Five new inductees for the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame

May 5th, 2010

Tonight, I attended the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame’s 2010 induction ceremony. This year’s inductees included Jim Foley, Garry Galley, Anne Merklinger, Shirley Moulds, and Bill Patterson.

Sport plays a very important role in the City of Ottawa by encouraging healthy lifestyles and promoting teamwork and cooperation - values that are essential to our quality of life.

Proceeds from last night’s auction at the ceremony will go to Christie Lake Kids, a camp oragnization that allows disadvantaged youth to enjoy the camp experience, learn essential life skills and, in the case of the S.T.A.R. program, hone their sports skills. A number of bright, young Christie Lake campers participated in the ceremony, one of whom spoke about his achievements and what camp has done for all participants. Organizations like Christie Lake, that are committed to community building and social justice, are tremendously important and Ottawa is a much better place because of them.

Congratulations to each of the new inductees and their families on achieving this great honour! Your contributions to our community and to sport will always be admired and remembered - immortalized in the Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame.

More information about this year’s inductees can be found here:

Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame.

Ottawa named Canada’s best by MoneySense Magazine

April 29th, 2010

Today, the City of Ottawa was named the best place to live in Canada by MoneySense Magazine. Ottawa also took the top spot in 2007 and 2008, remaining in the top two in 2009.

MoneySense has recognized what the residents of Ottawa have known for some time - that our quality of life is second-to-none. As someone who has lived in our great city all my life, I know that this is the best place in the country, and perhaps the world, in which to live, work, start a business, and raise a family.

MoneySense conducts an annual ranking of the best places to live in Canada based on a variety of factors including job creation, crime rates, health services, culture, recreation, cost of living, housing affordability and average salaries. MoneySense refines and adds to these criteria each year to give a more accurate and complete accounting of their rankings.

Ottawa is blessed to have two top-tier universities, two colleges, and a number of research institutions, including the NRC and the Heart Institute. The talent pool created by these institutions is enormous and provides Ottawa with a distinct advantage in Canada and around the world.

Ottawa is affordable, healthy, increasingly cosmopolitan and more accessible. I can honestly say that I have never been more optimistic about the future of our city than I am today.

China: Gateway to Prosperity

April 23rd, 2010

In the fall of 2010, Ottawa will dedicate a magnificent ceremonial gate at Somerset and Bronson, a gift from China’s capital city to Canada’s in honour of the 40th anniversary of Canada’s diplomatic recognition of the People’s Republic of China. For most, the gateway will be one to Ottawa’s Chinatown, but I will see a gateway to social and economic prosperity for both nations.

Those who joined me on a recent economic development mission to China were welcomed by a unique partnership of government and industry capitalism eager to do business with Ottawa, and actively seeking cross investment with Canada. We visited the worldwide headquarters of Huawei, a telecommunications giant who this week opened a state-of-the-art R&D facility in Kanata. Ottawa’s Plasco signed a contract in Beijing that should be the beginning of a large and profitable project to turn China’s considerable municipal garbage into clean energy. We inked reciprocal tourism promotion and economic development deals and extended invitations for return visits by investors, R&D firms and environmental groups. We found that the pace of business, though coloured by custom, is no longer slowed by suspicion or formality.

In many ways Canada represents an aspiration ideal to the Chinese; educated, orderly, clean and safe. What we have done for 32 million citizens they aspire to do for their 1.3 billion. I visited the Beijing urban planning centre and saw a commitment to reforesting the capital so comprehensively that no citizen will be more than 500 meters from parkland. At the same time, they are planning to build their transportation infrastructure to allow the city to grow even more rapidly in the next ten years.

Helping China clean up its environment alone is a multi-billion dollar opportunity, and I encourage Ottawa companies to be well represented at ECO Expo Asia this fall. Training Chinese workers in Canadian best practices could be profitable for Algonquin and La Cite, and educating scientists, engineers, and doctors is an important role for Carleton and the University of Ottawa. Ottawa business can help shape this tiger into a great citizen of the world.

Canadians may be blessed by a common border with the largest single economy in the world, but the second largest economy is now equally open to us- eager for our mineral resources, but also for the resources of our inventive minds; engineering, computer science, environmental science, and management. They are a nation that has moved from the 19th century to the 21st century in a matter of decades, and are looking for partners in that progress.

It’s easy to see poverty and repression in China, but equally easy to see progress and results. Economically, this powerhouse has created middle class prosperity for over a quarter of its citizens in just thirty years and daily is spreading that wealth from the coastal cities to the inner rural regions. Socially, it is tackling environmental and health issues at a pace we can only talk about. Politically, it is beginning to talk about transparency and “sunlight”.

China is a dynamic work in progress, and Ottawa has an opportunity to contribute. And by becoming their gateway into the lucrative but elusive North American technology markets, we stand to profit from the largest work-in-progress the world has ever seen.

A Night to Serve & Protect One Of Our Own

April 13th, 2010

brian-dyck-poster.jpgOn Friday, May 14th, I will be hosting a fundraiser for Brian Dyck, one of our city’s finest. Brian Dyck, his wife Natali and their daughter Sophi are entering a period of their lives that will call for great fortitude and strength. As Brian succumbs to the effects of the neuro-degenerative disease of ALS, he and his family will need to face great challenges with courage and bravery. In the coming months and years, there will be a significant need for support and assistance from Brian’s friends and community. This fundraising event is one way we can all show our love and compassion for Brian and his family.

Let’s make it a night to remember!

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease) is a devastating neuro-degenerative disease. Those living with the disease become progressively paralyzed due to degeneration of the upper and lower motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord.

ALS has no known cure or effective treatment and approximately 2,500–3,000 Canadians currently live with ALs. One of them is our friend Brian.

I invite all who can to attend the fundraiser and help serve and protect one of our own in he and his family’s time of need.

Event details can be found here.





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