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Hello Ward 13
Welcome to my March 2026 newsletter.
A lot has happened in a short period of time. We are watching instability abroad and the ripple effects are real: international relations, markets, confidence, and day to day affordability. It is easy to feel pulled in every direction when the news cycle is constant. My approach is to stay steady, focus on what we can control locally, and keep pushing for decisions that are fair, transparent, and actually improve outcomes for people.
Even with the uncertainty, I have faith in Canada. The escalation involving Iran is serious and the risks feel obvious, not just for the region, but for global stability and the kind of economic shock people feel quickly here at home. I don’t pretend to have all the answers on what comes next, but I do know this: I hope for peace and de escalation, and I hope ordinary Iranians ultimately have a better chance at a safer, freer, more stable life. At the same time, history teaches us to be careful about assuming conflict produces those outcomes. Canada cannot control events overseas, but as Canadians, we can stay engaged, stay informed, and stay anchored in what we do best: looking out for each other and staying practical about how we protect our communities and our economy.
At City Hall, the last few weeks have been a reminder of how important process is. Planning decisions shape neighbourhoods for decades. Residents deserve to see that we are following the rules we adopted, applying planning policy consistently, and making decisions that can be explained clearly in public and are in the interests of the public. When people lose confidence in how decisions get made, it is not just frustration that results, it becomes a barrier to getting anything done well.
If you missed it, here are two stories from CTV that capture what has been unfolding recently: https://www.ctvnews.ca/london/article/watch-councillors-spar-over-controversial-high-rise-proposal-after-neighbours-ejected-for-disrupting-meeting/
https://www.ctvnews.ca/london/article/ferreira-not-backing-off-comment-about-campaign-donations-and-planning-committee-decisions/
I have also been raising concerns about a growing issue in addiction care: for profit, high volume prescribing and dispensing models that operate with weak continuity and limited follow up. Medication can save lives. But when care is built around speed and volume, without a real plan for stabilization, aftercare, and wraparound support, we end up with a system that is incomplete. The gaps do not disappear. They show up in our public spaces, at storefronts, and in the daily experience of residents and workers downtown. The city is then left holding the impacts, even though the key levers in health care oversight sit with the province. I have been advocating to the Province and the regulators for care in substance use disorder to be reviewed, depoliticized and grounded in scientific research.
Here is the CBC piece if you want the full context: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/london/dundas-pharmacy-9.7103862
Alongside these bigger system issues, I have been focused on practical city building work that strengthens neighbourhood life in the day to day. The kind of progress you can see and feel. The kind that builds pride and belonging over time.
This month, there are a few good ways to plug in locally: If you want to bring people together this summer, the Outdoor Movie Night application is open, and there are supports available for neighbourhood events, including equipment lending.
There are also important chances to shape City decisions right now: Council is reviewing whether e-scooters are the right fit for London, and community feedback will matter as staff prepare their report this spring.
In Ward 13, upgrades are moving forward at Richard B. Harrison Park, including a new play area, a full size basketball court, exercise equipment, a community garden, pathway improvements, and new tree plantings, with an opportunity to share input before March 13.
And with the Queen’s Bridge rehabilitation beginning today, it is worth planning ahead for lane reductions and local detours as that work gets underway.
London is at its best when we stay engaged, demand better systems, and keep doing the local work that makes a real difference. Thank you for being part of that.
David Ferreira Councillor Ward 13, London Ontario 519-661-2489 ext. 4013 | dferreira@london.ca
For more information on newsletters, ward meetings, current city initiatives, and other resources, please visit my website at www.davidferreira.ca.
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