Building an emergency ready and resilient Ottawa | Page 880 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: May 6, 2026 - 09:59

Stay informed

Building an emergency ready and resilient Ottawa

May 6, 2026
By working together, we can help keep our community safe

Feature story

Emergencies can happen at any time. In Ottawa, we’ve experienced both riverine and flash flooding, blizzards unleashing 100 centimetres of snow, prolonged power outages, and severe spring and summer storms – even a derecho.

Each year and each emergency is different. How we prepare for them and work together to help keep our community safe and resilient follow the same steps.

What is community resilience?

By working together to reduce potential hazards and prepare for the various emergencies experienced in Ottawa, we are building community resiliency.

A resilient community leans on each other for assistance and creates support networks so that no one is left to handle a challenging situation on their own. The more connected the community, the more resilient they are when weathering the emergency and recovering afterwards.

Learn more about how we’re building stronger, safer, and more resilient communities in our Emergency Management Program Strategic Plan.

How we can build a resilient community Step 1: Prepare your household

Before you and your household can effectively help others, you must first ensure your own safety.

Be prepared: 

  1. Know your local hazards: Identify and understand potential risks to help you prepare more effectively.
  2. Make an emergency plan: Ensure everyone knows what to do, who to call, and where to go during an emergency.
  3. Build an emergency kit: Assemble the essential items that you need to manage your household for three days so you can shelter in place, if necessary.

The Are You Ready? workbook will guide you through each of these actions in more depth. Complete the workbook with your household and print a copy to keep in your emergency kit for reference.

Step 2: Discuss your plans with neighbours

Once your household is prepared, share your plan with your neighbours – and ask about theirs. There may be ways that you can look out for each other and be better prepared for an emergency by sharing information, resources or your skills.

If someone doesn’t have a plan, talk with them about making one. Helping others make an emergency plan is part of how we build resiliency as a community.

Creating an online group for your neighbourhood is a great way to get to know your neighbours and their emergency needs. An online group can also help you stay connected and coordinate support during an emergency situation.

Step 3: Prepare together

Keep the conversation going by working together to reduce risks in your neighbourhood and prepare for future emergencies.

You can host a meeting to discuss past local emergencies and identify the potential risks in your neighbourhood. For example, knowing where catch basins are located and keeping them clear of debris can help prevent basement flooding on your street.

At those meetings, also plan for future emergencies as a community. Just like your household, your neighbourhood will be better prepared for unexpected situations if everyone works together to have an emergency plan, contact list and essential supplies ready. 

To help you plan and prepare together, contact the City’s Office of Emergency Management to schedule an Are You Ready? education session for your neighbourhood.

More information

Learn more about emergency preparedness:



Unpublished Newswire

 
June 4, 2026 - 05:00 | Matthew Frank, Sara Mojtehedzadeh, Mahima Singh | The Globe and Mail
Crowding in Canadian emergency departments, as a direct result of almost criminal government inaction has indeed led to clinical workarounds such as examining patients in hallways, chairs and ambulance bays where privacy and patient confidentiality are regrettably largely expediently forgotten as we try to evaluate patients before they ether become critically ill or leave the ER in frustration. Read More
June 4, 2026 - 04:00 | Nicole Feriancek | Ottawa Citizen
OTTAWA — That hot person who reached out on LinkedIn or Indeed to offer you a job that feels “too good to be true”? They may be a Chinese intelligence agent, warns Canada’s spy agency. In a new advisory with its Five Eyes intelligence sharing partners , the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) sounded the alarm Wednesday on an increasingly popular method for Chinese spies to steal information from Canadians: online hiring websites. The warning comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney looks to increase trade ties with China and establish a new “strategic partnership” with the Asian...
June 4, 2026 - 04:00 | Christopher Nardi | National Post