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Ottawa

Finance committee OK's new management scheme for struggling markets

A new arm's-length corporation overseeing Ottawa's ByWard and Parkdale markets is one step closer to reality after city council's finance and economic development committee approved the new management structure Tuesday.

Arms-length corporation would take over ByWard, Parkdale markets next January

Ottawa's finance committee voted in favour of creating a non-profit municipal corporation to take over the management of the ByWard and Parkdale markets. (John Rieti/CBC)

A new, arm's-length corporation overseeing Ottawa'sByWard and Parkdale markets is one step closer to reality after city council's finance and economic development committee approved the new management structure at a meeting Tuesday morning.

The corporation would be responsible for the outdoor vending operations at both markets, as well as the 25 indoor tenancies at 55ByWardMarket Square and the seven tenancies located in the parking garage at 70 Clarence St.

Local producers Gerard Rochon and Andy Terauds argued that any new management structure should focus on getting rid of resellersand allow only local farmers to sell at the markets.

Andy Terauds of the Ottawa Farmers' Market was one of two local producers to speak to the committee Tuesday. (CBC News)

"They're called farmers' markets for a reason it should be farmers they are supporting," saidTerauds, one of the forces behind Ottawa Farmers' Market.

However citystaff saidthe board of directors of the new non-profit corporation would decide who could sell at the market based on public opinion, not proximity.

Markets struggling, report finds

According to a staff report the two markets have been declining and both have struggled to attract new vendors, with the ByWard Market increasingly being taken over by restaurants and bars.

"In recent years, the two markets have simultaneously experienced the challenges of attracting local producers, losing retiring vendors, and competing with the city's flourishing farmers market movement," the report notes.

The report makes a business casefor the new corporation, arguing it would be more nimble and entrepreneurial than the city's regulatorystaff that currently oversees the markets.

Staff also argue a separate management structure would result in better financial health for the markets, even though havinga non-profit corporation operating the markets carries more inherent risk than having them run directly by the city.

The reportfound that under current management, the markets would continue to lose money and havean estimated deficit of $110,000 by2020. But under a municipal services corporation, staff estimatethe markets would run deficits in 2018 and 2019 before turning a small profitof $15,000 in 2020, which it could then reinvest in the markets.

The move still requires approval by full council.