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ALEX CULLEN
With the amalgamation
of the City of Ottawa in
2001 came the establishment
of the City’s call
centre for information on
City services, at 580-2400.
However, Bell Canada will
be moving to a ten-digit
telephone number system
for Ottawa in 2006, due to
population increases in the
613 area code. Ten-digit
telephone numbers are
already in effect in the
Toronto 416 and 905 area
codes. As a result, the City
will be implementing a
convenient 311 phone
number for one-stop
access to non-emergency
City of Ottawa services
and information later this
year.
The new 311 service
provides user-friendly,
easy-to-remember access
to City services and information
at no extra cost to
taxpayers (emergency service
for fire, police and
paramedics continues as
911 in Ottawa). The City
of Gatineau will also be
implementing a 311 service
at the same time as
Ottawa’s (to reach
Ottawa’s from Gatineau
will still require dialling
613-580-2400, however).
Ottawa’s 311 service will
be accessible throughout
Ottawa (including the rural
area).
The new 311 service
will not only provide
information on City services
but also handle service
requests (i.e. fallen
trees, recreation program
registration, missed
garbage pickups, water bill
inquiries, etc.). Hours of
service will mirror today’s
standard of 7 a.m. to 7
p.m., with an answering
service for after-hours
calls on urgent matters
(i.e. watermain breaks,
noise complaints).
Ottawa is unique in
many ways – the 4th
largest city in Canada,
covering 2,760 sq.m. (larger
than Toronto, Montreal,
Vancouver, Calgary and
Edmonton combined),
with 5,440 km of roads
and 1,500 km of sidewalks.
And Ottawa is the
3rd coldest capital in the
world. As a result it is no
surprise to learn that
Ottawa’s winter operations
are a big ticket item in the
City’s budget - $52 million
a year.
However it will surprise
many to learn that global
warming trends are having
an impact on Ottawa, and
costing taxpayers more.
Why? Because as a result
of these trends Ottawa is
experiencing more
freeze/thaw events and
more episodes of freezing
rain. These events create
significant challenges in
the City’s ability to clear
our streets and sidewalks
effectively and maintain
safe conditions.
A good example of this
is what happened last winter,
when Ottawa received
more freezing rain than
during the Ice Storm of
1998. For the winter of
2004-2005 Ottawa
received nearly 90 hours
of freezing rain, more than
double the seasonal average
of 40 hours. In
December 2004 alone
there were 6 rain/freezing
rain/flash freeze events,
leading to icy sidewalk
and road conditions as
City crews were not able
to clear quick enough to
avoid ice accumulation.
The response by City
Council to these challenging
conditions last winter
was to spend an additional
$3.4 million in extra gritting,
salting and ice-cutting/
scarifying to create
safer road and sidewalk
conditions. However,
despite our efforts, for
many the icy conditions
posed significant safety
concerns.
These challenging
weather conditions –
directly attributable to
global warming – will add
some $4.5 million in additional
costs to the City’s
budget. The alternative?
Take up the One Tonne
Challenge and do your bit
to reduce greenhouse
gases and global warming.