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Checkup 2009: A Community Conversation a Lively Discussion of Local Issues

On Tuesday, October 20, the Community Foundation of Ottawa hosted Checkup 2009, a public event open to anyone wanting to participate in a community conversation based on the 2009 Ottawa’s Vital Signs report. Taking place in the auditorium of the Ottawa Public Library’s main branch, the two-hour event was moderated by Kathleen Petty (host of CBC Radio’s Ottawa Morning), and led by a panel that consisted of Caroline Andrew (University of Ottawa professor and Director of the Centre on Governance), Ken Gray (Ottawa Citizen columnist and Editorial Board member), and Carl Nicholson (Executive Director of the Catholic Immigration Centre of Ottawa).

Attracting a capacity audience of close to 200 people, Checkup 2009 was indeed a lively discussion of Ottawa’s hot topics, as well as a number of issues that were true eye-openers for many people in the room, including the panelists and moderator. In one instance, a woman whose son was incarcerated for a year in the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre awaiting trial tearfully described her own treatment as a visitor to the facility and her struggles to help her mentally ill son receive the medical attention he needed. Other passionately-articulated stories included those describing the ongoing difficulties faced by Ottawa’s physically disabled citizens in accessing public buildings, as well as those grappling with a lack of affordable housing and the growing gap between rich and poor in the city.

Also in attendance at the event was lawyer John Johnson, one of the Community Foundation's many valued professional advisors. Following the event, John sent a personal letter to the Foundation about his thoughts on the Checkup conversation, saying: "It is clear we have a way to go in Ottawa but at least there are people like your audience who can identify the problems but perhaps do not have access to power to remedy them or ever discuss the issues in a non-political environment. Your program gives these people a voice. It is imperative that someone now needs to listen and I believe we have a municipal election in the not too distant future. I intend to use your program as a guide to draw to the attention of each candidate the most pressing issues for the citizens of this city." Click here to read John's letter in its entirety.

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“This is what the Ottawa’s Vital Signs program is really all about,” says Barbara McInnes, President & CEO of the Community Foundation of Ottawa. “While the report is full of fascinating stats and data on everything from health and wellness to how people make their way around the city each day, it’s really only the beginning of an important discussion that needs to take place amongst the citizens of Ottawa. Checkup 2009 was a great opening to that conversation – the one about what kind of city we want to live in and how we’re going to make that vision a reality.”

Checkup 2009 was the first in a series of community conversations planned as part of the Ottawa’s Vital Signs program. Planning for the 2010 report will revolve significantly around ideas and feedback received at Checkup events in the early part of the year, to be followed by a similar reflection on the findings in the resulting report. “From the beginning, Ottawa’s Vital Signs was designed as a vehicle to engage the entire community on issues of importance, and to stimulate public dialogue on how we can work together to improve the quality of life in our city,” says Barbara. “We expect the Checkup series to bring us even further along the way towards realizing that goal.”

Ken Gray’s Checkup 2009 speech was published as his column the day after the event, and is available at: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/columnists/Ottawa+pretty+just+
looks+that/2126460/story.html

Ken’s blog article about his experience as a panelist is available at: http://communities.canada.com/ottawacitizen/blogs/bulldog/archive/
2009/10/27/thank-you-community-foundation.aspx


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2010 Annual Report