Three Ottawa city councillors organize citizen patrol through Centretown

By Alex Black

With the city warning of a continued impact on services throughout Ottawa's downtown core this weekend, residents are making moves to take back some control. 

The 'Freedom Convoy 2022' occupation entered it's eighth day on Friday, February 4, with no end in sight to the anti-COVID-19 vaccine mandate protest in and around Parliament Hill.

A citizen patrol is starting Friday morning, led by councillors Catherine McKenney, Shawn Menard and Jeff Leiper, to promote safety and unity for Ottawa residents. 

“As disturbing reports emerge, we will meet in Centretown and walk the neighbourhood,” Menard said in a tweet. “Friday starting at 11 a.m., and through the weekend, we will walk in the core reinforcing the importance of safety for residents and unity at this time. It is important to foster mutual aid, and not confrontation. Join in if you are able.”

Also, while some are welcoming news the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) will be deploying additional officers to help the Ottawa Police Service (OPS), others like councillor McKenney feel the RCMP should be deployed to Parliament Hill while OPS move their focus to the rest of the downtown core. 

McKenney says residents have been suffering from abuse and incessant horn honking all throughout the downtown, not just near the hill. 

Meantime, a petition calling on OPS to evict the convoy has over 30,000 signatures as of Friday morning. 

While the truck convoy has dwindled since last weekend, there doesn't seem to be any resolution on the horizon. Tamara Lich, a protest organizer, says the departure of the demonstrators would be based on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “ending all mandates and restrictions on our freedoms.”

On Thursday, February 3, protesters were seen stocking up on canisters of propane and cans of fuel in Confederation Park.

~With files from The Canadian Press

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