Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Junior Officer Blamed For Shuttering Ottawa Kid's Lemonade Stand, Ottawa Agency Apologizes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2016 01:05 PM
    OTTAWA — The agency responsible for policing federal lands in Ottawa has apologized to two young girls after their lemonade stand was shut down Sunday for not having a permit.
     
    The girls, aged seven and five, set up the stand on a grassy median of an Ottawa parkway that's closed to vehicular traffic on Sundays and opened to cyclists, roller bladers and others on foot.
     
    They had hoped to raise enough money for summer camp, but after selling over $50 worth of refreshments to parched pedestrians, they were told by an National Capital Commission officer to pack up and leave.
     
    Today, the NCC says the junior conservation officer acted in good faith in enforcing federal land use rules.
     
    But in a statement the commission says the situation could have been handled differently.
     
    It adds it has apologized to the family and has offered to help the girls reach their summer camp fund raising goal.
     
    Before the apology was issued, a local restaurant had to send the two kids to summer camp — and to support other renegade lemonade stand operators if need be.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death
    Mark Smich continues his testimony today under cross-examination from the lawyer of his co-accused, Dellen Millard.

    Accused Killer Says Violent Rap Lyrics He Wrote Were Not About Tim Bosma's Death

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog
    The Independent Investigations Office, the body that probes serious incidents involving police, issued a report saying the officer used reasonable force when she shot the 23-year-old man in a Safeway parking lot in December 2014.  

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident
    Snohomish County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Shari Ireton said Tony Clyde Reed, 49, crossed into the United States from Mexico and was arrested by U.S. Marshals.

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring
      Rangers filed a criminal complaint Monday against three members of the group known as High on Life SundayFundayz that accuses them of stepping onto a geothermal feature.

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report
    CALGARY — A new assessment of the economic impact of the Fort McMurray wildfires says close to $1 billion of oilsands production has been lost.

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier

      Seven people on the climate change leadership team have signed an open letter to Premier Christy Clark, saying the province is in "no position to delay or scale back efforts."

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier