Emergencies Act inquiry hears that residents felt 'abandoned' by the city, police - Action News
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Emergencies Act inquiry hears that residents felt 'abandoned' by the city, police

Two Ottawa city councillorshave told the public inquiry probing the federal government's useof emergency powers to end last winter's convoyprotest and occupation of downtown Ottawa that they struggledto convince city police to deploy resources to residential neighbourhoods.

The Public Order Emergency Commission is meeting for its second day in Ottawa

A resident holds a sign towards protesters as they participate in a counter protest to stop vehicles from driving in a convoy en route to Parliament Hill, on the 17th day of a protest against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, in Ottawa, Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
A resident holds a sign toward protesters as they participate in a counter-protest to stop vehicles from driving in a convoy en route to Parliament Hill, on the 17th day of a demonstration against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, in Ottawa on Feb. 13. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Two Ottawa city councillorshave told the public inquiry probing the federal government's useof emergency powers to end last winter's protest convoyoccupation of downtown Ottawa that they struggledto convince city police to deploy resources to residential neighbourhoods.

"It was a general sense of fear, terror and dismay, that they felt abandoned by their city and by their police," Catherine McKenney, a councillor for a core downtown ward, told the inquiry on Friday.

The Public Order Emergency Commission is reviewing the circumstances that led up to the government's decision on Feb. 14 to invoke the Emergencies Act to end an anti-vaccine mandate protest that had taken over the downtown. The legislation which the Trudeau government deployed for the first time in the act's34-yearhistory requires that a public inquiry be held after it is invoked.

WATCH |McKenney says Ottawa residents felt 'abandoned' by city and police:

McKenney says Ottawa residents felt 'abandoned' by city and police during convoy

2 years ago
Duration 0:53
Ottawa city councillor Catherine McKenney details Ottawa residents' experiences during the convoy protest.

McKenney appeared alongside Mathieu Fleury, who represents a ward just east of the parliamentary precinct. Theytestified to what they heard from residents about the impact of the protests and their experiences with city hall and the police service.

Both councillors said they felt that police officers weren't properly servingthe residential neighbourhoods just outside of what police called the "red zone" around Parliament Hill.

"There were incidents vehicles on sidewalks, police nearby nottaking action,"Fleurysaid.

"It grew into a lot of questions from all of us, including residents and business.... 'Are we in a state of chaos?'"

Ottawa city councillors Mathieu Fleury, left, and Catherine McKenney watch video evidence as they appear as witnesses at the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Friday. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Fleury is not running for re-electionin the upcoming Oct. 24 municipal election,whileMcKenney is running to be the city's new mayor.

The second day of the inquiry saw a number of email messagesbetween McKenney, Fleury, their residents, other city councillors and Ottawa police read into evidence.

Emails show safety concerns were raised

In one email presented to the inquiry, the Chteau Laurier, a historic hotel downtown, saidthat a sprinkler failure hadtriggered a fire alarm. Hotel staff said in the emailthat no fire truck couldget to the hotel, and they worried about what would happen if someone at the hotel called foran ambulance.

Fleury flipped the email to then-Ottawa police chief PeterSloly,calling it an "extremely dangerous" challenge.

"Did you ever get a substantive response to that?" asked Paul Champ, a lawyer for a coalition of businesses at the commission.

"No," Fleury said.

In another email,the head of the Rideau Centre, a major mall in the city's downtown, wrote thatit took more than 24 hours to remove a fuel truck from the mall's underground parking lot.

Fleury called that situation unacceptable as well.

On Feb. 8,McKenney wrote to Sloly and other councillorsregardingconcerns about vehicles blocking Metcalfe Street, according to an email entered as evidence.

Questioned bycommission counsel Natalia Rodriguez,McKenney said they doesn't recall receiving a response from Sloly.

Both councillors expressed frustration with Mayor Jim Watson, their fellow city councillorsand city hall, saying they failed toheedtheir calls for a plan to handle the protests.

WATCH |Witnesses' lawyer: ''It became an environment of anarchy in downtown Ottawa":

Witnesses lawyer: It became an environment of anarchy in downtown Ottawa

2 years ago
Duration 6:39
Ottawa residents testify about fear, lawlessness and the long-term effects of the convoy in the first day of witness testimony at the Public Order Emergency Commission.

Under cross-examination, a lawyer for the Ottawa Police Service, David Migicovsky, questioned the councillorson the force's resources.

"I don't know if you've had the unfortunate experience of being in a hospital in recent years, but just as in a hospital, patients get triaged in emergency," he said.

"That was going to happen with the police as well."

Migicovsky also said moving officers to other zones could have posed an operational risk.

Residents describe feeling trapped

Theirtestimony capped a day that focused on how the protests affected local residents and businesses last winter. Several witnessesdescribed a sense of helplessanxiety.

"I found myself trapped,"saidVictoria De La Ronde, one of the first people to testify before thePublic Order Emergency Commission.

Journalists follow Victoria De La Ronde, centre, and Zexi Li the first witnesses to appear at the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Friday. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

De La Ronde, whotestified that she has troublewith her eyesight, said theprotesters who blocked streets and filled the air withfumes and the sound of honking horns last winter left her feeling "trapped and helpless."

WATCH |'I felt trapped and helpless,' Ottawa resident says of convoy protest:

'I felt trapped and helpless,' Ottawa resident says of convoy protest

2 years ago
Duration 0:50
Ottawa resident Victoria De La Ronde gives witness testimony during the Emergencies Act inquiry.

She saidshe takes pride in her independence and relies on sounds, like crosswalk signals, to get around in her daily life. She also said she uses food delivery services and taxis.

That changed when the Freedom Convoy rolled into town, she testified Friday morning.

"It was such an experience of helplessness, especially during the event where the horn blowing was so loud and continuous. There was absolutely no place for me to go in my own unit, there was no place that had any less sound," De La Rondesaid.

"There was no escape to that."

Zexi Li testifies at the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Friday, Oct. 14, 2022.
Ottawa resident Zexi Li reacts to the sound of truck horns being played as evidence as she testifies at the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Friday. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

De La Ronde told the inquiry that eight months after police moved in to disperse the crowd, she is still dealing with the protest's lingering impact on her hearing.

Zexi Li, an Ottawa resident who helped secure an injunction againstprotesters to silence their incessant honking, said the noisemade her anxious.

"It didn't feel safe. My guard was up all the time," Li said of the experience of walking in Ottawa's downtown at the time.

Nathalie Carrier, executive director of the Vanier Business Improvement Area, appears as a witness at the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Friday. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

"It was incredibly difficult to get anything done because of the noise.... Sleep deprivation was one of the things that affected me personally."

Call with Sloly left BIAs 'shaken'

The commission also heard from local business associations about how the protests affectedstores and restaurants.

Nathalie Carrier, executive director of the Vanier Business Improvement Area (BIA), which covers a part of the city east of Parliament Hill, said many businesses felt it wasn't safe to open

"Unlike what happened to businesses during COVID, businesses were completely crippled, and that has to be understood by this commission because there were no deliveries," Carrier said.

A protester walks through an encampment near Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, shortly before being arrested on Feb. 17, 2022.
A protester walks through an encampment near Parliament Hill in Ottawa, shortly before being arrested on Feb. 17. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Carriersaid one of the moments that shook her during last winter's convoy protest came during a call with Sloly.

"I remember the chief saying at one point, 'You guys are scared. I get it. I'm scared, too,'"Carrier said, her voice trembling during her testimony.

"I thought if the chief of police is scared, something much bigger is happening here than a protest, and that personally scared me. And I think a lot of us on that call were shaken."

WATCH |'I remember being scared,' Ottawa resident says of convoy protest:

'I remember being scared,' Ottawa resident says of convoy protest

2 years ago
Duration 1:11
Nathalie Carrier, executive director of the Vanier BIA, says last winter was a difficult time for her because of the presence of protesters in Ottawa.

Sloly resigned on Feb. 15 after being roundly criticizedover his handling of the truck convoy protest.

Carrier, who appeared alongside Kevin McHale, executive director of the Sparks Street BIA, said she couldn't remember the exact date of the call but believes it was after the first weekend of the protest.

Tom Curry, one of Sloly's lawyers, pushed back on that statement during cross-examination, claiming thathis client was merely sayingthat he understood people were frightened.

"At no time did Chief Sloly say he was scared or frightened personally.Would that be fair to him?" Curry asked.

"No," Carrier responded.

"He was very candid with us.... I think he was relating that he, too, was scared."

Carrier said the manager of a Canadian Tire told her on the third weekend of the protestthat the store's stocks of"knives and bear spray" had sold out.

"That is something I reported immediately to [the Ottawa Police Service]," she said.

Mayor Jim Watson appearing next week

During cross-examination, Brendan Miller, a lawyer for the convoy organizers, asked Carrier if she saw anyonewaving a knife and if she could be certain it was protesters who were buyingbear spray and knives.

"Most people I know that hunt with knives don't wave them around,'' Carrier responded.

Next week, the inquiry will hear from a number of city officials, including MayorWatson andPatricia Ferguson, the acting deputy chief of Ottawa police,along withmembers of the Ontario Provincial Police.

Hearings are scheduled towrap up in late November.

The final report of the commission, headed by Ontario Court of Appeal JusticePaul Rouleau,is due in February.

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