The police will not be allowing any vehicle-based protests in the city, and Stubbs said the police have a “scalable” plan depending on how many protesters potentially arrive in the city.
Stubbs made the comments ahead of a Jan. 23 meeting of the Ottawa Police Services Board. He said police “will be ready” and that the ultimate goal of “all this planning and preparing is to ensure that what happened last year doesn’t happen this year.”
The city has resources, tow trucks, and staffing plans in place, if a protest were to take place.
“Our goal is not to have a vehicle-based protest, and if someone attempts a vehicle-based protest then we will take action to dismantle it fairly quickly,” Stubbs said.
Last year, on Jan. 28 and Jan. 29, the streets of downtown Ottawa were filled with rigs, trucks, live music, and bouncy castles as protesters called for the government to end vaccine mandates and government lockdowns.
“How we’re going to approach a convoy 2.0 is to ensure that the downtown core is safe and that vehicle-based protests don’t occur,” said the police chief.
He added, “if pedestrian-based protests do occur ... it needs to be safe, it needs to be peaceful and lawful. And that’s, of course, everyone’s right to do so.”
The Ottawa Police did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
However, a source involved with the organization of last year’s freedom convoy told The Epoch Times that organizers involved in the Ottawa protest have no plans for a repeat this year in the nation’s capital.
He said he has “heard some discussions about a freedom convoy headed to Winnipeg.”