A heartfelt endorsement for Ādisōke, Ottawa's new library, has emerged in the Ottawa Citizen's letters to the editor on Tuesday, June 2, 2026. The letters address broader concerns about City Hall's transparency and the value of the new library project.
Pellerin's Column Points to a Larger Problem at City Hall
Brigitte Pellerin's column on the new central library highlights a systemic issue at City Hall: when residents ask reasonable questions, Ottawa often responds with process, opacity, and self-review. Justice William Hourigan raised a similar concern in the LRT inquiry, questioning where the loyalties of senior city staff lay when the public interest was not properly protected. That question should not be limited to billion-dollar projects.
Stephen Maynard of Kanata shared his experience with by-law enforcement. A complaint was made about a boat trailer on his property. He cooperated and moved it. But when he asked basic questions—including whether the file had first been closed based on a complainant's update before a city inspection confirmed compliance—his complaint was sent back through the same branch whose conduct he was questioning. That is not independent oversight. That is the organization marking its own homework. Public trust is not maintained by authority alone. Authority loses legitimacy when citizens cannot get clear answers, when records are unclear, and when complaints about city staff are reviewed by the same chain of command. Ottawa needs independent oversight reporting to council. Transparency should not begin only after a public inquiry. It should begin at the front door.
Shhh, the City is Scared of Public Embarrassment
Frank G. Oakes of Ottawa commented on Pellerin's article regarding non-disclosure about the new library. Despite vain and empty protestations to the contrary, the only reason for silence in most legal dispute settlements and in all municipal contractual problems is nothing more than fear of public embarrassment.
The Ottawa Library That Should Have Never Been Demolished
Patricia O'Reilly of Ottawa expressed regret over the demolition of the old library. Reading Brigitte Pellerin's piece on the new library made her wish to climb into a time machine and return to before 1971. Ottawa had a stately and classy library then, which should never have been demolished. It was replaced by a hideous monstrosity, and now said monstrosity is being replaced to the tune of more money than we can imagine. Who thought that this was a good idea?
A Federal Librarian's Heartfelt Endorsement for Ādisōke
As a retired federal librarian and regular user of the public library system, one letter writer felt compelled to defend and heartily endorse the Ādisōke project. Ever since visiting La Grande Bibliothèque in Montreal many years ago, they have reflected on how great it would be to have something similar in Ottawa. Now we do—and then some! How often do we see this level of collaboration across multiple governments, be they federal, provincial, municipal, or Indigenous? From the outset, this has impressed them as being one of those rare projects where they got most things right. The architects incorporated and made the most of the unique topographical features of our region in their design. They took into account ecological and climate concerns, accessibility and inclusivity. Best of all, the public was consulted in meaningful ways: we were kept informed and invited to weigh in at every phase through, for example, in-person and online focus groups and via the Engage Ottawa and Adisoke.ca websites.



