Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Wed. July 30th, 2025 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: July 30, 2025 - 18:01

Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Wed. July 30th, 2025

July 30, 2025

As part of its Transportation Master Plan, the City of Ottawa is prioritizing sidewalks in newer developments. They are also examining a handful of pre-existing neighbourhoods that don’t have them, otherwise known as ‘gaps’ in the pedestrian network. This conversation brings us to Manor Park, where some residents have made it very clear that they don’t want sidewalk installations. Kristy Cameron chats with Natalie Belovic, who serves as President of the Manor Park Community Association. They will be taking part in tonight’s supper-time debate. Meantime, the Bank of Canada continues to play the interest rate waiting game, as some of the Canadian-targeted Trump tariffs are projected to rise yet again. The benchmark interest rate remains steady at 2.75 percent, the same level it’s been at since March, with the next ruling scheduled for September 17th. It’s a decision that has stunned Ontario Premier Doug Ford. So what does Wednesday’s decision mean for today’s mortgage holders? We dig deeper with mortgage broker Sue Hameed in Hour 2.



Unpublished Newswire

 
An online petition has been launched, calling on the province to act following the latest incident at the restaurant -- which could have resulted in their patrons being hurt.
August 7, 2025 - 20:48 | Klaudia Van Emmerik | Global News - Canada
'They put their trust in people,' shopper Linda Seeley said. 'And to see someone violate that trust ruins it for everybody.'
August 7, 2025 - 20:39 | Victoria Femia | Global News - Canada
A judge has reserved his decision on whether to review a proposed Alberta separation referendum question.Court of King’s Bench Justice Colin Feasby is expected to give his ruling Aug. 14.The matter stems from Alberta chief electoral officer Gordon McClure referring the proposed question to the Edmonton court last week. He has asked the judge to determine whether the question violates the Constitution, including treaty rights.
August 7, 2025 - 20:23 | Jack Farrell | The Globe and Mail