adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

News

Forbidden fruit: Don’t eat the food growing in downtown Ottawa planters, says NCC

Published

 on

 

OTTAWA – On the western side of Major’s Hill Park, tall stalks of corn wave in the breeze from planters overlooking the place where the Rideau Canal empties into the Ottawa River.

Scarlet beans have wound their way up the corn, decorating it with bright orange flowers. A variety of squashes are just beginning to take shape on the soil below. Bees and other pollinators are drawn to the purple salvia flowers and wild strawberries that fill out the space.

And surrounding the picturesque and delectable display are crude steel barricades most commonly used for crowd control.

There’s no signage, but the message is pretty clear: don’t pick the food.

The federal Crown corporation responsible for the park wants people to know it’s possible to grow a variety of food crops in urban Ottawa as part of its goal to tackle food insecurity.

The National Capital Commission says the fruits and vegetables it’s cultivating in the downtown are not meant to be eaten.

“I think that showing food growing in urban spaces is inspiring. It’s a nice thing to see,” said Erin Beagle, the executive director of Roots Community Food Centre in Thunder Bay, Ont., an organization that advocates for dignified food access.

But to say the food is not for people to eat “absolutely destroys their message.”

“To tell people it’s for food insecurity and then to even tell people who are food insecure, ‘Actually, no, but you can’t touch that’ is like waving something in front of them that they need.”

The NCC said the fences are to prevent people from tampering with food that it says “could be unfit for consumption.”

“Some of our sites historically contained contaminated soil and the water source used for irrigation (varies) from site to site,” it said in a statement.

Not far from the symbolic display about food security, the city’s very real issues with inequality are evident.

In recent years, problems associated with poverty and drug use have become so acute in the ByWard Market that the local business association has hired private security and successfully lobbied the city to open a police operational centre so as to step up patrols.

That has not kept people from living in makeshift encampments throughout the area. Panhandlers sit out the sweltering summer days in the shade of doorways, and community organizations drop by with bottles of water and sandwiches.

Food insecurity is not limited to people experiencing homelessness. Federal data show that in 2020, more than one in 10 Canadian households were experiencing moderate to severe food insecurity — and in the last four years, the cost of living has skyrocketed.

One of the NCC’s sustainable development goals is to invest in projects that increase access to food.

The agency says it’s doing that by opening more Greenbelt land to agriculture and community gardening, and exploring “the potential for food production on urban lands.”

The NCC also said its planters in Major’s Hill are meant to be ornamental and on display until November.

The commission’s senior landscape architect, Tina Liu, explained that she chose the plants to incorporate a celebration of Indigenous culture.

“This is the agricultural practice with the Three Sisters,” she said, referring to an Indigenous model of planting corn, beans and squash crops together to raise yields.

It’s not the first time Liu has grown edible plants in the city’s many gardens.

“The idea is also we can showcase (for) people how they can do that at home, you can mix planting food with flowers and it will still look nice,” she said.

The cement containers surrounding the Prime Minister’s Office are producing an abundance of groundcherries this summer. In recent years, they’ve also been home to kale and artichokes.

Liu said growing edible plants helps ensure harmony with urban wildlife like rabbits, groundhogs and birds, which do eat the displays.

The NCC said the metal barricades will come down when a nearby construction project is complete, and will be replaced with smaller fences.

It’s also planning to put up signs telling people the food may not be safe to eat.

Beagle is skeptical that the food grown on the NCC’s land is actually unsafe, pointing out that her organization helps grow food in First Nations communities that are living under long-standing federal boil-water advisories, and testing has shown that it is safe.

“Is that actually the reason?” she said. “Or is it inconvenient that people would eat it and then that would sort of ruin a display?”

If the soil and water are a concern, she said, that can be addressed.

Roots Community Food Centre runs a variety of programs including community meals, gardening and urban farming.

Beagle said many organizations like hers operate with the expectation that growing food in urban spaces means accepting that people and animals will interact with it.

“People can walk through at any time of the day and any time of the night, when we’re there, when we’re not there, and the vandalism is almost nothing. I’m sure people come in and taste and try and are involved in the food in ways that we don’t know about, but it is not concerning to us,” she said.

“Nobody wants to be seen climbing over a fence to steal food if they need it. So take the fence down.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 3, 2024.

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Liberals’ national campaign director Jeremy Broadhurst resigns

Published

 on

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is suddenly without the assistance of one of his longest advisers just as the threat of being forced into an early election has been heightened.

Jeremy Broadhurst resigned as the Liberal Party of Canada’s national campaign director today, one day after NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh ended the agreement supporting the Liberals on key votes.

In a statement on his decision to resign, which was first reported by the Toronto Star, Broadhurst cited the toll two decades and five national campaigns have taken on himself and his family.

He says the upcoming federal election could be the most critical federal campaign of his life, and the party deserves a campaign director who can bring more energy and devotion to the job.

Broadhurst has been a Liberal staffer in some form for the better part of 25 years, serving multiple times as chief of staff or adviser to several leaders and cabinet ministers.

Broadhurst was national director of the Liberal Party of Canada from 2013 to 2015 and helped retool the Liberal data machine into an operation that helped them win the 2015 election.

He worked in the Prime Minister’s Office after the 2015 win, and in 2019 was elevated to campaign director.

He returned to the campaign director post for the 2023 election a year ago, but gave up the post Thursday.

The next election has to be held by next fall, but with the Liberal-NDP confidence and supply agreement no longer in place, the odds are higher that the government will be voted down in Parliament before then.

The Liberals have trailed the Conservatives in polls by double-digits for almost a year and would lose if an election were held now.

In his statement, Broadhurst took an apparent swipe at the Conservatives, saying Canadians will have to decide whether to elect a party that is “banking on the assumption that Canadians are willing to forsake our commitment to fairness, equality, justice and progress for an agenda that is little more than simple slogans and cheap shots.”

He said Canadians will have to decide what kind of politics they want “before it is too late to stop at our border a brand of politics that stokes fears and seeks to divide us.”

Broadhurst said he is “still committed to the Liberal Party of Canada and to the Prime Minister,” but that it is “time to make way for others.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

News

Girl, 15, lit on fire at Saskatoon high school, staff injured trying to help

Published

 on

SASKATOON – A 15-year-old girl is in hospital with serious injuries after she was lit on fire at a Saskatoon high school, police said Thursday.

Sgt. Ken Kane told reporters that a school resource officer, who was at Evan Hardy Collegiate for a different matter, apprehended a 14-year-old girl as a suspect.

He did not say how the victim was lit on fire or the extent of her injuries.

Saskatoon Public Schools said staff members who tried to help the injured student were also hurt and sent to hospital. It said the suspect is also a student.

The school was closed for the rest of the day, and classes were cancelled for Friday.

“This incident resulted in serious injuries to the student and to the staff members that intervened. The injured persons were transported to hospital,” a school division spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

“We are grateful to the Evan Hardy staff for their immediate response and acknowledge it was a traumatic incident for the entire school community. We are providing supports to students and staff.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

News

Suspect charged with murder, assault over Vancouver stranger attacks

Published

 on

VANCOUVER – A 34-year-old man has been charged with second-degree murder and aggravated assault over what police called a pair of stranger attacks in downtown Vancouver on Wednesday.

Vancouver police said in a statement that Brendan Colin McBride remained in custody until his next court appearance on Sept. 18.

Police also identified the man who died as 70-year-old Francis David Laporte.

Officers said the first attack occurred early Wednesday morning near Richards and Dunsmuir streets, where a man had his hand severed by his assailant.

Police said they aren’t identifying that victim for privacy reasons and he remained in hospital.

While officers were investigating the first attack, police said Laporte was killed outside the nearby Queen Elizabeth Theatre at West Georgia and Hamilton streets.

Vancouver Police Chief Const. Adam Palmer said Wednesday that McBride, who had not been identified at the time, was on probation for a 2023 assault and had 60 previous police interactions.

Court documents show McBride was most recently sentenced to 18 months of probation in April over an assault that occurred in White Rock, B.C., last September

McBride was earlier sentenced to 12 months of probation in July 2022, stemming from a charge of assault causing bodily harm in January 2021.

Four other convictions, dating back to 2012, were all traffic violations.

Palmer said Wednesday that McBride was located near Vancouver’s Olympic Village less than two hours after the attacks with the help of a police drone operator.

The VPD chief had said police were looking into whether mental health was a factor in the attacks, calling the suspect “very troubled” with a history of assaulting officers and health care workers.

A single charge of resisting a peace officer in September 2023 did not result a conviction for McBride, court records show.

Wednesday’s gruesome attack spurred a call from Port Coquitlam, B.C., mayor Brad West for a mental hospital to replace the Riverview facility that closed in 2012.

“Closing Riverview Hospital was a historically stupid decision,” West said in a post on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. “The evidence is all around us and, sadly, plays out through repeated tragedies.”

Palmer said Wednesday that while such high-profile crimes “cause everyone to fear for their safety,” statistics show crime trending down in Vancouver.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending