Committee approves commemorative tree planting to mark Ottawa 200 | Page 886 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: April 21, 2026 - 11:31

Stay informed

Committee approves commemorative tree planting to mark Ottawa 200

April 21, 2026
The Environment and Climate Change Committee today directed staff to plant one commemorative tree in each ward as part of the Ottawa 200 celebrations in 2026.

The Environment and Climate Change Committee today directed staff to plant one commemorative tree in each ward as part of the Ottawa 200 celebrations this year. The trees will be installed through the City’s existing Tree Dedication Program during the fall planting season and will include special plaques marking the anniversary. The work will be delivered using approved planting locations and funded within existing Forestry Services budgets, providing a lasting legacy to mark Ottawa’s 200th anniversary.

Report confirms Ottawa’s drinking water remains safe and reliable

The Committee received the annual report on Municipal Drinking Water Systems, confirming that Ottawa’s drinking water systems are well managed, closely monitored and provide a reliable supply of safe drinking water for residents. In 2025, the City conducted more than 100,000 water quality tests across its eight municipal drinking water systems, including treatment plants drawing from the Ottawa River and well systems serving rural communities. All test results met provincial drinking water standards. The report also confirms that all systems operated within approved limits and that any minor administrative or technical issues were addressed promptly.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The federal government is standing by plans to have public servants return to the office at least four days a week starting in July. As David Fraser explains, unions still wonder if there's enough space.
May 6, 2026 - 17:45 | | CBC News - Ottawa
A furore among Barrie, Ontario parents has developed after a harm reduction booklet entitled “safer snorting” was distributed by the Canadian Mental Health Association at a local high school. One parent and member of the Facebook group “Barrie Concerned Citizens” posted that students at Barrie North Collegiate Institute were recently given the booklet along with condoms. “I do not know if the teachers and principal is aware but I sure hope complaints are made,” wrote James Buccos in a Facebook post on Tuesday. “This is absolutely despicable. Yes we are all aware our kids are going to...
May 6, 2026 - 17:44 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
Euthanasia for mental suffering can be the equivalent of suicide carried out by a doctor and it’s irresponsible to frame MAID as a way to prevent people from dying by suicide at their own hands, parliamentarians heard this week. Dutch psychiatrists issued a blunt warning to senators and MPs during the seventh and final meeting of a special joint committee deliberating the expansion of MAID (medical assistance in dying) to people whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness. “My message to Canada: do not expand. The evidence is not there,” Dr. Jim van Os, a professor of...
May 6, 2026 - 17:20 | Sharon Kirkey | National Post