the very least the thinking Canadian) may eventually develop an interest in their capital city: What is being done to improve it, what is being wrought to debase it. Hopefully, some day we’ll hear them chanting “Not in Canada’s front yard”, whenever something is afoot which, when considered from important angles, is bound to reduce Ottawa’s urban quality quotient.

And now, fellow Canadians, it so happens that something is afoot that will make a mess of Canada’s front yard, and it is a proposed Ontario-Quebec bridge over Kettle Island.

True, Ottawa is a nice city. But it has a dismal record when it comes to preserving, let alone identifying and enhancing assets that one would expect to see well taken care of in a capital city. A long list can be drawn of landmark buildings that might have been saved from fire or might have been sheltered from demolition. Add to that list the precious land areas, the unique locations which have been wasted, for lack of recognition of their true appeal. The verdict is out: All levels of government, as well as a special body, the National Capital Commission, have been mismanaging Canada’s capital city and, sadly, they are on the verge of making another infrastructure blunder by building this new interprovincial bridge in the wrong place.

Time to sound the alarums! Will we ever learn? Will Canadians across Canada ever realize the importance of their showcase city, not only its psychological, sociological and political importance, but also the potential economic benefits? So, Canadians! If we ask you “For whom the alarm sounds?” It sounds for thee!

Over the years many urbanists, planners, and civic commentators have been highly critical of those who have failed at detailing Ottawa’s architecture and urban qualities so that Ottawa might really be taken seriously as a capital city. They have been criticized, but many of us thank them for at least attempting to stir things up. And for being courageous, because washing dirty linen in public never wins much applause. And, more regrettably since they were criticized by some interest groups for trying to issue a wake-up call, the medicine they dispensed may have been bitter but it was not strong enough to cure the apathy.

Be that as it may! Let’s simply hope that there will be some awakening and that enough Canadians to matter will take an interest in their capital city and apply what pressures and influences they can muster towards its betterment.

Ottawa will not be mentioned in the same breath with some of the great world capitals for quite a while, but in the meantime, along the way, we can surely do better. One way to do better is to look at all developments carefully to see whether they will have a positive or negative impact on Ottawa as a national capital.

One proposed development or project which will certainly be of consequence and on which sharp attention needs to be focused on its suitability for our national capital, is the proposed additional interprovincial bridge across the Ottawa River. This bridge “file” deserves to be thoroughly scrutinized by federal, provincial, and municipal, officials who have a duty in trust to Ottawa, Canada’s capital.

Sadly, there is reason to doubt that they have been doing their jobs, and that no one in charge is “watching the store”. It has become evident that the appointed individuals who are supposed to be recommending the “best bridge and roadway system in the best possible location” have been going about their work without any regard to Ottawa being the nation’s capital. Reference is made here to the private consultants who have been engaged in what is called the “Interprovincial Crossings Environmental Assessment” (ICEA).

In the extensive documentation and literature the ICEA has produced, and quite possibly in their presentations, there is a shocking omission. That is, and hard as this may be to believe, there does not appear to be one, not even one mention or reminder that the city in which the bridge will be located is Canada’s capital. Further, there is no apparent indication that, had they been aware that Ottawa is the nation’s capital it would have occurred to them to pay attention to certain things.

There is simply no avowed realization that, for them, this had to be considered a special case! No mention of any challenge! Not a single expectation, requirement, standard or stricture is mentioned that would stem from Ottawa being a capital city –a city that will have the eyes of the world on it, you’ve guessed it, from time to time.

Well, maybe half of one: When scouring what is currently available on the ICEA website, www.ncrcrossings.ca, one finds this: “Truck traffic through the downtown is not compatible with tourism objectives of Canada’s Capital Region”. However, that could be said of any city which relies heavily on revenue from tourism. As for the sustainable transport bandwagon that is rolling through cities around the world? Well, it must have missed Ottawa, because we are still talking about building a very expensive and obtrusive bridge to move trucks through Canada’s capital.

How can this be? Surely it should constantly be in the minds of those who have some sort of fiduciary responsibility, or who have chosen public service, that a capital city must be a showcase. How can this be? It is general practice in advanced bureaucracies, be they governmental or business, to circulate proposals for projects, programmes, and campaigns to a number of departments asking them to indicate how they think the proposed endeavour might affect a number of things that the bureaucracy has to be concerned with before going ahead with it.

The range is wide: Will it impact on the agency’s public relations, on foreign relations; will it impact on certain customer groups, on certain communities; what about electrical supply, sewage facilities; on school locations and so on. In Ottawa, an additional box is needed: “Will it enhance Ottawa’s stature as the country’s capital?” And some day, perhaps: “Is it consistent with the official concept that has been agreed to for Ottawa’s development as a capital city?”

For some time, the ICEA has been pondering various bridge “configurations” a term that can be used to include “location” and the consequent “number of lanes”. The number of lanes and the resulting ravages that the road system serving the bridge will wreak depends on the crossing location (bigger spans mean bigger bridges with greater visual impact) that is chosen and the kind of vehicular traffic (dedicated, or not, to trucks) that the bridge will be built to handle. These are all intertwined, hence calling the result “configurations”.

The fact that no special requirements for the bridge and road network in terms of the higher quality of aesthetics which people would expect to find in a capital city, such as pricier materials and urban furnishings (lampposts, landscaping), are not at issue here. Recommendations on aesthetics are not expected from the ICEA. What is at issue is the fact that the ICEA has not been identifying the urban assets and attributes which Ottawa now has, nor has it been concerned about recommending a bridge configuration that will protect them, especially if they are precarious.

Blame it perhaps on the terms of reference but how, one might reasonably ask, could they have accepted such terms? Although not recognized for what it is, or for its great potential, Ottawa happens to have a large district which is undoubtedly a considerable topographical and urban asset which, for convenience might be called the STAG (Several thousand acres of greenery). Without insisting on precise boundaries, this huge district along the Ottawa River is seen as extending from New Edinburgh in the West to Rothwell Heights in the East. Considering this district “as of a piece” is justified because of its homogeneity: thousands of acres of parkland and residential areas that are as carefully manicured and treed as Ottawa has ever been able to achieve!

Now for the impending tragedy for Canada’s capital: A Kettle-Island Bridge (ICEA’s favoured option for a bridge) is smack in the middle of the STAG and this, in time, would jeopardize the STAG’s integrity and development. In fact, it would certainly depreciate a major capital asset in Canada’s Capital.

Ottawa: Pay attention! Canada: Pay attention! A big chunk of Ottawa which without doubt has high portents for Ottawa’s beauty, and for the eventual fulfilment of Ottawa’s vocation as a capital city, is at risk. The area, it should be mentioned also includes Canada’s official residences, the RCMP stables, the Aviation Museum, boat clubs, most embassies.

An encouraging thought: The importance of keeping the environs interesting and attractive will not escape the attention of all those who benefit from tourism, or who have a stake in our capital’s reputation across Canada and the world. What basis is there for predicting that the bridge would spell disaster for the STAG? Merely the fact that a bridge is not just a bridge! A bridge needs feeder roads and ramps, and the totality of this (what the ICEA rightfully calls a corridor) can have a tremendous impact, not only as an industrial blob when built and seen, but as the origin of many undesirable things when in operation.

Just what are these negative effects?

First, a “corridor” as can be expected separates one side from the other. STAG being of a piece, as stated earlier, would suffer irreparable harm. It is now a full expanse of greenery and quality residences. It is not only valuable on its own. It has a critical mass which, from an urbanism point-of-view, cannot do otherwise but improve the weaker housing districts within it and on its three sides unless, of course, to put it dramatically, the STAG gets stabbed by the proposed heavy-traffic conduit that will leak innumerable disturbances and interferences.

Secondly, the incompatibility of the Kettle Corridor and STAG becomes evident when one realizes that the ICEA only chose that corridor because it will attract a share of the trucks now going through Ottawa’s core. Trucks that everyone agrees should no longer travel where they are currently travelling and putting people at risk of spills and so on. This is the heavy-truck traffic now going back and forth between Quebec’s Highway 50 and Ontario’s 417 via the Nicholas, Rideau, and King Edward route in downtown Ottawa. If the Kettle corridor is adopted, this non-hybrid heavy-truck traffic will be going past the Montfort Hospital and CHMC’s manor-style head office and will brake and accelerate many a time in its progress from Ontario’s Highway 417 to Quebec’s Highway 50. It will simply never fail to spew foul gases into the STAG, and some of the foul air will need to be filtered by the Montfort Hospital and Chronic Care Centre’s air conditioning system. The bridge will also be used by thousands of passenger vehicles and small commercial vans and pick-ups, some attending to the needs of STAG residents, but most drivers will be using their own shortcuts within the STAG on their way to work in Ottawa’s business districts and business parks. There are ample precedents of this kind of result. Ottawa, nay, Canada cannot possibly put at risk what is indisputably a major urban asset for Ottawa.

As our capital city grows to the great extent predicted by the ICEA, there will be increasing pressure on its core and, as any respectable city planner would have to agree, it would be unconscionable to have this “STAG” asset despoiled for lack of appreciation and due attention back in the early years of the 21st century.

It can be objected that Ottawa has no shortage of exceptionally beautiful housing districts. True enough. One merely has to go look along the Rideau Canal, Dow’s Lake and Island Park Drive to name a few, but this huge district, the STAG, which has high potential to straighten itself out over the years and to raise Ottawa’s average beauty quotient, should complement these valuable residential assets and not ever be impaired by a major bridge, let alone a trucking bridge.

Tragically, the current proposal to have the new bridge cross the Ottawa River via Kettle Island and to use the beautiful Aviation Parkway as its traffic feed would most certainly do that! It is therefore not surprising that all the STAG communities have been protesting against the Kettle-Island bridge proposal. The STAG must not be split by a Kettle-Island Corridor and must not be drowned by traffic, as happened years ago to Ottawa’s then-glorious Metcalfe, O’Connor and King Edward “boulevards” through lack of civic foresight.

Not a single part of the STAG should be made vulnerable; none of the effort that has gone into its constituent communities for generations to make them what they are, and always better, should be wasted. Largely due to its lack of pollution-spewing factories and plants, Ottawa is probably one of few cities that do not have the proverbial “West-End” which looks down on the East-Side. Not in Ottawa, because Ottawa has an excellent “East Side” right now, which has a great future, but only if the present is properly handled.

Ottawa has to realize that it has this “homogeneity” and that it is an important asset to be protected, not solely for its relative uniqueness but for the high marks that Urbanism 101 gives to cities which avoid severe, inappropriate, infrastructure cleavages and their unforgiving legacies. As for the proper handling of this unwanted and unacceptable proposal for the wrong bridge in the wrong place at the wrong time, we say “NO”, to the ICEA.

And, better still, in the usual Canadian fashion, we urge others to say “Please. No thanks! Thank you.”

Hubert Gratton, PhL
Barry Wellar, PhD, MCIP
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MP Mauril Bélanger congratulates the NCC for its latest decision

February 18th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in News and Commentary

Press release issued by Mauril Bélanger’s office yesterday:
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Future Interprovincial Crossings: MP Mauril Bélanger congratulates the NCC for its latest decision

OTTAWA, February 13, 2009 – Honourable Mauril Bélanger, Member of Parliament for Ottawa-Vanier, congratulates the National Capital Commission (NCC)’s Board of Directors for their unanimous decision to adopt a resolution suggesting that Phase 2 of the Environmental Assessment study of Future Interprovincial Crossings in the National Capital Region take account option 5 (Kettle Island), 6 (Lower Duck Island) and 7 (Canotek industrial park – Gatineau airport). This means that more information will be collected to compare these options.

“The Board’s decision to add options 6 and 7 to the Roche NCE’s recommendation to submit option 5 to an in-depth assessment shows common sense”, said Mr. Bélanger. “The citizens will benefit from the additional comparative assessments and the result will help to ensure the removal of a maximum amount of heavy-truck traffic from the downtown core of the nation’s capital.”

Mr. Bélanger says that by proceeding with solely option 5, the construction of a new bridge would be intended to accommodate heavy commercial truck drivers instead of accommodating established communities. Removing heavy trucks from residential areas is the ultimate objective. Today, the NCC demonstrated its commitment to this objective – subject to the approval of the budget by the three funding partners (Ontario, Québec and the NCC).

The Government of Ontario and the Government of Québec have both recently demonstrated their wish to see the inclusion of options 6 and 7 in the assessment of the future interprovincial crossings. According to Mr. Bélanger, option 7 is the most viable since it is situated in a less densely populated area, as greater potential for contributing to economic development in Ottawa East end, and is well positioned for the construction of a future ring road around the Capital.

Information:
Alexandre Mattard-Michaud
Office of the Hon. Mauril Bélanger, P.C., M.P.
613-992-4766
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Provinces will ultimately decide bridge location

February 17th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

In an Ottawa Citizen article published today, Madeleine Meilleur, MPP Ottawa-Vanier and Ontario Minister of Community and Social Services, clarifies the roles of the provinces in the bridge decision. A few excerpts from the article below:

“What it would take to have a bridge is an agreement between the two provinces on where the bridge should be,” Ms. Meilleur said in an interview. “Right now there is no agreement to build it at Kettle Island … If there is no agreement between the two governments, there will be no bridge.”

Ms. Meilleur said the NCC consultant’s recommendation to build the bridge at Kettle Island, is part of a 1950s attitude that has no place in the 21st-century concept of building a city. She said when French planner Jacques Gréber made a plan for the city at the request of prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, it included a bridge at Kettle Island because the area south of the bridge was unpopulated. Today, it has several communities and thriving institutions, and you don’t ravage a built-up community for a bridge.

“Kettle Island is a 1950s decision. It was in the Gréber plan when there was nothing built after St. Laurent Boulevard, but now you have a lot of communities there and we feel that the community should come first — not a bridge,” Ms. Meilleur said.

She says the Ontario government will participate in the second phase of the environmental study, but wants the impact on the community to be paramount in the assessment. Public transit and economic development would be next in the order of priority, she said.

The full article is available here:
Feb. 17, Ottawa Citizen: No bridge without agreement: Meilleur

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Setting the record straight re: previous bridge studies

February 14th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

The following was prepared by Judy Lishman to address the history of previous bridge studies and the interpretation of their conclusions.
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Setting the Record Straight
by Judy Lishman

Misinformation is being spread that there have been three studies that have selected Kettle Island as the preferred location for an interprovincial bridge. This is simply not true. To begin with, there has never been an Environmental Assessment Study done for any study. Without an EA Study no bridge site can be selected. The current study will not become an EA Study until it moves into Phase 2.

The preliminary study, in the early nineties, commissioned by JACPAT ( made up of both cities, both regional governments, both provinces and the NCC) did recommend Kettle Island, but this recommendation was never accepted by any of the partners who commissioned the study. In fact, it was vigorously opposed by The City of Ottawa, the Regional Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton and the Ontario Government.

Another preliminary study done in 1999 by Steve Taylor, the same lead consultant as the present study, looked at 3 possible east end bridge sites. (The 1999 Interprovincial Transportation Concept Plan) In this study, Petrie Island came first, Lower Duck Island came second, and Kettle Island came last.

In the current study, Steve Taylor has recommended a bridge at Kettle Island. This recommendation has not been accepted by the 3 funding partners as proven by the NCC and the 2 provinces by their decision to commission further study on the top 3 corridors before making a final selection.

Those who are supporting a bridge at Kettle Island also refer back sixty years to the Greber plan. This plan recommended reserving the then empty corridor at Kettle Island for consideration of a future bridge location. This recommendation was never followed and development has taken place along the corridor on both sides of the river. It is ludicrous to use the Greber Plan of 60 years ago as support for a bridge at Kettle Island.

All of the above information is on public record and available to anyone who wishes to verify the facts.
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The 1994 JACPAT study and the 1999 Interprovincial Transportation Concept Plan (as well as other bridge-related document and information) are posted on Councillor Jacques Legendre’s website here: http://www.rideau-rockcliffe.com/ottawa_crossing_e.shtml

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Carson Grove/Rockcliffe Mews press release

February 13th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

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CARSON GROVE/ROCKCLIFFE MEWS RESIDENTS’ ASSOCIATION WELCOMES THE NCC’S DECISION TO INCLUDE ADDITIONAL CORRIDORS FOR PHASE II OF THE INTER PROVINCIAL BRIDGE STUDY

Ottawa (February 13, 2009) – Carson Grove/Rockcliffe Mews Residents’ Association, representing 2,500 residents, welcomes the NCC’s decision to proceed with additional corridors for Phase II of the Inter Provincial Bridge Study conducted by ROCHE-NCE.

Carson Grove/Rockcliffe Mews Residents’ Association, along with many other Associations between King Edward Avenue and Blair Road, believe that the study is severely flawed and does not meet the initial terms of reference. Ideally, we would liked to have seen the NCC follow the Ontario Government’s recommendation to expand Phase I of the study to include the three east end alternatives that scored the highest and to re-evaluate those alternative to consider the impacts on communities, economic development and transit.

“Our Association, along with several other Associations between King Edward Avenue and Blair Road, have worked extremely hard over the last six months to ensure the Ontario Government, the Quebec Government, the Ottawa City Council and finally the NCC realizes that the Kettle Island corridor is not the right choice for an inter provincial bridge. To see the NCC listening to their funding partners and the community, gives us an indication that the public can make a difference”, says President Mélanie Drouin.

The Association believes that we need to get the trucks out of the downtown. We believe a bridge is required. We cannot, however, support a bridge site that moves the truck problem from one residential area to another. Major bridge and road infrastructure should not be built on Ottawa’s urban parkways and through an area consisting of many developed communities, a school, the Aviation Museum, the RCMP Musical ride and a major hospital which will be affected by air pollution, noise and health risks associated with major roadways and hazardous materials shipping.

A preferred bridge site for traffic during the next 25 – 50 years should permit direct linkage into a regional ring road system, not simply dump traffic onto Highway 174 or the Split. We need better planning for future traffic flow, especially for heavy commercial traffic.

We are pleased NCC will be including additional corridors and we are confident once the consultant conducts a study to ensure the impacts on communities, economic development and transit are reviewed, the Kettle Island corridor will not be the “technically preferred site”.

For additional comments or further information, contact:

Mélanie Drouin
President, Carson Grove/Rockcliffe Mews Residents’ Association
Telephone: (613) 741-3345

Norman Kruse
Vice-President, Carson Grove/Rockcliffe Mews Residents’ Association
Telephone: (613) 748-1535
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MPCA press release

February 13th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary

Press release issued today by the Manor Park Community Association:
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Opponents of Kettle Island Corridor undaunted by NCC decision

The Manor Park Community Association, in concert with other communities along the proposed truck corridor, will continue to fight against a new interprovincial bridge at Kettle Island and the associated expressway carrying heavy commercial truck and commuter traffic on the Aviation Parkway.

“The NCC’s decision today to go forward to the next phase of the study with three corridor options is a small step in the right direction,” says Judy Lishman, Chair of the Manor Park Bridge Committee, “but it does not change our resolve to use every effective measure to remove the Kettle Island bridge proposal once and for all. Heavy diesel trucks are hazardous to people’s health and safety. They do not belong in residential neighbourhoods. We cannot allow the mistakes of the past to be repeated.”

A Kettle Island route would negatively affect residential areas on both sides of the Ottawa River, including 24 Sussex Drive and Government House, because the people in these areas would be exposed to the devastating consequences of increased traffic. Moreover, the Montfort Hospital, the Canadian Aviation Museum, the RCMP Musical Ride, the Rockcliffe Airport, the Rockcliffe Sailing Club, and the Montfort Woods would be seriously impacted. “How can the NCC allow the degradation of these national capital assets,” says John Forsey, President of the Manor Park Community Association. “It flies in the face of their mandate.”

“This route does not link to public transit, either current or future, adds Forsey. “It encourages unsustainable single-occupant automobile commuter traffic and unjustifiably continues to leave trucks in the downtown core, both at the King Edward route and the proposed new route. Millions of taxpayers’ dollars have been wasted on a study that completely ignores the problem it was intended to solve. All Ottawans should be outraged.”

“Kettle Island shouldn’t even be on the table,” says Lishman. “and we will continue to insist that the Province of Ontario take it off and put an end to this inappropriate study. It has been seriously flawed from the outset, and it’s impossible to imagine any outcome that could benefit the citizens of Ottawa.”

For further information:

John Forsey, President
Manor Park Community Association (MPCA) 613-748-8700 (2530)

Judy Lishman, Chair
MPCA Bridge Committee 613-748-1375

Porte-parole en français:
Natalie Belovic 613-747-9914
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NCC Decision: 3 options to go forward

February 13th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in News and Commentary, Video and Audio Clips

The NCC voted unanimously to go ahead to Phase 2 with three options. This is contingent on funding from the Province of Ontario—agreement to participate in next phase of the study is not clear from their statement. Phase two is expected to cost $1.7 million for each of the three funding partners and is expected to take four years to complete as opposed to three. Phase two will also include a commercial vehicle origin/ destination study.

Media coverage below:

Feb. 14, Ottawa Citizen: NCC opts to study 3 bridge routes

Feb. 14, Ottawa Sun: NCC adds 2 options to new bridge plan

Feb. 13, CBC Ottawa: Ottawa given 3 choices for new interprovincial bridge

Feb. 13, Orleans Star: Study to look at Lower Duck, Kettle Island sites NCC decides

Feb. 13, CTV Ottawa: NCC to study three locations for new inter-provincial bridge (with video clip)

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CBC Ottawa Morning – Bridge Debate

Listen to a bridge debate aired this morning on CBC:

http://www.cbc.ca/ottawamorning/archives.html

Here’s a summary of the main points made by Judy Lishman, Chair of the Manor Park Bridge Committee:

  • Council has missed an opportunity to have a say in the matter. Besides, it is not a funding partner.
  • Out of the studies done in the past, Kettle was in fact not chosen as the top option.
  • The Phase I study didn’t look at mitigation issues. That will come later.
  • Both provinces have decided that three choices deserve a second look.
  • Kettle would take traffic through the longest and most heavily populated corridor.

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Ottawa City Council split and unresolved on the bridge issue

February 12th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in News and Commentary

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Summary of the Feb. 11 Ottawa City Council meeting
Contributed by Gisèle Forsey

Council voted in favour of reconsidering its recommendation to remove Lower Duck from further consideration in the inter-provincial crossing study. Bloess’ motion to remove Lower Duck was allowed on a technicality and passed because councillors Hume and Bédard were away on City business. Thanks to our lobbying efforts, we did not lose any support among councillors.

The message City Council is sending the NCC is that it is split and unresolved on the bridge issue—the tactics demonstrated to date could go on indefinitely.

Thank you to all those who came to the meeting wearing buttons, even for a short time. There was a strong button-wearing contingent, including a few who stayed until the end of the 11 hour meeting, offering a visible testimony to the Mayor and all members of Council that we will not back down from this fight. There was a small group of determined residents from Orleans who stayed as well. We were balanced in our representation.

It is anticipated that Bloess will try to make as much out Council’s recommendation as he can in the media. But there is no substance to it.
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Coverage of the meeting by the Ottawa Citizen:
Feb. 12, Ottawa Citizen: Council meeting spins out of control

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Gatineau states its conditions for a new bridge

February 11th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in News and Commentary, Video and Audio Clips

Please watch the following video (in French) that was filmed yesterday at the Gatineau city council meeting that talks about the “2 conditions” for having a bridge connecting to Montée Paiement:

1. Continue to allow trucks on King Edward
2. No increased circulation (”éviter de surcharger”) on Montée Paiement

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An analysis of the ROCHE-NCE study

February 10th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Letters to Decision Makers, Project Critique

Christine, a concerned citizen and author of 10 facts about the consultant’s selection process, has prepared a compelling analysis and critique of the ROCHE-NCE study.

This is an excellent piece of work that very convincingly highlights and summarizes the flaws and shortcomings of the Kettle Island recommendation. Christine has distributed this report to our elected representatives and decision-makers for their consideration.
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Click on the icon below to download the full report:


SYNOPSIS

While most parties agree that a bridge between the Ottawa and Gatineau regions is necessary, local history has taught us that continuing to pursue an incorrect option will result in years of litigation, and eventually, the need to once again commission a properly conducted site selection study.

The selection of Kettle Island as a location for a new bridge between Ottawa and Gatineau is based on incomplete and insufficient information and clearly goes against the best interests of our communities, the region, municipalities and provincial governments.

The City of Ottawa Council’s probable decision to continue with the next phase of execution of the Kettle Island bridge site is based almost entirely on a misleading and one‐sided environmental assessment report conducted by the consulting firm, Roche‐NCE.

In the interest of providing clarity and transparency to the ongoing dialogue on Kettle Island, this report was prepared in consultation with a small group of concerned professionals, consisting of Accountants, Auditors, Consultants, Financial and Systems Analysts to provide decision‐makers and the public with a thorough analysis of the Roche‐NCE consulting report.

The findings from this analysis are that the consultant’s report is highly suspect and flawed on a number of significant fronts. Highlights include:

  • The Roche‐NCE consultant’s study is almost completely devoid of considerations affecting communities, local commerce and “environmental sensitive” and protected areas such as the Montfort Woods;
  • While the consultant’s methodology and sensitivity analysis is complicated and complex, the analysis is unsophisticated and highly susceptible to manipulation through discretionary interpretation such as the weightings of factor groups and sub‐elements.
  • The sequence of events leading to the report, suggest that the report is the product of a pre‐determined decision from previous City of Ottawa Council meetings.

We urge the City of Ottawa Council members, the NCC Board members and decision‐makers at all levels to critically assess the validity of the consultant’s study and to consider the addition of more viable alternative corridors so that current efforts are not wasted and that the Ottawa‐Gatineau region gets a bridge in a location that serves all of our best interests.

Sincerely,
Christine
A Concerned Resident
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Urgent: Fierce lobbying required NOW!

February 10th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Letters to Decision Makers, Your Participation

URGENT!

Lobbying from the Kettle Island NOW side is expected to be fierce.

We need to combat this with fierce lobbying of our own.

Please send your letter as a personal email TODAY to each of the following councillors who might be wavering (see letter below for guidance):

Rick Chiarelli
Rick.Chiarelli@ottawa.ca

Maria McRae
Maria.Mcrae@Ottawa.ca

Peggy Feltmate
Peggy.Feltmate@ottawa.ca

Alex Cullen (just in case)
Alex.Cullen@Ottawa.ca

Also include for good measure: Steve.Desroches@ottawa.ca , Diane.Deans@ottawa.ca , Eli.El-Chantiry@ottawa.ca , Jan.Harder@ottawa.ca , Kitchissippi@ottawa.ca (Christine Leadman) , and Shad.Qadri@ottawa.ca

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Dear Councillor,

I am writing regarding the issue of the inter-provincial bridge study which will be considered by Council on February 11, 2009. Council needs to show leadership by coming to a decision on this file; its decision should be fair and in the best interest of the citizens of Ottawa.

I believe that the citizens of Ottawa need a transportation vision that keeps trucks away from established communities, improves public transportation, and delivers economic benefits.

Of all the east end options, the Kettle Island corridor will affect the health and safety of thousands of Ottawa residents and have the greatest social impact. Selecting the Kettle Island corridor will not solve the downtown truck problem – it will only repeat the mistakes of the King Edward corridor.

The Kettle Island option does not integrate into future land use plans on either side of the river nor does it link to public transit plans both current and future. There would be considerably greater economic benefits from options further down-stream, which would link the industrial sections of both sides.

I believe the position of the Province of Ontario in its letter to the NCC is correct and fair—the top three options need to be further reviewed, taking into account the important factors of impact on existing communities, encouragement of public transit usage, and stimulation of economic development.

I urge you to support the motion put forward by Jacques Legendre and Georges Bédard that Council support the provinces on the matter of the inter-provincial river crossing environmental assessment.

Regards,

(concerned citizen)
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Re: Build the bridge — now

February 9th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in News and Commentary, Your Participation

Submitted to the Ottawa Citizen:
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No construction jobs before late 2011
Re: Build the bridge – now

The only jobs that will benefit from the next phase of the Interprovincial Crossings project are those of the consultants conducting the environmental assessment. The vast majority of the work – the actual construction – would not start for at least two and a half years, only after the environmental assessment has been completed and contracts have been awarded.

Not one construction job would be created by this project before late 2011. And who knows what the economy has in store for us then.

But one thing is certain. The next phase of the project, regardless of which options are taken forward, will do little to bolster our current economic state.

So stop pinning your hopes for an economic recovery on a quick bridge decision. It’s not the miracle cure that you portray it to be.

Christophe Credico
Ottawa
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Primary stakeholders have been neglected

February 8th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Letters to Decision Makers

I have sent the following letter to the NCC Board of Directors and to the City Councillors:
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RE: Interprovincial Crossings Project

Dear Elected Representatives and Decision Makers:

I’d like to begin by making one point very clear. The consultants have recommended Kettle Island as their technically preferred corridor. They have not recommended it as the corridor that best meets the overall needs of the National Capital Region.

When considering what’s best for the overall region, the citizens of the region must be considered as primary stakeholders. Their perspectives and concerns warrant the utmost consideration.

The consultants have gone through the motions of public consultation, but these have had little impact on the study. As part of the process, a quantitative survey was conducted across the National Capital Region on both sides of the river, in order to solicit public input on the relative importance of the major factors included in the analysis.

However, when the technical experts determined the weightings that would be applied, they virtually ignored the voice of the citizens. Here are the final rankings assigned by the technical experts in order of importance, with citizens’ ranking in brackets:

1. Traffic and Transportation (6)
2. Cost (7)
3. Natural Environment (1)
4. Cultural Environment (3)
5. Land Use and Property (4)
6. Socio Economic Environment (5)
7. Water Use and Resources (2)

The clear shift that the technical experts made was in the relative priority of Traffic and Cost factors. These factors shifted from the bottom of the list defined by the citizens to the top of the list. To emphasize this shift, the technical experts assigned a total weight of 54% to these two factors alone.

As a result of the assigned weightings, Kettle Island ranks first. But this is primarily due to its relatively high Traffic and Cost scores. Kettle Island ranks last of the twelve options considered for both Cultural Environment and Water Use – two of the top three factors identified by the citizens of the region.

Running the consultants’ decision-making model with the relative weights reflecting the ranking determined by citizens of the region places Kettle Island 9th.

The people have spoken, through the survey and throughout the public consultation process. The trouble is that the technical experts have not listened.

This is where you, the elected representatives and decision makers, must acknowledge the valid concerns of the primary stakeholders in this project. These primary stakeholders – the citizens of the National Capital Region – have been neglected.

You must balance the current technical recommendation with your greater obligation to these citizens.

I urge you to align with the position taken by the Ontario Government, and to further assess the top three options taking into greater account the impact on existing communities, encouragement of public transit usage, and stimulation of economic development.

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NCC decision day: Friday the 13th

February 7th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in News and Commentary, Your Participation

The next NCC public board meeting is scheduled for Friday, February 13th. The only item on the agenda for this meeting is the bridge.

As you are probably aware, the NCC holds this final cards for the next steps of this project. They are the most critical body to address.

Please attend if you can. And if you have any final words or thoughts that you want to share with the NCC about the bridge, be sure to do so before that meeting.

Refer to any material on this website, particularly the Letters to Decision Makers category for ideas about what to say.

Your best bet is to send your feedback to Lyne Lwow and ask her to forward it to the Board of Directors:

Lyne Lwow
Manager, Executive Office Administration and Executive Assistant to the Chief Executive Officer / Gestionnaire, administration du bureau de la direction et adjointe exécutive à la première dirigeante
National Capital Commission / Commission de la capitale nationale
(613) 239-5271
llwow@ncc-ccn.ca

The NCC will likely be influenced by City Council’s decision on Feb 11th.
Your fierce lobbying of City Councillors is required now!  Click here for details.

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The NCC Opens Its Doors
Friday, February 13, 2009

Public Board of Directors Meeting:
11:30 am to 12:30 pm

Join us or watch the live webcast on the NCC website!

Location:
National Arts Centre, Panorama Room

53 Elgin Street, Ottawa

Agenda on our website:
http://www.capitaleducanada.gc.ca/bins/ncc_web_content_page.asp?cid=16302-103085-95025&lang=1
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Ottawa City Council Meeting: Wednesday Feb 11th

Ottawa City Council meets on Wednesday, Feb. 11, to make a decision on the inter-provincial river crossing EA. The City’s decision will influence the NCC’s final decision on Feb 13th.

The meeting will be held at Andrew S. Haydon Hall beginning at 10:00 a.m. Attend if you can, and don’t forget your button.  Click here for the full agenda.

In advance of the meeting, please urge City Councillors to support the provinces in their recommendation for further study of the top three options with respect to impact on communities, economic benefit, and transit.  See the sample letter below for ideas on what to day.

Letters for distribution to all councillors can be sent to Dawn Whelan, 613-580-2424 ext. 21837, Dawn.Whelan@ottawa.ca.

The councilors who voted last time in favour of carrying two or three corridors forward were:

Marianne Wilkinson, Christine Leadman, Rick Chiarelli, Peggy Feltmate, Diane Holmes, Maria McRae, Diane Deans, Peter Hume, Glenn Brooks, Georges Bédard Jacques Legendre, and Clive Doucet.

It is time well spent to thank these councilors for this support.

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Sample Letter to City Councillors:

Dear Councillor,

I am writing regarding the issue of the inter-provincial bridge study which will be considered by Council on February 11, 2009. Council needs to show leadership by coming to a decision on this file, and its decision should be fair and in the best interest of the citizens of Ottawa.

I believe that the citizens of Ottawa need a transportation vision that keeps trucks away from established communities, improves public transportation, and delivers economic benefits.

The Kettle Island corridor will affect the health and safety of thousands of Ottawa residents and have the greatest social impact of all the east end options. Selecting Kettle Island will not solve the downtown truck problem – it will only repeat the mistakes of the King Edward corridor.

The Kettle Island option does not integrate into future land use plans on either side of the river, nor does it link to public transit plans both current and future. There would be considerably greater economic benefits from options further down-stream, which would link the industrial sections of both sides.

I believe the position of the Province of Ontario in its letter to the NCC is correct and fair—the top three options need to be further reviewed, taking into account the important factors of impact on existing communities, encouragement of public transit usage, and stimulation of economic development. I urge you to support the motion put forward by Jacques Legendre and Georges Bédard that Council support the provinces on the matter of the inter-provincial river crossing environmental assessment.
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Air quality a deadly concern

February 7th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Health and Safety, Project Critique

Contributed by Judy Lishman:
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The consultant has said that there would be no impact on air quality in the Kettle Island corridor, the most heavily populated corridor studied. He is wrong.

The adverse health effects of diesel exhaust fumes are well documented. Studies by the American Lung Association indicate that 70-80% of the cancer risk from air pollution is due to particulate matter emissions from diesel engines.

According to Environment Canada, fine particulate matter is considered to be toxic as defined in the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999.

Increased roadway pollution produced by diesel fuel in vehicles is leading to a cascade of conditions that could result in heart attack or stroke and premature death researchers noted in a report to the American Heart Association.

The Canadian Medical Association states that “the link between exposure to diesel exhaust and asthma has been borne out in epidemiological studies indicating that children living along major trucking routes are at increased risk of asthma and allergic symptoms and of having respiratory dysfunction.

The Ontario Government through its “Strategic Options To Address The Fine Particulate Issue In Ontario” recognizes the serious issue of diesel exhaust. “Recent scientific studies have statistically linked atmospheric fine particulate matter arising from diesel exhaust with harmful human health effects such as cancer, the exacerbation of asthma, respiratory disease, heart disease and chronic obstructive lung disease. Unlike the situation with many other toxic substances, for fine particulate matter there is no known threshold concentration below which exposures are deemed safe. Therefore, even at very low levels of ambient particulate matter, susceptible individuals including the elderly, children and people with pre-existing respiratory or cardiovascular disease may respond adversely.”

There are 12000 people in the Kettle Island corridor who live within the zone of influence of the toxic emissions of diesel trucks. It is not only a possibility but a certainty that a percentage of them will get cancer, heart disease, lung disease and die prematurely as a result of diesel emissions if the bridge is built at Kettle Island.

According to Ontario’s strategy, measures need to be introduced to attain desirable particulate matter levels in the province. Since cities are the place where most of Ontario’s population resides, reduction of particulate matter effects in cities is crucial.

The consultant’s answer is that mitigation measures will be studied in phase 2. There are no mitigation measures available other than removing trucks from populated areas.

The trucks must be directed to a corridor remote from people so that diesel exhaust emissions can be adequately attenuated.

The recommendation by the consultant to locate a new bridge in the Kettle Island corridor must be rejected in order to protect the health and lives of the people who live there.
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Kettle Island discourages public transit

February 7th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Project Critique

Contributed by Judy Lishman:
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The Kettle Island corridor would be the poorest performing corridor for encouraging transit ridership. According to the consultant’s own conclusion in his Transit Report of July, 2008 “The least useful interprovincial crossing for transit is Crossing 5 Kettle Island – there are no benefits for route travel time or ridership criteria”. In fact, a bridge at Kettle Island would discourage transit travel and encourage automobile travel.

Transit ridership only increases if it is convenient and results in a shorter ride time than automobile. The best way to increase transit ridership is to provide dedicated transit facilities on the bridges (either bus lanes or rail) so that transit is separated from car traffic.

The City of Ottawa has just approved a transit plan that incorporates both Light Rail Transit (LRT) and Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). A major rail/bus transfer station will be located at the Blair Station close to the Greenbelt and Highway 174. The Kettle Island corridor would not directly connect with either rail or bus transit. It would not promote transit ridership and therefore would not increase the modal split (M/S) i.e. the split between transit travel and automobile travel. Corridors east of the Blair Station could enhance transit ridership from Gatineau significantly and thereby increase the M/S and reduce the requirement for future bridge capacity. There is little sense in selecting a bridge corridor that fails to connect to transit.

The NCC has recently commissioned the Interprovincial Rapid Transit Integration Strategic Planning Study. It would seem prudent, if the proponents are serious about promoting public transit, to integrate the transit study with the Interprovincial Crossings Study in order to rationalize the decisions about public transit and a new crossing corridor.

To demonstrate how little value the consultant has placed on the importance of transit in the National Capital Region, the combined weight given to the ability of a corridor to encourage automobile use is 13.4% while the weight given to encourage transit use is 2.3%. This distortion in the weighting has led to the selection of a corridor that, in fact, discourages transit use. For this reason, a bridge at Kettle Island should be rejected.
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Ontario Ministry of the Environment must get involved

February 7th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Health and Safety

Contributed by Judy Lishman:
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The Ontario Ministry of the Environment must become actively involved in The Interprovincial Crossings Study in order to provide protection to Ontario citizens.

The Terms of Reference of the study state that it is a harmonized study with the federal government and the two provinces as the proponents and funding partners. The most stringent of their environmental legislation is to apply.

In order to avoid overlapping jurisdictions, the federal Environmental Act only applies to the natural environment not to the human environment. The human environment is afforded protection by the provincial Environmental Acts.

At this point in the bridge study, Ontario residents are left with no protection because the Ontario Ministry of the Environment is not involved in the study. At the outset, they declined to participate in approving the Terms of Reference because they said it wasn’t clear if Ontario was a proponent. Since Ontario has been named a proponent by the NCC, the MTO is actively participating in the study, Ontario is being asked their opinion on the study’s recommendation and is helping to pay for it, it is clear that the MOE must be involved at every stage of this study. The Environmental Assessment Legislation was enacted to protect the citizens of Ontario in exactly these circumstances.

If a bridge is built at Kettle Island thousands of Ontario citizens will be exposed daily to health and safety hazards. We need protection from our government.
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NCC CEO interview with the Citizen Editorial Board

February 6th, 2009 | 4 Comments | Posted in News and Commentary, Video and Audio Clips

From the Ottawa Citizen Editorial Board Discussions:

Marie Lemay of the NCC
On Feb. 3, Marie Lemay, CEO of the National Capital Commission, spoke with the Citizen’s editorial board about the proposed bridge at Kettle Island, the potential for development in the Greenbelt and along the Ottawa River, the NCC’s 50-year vision for the capital, and whether environmental assessments really can be streamlined.

Audio clip:  http://www.ottawacitizen.com/audio/090203_lemay.mp3

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Subjectivity masked as unbiased, scientific accuracy

February 4th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted in Project Critique

From my speech at Public Consultation #4 in September.  I thought it was worthwhile resurrecting and publishing it to reinforce some of the key messages:
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The recommendations of the consultants are based on a mathematical formula, giving the illusion of scientific accuracy. 91 subfactors have been diligently analyzed and quantified, each one feeding data into what I will refer to as the ‘bridge formula’.

A few examples:

  • Mathematical models have been created to forecast daily traffic volumes in the year 2031 right down to the individual car and truck.
  • Construction costs, which range from $360 million to almost $2 billion for one of the west end tunnel options, are precisely presented to the nearest $1 million.
  • Ongoing annual operating costs are refined even further, and have been calculated to the nearest $100,000.
  • Shorelines have been measured to the nearest centimeter.

The consultants have gone to great lengths to present a precise, defensible recommendation. One that they claim to be analytically sound and unbiased, and one that identifies Kettle Island as the best technical alternative based on a bridge formula that scores each alternative on a scale of 1-100…to two decimal places.

Very impressive.

As with any formula, the results are entirely dependent upon the values plugged into the formula. In the bridge formula, results are calculated based on utility factors and the weighting applied to each factor.  Obviously, if the utility factors and/or weights change, the result of the formula changes.

I believe there to be flaws and omissions in the factors and subfactors that make up the bridge formula, and I am note alone.

A few examples:

  • There are no factors to address the NEGATVE traffic impacts on people and communities associated with heavy traffic increases on residential roads in and around the corridor – every traffic factor is focused on maximizing traffic flow through the new corridor.
  • Socio-economic benefits to both downtown and to the new crossing area are based primarily on maximizing traffic volume through the new corridor. This amplifies the already heavily weighted traffic flow factors.  Furthermore, there is no consideration for land use within the corridors.  According to the consultants, routing trucks through the communities along the Kettle Island corridor is good for economic development in the corridor…even though there are no industrial areas anywhere near the corridor!
  • Cultural impacts from disruption and possible relocation of the RCMP stables and Musical Ride, a national institution and treasured facility in the heart of the city, are completely neglected.
  • There is no measure of the negative economic impacts of closing the west-bound 417 exit at St. Laurent, effectively isolating east-end residents from the businesses along St Laurent, including the St Laurent mall.
  • Ancillary costs such as potential relocation of the RCMP stables and musical ride, potential relocation of the runway at the Rockcliffe airport, and necessary mitigating measures for Montfort Hospital have been excluded.
  • And one of the biggest oversights, I believe, is that there is no simple measure of the total population of people negatively impacted by the corridor.

I could go on, but what I really want to focus on are the weightings.

As we know, the weightings were determined by a closed-door technically oriented committee with no effective community representation.  Based on the composition of this committee and the interests represented, it is not surprising that traffic considerations specific to trucks were given high consideration.

To the detriment of the people living in the impacted area and to the broader National Capital region, factors contributing to the negative impact on people and communities in the impacted areas were given low consideration.

Traffic and Cost factors represent 55% of the total score, while the impact on people and communities, only partially represented within the Cultural Environment (where, for the record, Kettle Island ranks 12th of the 12 crossing options considered), accounts for only 9% of the total score.

And make no mistake: If the weightings change, the results change.  Without getting too far into the details, Kettle Island rises to the top of the list only as the weightings applied to people factors diminish, and as the weightings applied to Cost and Traffic factors increase.

Despite the precision of the consultant’s analysis and recommendations, it is critical to remember that there is a difference between precision and accuracy. For example, given the early stages of this analysis, I believe there to be a wide margin of uncertainty in the cost and traffic numbers, so I would argue that these number can’t possibly be accurate. Changes to these numbers in particular have a very real impact on the final scoring and ranking, given the disproportionally high weightings currently applied to these factors.

So as much as the consultants would like us to believe that this is an objective, unbiased study:

  • Subjective decisions were made about which factors to include and which factors to exclude;
  • Subjective decisions were made about how to quantify and measure each factor;
  • Subjective decisions were made about who would sit on the weightings committee, and about how the weightings would be applied to each factor;
  • Subjective decisions were made about if or how feedback from public consultations would be incorporated into the analysis;
  • And ultimately, subjective decisions were made to put trucks before people.

At the end of the day, the final scores and rankings outputted by the bridge equation as it exists today are just numbers. These numbers should be inputs into the final decision, but they should not be the sole basis of the final decision.

The numbers need to be balanced with common sense.

And common sense says that trucks and people don’t mix.
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    This blog was started by Ottawa residents concerned about the selection methodology for a new bridge and inter-provincial truck highway. Our research has led us to believe that Kettle Island is a bad choice for our region, yet we represent no particular group or neighbourhood. Anyone is invited and encouraged to participate in our blog.
     
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