Vote on $13M grant for proposed Ottawa airport hotel ends in tie; here's what happens next
A vote at the Finance and Corporate Services Committee on a $13 million tax grant for a proposed hotel at the Ottawa airport ended in a tie.
Six councillors voted in favour of giving Germain Hotels a multi-year tax break on a proposed 180-room terminal hotel, while five councillors and the mayor voted against it. By way of protocol, a tie vote means the proposal will rise to council for consideration.
Mayor Mark Sutcliffe publicly stated on Monday that he would oppose the grant, which would be given under the Ottawa International Airport Community Improvement Plan (YOW CIP) that was approved by the previous term of council. Sutcliffe said he has heard repeatedly from residents that "they don't want their tax dollars going to these kinds of projects."
Speaking to councillors at committee Tuesday, Sutcliffe made the case that if a development is not approved today, it does not mean nothing will ever be built there.
"There are actually lots of scenarios in the next 25 years where some kind of development will happen on that site and we'll collect 100 per cent of the tax revenues," Sutcliffe said. "If, in the next 10 years, we saw development on the site, we would collect tax revenue and it would add up to more than $4.4 million."
That $4.4 million is the difference between the amount of tax revenue the develop would bring the city over 25 years minus the $13 million grant.
"I want to be clear, it is not because I don't support the airport. It's not because I don't believe in economic development. It is not because I don't support staff. It is because I don't believe in this type of funding model," Sutcliffe said.
Several business leaders who spoke at committee said they were in favour of giving the grant to build the hotel.
"The Ottawa Board of Trade supports the grant application for Germain Hotels under the YOW CIP," said board of trade president Sueling Ching. "Our business leaders have been long concerned with the support for our airport as a key economic driver for our region."
Ching said business owners have said a lack of direct flights to Ottawa hinder their ability to attract tourists, conferences and other customers.
Mark Laroche, president and CEO Ottawa International Airport Authority, told committee that investments in the airport are critical to making it competitive.
"St. Hubert airport (in Longueuil, Que.) just announced building a terminal of nine gates with a hotel, directly trying to capture traffic from eastern Canada. I do not want them to eat our lunch and take away the opportunity to be a hub," he said.
He says the Ottawa airport is at a significant geographical disadvantage, being close to the busier hubs of Toronto and Montreal. Adding a hotel, like other airports, would help bring more service to the capital.
"Hotel use is not a bad use. It's the choice of the airport. We're the one who went to the market to attract a hotel," he said. "If we want to play in the league of a hub airport, we have to have those amenities."
Hugo Germain, vice-president of operations for Germain Hotels, said if the grant were not approved, the company would need to re-evaluate its partnerships.
"An investment of this magnitude, $55 million, you can appreciate we're not doing this all in cash, we have a lender. That lender is entertaining this (the grant) as additional source of help to justify an investment," he said. "Getting them at the table required additional arguments and this was one of them."
Coun. Matthew Luloff said denying the grant would send the wrong message.
"Why would anyone apply for this if we shut down the first application that comes in front of us?" he asked. "What message does that send when we have an applicant who meets every criteria and we deny them?"
Coun. Laura Dudas, who is in favour of the grant, moved a motion asking that the expected $4.4 million in tax revenue that would be raised over 25 years by the construction of the hotel be directed to affordable housing for people in the shelter system.
"At this point in time, there's money on the table that we can designate to helping families in emergency shelters find housing," she said, noting that if the hotel is not built, the city naturally gets no tax revenue.
Her motion, however, was defeated on a tie vote.
The motion will be considered by council April 12.
HOW COUNCILLORS VOTED
Here is how councillors voted for the motion to provide the YOW CIP grant to the hotel project.
Matthew Luloff: Yes
Laura Dudas: Yes
Cathy Curry: Yes
Glen Gower: Yes
Tim Tierney: No
Rawlson King: Yes
Jeff Leiper: No
Riley Brockington: No
Shawn Menard: No
George Darouze: No
Catherine Kitts: Yes
Mark Sutcliffe: No
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Bird flu, measles top 2025 concerns for Canada's chief public health officer
As we enter 2025, Dr. Theresa Tam has her eye on H5N1 bird flu, an emerging virus that had its first human case in Canada this year.
DEVELOPING Body found in wheel well of plane at Maui airport
A person was found dead in the wheel well of a United Airlines flight to Maui on Tuesday.
Raised in Sask. after his family fled Hungary, this man spent decades spying on communists for the RCMP
As a Communist Party member in Calgary in the early 1940s, Frank Hadesbeck performed clerical work at the party office, printed leaflets and sold books.
Ottawa police identify victim of Christmas Day homicide in Hintonburg, charge suspect
The Ottawa Police Service says the victim who has been killed on Christmas Day in Hintonburg has been identified.
Christmas shooting at Phoenix airport leaves 3 people wounded
Police are investigating a Christmas shooting at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix that left three people injured by gunfire.
Ship remains stalled on St-Lawrence River north of Montreal
A ship that lost power on the St. Lawrence River on Christmas Eve, remains stationary north of Montreal.
Your kid is spending too much time on their phone. Here's what to do about it
Wondering what your teen is up to when you're not around? They are likely on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram or Snapchat, according to a new report.
Bird flu kills more than half the big cats at a Washington sanctuary
Bird flu has been on the rise in Washington state and one sanctuary was hit hard: 20 big cats – more than half of the facility’s population – died over the course of weeks.
6,000 inmates stage Christmas Day escape from high-security Mozambique prison
At least 6,000 inmates escaped from a high-security prison in Mozambique's capital on Christmas Day after a rebellion, the country's police chief said, as widespread post-election riots and violence continue to engulf the country.