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Ottawa

Merchants air frustrations about state of ByWard Market

During a meeting that was at times loud and emotionally charged, merchants aired their frustrations about worsening conditions in the ByWard Market.

Conditions are trending in wrong direction, business owners say

People sit inside a restaurant. A man in a white shirt stands as he speaks to the crowd.
ByWard Market business owners held a meeting Tuesday to discuss their concerns with the state of the neighbourhood. Court Curry, who works with the city, addresses the crowd. (Francis Ferland/Radio-Canada)

During a meeting that was at times loud and emotionally charged, merchants aired their frustrations about worsening conditions in the ByWard Market.

For many present at the meeting Tuesday, drug useand homelessness in the area only seem to be getting worsewith little relief in sight.

"It's not a scary place only at night," said Chantal Biro, who runs thefashion boutique Schad on Sussex Drive. "Now it's becoming a scary place during the day."

Shesaid her team hashad two break-ins in as many weeks, including someone stealing $1,000 worth of merchandise.

Biro, adecades-long tenant in the area, said she became concernedafter learning her neighbours' windows had beensmashed.

"Now I'm worried. I've taken things out of my window so that things aren't as attractive to grab," she said.

Retailers requested an audience with Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, butinsteadmet with city staff, the ward councillor, the head of the ByWard Market District Authority and a representative from the mayor's office.

The dozens of business owners in attendanceraised frustrations about awide range of topics, includingbylaw and police enforcement,parking, security anda gradual loss of the activities that once drew families and shoppers to the market.

"I guess what I'm hearing here is people saying'What is the immediate plan for safety?'" said Phil Emond,a gallerist withthe Gordon Harrison Canadian Landscape Galleryon Sussex who spearheaded the meeting.

"We just don't need to talk about it. We need a change now. What's going to change?"

Policing the market 'very challenging'

Homelessness and drug addictionare major challengesin the ByWard Market, withmany who were inattendance feeling those realities havetaken a tollonseveral nearby blocks.

But howthe city and others shouldtackle these problems isn't always clear.

"Enforcement is not always the key," said Const. Sbastien Lemay, a community police officer assigned to the area.

Speaking to reporters after the meeting,Lemay said it's becoming "very challenging" to police the market, but echoedsentiments ofcolleagues who have discussed how arresting people isn't always the solution.

"We have made connections with different agencies, different service providers," hesaid. "So again, it's looking at these individuals that might struggle with addiction, and seeing which services can help them."

A police officer stands on a city street on a sunny summer day.
Const. Sbastien Lemay says it has become "very challenging" to police the market. (Francis Ferland/Radio-Canada)

Kalin McCluskey, director of policy with the mayor's office, discussed upcoming changes to 911and said a separate phone number that willact as an alternative for mental health issues will also be rolling out "within the upcoming months."

"So when things are in distress, you can call it and get a tailored response to that person in crisis, recognizing that not every call is a police call," she said.

'No easy solution'

The city hopes one solution to revitalizing the marketcomes in its latest governing change:theByWard Market District Authority, a newly formed municipal corporationthat will act to amalgamate and replace Ottawa Markets and the dissolving BIA.

"The view is this is our most special part of Ottawa,"saidCourt Curry,who works withthe city's economic development department.

"It should be our premier, most elevated neighborhood, but there are multiple people with competing visions, competing priorities, competing advocacy in a very small space."

TheByWard Market District Authorityhas been given as much autonomy and as many possibilities to generate revenue as possible, he said, adding it should run almost as its own village.

The authority will begin to ramp up its work come September and October, including establishing a business advisory committee and re-establishing a community safety and security committee.

"I also have to acknowledge we're late to the game on this," said Zachary Dayler, the authority's executive director who served the same role for Ottawa Markets. "We're probably five [to] 10 years behind where we need to be."

"But we're here and so we're going to move forward."

A man stands behind a table as he talks to a crowd.
Zachary Dayler, centre, is the executive director of the ByWard Market District Authority. Rideau-Vanier Coun. Stphanie Plante sits to his right. (Francis Ferland/Radio-Canada)

Biro says simply increasing security would help businessowners feel safer as a short-term solution.

In the long-term, she believes the concentration ofsocialservices and the types of businesses that populate the market shouldbe reconsidered.

"I know there's no easy solution," she said. "Otherwise, I think we would have already solved it."

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