Editorial: Ottawa's new city council must translate big ideas into action
OTTAWA CITIZEN EDITORIAL BOARD
Updated: October 23, 2018
Mayoral candidate Clive Doucet was right to stress the importance of the Prince of Wales Bridge during the election campaign. ASHLEY FRASER / POSTMEDIA
Jim Watson ran a hyper-cautious, incremental re-election campaign. His chief rival, Clive Doucet, countered with a grab-bag of big, sprawling ideas. It turns out Ottawans may favour a bit of both: They’ve re-elected Watson, but done so just as some big city projects are about to take off – or fall flat.
The man who made no campaign promises of consequence (except to say he needed a tiny bit more flexibility with property tax hikes) now confronts the challenge of managing several huge ideas through to fruition.
There’s the still-to-occur opening of the Confederation Line next year, after some dismaying delays. There’s the signing of a $3-billion contract and managing stage 2 to Moodie Drive, Algonquin College, Trim Road, Riverside South and the airport. There’s the hope to one day build stage 3 to Barrhaven and Kanata-Stittsville.
There’s the big central library project, meant for one corner of LeBreton Flats and conceived as an ambitious partnership with Library and Archives Canada. If done right – the big word is “if” – this building will become a cultural jewel of Ottawa’s shifting downtown core.
There’s the even bigger project of pushing progress on the rest of the Flats: finding ways to help bring the secretive RendezVous LeBreton-NCC ordeal to a point where something happens and a downtown arena is a fait accompli, not simply a gleam in the eyes of planners and sports fans.
There’s the attempt to figure out a better future for the ByWard Market, and for Sparks Street. There’s a continuing controversy over building a large shelter for homeless men on Vanier’s main street. There’s a redo of the city’s Official Plan, setting out the broad parameters for how the capital will look and feel in the coming decades. More tall towers? More inclusionary zoning? More evolution toward being both an innovation centre and a truly “green” city?
And there are the broad issues Doucet raised, though with insufficient detail to give them traction during the campaign. Regional rail is not a ridiculous concept to research further. Settling the fate of the Prince of Wales Bridge, and acting on it, should be a priority in this term of council. Discussion of the truck tunnel under the Ottawa River needs to resurface.
Watson and his new council must juggle all these big ideas while still sorting out garbage pickup, plugging potholes, slowing down traffic speeders and regulating where in the city an adult can smoke a joint.
It’s not work for the faint of heart. It’ll require both pluck and pragmatism. Good luck, Mr. Mayor. Good luck, councillors.