Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Canada 150 Event Has Unprecendented Security, Performances, Fireworks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2017 01:23 PM
    OTTAWA — Tens of thousands of Canadians — and more than a few wannabe Canadians — are expected to descend on the national capital this weekend to celebrate Canada's 150th birthday. Here are five things you should know:
     
     
     
    1. Security will be tight. An unprecedented security perimeter has been erected around the main staging area on Parliament Hill. Large white tents have been set up west and east of the parliamentary precinct where partygoers are subjected to searches and screened with metal detectors. Ottawa police say every officer not on a pre-arranged leave has been ordered to work the July 1 weekend. The Mounties have also enlisted volunteers from their Ottawa headquarters to complement their regular force on duty.
     
     
     
    2. The lineup is already tight. A host of musical performers and entertainers are scheduled to join in the celebrations, including country singer Dean Brody, Walk Off The Earth, folk musician Gordon Lightfoot, pop artist Alessia Cara and Cirque du Soleil. While Canada Day in Ottawa is typically an all-Canadian affair, U2 members Bono and the Edge are expected to give the Canada 150 celebrations an international flavour, with plans to perform a single number.
     
     
     
    3. The crowds will be enormous — and probably damp. Security officials said they are preparing for crowds that could reach 450,000 in number throughout Ottawa over the weekend. However, with the forecast calling for a significant chance of rain, and even severe thunder and lightning, those estimates may dwindle as revellers seek shelter.
     
     
     
     
     
    4. Indigenous protesters are welcome. Aboriginal activists have erected a teepee on Parliament Hill — after having initially been denied access — to raise awareness of what they call Canada's "dark chapter" in the treatment of Indigenous Peoples by successive past governments, and to raise awareness of the fact that the lands on which the national Canada Day celebrations are held are unceded Algonquin territory.
     
     
     
    5. The day will end with a bang — weather permitting. There's no better place in the country to watch a fireworks display than on Parliament Hill. This year, however, event organizers are billing the show as "the largest pyrotechnic show ever presented in the capital region." Fireworks are to be launched from five different locations, including 15,000 individual fireworks and 150 aerial shells of calibres up to 300 millimetres, all synchronized to music. The show, barring rain, is expected to last 20 minutes, beginning at 11 p.m. ET.
     
     
    A BY-THE-NUMBERS LOOK AT THE MAIN CANADA DAY CELEBRATION ON PARLIAMENT HILL
     
     
     
     
    OTTAWA — The Canada Day stage on Parliament Hill (the biggest one ever) is set for 150th birthday celebrations on Saturday in the nation's capital. Here's a by-the-numbers look at preparations in Ottawa.
     
     
    600: Volunteers working Canada Day on Parliament Hill.
     
     
    168: Total number of performances at the three Canada Day festivity sites in the capital region.
     
     
    345: Number of performers and artists participating.
     
     
    15,000: Individual fireworks that will be set off from five different launching sites near Parliament Hill for the nighttime show that will last for 20 minutes and 17 seconds.
     
     
    80: Canadian Heritage employees who have planned Canada Day events on Parliament Hill
     
     
    32: Portable washrooms on Parliament Hill, split evenly between the east and west sides of the lawn.
     
     
    35: Portable washrooms on Wellington Street, inside the security zone and across from Parliament Hill in the parking lot of the former U.S. embassy at 100 Wellington St.
     
     
    4: Accessible portable washrooms on Parliament Hill, plus four more on Wellington Street

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Investigating Suspicious Death After Man Found In Kingsgate Mall Parking Lot

    Vancouver Police Investigating Suspicious Death After Man Found In Kingsgate Mall Parking Lot
    Just after 1:30 a.m., a citizen found the man in apparent medical distress. BC Ambulance and police responded, and he was rushed to hospital where he died.

    Vancouver Police Investigating Suspicious Death After Man Found In Kingsgate Mall Parking Lot

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street
    The fire broke out at about 8 p.m. in a string of one-storey businesses that include a tailor, hair studio, pizza shop, an ice cream store and a Salvation Army thrift store.

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne
    Here is a look at some of the major promises in the speech, and where the parties stood during the campaign

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection
    TORONTO — Sears Canada Inc. (TSX:SCC) said it plans to close 59 locations and cut approximately 2,900 jobs under a court-supervised restructuring after it was granted protection from creditors Thursday.

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government's new security bill adds torture, detention and serious destruction of property that would endanger a life to the list of things Canada's spy agency cannot do when disrupting terror plots.

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary
    CALGARY — Police have charged a man with aggravated assault in the first of three attacks in downtown Calgary in which men were hit in the back of the head with heavy objects.

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary