Friday, May 29, 2009

On Chevrolets and Cadillacs

I was at a meeting this past week where there was one of those interminable discussions on public transit in Ottawa. You know the ones--someone new talks about how easily transit could be improved in Ottawa and all the old hats have to tell them that logical arguments don't work in this city. (You don't know those types of meetings? Consider yourself lucky)

The boredom of this particularly long spell of circular discussions put me into a hypnotic spell in which I had a flashback to a catchphrase from the last LRT project.

Back in the 2003 municipal election, there was much to do about Cadillacs. There was an article in the Citizen on November 3 that is a case in point. You can read it in the Proquest archive here if you have an Ottawa Public Library card and PIN.

The article, "Chiarelli's priorities for Ottawa" by David Reevely, repeats the contemporary meme that the City was spending a lot of money on "Cadillac" projects, the metaphor suggesting that the City should not be using tax dollars to build luxury projects.

The case in point for this analogy was the O-Train expansion, which at the time had not grown into the $900-million North-South Light Rail Transit project that was killed shortly after the following election.
"If you're going to look at getting Chevys instead of Cadillacs, I think you have to take a hard look at the O-Train," said J.-F. Claude, running in Innes ward. "It's not going to reach the east end until 2018, and it's a Cadillac system where we're dealing with a Chevy budget."

The city's transit money would be much better spent on more and better buses, Mr. Claude said.

Mr. Chiarelli, however, argues that it costs about $2 million a kilometre to convert existing track for the O-Train's use, versus $12 million a kilometre to expand the Transitway.

"Light rail is about as efficient as you can get," he said, adding that city staff are already looking at ways to expand the system as cheaply as possible.
It's crazy to think that the 2003 Transportation Master Plan (TMP) proposed 120 kilometres of light rail, mostly using existing track to expand rail cheaply and effectively, whereas the 2008 update significantly reduced the amount of rail and opted for a much more expensive version of rail.

Instead of reaching the east end by 2018, as the 2003 plans suggested, it will now only go as far as Blair in the east and Tunney's Pasture in the west by that time.

On the one hand, the O-Train extension was considered expensive and luxurious--a "Cadillac" plan in comparison to the existing "Chevy" bus service. By that comparison, though, we're now building a Hummer system: something that costs a lot more and doesn't go nearly as far.

It's unfortunate that Bob Chiarelli turned his back on the idea of using existing track to cheaply expand rapid transit. It lost him the 2006 election big time. Now we're planning a Hummer system which probably won't even get built, leaving us with our Chevy bus system.

Now, in 2009, as Chevrolet struggles against bankruptcy, do we really want the City of Ottawa to keep on the Chevy trail?

- RG>

Saturday, May 16, 2009

At least I didn't catch swine flu...

It's been a while since I sat in the front window at Bridgehead. I occasionally like to sit here because I can keep an eye out on the panhandler of the day across the sidewalk.

This night, at about a quarter to 8pm, two policemen approached the person sitting in front of the empty Ottawa Sun box and she got up.

She had been sitting there when I had sat down, at least forty minutes, barely breaking her silent, empty gaze as pedestrians went by her, often ignoring her. She was very skinny, and wasn't holding a sign. She wasn't asking people for change, or even saying hello, as some panhandlers do.

And the police got her to leave. They watched her as she sullenly stuffed into the recycling bin the newspapers on which she had been sitting, then walked away.

As they did this, I got up and stood outside the door of Bridgehead, my body language making it clear that I was keeping away, but watching very intently. The cops chose not to notice me.

I followed the cops and called out "excuse me" as nonaggressively as I could, and I guess they didn't hear me because they started into a lively chat with a couple on the patio of the Sir John A. I stood back, allowing pedestrians to pass on the sidewalk, and waited about five minutes until their conversation waned.

Again, as I waited, I used my body language to make it clear I was there for them: my hands were in my pockets, my shoulders were aimed square at them, and my eyes were on them, making eye contact whenever they popped their head up to look around.

There were two officers, both beat cops on foot.

The older one, a sergeant, looked around 50-60 years old, white male, with salt-and-pepper hair under his cap. He lightly rested the palm of his right hand lightly on the end of his sidearm and fold-up baton on his belt.

The younger one, a constable, was more interested in the conversation and more comfortable in it. He looked around 30, a bit on the larger side, and had a buzz cut and a short goatee from his lower lip to his chin.

As I stood there immobile, I noticed that the sergeant's shoes were shinier.

I suspect the sergeant was uncomfortable because he realized I was there, and he knew that eventually this conversation would have to end and he'd have to talk to me. He forced himself to look cheerful as he chatted, despite his obvious discomfort, in order to borrow as much time as possible.

The younger one suggested they'd better get back on their way, and the sergeant turned around.

"Hi!" I said as cheerfully as I could muster.

"Oh, you're waiting for me? Sorry," asked the sergeant with a politeness so artificial that it was obvious he knew for damn sure I was waiting for him.

So we're both playing ignorant. Fine.

It was at this point that I discovered the sergeant, Mr. Couillard, was about six foot four. I hadn't noticed this earlier because it was only now that he was standing eight inches away from me!

Ostensibly, he didn't even know what I was going to ask him about. He probably had an idea, but up until that point I'm just joe on the street. So here we have our friendly neighbourhood police officer, there to be a part of the community (PDF warning), staring down a member of the public and violating their personal space while politely saying hello.

I hope he saw the "go fuck yourself" I was hiding behind my polite banter and smile.

"Yeah," I said rather cludgily, my words fast and my voice pitched high. I was waiting for you, "I mean, I have all night." On the surface I was saying that I was being patient and polite for him to finish his conversation with the folks on the patio. Underneath, I was telling him that he couldn't make me uncomfortable (at least not easily) or threaten me with delay tactics.

Since these guys had an important job to get to, I got right down to business.

"I was wondering why you guys asked the panhandler to move along there."

Officer smiley suddenly turned into officer frowny. The game was up, at least on his side. Thankfully he didn't have bad breath, because he was standing as close to me as an unfamiliar man could. The constable stood behind him across the sidewalk. I couldn't see him.

Without a pause after my question, Sergeant Frowny replied "because she was obstructing the sidewalk, somebody's going to trip and break either her ankle, or their ankle."

I paused to process this reply.

Me: "I... Okay. I accept your view. I disagree with it, but I accept it."

Him: "You can disagree with it all you want. When it creates a danger, in the manner that they're doing it..."

Me: "mmm-hmm.."

Him: "...then we ask them to--we didn't even ask; we just walked up said 'hi', and she says 'I know I'm gonna move.'"

Me: "Okay. Thank you!"
As the conversation ended, I could see the constable behind the cop, on the other side of the sidewalk, almost on his toes trying to look over the sergeant's shoulder to see what was going on. I find this very curious. I guess he wanted to learn how to keep Ottawa's streets safe from one of the best.

It's so nice off Sergeant Couillard to think of the safety of this girl's ankle. Like any police officer walking the beat, he politely approached her and said hi. It was her choice to respond by getting up and leave--all he did was say "hi".

If he said 'hi' to her as "politely" as he said it to me--and he towered over me while I was standing, the girl had been sitting--does he really expect me to think that she had any choice but to leave? I mean, she doesn't want to end up like this girl, does she? [None of the cops in the linked post were either of the ones in this incident]

Copwatch

In addition to zoom's account in the above-linked incident, my other inspiration to stand up and approach the police about this incident is from Copwatch, which I've never done myself on any formal basis, but have heard of. In Ottawa, it's organized by Andrew Nellis (whom I've mentioned many times on this blog).

Kill Everything blogger Nik has a good post [among others; I've spent the last four hours enthralled by his blog posts... he also writes about Nellis] where he describes Copwatch and what it's like to be out on a patrol shift with Nellis:

"Copwatch happens all over the world. In Ottawa, it's a program where ordinary people put on florescent orange vests with COPWATCH written on them..."
The police are (allegedly) there for people's safety, not to harass the vulnerable. I didn't want to intervene on the girl's behalf and possibly cause her undue trouble (which she obviously wanted to avoid), but I sure as hell wanted to let those cops know that what they're doing is bullshit.

You want to look out for her safety? Find her a place to live and a reliable source of income. Look after her stomach, not her ankle. And protect her from being harassed--of the hundreds of people who walked by her, the only two who seemed to be bothered by her was those two white men with shiny badges.

- RG>

Sunday, May 03, 2009

F to the B to the O-M-B

The topic of the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) came up on an e-mail list I'm on. Specifically, someone was confused that City Staff would provide testimony at the OMB that contradicts the decision of City Council. Having been to the City of Ottawa's Planning Primer (next one's at the end of May--sign up before May 20th!) session on the OMB, I explained how the OMB, City Council, City Staff, and the Province all inter-relate.

At least one of the people who received my message was astounded that municipal "democracy" works the way it does in this day and age. Given their reaction, I thought it important to share this explanation of how the OMB works with a wider audience:

Hi,

David is describing how the OMB operates. The OMB can override Council, and takes planning evidence into its decisions. Councillors' opinions are political information, not planning evidence from professionals.

The job of City Staff in terms of Council decisions is to inform Council's decisions based on the proposal by the developer, and this often takes the form of making a recommendation based on their professional analysis of the proposal. Council then makes their decision based on a variety of factors, including Staff's recommendations, their own personal opinions, and comments from the public and lobbyists.

When an appeal is made to the OMB, Staff from the planning department can be called to testify, as they have an expert opinion. Other professional planners (i.e. those acting on behalf of other parties to an OMB hearing) can also be called as witnesses, but when City Staff are called, they have to give their professional opinion, and obviously it must reflect whatever opinion they gave to Council at the time.

The Board member then makes a decision based purely on whether it makes sense from a planning perspective, not political/social/democratic considerations. And they are supposed to consider it from first principles, and not in comparison to however Council decided on the case.

I'm not saying I like this, I'm just describing how it goes (or at least, how it's supposed to go).


Keep in mind that the City of Ottawa is a creature of the Province, and so is the OMB. The OMB acts as a form of appeal for municipal decisions. Sort of like how the Governor General and provincial Lieutenants General act as representatives of the queen, and theoretically have the power to overturn the decisions of the legislature. Except the OMB, established in 1897, still holds real power to override decisions of democratically-elected representatives.
(I didn't bother replacing David's name, because there are so damn many of them in this City--even just in the ottawablogosphere!--that it's sufficiently ambiguous!)

The OMB was created over a century ago. Democracy has come a long way since then. The Board should be abolished, and the buck should stop at elected municipal councils (dysfunctional as they sometimes may be).

- RG>