Mark Sutcliffe says he has a plan to keep “the dream of home ownership” alive in Ottawa if elected as mayor, anchored by a pledge add 100,000 housing units to the city’s residential universe over the next ten years. Read More
Source: Visit the Ottawa Citizen for more!
Sutcliffe promises Ottawa 100,000 more homes over ten years in new housing platform
More from 2022 municipal electionMore posts in 2022 municipal election »
- Fresh faces at city hall: Meet David Brown and Clarke Kelly, who will represent rural Ottawa wards
- Ottawa's largest school board welcomes a majority of new trustees elected
- Here are the winners in Ottawa's school board trustee races
- Here are the winners in Ottawa's city council races
- Live Blog: It's election night in Ottawa
More from CampaignMore posts in Campaign »
- Lansdowne 2.0, Salvation Army shelter: Here's where the leading mayoral candidates stand
- Ontario election 2022: Highway 7, mental health, and a Green party platform reveal
- What they promised us, 2021 edition: campaign pledges from the candidates Ottawa elected
- Exit interview: Catherine McKenna on authenticity, Ottawa Centre, and her plans for the election campaign
More from ElectionMore posts in Election »
- In Riverside South-Findlay Creek, council candidates competing to serve fast-growing suburban community
- 'Good for democracy': Ottawa's most exciting mayoral contest in more than a decade approaches finish line
- Lansdowne 2.0, Salvation Army shelter: Here's where the leading mayoral candidates stand
- 'Confidential' meeting details for school board's virtual support groups posted online
- More Ottawa women are running for municipal office. Here's why this race will be transformative
More from homelessnessMore posts in homelessness »
- Kavanagh: We need Ottawa Community Housing more than ever
- Federal government to spend $90M to fund 270 affordable housing units in Ottawa
- 'The community found a home:' As Ottawa's pandemic respite centres close, their lessons live on
- Fortier, Collard and Fleury: Salvation Army still isn't listening to its Ottawa neighbours
- ‘Reno-viction’ rage: Tenants demand policies to protect low-income renters in Ottawa
More from HomesMore posts in Homes »
More from housingMore posts in housing »
- Vacancies in Ottawa-Gatineau drop to pre-pandemic levels
- Ottawa ACORN protesters bring Bill 23 'demoviction' concerns to minister's home office
- Ottawa's new official plan has finally been approved, with the urban boundary pushed further out by the provincial government
- Public hearings for the province's new housing legislation are coming soon—just not to Ottawa
- Mayoral candidate Chiarelli vows to protect single-family neighbourhoods, challenge plans for inclusionary zoning
More from Local NewsMore posts in Local News »
- Choking case at Ottawa Fire Station 47: 'Our client is still traumatized by the assault'
- Vanier high-rise with elevated carbon monoxide levels evacuated Sunday
- Ottawa chef Briana Kim wins the 2023 Canadian Culinary Championship at the Shaw Centre
- Winterlude resumes activities following Friday shutdown, Skateway closed Feb 4-5
- Residents flee Stittsville blaze barefoot, one of four fires in freezing conditions
More from Mark SutcliffeMore posts in Mark Sutcliffe »
- OTTAWA BUDGET 2023: Sutcliffe unveils 'tight' draft budget with priority investments and efficiencies
- City of Ottawa receiving $350M boost from federal government for electric bus fleet
- Debate ignites over future of Wellington Street, as council committee prepares to consider its reopening
- MacDougall: What Elon Musk, Danielle Smith and the city of Ottawa have in common
- Steve Kanellakos resigns as city manager, issues preemptive defence of city staff ahead of LRT inquiry report
More from mayorMore posts in mayor »
- OTTAWA BUDGET 2023: Sutcliffe unveils 'tight' draft budget with priority investments and efficiencies
- 'Incredibly problematic, entirely undemocratic'; New mayor and councillors don't want minority-rule power to pass bylaws. But what can they do about it?
- Sutcliffe visits cabinet ministers in Toronto; premier 'had to cancel' first meeting with Ottawa's new mayor
- Final municipal results: McKenney support concentrated in central wards, Sutcliffe swept the remainder
- 'Good for democracy': Ottawa's most exciting mayoral contest in more than a decade approaches finish line
Be First to Comment