Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: June 24, 2025 - 10:45
Committee moves to expand access to Francophone child care in Centretown West
June 24, 2025
The Community Services Committee today approved a plan to increase access to affordable, high-quality Francophone child care in a high needs community within the Dalhousie neighbourhood in Centretown West.
Following a thorough review to identify an ideal high needs location, the City proposes to transition the Centre éducatif Pinocchio from its current location at 111 Sussex Drive to a new facility at 1010 Somerset Street West. The new location will be part of a French-language elementary school planned to open in September 2027 within the future Gladstone Village community hub, between the neighbourhoods of Little Italy, Hintonburg and Chinatown.
The move would create an integrated child care centre within the school to better serve Francophone children and families. The City would leverage provincial investments and partner with the Conseil des écoles publiques de l’Est de l’Ontario to create 57 net new Francophone spaces, bringing the total child care spaces at that location to 88.
Access to French language child care strengthens community, helps preserve the French language and encourages future French language education. By expanding these services, the City is helping ensure equitable access to high quality care for children while also upholding its commitment to inclusivity, responsiveness and community well-being.
The City would ensure the transition causes as little disruption as possible for families attending the Centre éducatif Pinocchio. There would be no service changes until the City transitions to the new location, timed to coincide with the new school’s planned opening in 2027. Staff would assess the feasibility of maintaining municipally operated French-language child care services in Lowertown or Sandy Hill and report back with recommendations to help minimize potential impacts. Families will be kept informed and supported throughout the relocation to ensure consistent care for their children.
Ensuring efficient, equitable access to social housing
The Committee approved updates to the City’s local rules for rent-geared-to-income (RGI) housing to ensure policies remain current and to better serve residents in need of deeply affordable housing. The changes aim to make the rules easier to understand and apply, to ensure that the limited stock of available RGI housing is used to support as many households as possible. The updated rules are designed to improve how RGI units are allocated and ensure larger units are available for families who need them the most.
Key changes include clearer guidelines on unit-size eligibility, streamlined processes for households that need to move to appropriately sized homes, and simplified reporting requirements for changes in household status. A separate review of how priority is determined for the centralized waitlist is underway, with further recommendations expected in 2026.
Items approved at this meeting will rise to Council on Wednesday, July 23.
A report into a wildfire that devastated the Rocky Mountain resort town of Jasper says crews did their best but command and control was hampered by the Alberta government.The report was commissioned by the town and surveyed participants and firefighters who battled the wind-whipped blaze that destroyed a third of buildings in the community located in Jasper National Park.
July 17, 2025 - 19:45 | | The Globe and Mail
Alberta’s Auditor-General says the provincial government has not done the work to ensure daycares getting public funds use them to lower fees for parents or top up staff wages.Doug Wylie, in a report released Thursday, says without proper verification, Alberta could be overcompensating operators with federal and provincial funds meant to lower the average cost of daycare to $10 per day.“There is a risk that public funds may not be used as intended – leading to parents overpaying for child-care and educators being under-compensated,” the report says.
July 17, 2025 - 19:12 | Jack Farrell | The Globe and Mail
Two people escaped serious injury despite having to be rescued from a kitchen fire in a multi-unit low-rise building in the Carlington neighbourhood on Thursday. Read More
July 17, 2025 - 19:00 | Gord Holder, Postmedia | Ottawa Citizen
Comments
Be the first to comment