Ottawa police prepare as convoy protesting vaccine mandate heads to nation's capital
CBC
Ottawa police are preparing for the arrival this weekend of a massive convoy of protesters opposed to pandemic public health measures — but they say they don't know how big the event will be or how long the protesters might stay.
The 'Freedom Rally' convoy includes transport truck operators from across the country and members of groups broadly opposed to public health mandates. Its participants are planning to stage a protest on Parliament Hill against the federal government's vaccination mandate for all cross-border drivers, which came into effect earlier this month.
"As with any large demonstration, there will be unique and asymmetric elements that are impossible to predict and challenging to manage," Ottawa Police Acting Deputy Chief Trish Ferguson told a special meeting of the Ottawa Police Services Board Wednesday afternoon.
Police say they don't know exactly when the convoy could arrive in the city, how long the protests could last or what each group participating in the convoy has planned.
"We are planning for a range of potential risks, including but not limited to counter-demonstrations, blocking of intersections, interfering with critical infrastructure and unlawful and violent activity," said Ferguson.
She said Ottawa police are working with the RCMP and the Parliamentary Protective Service to set up a command centre for the protests. She said the police service will ensure there are enough officers working over the weekend to manage both the protests and day-to-day situations.
Police are asking people to avoid unnecessary travel in the downtown core because of the risk of traffic disruptions related to protests.
"What we've seen so far in other jurisdictions is that the core demonstration[s] involving the vehicles have been peaceful, well co-ordinated, co-operative in nature," said Ottawa Police Service Chief Peter Sloly. He conceded the situation in Ottawa could be very different.
"This is the terminus of all the different demonstrations and so there are going to be multiple other actors involved," he added. "It'll be much harder for us to create the same level of certainty around what's going on."
Some city councillors and residents say they fear the protests could turn ugly.
"The event we're looking at this weekend is not what it appears," Coun. Catherine McKenney, a mayoral candidate who represents the Somerset ward, wrote in a media statement.
"Several members of this group are connected to militant racist, sexist and homophobic groups. Their statements and placards promote xenophobia. They are not here to only raise voices against vaccination mandates, but to also fuel hatred against the very fabric of our society.
"You have the right to disagree. You do not have the right to damage our infrastructure, to threaten violence, or to spew your statements of hatred, xenophobia and racism to those who disagree with you."
Some in the trucking industry say they understand transport drivers' concerns about the vaccine mandate.
P.E.I.'s Public Schools Branch is looking for 50 substitute bus drivers, and it'll be recruiting at three job fairs on Saturday, June 8. The job fairs are located at the Atlantic Superstore in Montague, Royalty Crossing in Charlottetown, and the bus parking lot of Three Oaks Senior High in Summerside. All three run from 9 a.m. until noon. Dave Gillis, the director of transportation and risk management for the Public Schools Branch, said the number of substitute drivers they're hiring isn't unusual. "We are always looking for more. Our drivers tend to have an older demographic," he said.