City Council media availability | Unpublished
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Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: February 11, 2025 - 15:51

City Council media availability

February 11, 2025
Mayor Mark Sutcliffe and Wendy Stephanson, City Manager, will respond to media questions after tomorrow's Council meeting. The following subject-matter experts will be available to answer questions:
  • Dan Chenier, General Manager, Recreation, Cultural and Facility Services
  • Debbie Stewart, General Manager, Strategic Initiatives
  • Vivi Chi, Interim General Manager, Planning, Development and Building Services
  • Isabelle Jasmin, Deputy City Treasurer, Corporate Finance
Residents will be able to watch the media availability on the Ottawa City Council YouTube channel. When: Wednesday, February 12 Time: 10 minutes after Council adjourns This meeting will accommodate in-person and virtual media. To adequately prepare for this meeting, please confirm your registration with medias@ottawa.ca and indicate whether you will be participating in person or virtually.


Unpublished Newswire

 
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince George, B.C., says it hopes a $3.4-million settlement gives an alleged victim of sexual abuse by a school teacher “some degree of restitution for the harm that was so unjustly inflicted upon him by his abuser.”The settlement by the diocese and St. Thomas More Collegiate, a Catholic school in Burnaby, B.C., was announced in a statement released by lawyer Sandra Kovacs, who represented the anonymous man in the lawsuit.Also named in the lawsuit was former teacher Alfred Patrick Quigley, who the anonymous plaintiff said sexually abused him in the 1990s.
February 11, 2025 - 19:10 | Darryl Greer | The Globe and Mail
A young woman can be seen on police body-worn camera video telling police that her on-and-off boyfriend of five years harasses her, and she is afraid.
February 11, 2025 - 19:05 | Catherine McDonald | Global News - Ottawa
An Edmonton police sergeant has been demoted to constable and had his salary slashed after a disciplinary hearing found he made degrading sexual comments to three gay junior officers.Ken Smith’s remarks were further aggravated after he showed no genuine remorse for how they might have affected the male officers and the broader LGBTQ+ community, Fred Kamins, a retired RCMP chief superintendent who presided over the hearing, said in a decision.“He called the comments ‘jovial’ and his attempt at ‘humour’ not out of line with what he had seen, and permitted, to occur,”' said Kamins.
February 11, 2025 - 19:04 | Fakiha Baig | The Globe and Mail