National Post (National Edition)

NO HOCKEY, NO FIGURE SKATING, NO CELLPHONES ALLOWED

A new, $4.3-million rink built on the lawn of Parliament Hill will be fun for all the family, says the government — but don’t head over with a hockey stick or puck in hand.

- SCOTT STINSON

On the lawn of Parliament Hill on Thursday, crews were busy erecting a very expensive monument to that most Canadian of pastimes: excessivel­y prudish regulation­s. Oh, and hockey. Also that. The Canada 150 rink, still in the developmen­t stages even though work began on it last month, looks about like you would expect a hockey rink to look. Ice, boards, bleachers and whatnot. Except it is a very special rink, due to its iconic location and also because it is costing an absurd amount of money.

The rink, which was scheduled to be operationa­l for all of 26 days but will now be open til February, the government announced Thursday, is part of a $5.6-million project. Before you slap your forehead and drop your jaw and steam cartoonish­ly bursts out of your ears, don’t worry: the cost for the constructi­on and operation of the rink itself is only $4.3 million. (The rest is for a kids’ hockey tournament.)

Heritage Minister Melanie Joly has explained that this is in fact great value for money because the rink will “support important programmin­g for communitie­s and children” from across the country who are apparently unable to access such programmin­g at the approximat­ely 8,300 other such rinks that already exist in Canada.

When the fun eventually ends, the rink will be dismantled and donated to a “vulnerable” local community. It is unclear what the community will do with it, considerin­g it costs millions just to keep the thing operationa­l until the end of December.

The particular­ly hilarious part of the Parliament rink is all the ways in which this programmin­g for the community will be hard for the community to use. Spots will have to be reserved ahead of time online, and there is a long list of expressly forbidden items:

No hockey sticks and/or pucks

No headsets

No cellphones (!)

No carrying of children

No figure skating

No rough play or “speed” games

No racing If you have ever been to a free skate at a public rink, it is a safe bet that at least three of the above are taking place at any given time.

But, this being Ontario, the province that is only now allowing a few grocery stores to sell beer and wine, but not too many lest the whole province turn into Ibiza overnight, perhaps we should be grateful that the regulation­s are not worse.

They may yet be. From appearance­s at the site on Thursday, the rink will have boards and surroundin­g glass at normal hockey-rink height. But there is no sign of netting that might prevent an errant puck from leaving the rink and endangerin­g passersby. What of the foreign tourists who, unfamiliar with Canada’s national game, will be strolling along in the shadow of the East Block, blissfully unaware of the possibilit­y that a rubber projectile could cross their path at any moment? Won’t someone think of them?

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 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The rink on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Outside of a planned peewee house league tournament, there will be no hockey allowed on the ice. Also no food, no rough housing, no tag, no figure or speedskati­ng, and no carrying of children.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS The rink on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Outside of a planned peewee house league tournament, there will be no hockey allowed on the ice. Also no food, no rough housing, no tag, no figure or speedskati­ng, and no carrying of children.

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