Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hunt On For New Site Away From Parliament Hill To Host Marquee Canada Day Party

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2015 01:33 PM
    OTTAWA — Federal officials are on the hunt for a new location for the country's marquee party for Canada Day celebrations.
     
    A select group of companies were invited to bid on the project to find a new location near Parliament Hill for the federally organized Canada Day bash once the Centre Block is closed in 2018 for a decade of badly needed repairs.
     
    During that time, Parliament Hill won't be able to play host to the annual July 1 party that attracts thousands to the heart of the capital.
     
    Government bid documents show the project to find a new party spot is budgeted to cost $30,000, with a final report and recommendation to Canadian Heritage officials due in January. The government says "time is of the essence" to find a new home for the gala.
     
    The bid documents say the new site should be "optimal for the public experience" for "Canada Day celebrations and for future anniversaries." It should also lie  between two bridges that connect Ottawa and Gatineau, Que. — the Alexandra Bridge to the east, and the Chaudiere crossing in the west, meaning the party won't be moving too far from Parliament Hill and will likely remain along the Ottawa River.
     
    The Canadian Press obtained copies of the documents under the Access to Information Act.
     
    Finding a new home for the Canada Day event — and possibly carnivals held in and around Ottawa's downtown core during the depths of winter — will also mean looking for a new launching site for the evening fireworks display.
     
     
    Those fireworks usually go off from Nepean Point, a green space along the Ottawa River just east of Parliament Hill and next to the National Gallery of Canada. But Nepean Point is undergoing its own work around the same time as workers begin renovating the Centre Block, making it a no-go for fireworks and forcing a relocation of the launch pad.
     
    Moving the site will be good news for the National Gallery of Canada, which had asked the government to move the fireworks display.
     
    In a 2014 letter to federal officials, the gallery's CEO raised concerns that the "very strong vibrations caused by the fireworks" put the building's windows and its valuable collection of Canadian art at risk while also leaving a "sticky, tenacious residue" on the glass roof.
     
    The building itself has to be evacuated for the fireworks because it sits inside a safety perimeter.
     
    Federal workers do put up barriers to protect the building from the pyrotechnics display, which is aimed away from the gallery. Two technicians stay on the roof of the building to keep an eye out for any flaming fallout and cleanup crews come through afterwards to clean up any debris.
     
    In a briefing note to the deputy minister of Canadian Heritage ahead of a May 27 meeting with the gallery, officials wrote that launching site for the fireworks should stay put for now for safety and aesthetic reasons.
     
    Officials also recommended that the gallery be pushed to provide data and evidence that the fireworks display puts the building and collection at risk.
     
    Josee-Britanie Mallet, a spokeswoman for the gallery, said in an email that the two sides have not to date talked any further about the fireworks issue.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

    The 38-page report on Gordon Stuckless was compiled by Dr. Mark Pearce, a forensic psychiatrist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

    Gordon Stuckless Doesn't Meet Dangerous Offender Status: Psychiatric Assessment

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert
    You must be punctual. You must own your own car. You will be emailing and calling seven days a week at all hours.

    Unpaid Internships Still Demand Action For Exploiting Young: Expert

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling
    Saskatchewan has fixed a law that the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional because it prevented some public-sector employees from striking.

    Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime
    Sgt. Brian Wentzell of Halifax testified today that he arrived in Saint John, N.B., on July 11 and began to examine the scene.

    Blood Spatter Expert Tells Oland Trial He Was Called Four Days After Crime

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship
     An Ottawa man jailed for his part in a terrorist conspiracy says a federal move to strip him of Canadian citizenship violates several constitutional guarantees, including his right to vote.

    Terrorist Cites Right To Vote In Challenging Move To Strip His Citizenship

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report
    An outside review of the tribunal Canadians turn to when denied social security benefits appears to have been short-staffed from its inception, leading to a backlog of new cases and stressed-out, error-prone employees.

    Social Security Tribunal Short-Staffed, Under Pressure From Start: Report