Ottawa Citizen

Months later, no answers on weather radar failure

- TOM SPEARS

Want to ask Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada about the weather? You may have a seven-month wait — and still not get an answer.

That's what happened when this newspaper inquired about the floods that hit Ottawa on Aug. 10, 2023, after 38 millimetre­s of rain fell in a single stormy afternoon.

From late morning into mid-evening that day, radar coverage of that storm kept cutting out. Streets and homes were flooded, but members of the public trying to look at Environmen­t Canada's radar map kept getting the message “Radar unavailabl­e ... please try again later.”

This newspaper followed up with an access to informatio­n request asking the federal department for any recent informatio­n on the radar's reliabilit­y, and also asking: were there any comments from the public? Access-to-informatio­n law is the formal means by which members of the public are supposed to be able to obtain informatio­n from the federal government.

In mid-september the department wrote that it needed 30 more days to answer.

Since then, nothing.

One of the flooded areas was River Ward, where Coun. Riley Brockingto­n lives. He says city officials saw extreme weather coming and braced for it — making sure that drains were cleared of leaves or debris, and people were warned.

“I chair the emergency preparedne­ss committee, so I'm a lot more cognizant of getting people ready, getting people aware, getting informatio­n out, warning people about any type of storm that is coming and could have impact, just to be prepared and ready,” he said.

He's puzzled by the lack of response from Environmen­t Canada. The department is the top agency for weather informatio­n, he says. “Environmen­t Canada is like the Bible, and if people rely on their radar or other feeds for sources of informatio­n ... then that has to be maintained.”

Brockingto­n understand­s that technical glitches do happen, “but the fact that they haven't replied and provided informatio­n is a head-scratcher.”

Jim Turk, who runs the Centre for Free Expression at Toronto Metropolit­an University, blames weak access-to-informatio­n laws.

“The lack of response by Environmen­t Canada to your two simple and straightfo­rward requests for what should be readily available informatio­n are yet more examples of Canada's deeply flawed access-to-informatio­n system,” he wrote in an email.

“Democracy depends on the public being able to know what its government­s, government department­s and agencies do. But all too frequently, our laws that are to ensure openness are so weak that they instead enable government secrecy.”

Environmen­t Canada said this week that it will process our request “in conjunctio­n with our current workload and priorities.”

 ?? JULIE OLIVER ?? Vehicles got waterlogge­d, stuck and had to be abandoned on some Ottawa streets during the big summer storm.
JULIE OLIVER Vehicles got waterlogge­d, stuck and had to be abandoned on some Ottawa streets during the big summer storm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada