Canada Day enforcement in Ottawa sees 284 parking tickets issued as protesters return - Action News
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Canada Day enforcement in Ottawa sees 284 parking tickets issued as protesters return

Canada Day enforcement efforts in Ottawa have includedbylaw officers handing out 284parking tickets since 8 a.m. ET Thursday in the downtown area as well as the towing of 79vehicles, as anti-mandateprotesters returned to the capital with few issuesFriday.

79 vehicles towed inside downtown auto exclusion zone around Parliament Hill

People protest against COVID-19 health measures near Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Canada Day. (Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press)

Canada Day enforcement efforts in Ottawa have includedbylaw officers handing out 284parking tickets since 8 a.m. ET Thursday in the downtown area as well as the towing of 79vehicles, as anti-mandateprotesters returned to the capital with few issuesFriday.

In a tweet, bylawofficials said the towing occurredinside the downtown vehicle exclusion zone.

We're certainly better prepared and more police officers from different jurisdictions are coming to help this weekend.- Jim Watson, Ottawa mayor

The zone issimilar to what was set up inlate April for the Rolling Thunder motorcycle rally, and covers much of the downtown area. Within it, nostreet parking is permitted and no protest vehicles are allowed in until at least 6 a.m. on Monday.

The zoneexpanded west on Albert Street to Bayviewstationand east into the ByWard Market for Canada Day.

On Thursday evening, four people were arrested near the National War Memorial.

The Ottawa Police Service said it's investigating the incident, including reviewing video.

Its initial investigations found an interaction with an officer became confrontational and an officer was choked, the service tweeted. Police haven't clarified if the incident involved one or two officers.

Despite the arrests, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson saidenforcement efforts seemto be "working relatively well," especially compared to the weeks-long occupation earlier this year of downtown streets.

A vehicle with two parking tickets on its dash.
This vehicle was parked in Ottawa's vehicle-exclusion zone on Wednesday ahead of the Canada Day events in the capital. Protesters who participated in the Freedom Convoy and Rolling Thunder rallies earlier this year returned to the city for July 1. (Buntola Nou/CBC)

"I think we're certainly better prepared and more police officers from different jurisdictions are coming to help this weekend,"Watson said at a Canada Day event Friday morning.

"It's always a big day in Ottawa ifCanada Day is celebrated. We wanted to make sure that people come here and they have an enjoyable, safe, fun experience."

'Minimal' police activity, says mayor

Later in the day, Watson saidpolice told himthere has been "minimal activity" requiring officers' involvement.

Organizers were scheduled to holda "freedom music concert" featuring entertainers who became popular during the Freedom Convoy for performing on astage that was set upin front of Parliament Hill on Wellington Street.

Protesters had also been planning to march Friday to Parliament Hill and hold a dance party.

A man walks down a street while covered in Canadian flags.
A man decked out in dozens of Canadian flags walks down Sparks Street in Ottawa on July 1, 2022. (Catherine Morasse/Radio-Canada)

As was the case duringthe Rolling Thunder motorcycle rallyin April,many of the Canada Day events are being co-ordinated by Veterans 4 Freedom (V4F), a group formed by central figures involved in theFreedom Convoy's weeks-long winter protests.

Organizers had also planned an "old-fashioned family picnic" in Strathcona Park on Friday morning, but theevent was cancelled.

With files from Radio-Canada and CBC's Olivia Stefanovich

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