The Daily Courier

Ottawa readies for Canada 150 events

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OTTAWA — Jessica Mellor was doing her best Friday to catch her son, Lincoln, running — as toddlers often do — towards a security gate around the main Canada Day stage on Parliament Hill.

It was a tranquil moment as the family braced for the hoopla of today, when half a million people are expected to gather in the shadow of the Centre Block to mark Canada’s 150th anniversar­y — an unpreceden­ted crowd, with logistical planning and security to match.

“We’ve been meaning to come up for Canada Day our whole lives, basically, and never really got around to it,” said Lincoln’s father, Kyle, whose son is named for Lincoln Alexander, Canada’s first black member of Parliament and former Ontario lieutenant-governor.

“This year, 150, it’s a bit of a pilgrimage to come up and just pay homage to everything that the nation has done for us.”

Officials have been working for months to prepare for this weekend’s events, which the government has billed as the largest in the nation’s history, between the hundreds of thousands who are expected to be in downtown Ottawa to the countless others massing in more than 2,000 communitie­s across the country.

On Friday, workers were putting the finishing touches on the towering main stage, where last-minute rehearsals were underway. Temporary fencing, barricades and bollards created security bottleneck­s where visitors normally enjoy unfettered access to the grounds. Much of downtown Ottawa was closed to vehicles.

At one point, officers were seen peering into and under the decorative planters lining the street; a security official was heard chiding staff for letting a group walk past without being checked — a group that turned out to be Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna her staff.

“The hoops you have to go through, it’s like a cattle shed here,” Ottawa resident George Neville said of security.

“It seems extreme for a country like Canada.”

Today’s itinerary includes appearance­s by the Prince of Wales, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and U2 band members Bono and The Edge. And while Heritage Minister Melanie Joly called the preparatio­ns hectic, she said officials are more than ready.

“We want people to be able to celebrate and have fun and we want to showcase the best of Canada,” she said. “That’s exactly what we’ve been working for two years and now this is our big moment.”

The weather, however, may have other ideas.

Environmen­t Canada’s forecast for today includes rain in the morning and the risk of thundersto­rms later in the day and into the evening, which could put a damper on plans for what has been billed as a spectacula­r 20-minute fireworks extravagan­za.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Police officers armed with heavy automatic weapons stand guard a blocked street leading to Parliament Hill in preparatio­n for Canada Day in Ottawa on Friday.
The Canadian Press Police officers armed with heavy automatic weapons stand guard a blocked street leading to Parliament Hill in preparatio­n for Canada Day in Ottawa on Friday.

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