NNNow News Blog

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Stanley Pool Open!

It's officially Summer:

Stanley Park Changes

There are several changes happening in Stanley Park south right now: new sidewalks, some new (to us) picnic tables, and a (long overdue) fix and cleanup of the former Stanley Terrace on the south-west corner of the park.

There's also the Sales Centre for the new Brad Lamb "Parc" development:
















Interesting times in the area. More on all of the above to come.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Lighting up Niagara Street



Some residents have voiced concerns regarding light pollution from the new development at 60 - 64 Niagara.

Homeowners living opposite the development have found that new landscape lighting is illuminating their properties as well, and have contacted The Sorbara Group in hopes of working out a fair compromise. The developer has been responding, and we’re hoping for a speedy resolution to the issue.

Have you had an issue with the lighting from this or other developments? Post in the comments and let us know.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Community Updates from Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone

From Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone's Newsletter:

Friday, June 13 - Sunday, June 15: The Taste of Little Italy is here again! At 6:00 pm on Friday, June 13, College St from Shaw to Bathurst will be closed to make way for the popular Toronto festival and will run until the evening of Sunday, June 15. All weekend, restaurants and cafes on the boulevard will bring their delicious foods out of the kitchen and onto the streets. There will be entertainment for both adults and children, including local musical artists, and booths with representatives from local community organizations. On Friday, June 13 at 7:00 pm, please join me and the community for the unveiling of a commemorative plaque in honour of the late Johnny Lombardi in Johnny Lombardi Piazza.

Saturday, June 21: Bloor Street will be host the first annual BIG Street Festival from 1:00-9:00 pm on Saturday, June 21. (Bloor will be closed from Christie to Lansdowne from 9:00 am to 11:00 p.m.) There will be all kinds of activities for all ages including games, music, dancing, demonstrations, arts and crafts vendors, and a great variety of food and drink in one of the most multicultural areas of Toronto. At 6:00 everyone will have the chance to gather in the middle of Bloor St and make a BIG dinner party.

This festival will be the culmination of many community volunteer hours but there's still room for volunteers for all or part of the festival day. For more information about renting a table for dinner or volunteering go to bigonbloor.com/festival, drop by TheStoreFront at 957 Bloor West, or contact Dougal Bichan, Program Coordinator 416.656.4893 dougal@bigonbloor.com or Sid Bruyn, Production Coordinator 416.530.4152, sid@bigonbloor.com.

Also on Saturday, June 21 is the annual Montrose Avenue Street Party. As in previous years, there will be a full and exciting market in the morning and, throughout the day, activities for children and families all along Montrose Avenue, between Bloor Street and Harbord Street. Runs from 9 am - 12 pm.

Sunday, June 22: Please join me and the Liberty Village community as the Liberty Village Market hosts its official opening on June 22 between 9:00 am - 2:00 pm. The ceremony will take place at 11:00 am. I look forward to seeing you there!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Whatever Happened to Stanley Terrace? Update

Update from our friends at City Hall: Plazacorp (the condo owners) have contracted the landscaping and sidewalk work out for Stanley Terrace, and the contractor is scheduled to start on June 23rd.

Fingers crossed...

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Toronto Cycling Map for 2008

Toronto Cycling Map for 2008 is out - we have a couple of copies if you're interested (niagarann@hotmail.com) or contact City Hall.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Strachan Avenue Grade Separation Design Concept Study Open House

An open invite from the city: anyone who is concerned should attend (we'll be there from the association...)

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You are invited to attend an open house on Tuesday June 17, 2008 at 6:30 to 8:30 pm at the Liberty Market Building, 171 East Liberty Street, 2nd floor Tenant Lounge, to review various options to replace the existing at grade crossing of Strachan Avenue and the GO Georgetown/Milton line. The outcome of this exercise will become part of the City of Toronto’s response and input into GO Transit’s Individual Environmental Assessment Study of the “Georgetown South Corridor Service Expansion and Airport Transportation Link between Lester B. Pearson Airport and Union Station”.

The City of Toronto has retained a consultant team led by du Toit Allsopp Hillier-Urban
Design/Architecture/Landscape Architecture with BA Consulting Group-Transportation Planning and Delcan Corp-Structural and Civil Engineering to develop and assess various opportunities and options to replace the existing at-grade crossing of Strachan Avenue and the GO Georgetown/Milton line. Urban Design, “place making” is an integral component to this study. The objective is to enhance the existing built environment and establish a clear identity for the area with Strachan Avenue as a gateway to the waterfront and has a neighbourhood street including a technically feasible alternative to the at grade rail crossing.

Following a brief presentation at 6:30 pm of Tuesday June 17, the consultant team and city staff will be available to discuss the grade separation options that have been developed in an open house format in order to obtain input from invited community representatives, business interests and public agencies.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Whatever Happened to Stanley Terrace?


Rumour has it there's a dispute between the condo developers and the city regarding what used to be the south end of Stanley Terrace. They started work, but it's been sitting ugly and unfinished for over a year now.

Whether it's developers, the city, or some other red tape, the end result is an eyesore for everyone.

Let's hope they're not waiting until the so-new-no-one-knew "Parc" development from Brad Lamb.

Friday, June 6, 2008

A Letter from Adam Vaughan - OMB REFORM BEGINS NOW!

June 5, 2008

OPEN LETTER TO ALL WARD 20 RESIDENTS:

OMB REFORM BEGINS NOW!

A significant step was taken today, in the fight to reform, and in fact, eliminate part of the Ontario Municipal Board’s (OMB) functions. At the Planning and Growth Management Committee this morning, City Councillors approved the motion attached below.

This decision starts a process that will eliminate the Ontario Municipal Board as an as appeal body for Committee of Adjustment (CoA) decisions. As your Ward Councillor and as member of the City’s Planning and Growth Management Committee, I have been working my colleague Councillor Peter Milczyn on this idea and I was proud to support the motion which passed unanimously this morning.

Currently, significant development applications that fall just short of requiring an Official Plan Amendment, a formal re-zoning or are deemed to involve only minor amounts of additional density and/or changes to an approved or existing property or design are dealt with by the CoA.

In theory, the CoA was set up to deal with only minor variances such as; extensions to buildings (enlarged porches, rear additions, or the construction of new basement apartments, etc.). In practice, this work still forms the bulk of the cases heard by the CoA. In recent years however, this has begun to change, especially in Ward 20.

Residents now see large projects that have gone through an extensive planning process and careful debate (and occasionally, have even been settled by the OMB) resurface at the CoA with months of a settlement.

The project is restructured, the community is often ambushed, the political and planning process are undermined, and less informed, less regulated and less challenged developments are re-configured and approved in lightening speed.

Today at the Planning and Growth Management Committee, we set in motion a process to put an end to this form of backdoor re-zoning by instructing staff to take advantage of the new powers afforded council in the City of Toronto Act, and to begin work in creating a made-in-Toronto appeal process that will eliminate the OMB as an appeal route for applicants unhappy with the CoA decisions.

CoA decisions would still be open to appeal, but the body that would have carriage of the issue would be appointed by City Council and would operate within guidelines and rules set by Council. This could include instructions to adhere to heritage guidelines, render judgments consistent with Avenue studies and Part II plans. The new appeal body could also be required to interpret all non-planning city by-laws much more literally as the impact of a development is considered and approved.

This is a significant initiative. It heralds and hopefully begins the process of making Toronto’s planning process much more accountable, community-based and sensitive to local conditions and more importantly a more neighbourhood-based process.

There is still a lot of work ahead and as a member of the Planning and Growth Management Committee, I will do all I can to make sure that the concerns of resident groups are front and centre in how the proposal evolves. As it stands now, a working group of committee members and staff will jointly develop a proposal to bring to the community in the fall. At that time, public consultations, financial impacts and responses from all stakeholders and City diviisons will kick-off a public process to bring this idea to life and a introduce a new approach to planning approvals to City Hall.

This initiative won’t solve all of the problems we have with the OMB or the CoA, but it is a serious start and may be the first step in Toronto becoming a self governing city when it comes to planning.

Yours truly,
Adam Vaughan
City Councillor
Ward 20, Trinity-Spadina



MOTION PGM 16.11

Background

The new City of Toronto Act ushered in expanded powers and responsibilities for municipal government in Toronto. One of the significant new powers which were given to the City is the ability to establish our own Appeal Panel for Minor Variance and Consent applications heard by the Committee of Adjustment.

Section 115 of the Act gives the City the ability to establish its own Appeal Panel and appoint members of the Panel according to its own criteria. The only restrictions the Act imposes are that members of the Appeal Panel may not be Members of Council, Committee of Adjustment members, or City staff.

Recommendations:

1. A Councillor-Staff Working Group is struck to develop the structure for an Appeal Panel to hear appeals of Committee of Adjustment decisions on Minor Variance and Consent Applications.

2. The Working Group should consider;- the staff and financial resource requirements for the establishment of such an Appeal Panel- the fee structure for Appeals- the structure and size of the Appeal Panel- qualifications and criteria for appointment of members to the new Appeal Panel

3. The Councillor-Staff Working Group should report to the Planning & Growth Committee by October 2008. The Executive Committee and Budget Committee should be kept apprised of the work of the Working Group so as to be able to plan for the new Appeal Panel’s implementation.

The City of Toronto, residents and generations of municipal politicians have lamented the fact that the Ontario Municipal Board has jurisdiction over appeals of local Planning matters. The Government of the Province of Ontario has offered the City the ability to take over responsibility for a fair, rule-of-law based Appeal Panel for hearing appeals of decisions of the Committee of Adjustment.

It is important that the City of Toronto grasp this opportunity to demonstrate its ability to more fully take control of the Planning process at the municipal level. A successful implementation of this measure would strengthen the City’s calls for wresting more control over the Planning process away from the Ontario Municipal Board.

The new City of Toronto Act ushered in expanded powers and responsibilities for municipal government in Toronto. One of the significant new powers which were given to the City is the ability to establish our own Appeal Panel for Minor Variance and Consent applications heard by the Committee of Adjustment.

Section 115 of the Act gives the City the ability to establish its own Appeal Panel and appoint members of the Panel according to its own criteria. The only restrictions the Act imposes are that members of the Appeal Panel may not be Members of Council, Committee of Adjustment members, or City staff.