Ottawa

Police budget to be tabled early due to scheduling conflicts

The Ottawa Police Service's 2017 draft budget will be tabled two days earlier than the rest of the city budget after several police board members signalled they wouldn't be able to attend the at the usual time.

Coun. Jan Harder unable to attend budget meeting due to Costco ribbon cutting in her ward

Members of the Ottawa Police Services board, including chair Eli El-Chantiry, hear details of the upcoming draft budget from chief Charles Bordeleau and director general Debra Frazer at a meeting in September 2016. (CBC)

The Ottawa Police Service's 2017 draft budget will be tabled two days earlier than the rest of the city budget after several police board members signalled they wouldn't be able to attend the at the usual time.

Traditionally the police force is the first city department to table its documents on budget day.

But for the first time the board's chair can remember, the special 8:30 a.m. meeting will not immediately precede the tabling of draft budgets for city operations, library, public health and transit.

Coun Eli El-Chantiry said the minimum four board members needed to make quorum on Wed., Nov. 9, are unavailable, so instead the meeting will take place on Nov. 7 at 4 p.m.

Board members Jim Durrell, Carl Nicholson, Suzanne Valiquet and Coun. Jan Harder have all said they have other commitments.

Valiquet, a provincial appointee to the board, will be out of town.

Harder attending store opening

Harder, meanwhile, plans to attend the grand opening of a new Costco store in her Barrhaven ward, and said she wouldn't have enough time to make it downtown for an 8:30 police board meeting.

She said the Costco opening is a big deal in Barrhaven, and something her residents have been anticipating for months, so it's not something she would miss. 

The opening takes place at 8 a.m., and will also be attended by Mayor Jim Watson.

Harder didn't see the rescheduling as a break from tradition, and pointed out other boards, such as the library and health boards, routinely table their budgets early.

Monday's meeting will likely be Harder's last as a police board member because she will soon be replaced by Kanata South Coun. Allan Hubley. Harder, who chairs the city's planning committee, said she's stepping down to lighten her workload. 

The police services budget must be tabled before that meeting of council in order to be considered as part of the city's overall draft budget.