News of the day: Is Ottawa ready for no supervised consumption?; Major defence procurements take 16 years on average; House of commons transcribers and editors get higher wage increase

News Room
By News Room 2 Min Read

It’s Friday, June 19. Here are the top stories from the Ottawa Citizen newsroom today.

IS OTTAWA READY FOR NO SUPERVISED CONSUMPTION?

The city just closed its last two consumption and treatment services sites. Those who know the area well are already sounding the alarm bell.

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 The South Korean submarine Dosan Ahn Chang-ho arrives at CFB Esquimalt in Victoria on Saturday.

MAJOR DEFENCE PROCUREMENTS TAKE 16 YEARS ON AVERAGE: WATCHDOG

Experts bullish on potential of new Defence Investment Agency but want more details about how it will operate, report finds.

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 The House of Commons text and processing bargaining unit includes around 49 full-time employees and 34 seasonal staff who work between 700 and 1,820 hours per year.

BINDING ARBITRATION NETS HOUSE OF COMMONS TRANSCRIBERS AND EDITORS HIGHER WAGE INCREASE

The workers who prepare reports on debates and other documents related to business inside the House of Commons have received a retroactive higher wage adjustment for 2023 through arbitration, among other decisions.

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 It’s time to rethink how residents of Ottawa park — where, for how long, and at what cost.

HERE’S A BETTER WAY TO DO STREET PARKING IN OTTAWA | OPINION

Brigitte Pellerin: Imagine each resident being allowed to add their car to a city account that lets you park anywhere there’s a meter without paying.

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 Ottawa 67’s forward Thomas Vandenberg tracks the puck during an Ontario Hockey League playoff game.

REMARKABLE ROOKIE YEAR WITH OTTAWA 67’S PROPELS NEPEAN’S THOMAS VANDENBERG UP NHL DRAFT RANKINGS

Jumping at the opportunity to play for one of his childhood teams, the 17-year-old was third on the 67’s in goal scoring this past season and will soon learn his future National Hockey League home.

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