Was the Emergencies Act needed to stop convoy blockades? What the inquiry has heard
OTTAWA — The public inquiry examining the federal government’s use of the Emergencies Act to clear “Freedom Convoy” protesters from Ottawa streets and several border crossings in February is tasked with answering a central question: Was the decision to invoke emergency powers necessary and justified?
As the commission stretches into its second week of public hearings with testimony from police and city officials, here is how some witnesses have answered that question:
Ottawa Police Service
Supt. Robert Bernier, who oversaw a command centre, said Ottawa police developed a plan by mid-February using existing laws to remove protesters. That plan involved the Ontario Provincial Police securing 34 tow trucks and drivers, promised anonymity, to remove vehicles.