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An Ottawa French Catholic high school begins meetings to update the dress code, construction season ramps up in Ottawa and Prince Charles and Camilla visit the capital.
CTVNewsOttawa.ca looks at five stories to watch this week.
Ottawa's French Catholic School Board says meetings will be held this week with students at Béatrice-Desloges high school to review the dress code, after students and parents expressed outrage at a dress-code blitz.
Students held a protest on Friday after the principal and senior staff conducted a dress code 'blitz' one-day earlier to enforce the school's dress code. Students said the class-to-class enforcement left them feeling degraded and humiliated.
On Saturday, the director of education for the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est apologized to students for the dress-code check, adding it was unacceptable.
"This dress code verification strategy is not encouraged by the CECCE and is not acceptable," Marc Bertrand wrote. "All students must absolutely be treated with dignity and respect. No student should be subject to such a check of his or her clothing and even less to be challenged in front of his or her peers. The strategy employed by the school last Thursday unfortunately does not reflect these values, which are very dear to the CECCE."
A board superintendent told parents that starting this week, meetings will be organized with students to review "certain elements specific to the dress code" in a bid to update it to reflect "changing expectations."
Jason Dupuis told Newstalk 580 CFRA the board will work with the students to make some changes to bring the dress code to "be in line with fashion of 2022."
Students at Béatrice-Desloges high school are planning to hold a second protest on Tuesday.
Ontario's four main party leaders will debate the issues Monday night in the television election debate.
Green Party leader Mike Schreiner, Liberal leader Steven Del Duca, NDP leader Andrea Horwath and Progressive Conservative leader Doug Ford will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m.
The debate comes two-and-a-half weeks before Ontarians head to the polls to elect a new Member of Provincial Parliament, which will determine who forms the new government.
You can catch the debate on CTV News Ottawa and Newstalk 580 CFRA.
Experts predict the cost to fill up your gas tank will continue to rise this week leading up to the Victoria Day long weekend.
Gas was selling for 208.9 cents a litre in Ottawa on Sunday, a new record high for prices. The six cent a litre jump came one day after gas exceeded $2 a litre for the first time ever.
Canadians for Affordable Energy President Dan McTeague told Newstalk 580 CFRA on Friday that gas prices should hit $2.10 a litre by the long weekend.
"Welcome to the new reality of less supply, tightness of supply, a weak Canadian dollar and high taxes all make for a pretty devastating and potent combination."
According to ottawagasprices.com, gas was selling for $1.24 a litre at this time last year, and $0.83 a litre in May 2020.
An Ottawa gas station selling gas for 208.9 cents per litre. Sunday, May 15, 2022. (Dave Charbonneau/CTV News Ottawa)
The joke is that there's only two seasons in Ottawa – winter and construction. Well, Ottawa's construction season will ramp up this week with millions of dollars in new projects.
Transportation Committee chair Tim Tierney and Barrhaven Coun. Jan Harder will kick off the 2022 construction season Monday morning at the Strandherd Drive widening project.
The Standherd Drive widening project will see the road widened to four-lanes from Maravista Drive to Jockvale Road. The $112 million project began in 2020 and is scheduled to wrap up in the fall of 2023, with work this year focusing on completing all underground work and construction of the westbound lanes and associated sidewalks and cycle tracks.
The 2022 city of Ottawa budget included $427 million in capital funding to improve roads, bridges, culverts, sidewalks, pathways and intersections. The city will spend a total of $76 million on road resurfacing and $13.4 million on active transportation.
A 'construction ahead' sign on Bay Street between Slater and Albert Streets in Ottawa. (Peter Szperling/CTV News Ottawa)
Prince Charles and his wife Camilla will visit Ottawa this week as part of the three-day tour to Canada.
The royal tour, marking the Queen's Platinum Jubilee celebrations, will see the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall arrive in St. John's, N.L. on Tuesday, before visiting Ottawa on Wednesday and Yellowknife on Thursday.
Prince Charles and Camilla will join Governor General Mary Simon at the National War Memorial to pay tribute to Canadian veterans on Wednesday, meet with members of the local Ukrainian community and take in a special performance of the RCMP Musical Ride.
The day will wrap up with a gala at Rideau Hall to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee.
Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall are seen outside Rideau Hall, in Ottawa on Saturday, July 1, 2017. (Adrian Wyld/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
Ontario election debate - 6:30 p.m.
Princess Margriet of the Netherlands wraps up the visit to Ottawa
Standing committee on environmental protection, water and waste management meeting – 9 a.m.
Prince Charles and Camilla visit Ottawa
Ottawa transit commission meeting – 9:30 a.m.
The Canadian Children's Museum opens
Community and protective services committee meeting – 9:30 a.m.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson resigned Thursday, acknowledging that it was 'clearly the will' of his party that he should go. He stepped down immediately as leader of his Conservative Party but plans to remain as prime minister while the leadership contest is held.
Boris Johnson was due to resign as Britain's prime minister on Thursday, bringing an end to a turbulent two and half years in office and triggering a search for a new leader.
Five men are being hailed as heroes by the Ontario Provincial Police after saving a man from a burning vehicle on a Toronto-area highway earlier this week.
Several vaccine manufacturers are racing to develop formulas that take into account the more infectious Omicron variant now driving cases, while policymakers are laying the groundwork for another large-scale vaccine blitz.
A well-known Ukrainian paramedic who was held prisoner by Russian and separatist forces for three months after being captured in the southeastern city of Mariupol has accused her guards of psychological and physical torture during her time in captivity.
Video has emerged showing a worker dangling in the air above a Toronto construction site after accidently getting entangled in a tagline attached to a crane.
The federal government has no intention of dropping the controversial ArriveCan app because it gives the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) key health information about travellers who test positive for COVID-19 through testing at airports and land borders, senior government sources tell CTV News.
A staggering 71 million more people around the world are experiencing poverty as a result of soaring food and energy prices that climbed in the weeks following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the United Nations Development Program said in a report Thursday.
Patrick Brown is alleging political corruption played a role in his disqualification from the Conservative Party of Canada's leadership race, a move that came following allegations that his campaign violated election financing rules.