Ottawa

Flooding task force meets behind closed doors

Ottawa-area MPPs are holding a closed-door meeting with municipal and industry leaders Friday to look at how to make Ontario more resilient to flooding.

Future flood prevention meetings should be public, says Eli El-Chantiry

MPP Merrilee Fullerton greets municipal officials as well as representatives from Ontario Power Generation and the Ottawa River Wastershed Council at the start of closed-door meeting on May 24, 2019. (Kate Porter/CBC)

Ottawa-area MPPs held a closed-door meeting with municipal and industry leaders Friday to look at how to make Ontario more resilient to flooding.

Kanata-Carleton MPP Merrilee Fullerton hosted the session in downtown Ottawa, which included the mayors of Ottawa, Clarence-Rockland and Alfred and Plantagenet, as well as representatives from Ontario Power Generation (OPG), Emergency Management Ontario and the Ottawa River Watershed Council.

West Carleton-March Coun. El-Chantiry also attended the meeting after initially being left off the guest list. He said the lesson from today's meeting was for all parties to work together — and that future meetings on flood prevention matters should be public.

"I think our residents deserve transparency on the whole issue and have all agencies talk to them about what's happening," he said.

"Have a meeting [behind] closed doors does not answer the question. They need to hear it directly."

Task force aims to mitigate impact of future floods

6 years ago
Duration 0:44
Kanata-Carleton MPP Merrilee Fullerton said the results of the task force meetings will eventually be summarized in a report by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.

'So many questions'

El-Chantiry said that people in his ward — which include the hard-hit communities of Fitzroy Harbour and Constance Bay — need answers from both the provincial and federal government on a number of pressing issues.

"Are you going to buy their homes? Are you going to help them to raise their homes? Are you going to help the municipality to build the infrastructure to be able to stay where we are?" he asked afterwards. 

"There are so many questions and it's not really on the city's hands. We need other levels of government, both levels of government, to help us out on that."

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson called the meeting "a very frank discussion."

"My hope is that they understand the severity of the problem of people's lives and their livelihoods," Watson said. "We also recognize it's all three orders of government that have to be involved in this particular challenge."

Watson said he asked the province if it will follow Quebec's proposal and offer a buyout for residents dealing with floods year after year.

Scope of task force still 'unclear,' some say

6 years ago
Duration 1:01
Sally McIntyre, general manager of the Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority and Coun. Eli El-Chantiry say there are still unanswered questions when it comes to the mandate of the task force.

More facts needed

As for Fullerton, she called Friday's meeting a "good start," but said the public will need to wait until the province has more facts to better communicate what she called a complicated issue.

"I think will be very important in understanding how we communicate the facts and the evidence," she said. "I think we need to have improved communication so that the general public can understand what's going on and the report from the task force will be helpful."

"Water doesn't follow any jurisdiction," Fullerton added.

The results of the task force meetings will eventually be summarized in a report by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.

Left to right, Guy Desjardins, mayor of Clarence-Rockland, Stéphane Sarrazin, mayor of Alfred-Plantagenet, and Larissa Holman of Ottawa Riverkeeper attend a session of the Ontario government's flooding task force in Ottawa on May 24, 2019.

Unanswered questions

At Wednesday's city council meeting, El-Chantiry formally asked that upper levels of government look into what caused the flooding both this year and in 2017.

If flooding becomes the new normal due to climate change, many residents may choose to move, El-Chantiry said. But if it's been exacerbated by the way dams and reservoirs along the Ottawa River are managed, something can be done about it, he said.

Coun. Eli El-Chantiry attends a closed meeting of Ontario's task force on flooding on May 24, 2019, along with Mayor Jim Watson and manager of security emergency management Pierre Poirier. (Kate Porter/CBC)

Review a possibility

The province heard similar demands Thursday at a meeting from mayors in Renfrew County, attendend by Finance Minister Vic Fedeli and Natural Resources Minister John Yakabuski.

On Ottawa Morning Friday, Yakabuski acknowledged the call for a review of dam operation.

"I don't have an issue with that at all," Yakabuski said. "We would have to work with our other counterparts. The Ottawa River isn't solely ours."

Neither Fedeli nor Yakabuski were present at the Ottawa meeting. Fullerton was joined by Ottawa-area MPPs Jeremy Roberts, Goldie Ghamari, Toby Barrett and Jim McDonell.