Historic Civic Hospital fundraising campaign surpasses halfway point
A year since its launch, the Campaign to Create Tomorrow—the largest fundraising initiative in our city’s history to build the new Civic Campus of the Ottawa Hospital—has raised more than half of its $500 million goal.
“I’m thrilled to announce that as of today we’re at $268 million,” said Campaign Chair, Roger Greenberg.
Donors, Greenberg said, have been more generous than ever, showing fervent support for a new campus, leading-edge research and life-sciences park.
“I would say the majority of people, including my own family, have given multiples of their normal giving. They realize what this will bring to the community in terms of its impact on healthcare,” he said.
It was shortly after the First World War when Ottawa’s former mayor, Harold Fisher, had a progressive vision for the future of medicine in the capital.
With the world in the grip of a global influenza pandemic, Fisher pushed for the construction of the Ottawa Civic Hospital, opening the doors to a century of incomparable healthcare in the city.
Today, however, Fisher’s once state-of-the-art facility is challenged to meet the needs of future generations.
“The building is past its due date,” said Greenberg.
“People may not realize it but the original building that was built in 1923 has had twenty-one additional buildings grafted on to it. There’s no space to expand.”
An early photo of the Ottawa Civic Hospital (supplied)
Now a new vision for the Civic is taking shape, fueled by passionate Ottawa residents like Greenberg. He was born at the Civic, along with his parents, five siblings and two of his three children.
It’s the same hospital where many of his family members and friends have said their good-byes.
“If you look back over time at your core moments of happiness and sadness, it’s been at the Civic Hospital,” Greenberg said.
Construction has begun on a 2,500-vehicle parking garage, ultimately for hospital staff, patients and visitors. In the short term, it will be used by work crews building the new hospital.
Crews are busy with the first stage of construction. They’re building a 3500 vehicle parking garage. (Joel Haslam CTV Ottawa)
“So they need a place to park and we’re building what is one of the key fundamentals of the hospital which is adequate parking for everyone, once it opens. The hope is to finish the garage in about 18 months, or so. And then work will start on the main hospital building, in late 2024 or early 2025.”
The hospital will strive to be more patient-centred than ever.
Greenberg says double, triple and quadruple beds in a room will be a thing of the past. Every room, and there will be more of them, will be single-occupancy.
“That might sound like an extravagance, but it isn’t,” said Greenberg.
“When you have a pandemic, every one of those rooms can be turned into their own little isolation ward because they’ll have everything that the patient needs to have and they’ll also have an area for family who are coming to visit and take care of them, so they can be there with their own family member, or a caregiver, if you want to bring someone extra in, as well,” he said.
The scope of the project’s economic impact is massive.
“This will end up creating thousands of new jobs and well-paying jobs for residents of Ottawa.”
Roger Greenberg, Chair of the Campaign to Create Tomorrrow, surveys the early stages of construction. Since launching one year ago, Greenberg and his team have raised $268 million of the campaign’s $500 million fundraising goal. (Joel Haslam CTV Ottawa)
Despite the success of the campaign after its first year, Greenberg says raising the remaining $232 million will require a great deal of work and support.
“Our campaign slogan is ‘It’s time,’” he said.
“We’ve been waiting for this moment for a long time, and many of us are never going to see this moment again. Now’s the time to make a commitment.”
“At $232 million, that itself is bigger than any other campaign in the city’s history. It’s great we’ve had this success, but we can’t rest on our laurels. There’s still lots of work to do.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Large numbers of New York City police officers begin entering Columbia University campus
Large numbers of New York City police officers began entering the Columbia University late Tuesday as dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters remained on the campus.
Poilievre kicked out of Commons after calling Prime Minister Justin Trudeau 'wacko'
Testy exchanges between the prime minister and his chief opponent ended with the Opposition leader and one of his MPs being ejected from the House of Commons on Tuesday -- and the rest of Conservative caucus walking out of the chamber in protest.
Baby, grandparents among 4 people killed in wrong-way police chase on Ontario's Hwy. 401
A police chase which started with a liquor store robbery in Bowmanville Monday night ended in tragedy some 20 minutes later when a suspect fleeing police entered Highway 401 in the wrong direction and caused a pileup which killed an infant and the child's grandparents, as well as the suspect, investigators say.
Freeland leaves capital gains tax change out of coming budget implementation bill, here's why
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland will be tabling yet another omnibus bill to pass a sweeping range of measures promised in her April 16 federal budget, though left out of the legislation will be the government's proposed capital gains tax change.
Sword-wielding man attacks passersby in London, killing a 14-year-old boy and injuring 4 others
A man wielding a sword attacked members of the public and police officers in a northeast London suburb Tuesday, killing a 14-year-old boy and injuring four other people, British authorities said.
Man dies after suffering cardiac arrest while waiting in ER, widow wants investigation
When an ambulance took David Lippert to the hospital in March of 2023, the 68-year-old Kitchener, Ont., executive was hoping to find out why he was feeling weak and unable to walk. Some 24 hours later, he was found unresponsive in the ER.
CSE says it shared information on Chinese hacking of parliamentarians in 2022
While several MPs and senators say they were only recently made aware of China-backed hackers targeting them, the Communications Security Establishment, one of Canada's intelligence agencies, says it shared information about the incident with parliamentary officials in June of 2022.
WATCH Arnold Schwarzenegger spotted filming in Elora, Ont.
The name of the project has not been officially released although it’s widely believed to be the Netflix series FUBAR.
Eviction for landlord's use was legitimate, despite owners' partial move, B.C. court rules
A B.C. judge has upheld the eviction of a family from their North Vancouver townhouse, finding that the landlords did not take an unreasonable amount of time to move into the home after the tenants vacated it.