Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: April 10, 2025 - 18:01
Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Thurs. April 10th, 2025
April 10, 2025

Public consultations kicked off this week for Phase 5 of the Transportation Master Plan. This phase identifies transit and road network projects that are needed to ‘accommodate planned growth’ and ‘achieve the city’s mobility objectives’. Well, at least until 2046, that is. And with Ottawa’s population expected to grow to 1.4 million over the next 21 years, Canada’s Capital is expected to see a spike in transit demand. We are talking an additional 1.2 million transit trips every single day, coupled with over 620,000 daily trips in vehicles. Kristy Cameron digs deeper with Beacon Hill-Cyrville councillor Tim Tierney, who serves as the Chair of Transportation and also sits on the city’s Transit Committee. Meantime, a simmering trade war between the United States and China is poised to hit Canadian consumers, particularly when it comes to electronics and other imported specialty goods. Here to explain further is Bill Chappell, the owner of The Hobby Centre in Ottawa.
1
2
const title = "Interprovincial Trade, Indigenous Sovereignty, and the End of WAGE";
const date = "April 19, 2025";
const data = [
{
image: "https://walrus-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/img/FEA_Wark_JUN25_Art-08_Web-2.jpg",
title: "How to Save Canada",
url: "https://thewalrus.ca/how-to-save-canada/",
question: "With the US repeatedly making annexationist and imperial threats against Canada, national security and intelligence expert Wesley Wark warns that the country is now staring down the prospect of an information warfare surge...
April 19, 2025 - 06:00 | Kayla Thompson | Walrus
Over the 40 years he spent in elected politics, former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien has seen it all.Yet, the 91-year-old career politician admits the current federal election is unique among the many he’s observed in his lifetime.
April 19, 2025 - 06:00 | Gary Mason | The Globe and Mail
Joen Hadfield’s deep sense of pride in her community makes her believe that together the city will make it through to the other side of the trade war with Canada’s largest trading partner – but not without hardship.Still, fear is creeping in.
April 19, 2025 - 05:00 | Skye Anderson | The Globe and Mail
Comments
Be the first to comment