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Ottawa shooting: How Parliament will carry on

MPs will be sitting in the House of Commons as usual today following yesterday's deadly shooting in the capital, but security measures will likely be stepped up and the Hill will be closed to visitors.

Hill grounds have remained open but security will likely be stepped up

Ottawa shooting

10 years ago
Duration 4:12
The latest news on the attack on Parliament Hill

Industry Minister James Moore vows thatthe House of Commons will sit at10 a.m. ET todayas usual, despite the shooting that shook Ottawa the day before.

"Our democracy cannot and will not be intimidated by today's events,"Moore tweetedWednesdaynight.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Wednesday night Canada will not be intimidated.

"In fact, this will lead us to strengthen our resolve and redouble our efforts,and those of our national security agencies, to take all necessary steps to identify and counter threats and keep Canada safe here at home,"he said in an address to Canadians.

Parliamentarians, staffers and others will return to work one day after a gunman walked into the building just metres from the room where Prime Minister Stephen Harper metwith his caucus.

The question on many minds is: How will it be different.

Will the stone walls and marble floors bear the pockmarked scars of the shooting? Will the broken glass, shattered when police burst through doors to search offices for intruders, be swept up? And, if security is tightened, how will it change how things work?

Security stepped up in recent years

RCMP saidWednesdayafternoon that the threat level on Parliament Hill wont change, but that doesnt mean security measures wont.

Indeed, while parliamentarians want to sit as usual ThursdaySenate Speaker Noel Kinsella also said he expects senators to be in their seats at the normal time the Hill will be closed to visitors.

In the 13 years since theSept. 11attacks in the U.S., Parliament Hill has dramatically increased security while keeping the grounds around the buildings wide open.

Theres even an open yoga class everyWednesdayduring the warm summer months where participants spread their brightly coloured mats around the front lawns. Canada Day sees tens of thousands of revellers crowd the area, and a sound and light show entertains people every night at the height of tourist season.

In the past few years, security has been stepped up even more, with the grand stone wall along Wellington Street extended to close off some entrances and retractable bollards essentially big concrete cylinders installed to control the remaining ones.

The number of surveillance cameras has quadrupled and all visitors, even those escorted by someone with a Hill pass, have to go through security at the entrance to Centre Block.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said criminals will not dictate how Canadians govern the country.

"They cannot and will not dictate our values. And they do not get to decide how we use our shared public spaces,"he said in prepared remarks Wednesday night.

Country blessed by peace

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May urged calm while law enforcement officials investigate what happened.

"Today is not a day that 'changes everything,'"she said in a statement.

"It is a day of tragedy. We must ensure we keep our responses proportionate to whatever threat remains."

It's hard to tell in the immediate aftermath of a shocking event just how much will change. It's just as hard to know whether those changes will last.

There were momentsWednesdaywhere some of it seemed routine: journalists waited outside with the same colleagues with whom they've staked out dozens of closed doors and public events. The newsrooms, albeit locked down, throbbed with the energy that only comes withthe biggest of breaking stories.

For the staffers locked inside their offices, advised to stack furniture to block the doors, hearing the police smash through neighbouring rooms to ensure no one was hiding, heading to work willlikely feel a lot different.

After all the chaos and horror, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair sounded a reassuring note.

"Canada is shaken today but we shall not waver. We woke up this morning in a country blessed by love, diversity and peace. And tomorrow, we will do the same."