HomeMy WebLinkAboutNovember 3, 2008
Planning & Development
Committee Agenda
Monday, November 3,2008
7:30 pm
Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor Littley
PART "A"
INFORMATION REPORTS
PAGES
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 21-08
SUBJECT: City Initiated Amendment to the Pickering Official Plan 1-37
File: OPA 08-002/P
Requirements for Complete Applications and Pre-Submission
Consultations
City of Pickering
(Pickerina Official Plan Review)
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 22-08
38-56
SUBJECT: Draft Plan of Condominium CP-2008-02
S.R.& R Bay Ridges Ltd.
Part of Block Y Plan 16
City of Pickering
PART "8"
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT REPORTS
1.
Director, Planning & Development, Report PD 37-08
Rinal Enterprises Inc.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1906
57-70
Cougs Investments Ltd.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1913
Ballymore Building (Pickering) Corp.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1915
Dare-Dale Developments Limited
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1916
Planning & Development
Committee Agenda
Monday, November 3,2008
7:30 pm
Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor Littley
Rondev Homes Ltd.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1920
Rondev Homes Ltd.lACPA Corporation Ltd./Bianchi; Vincenzo, Lisa, Gabriale
and Liliana/Digirolamo, Filomena and Anna
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1923
Woodsmere Properties Limited
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1943
Marshall Homes (Altona) Limited/D'Oliveira, Anthony and Allison
Helbling, Gertrude
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1958
Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision
RECOMMENDATION
1. That Report PD 37-08 of the Director, Planning & Development regarding the
Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision 40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915,
40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943 and 40M-1958 be received;
2. That the highway being Monica Cook Place within Plan 40M-1915 be
assumed for public use;
3. That the highway being Holbrook Court within Plan 40M-1916 be assumed
for public use;
4. That the highway being Granby Court within Plans 40M-1920 and 40M-1923
be assumed for public use;
5. That the highways being Stroud's Lane and Treetop Way within Plan 40M-
1943 be assumed for public use;
6. That the highways being Fawndale Road, Stover Crescent, Littleford Street
and Stonehampton Court within Plan 40M-1958 be assumed for public use;
7. That the services required by the Subdivision Agreements relating to Plans
40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915, 40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-
1943 and 40M-1958, which are constructed, installed or located on lands
dedicated to, or owned by the City, or on lands lying immediately adjacent
Planning & Development
Committee Agenda
Monday, November 3,2008
7:30 pm
Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor Littley
thereto, including lands that are subject to easements transferred to the City,
be accepted and assumed for maintenance, save and except from Blocks 10
and 11, Plan 40M-1906; Blocks 28 and 29, Plan 40M-1915; Blocks 23, 24
and 25, Plan 40M-1920; Blocks 42,43,44 and 45, Plan 40M-1923; Block 16,
Plan 40M-1943 and Blocks 35, 36, 37 and 38, Plan 40M-1958;
8. That the Subdivision Agreements and any amendments thereto relating to
Plans 40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915, 40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923,
40M-1943 and 40M-1958, save and except from Blocks 30, 32, 33 and 34,
Plan 40M-1923 and Block 16, Plan 40M-1943, be released and removed
from title;
9. That Council enact a By-law to dedicate Block 26, Plan 40M-1920 as public
highway; and
10. That Council enact a By-law to dedicate Blocks 17 and 18, Plan 40M-1943 as
public highways.
2.
Director, Planning & Development, Report PD 43-08
Zoning By-law Amendment - A 11/08
Grant Morris Associates Ltd.
1789,1795,1801 & 1805 Pine Grove Avenue
1790, 1792, 1794, 1804, 1806, 1808 & 1810 Woodview Avenue
(Part of Road Allowance Between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1
Parts 2,3,5 - 9,11 -13,15,17,18,20,22,24,26 - 30,32,33 &
35, 40R-25121)
City of Pickerina
71-90
RECOMMENDATION
1. That Zoning By-law Amendment Application A 11/08 submitted by Grant
Morris Associates Ltd. to amend the existing zoning on the rear of the subject
properties to permit reduced side yard widths, reduced building height and an
increased lot coverage on lands situated on Part of Road Allowance Between
Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1, Parts 2, 3, 5 - 9, 11 - 13, 15, 17, 18, 20, 22, 24,
26 - 30,32,33 & 35, 40R-25121 be approved.
Planning & Development
Committee Agenda
Monday, November 3,2008
7:30 pm
Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor Littley
2. That City Council endorse the creation of more than 3 lots to proceed by
Land Division for the properties at 1795 Pine Grove Avenue and 1804, 1806
& 1808 Woodview Avenue; and
3. Further, that the amending zoning by-law to implement Zoning By-law
Amendment Application A 11/08 as set out in Appendix I to Report PD 43-08
be forwarded to City Council for enactment.
3. Director, Planning & Development, Report PD 42-08 91-126
Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study: Growing Durham
- Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report,
prepared by Urban Strategies Inc. et ai, dated September 23, 2008
- Phase 5
RECOMMENDATION
1. That Report PD 42-08 of the Director, Planning & Development, regarding
the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report,
dated September 23, 2008, presenting the draft recommendations for Phase
5 of the Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study, be received;
2. That the comments contained in Report PD 42-08 on the Draft
Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report for the Region
of Durham Growth Plan Implementation Study be endorsed, and further that
the Region of Durham and its consultants be requested to make the following
changes:
a) Expand the extent of land identified for future living area around
Kinsale, extending both to the west and to the east to Lake Ridge Road,
so as to create a threshold of growth for a complete neighbourhood;
b) Revise the policy restricting major office development from employment
areas, such that it permits major office development at selected freeway
interchanges, thereby taking advantage of transit and increasing
employment densities;
c) Reconsider the timing of the lands in the centre of northeast Pickering
identified for future employment in the post-2031 period, so as to
maximize the logical and orderly extension of services and
infrastructure; and
d) Implement the timing changes recommended by Regional Planning
Committee on October 14, 2008, to bring lands for future living area at
Planning & Development
Committee Agenda
Monday, November 3,2008
7:30 pm
Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor Littley
the north limit of northeast Pickering from post-2031 to pre-2031, and to
change the lands in northeast Pickering adjacent to Lake Ridge Road
from pre-2031 to post-2031; and
3. Further, that a copy of Report PD 42-08 and Pickering Council's resolution on
the matter be forwarded to the Region of Durham, Urban Strategies Inc. et ai,
other Durham Area Municipalities, the Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure,
and the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing.
(II) OTHER BUSINESS
(III) ADJOURNMENT
CLuJ o~
,1
i
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 21-08
FOR OPEN HOUSE ON
October 21, 2008
AND
PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING OF
November 3, 2008
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PUBLIC MEETING REQUIREMENTS OF
THE PLANNING ACT, R.S.O. 1990, chapter P.13
SUBJECT: City Initiated Amendment to the Pickering Official Plan
File: OPA 08-002/P
Requirements for Complete Applications and Pre-Submission Consultations
City of Pickering
(Pickering Official Plan Review)
1.0 BACKGROUND
· The Planning and Conservation Land Statute Law Amendment Act, 2006 (Bill
51) introduced a number of changes to the Planning Act including a number
of additional planning and development control tools for municipalities.
· One objective of the current Pickering Official Plan Review is to introduce new
policies to use the additional planning and development control tools for
municipalities made available by Bill 51.
Complete Applications:
· Among the new powers provided by Bill 51 is the ability of a municipality to
require studies to be submitted at the time that applications are submitted and
to refuse consideration of applications if these studies are not submitted: in
other words, if applications are not 'complete'. This complete application
provision applies to official plan amendments, zoning by-law amendments,
consents, plans of subdivision and plans of condominium. However, since
the Region of Durham is responsible for consents, policies for consents will
not be proposed by the City.
· To avail itself of these powers, the City must include in its Official Plan the
requirements for 'complete' applications. These provisions should document
the information that the City will need to review an application.
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 2
)
c. Although not specifically enabled by the Planning Act (Bill 51), other
municipalities have extended provisions for complete applications in their
official plans to include site plan applications.
Pre-submission Consultations:
· The Act also provides a municipality the ability to require applicants to consult
with it prior to submitting applications for official plan amendments, zoning
by-law amendments, site plan approval, consents, plans of subdivision and
plans of condominium.
· In order to require such pre-consultation, a municipality must pass a by-law to
do so. The Act does not require a municipality to include such provisions in
its Official Plan, nor does the Act prevent such provisions.
Official Plan Review:
· The Official Plan Review draft workplan sets out a three-year study process to
amend the Pickering Official Plan through a series of seven amendments.
The first amendment listed in that workplan will implement Bill 51 and the
2005 Provincial Policy Statement (PPS, 2005).
· Staff now proposes to take earlier advantage of those Bill 51 powers for
complete applications and mandatory pre-submission consultations by
proceeding with an amendment for this purpose first. The amendment to
implement the remainder of the new powers introduced by Bill 51 and
requirements of the PPS, 2005 will be forwarded using the Council approved
consultation process for the rest of the Official Plan Review once Council has
approved the revised workplan and consultation program.
· Staff is currently reconsidering aspects of the consultation and visioning
aspects of the Official Plan Review program, prior to forwarding a revised
workplan for Council approval.
· Since this amendment is part of the Official Plan Review, the Planning Act
requires that an Open House be held in addition to the requirement for a
Public Meeting. It also requires that notification of these consultation
meetings include the proposed amendment to the official plan.
· Accordingly, an Open House is scheduled to be held October 21, 2008,
commencing at 7:30 pm, a Public Meeting is scheduled for November 3, 2008,
commencing at 7:30 pm, and a copy of the proposed draft Official Plan
Amendment has been included in the notices mailed to everyone who
requested to be advised of Official Plan Review meetings.
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 3
2.0 OFFICIAL PLANS AND ZONING BY-LAW
,)
2.1 Durham Reaional Official Plan
· Although the Region of Durham adopted Amendment #114 (ROPA #114) as
a major part of its recent Official Plan Review, the Regional Official Plan does
not provide policy directives for lower-tier municipalities to implement
'complete application' requirements in their Official Plan, or require
'pre-submission consultations'. .
· The Region has recently adopted its own official plan amendment and by-law
to require planning applications submitted to the Region (i.e.: Regional official
plan amendments, consents, etc.) to be complete and to require mandatory
pre-submission consultations before applications for Regional approval are
submitted.
2.2 Pickerina Official Plan
· Although the current City of Pickering Official Plan provides criteria for
specific stl)dies required to be provided durinq the consideration of different
types of planning applications, it does not specify that such studies must be
submitted at the time that the applications are submitted to the City. It also
does not currently require a pre-submission consultation for planning
applications. .
· Chapter 15 of the current Pickering Official Plan lists various studies that are
required and, in many cases, the specific study requirements.
· In some cases these study requirements need to be revised to conform with
the Greenbelt Plan or ROPA #114. For instance, ROPA #114 applies stricter
permissions regarding uses in Prime Agricultural Areas. These restrictions
affect issues that should be addressed in required studies that support
applications in Agricultural Areas in the City of Pickering.
2.3 Pickerina Zonina By-laws
· The subject Amendment will not have any implications for the Zoning By-law.
2.4 Other Pickerina Bv-Iaws
· The City adopted By-law No. 6763/07 in May, 2007 to delegate to the
Director, Planning & Development, the authority to deem applications for
approval under the Planning Act as 'complete'.
· A draft by-law to require applicants to consult with the municipality prior to
submission of planning applications is attached to this Information Report as
Attachment #3. Staff will recommend that Pickering City Council adopt such
a by-law to come into effect at the same time as the proposed official plan
amendment to require complete applications and mandatory pre-consultation
prior to submission of planning applications.
Information Report No. 21-08
{1
3.0 DISCUSSION
Page 4
3.1 Advantaaes of New Policv Directions
Complete Application
· Requiring specific studies to be submitted as part of a development
application is a tool to strengthen implementation of Provincial policies and
municipal priorities.
· Including such provisions in the Official Plan will offer greater certainty for the
applicants.
· It will also allow City staff to have adequate information and time to
comprehensively assess the merits of an application.
· Requiring studies to be submitted early in the process also contributes to
greater transparency and accessibility to information for stakeholders, as all
documents submitted to the municipality will be available to the public.
· It also front-loads the planning process in that necessary information is
provided up-front, leading more certainty during the process.
· An application would be deemed to be complete when all required information
has been submitted to the City.
· The time periods in which an applicant can appeal to the OMB would not
begin to run until the application is deemed complete by the municipality.
· However, an applicant can bring a motion to the OMB to dispute whether a
notice from the municipality that an application is not complete or whether a
notice has not been received within 30 days of submission of an application is
reasonable.
· In addition, new provisions in the Planning Act restrict evidence before the
OMB to only the information and material that was previously provided to the
municipality with the application. This places the onus on applicants to
ensure that municipalities have all relevant material and expert reports in
support of development applications when submitted. If new information is
still introduced at the OMB, the Board must refer the application back to the
municipal Council to reconsider the application.
Pre-submission Consultation
· Requiring consultation with City staff prior to submission of a planning
application will require earlier engagement with City staff and with agency
staff such as Conservation Authority, the Region of Durham or other
interested agencies, thus allowing staff more time to understand the possible
impact of a proposed development on a range of possible public policy
concerns.
· It offers an opportunity for City and agency staff and other stakeholders to
identify concerns and issues earlier in the process.
· It also provides City staff with flexibility to scope or add to the standard list of
required studies for a complete application depending on the complexity of
the application and to scale the extent of required studies to the anticipated
impacts of each particular application.
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 5 .
:)
3.2 Review of Approaches of Other Municipalities
· As Attachment #1 (Table 1 - Complete Applications and Pre-Consultation
Provisions of other municipalities) illustrates, there are a number of interesting
similarities amongst the approaches of other municipalities to complete
application requirements.
· Most municipalities have chosen to include pre-submission meeting
requirements in their official plans even though it is not required by the
Planning Act. In many cases they have linked that requirement with the
complete application requirements.
· As well, many municipalities have used the pre-submission requirements to
both scope the list of required studies as well as add to the list of studies.
This approach has a great deal of merit, as the scale, impacts and complexity
of each application varies and as such the number and type of studies will
vary as well.
. In terms of the studies required as part of a complete application, most
municipalities list those studies in their Official Plan, while a few include them
in separate schedules or appendices.
. There are generally two different approaches to the list of studies themselves:
one is to use a standard list of studies for all applications and rely on the
scoping provisions to tailor the study requirements; and the other is to have
separate lists for each type of application. Staff recommends the former
approach for Pickering.
. Not discussed in Table #1, but a requirement of many of the municipal official
plan amendments is the requirement that applicants agree to pay for peer
reviews of the applicant studies and legal support of an applicant's case at
court or the OMB. This is becoming a standard practice throughout Ontario,
and there is merit in clarifying the intent of the City of Pickering in this regard
in the Official Plan.
3.3 The Proposed Pickering Official Plan Amendment
. The proposed amendment is attached to the written notices of the Open
House and Statutory Public Meeting sent to City Councillors and staff,
agencies and utilities and anyone who requested notice of any Official Plan
Review matters. The proposed amendment, including informational revisions
and policy changes to the Pickering Official Plan is attached to Information
Report No. 21-08 as Attachment #3.
. The purpose, location and basis of the proposed Amendment and
Informational Revision explain that changes are proposed in order to
implement new powers provided by Bill 51 to require that planning
applications be complete when submitted and include all required information
and studies as determined at a mandatory pre-submission consultation
meeting with City staff and interested agencies. This applies to applications
to amend the official plan or zoning by-law and for plans of subdivision and
condominium and site plan approval. This provides a standard list for all
applications to be scoped at the pre-submission consultation meeting.
. t J
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 6
C)
· Items 1 and 2 of the proposed amendment include reVISions to several
informational paragraphs that precede the policy sections. Informational side
notes are proposed to be amended for most of the policy sections.
· Although the Planning Act does not require a municipality to include
provisions to require a pre-submission consultation in the Official Plan, a
number of municipalities have done so, largely to make it clear to applicants
of the municipalities requirements. Including it in the Official Plan also gives
the municipality the ability to scope the studies that are required under the
complete application provision. This has been added as section 15.2 as
shown in Attachment #2 (also see Attachment #3 for the draft by-law to
require pre-submission consultations).
· Item 3 requires that applicants pre-consult with City staff to establish which
studies must be submitted with their planning applications and that additional
studies may also be required later, during the processing of applications.
· Item 4 lists the types of information that must be submitted with the
application, including a completed application form, record of the
pre-submission consultation meeting, all required fees, a peer review and
legal fees agreement and all required studies.
· Item 5 specifies that applications will be deemed complete once all required
items are submitted to the satisfaction of the City.
· Item 6 lists up to 30 possible types of studies that may be required to
accompany applications, with the studies required for each specific
application determined and scoped in the mandatory pre-submission
consultation meeting with staff.
· Some existing policy sections that address agricultural reports and rural
servicing studies refer to applications for settlement expansions (Sections
15.6 and 15.7) that are no longer permitted by the Growth Plan for the
Greater Golden Horseshoe. Other sections need to be brought into
conformity with the Greenbelt Plan, Provincial policy and Regional policy in
terms of their wording and scope. Items 7 and 8 of the proposed amendment
address these conformity issues.
· Item 7 provides the criteria/objectives for required agricultural reports; while
Item 8 provides the objectives required for site suitability studies required for
proposals for non-agricultural uses in rural areas.
· The Greenbelt Plan provides a minimum distance for development or site
alteration adjacent to key hydrologic and key natural heritage features that
are located within the Natural Heritage System of the Greenbelt Plan. In such
instances, a natural heritage evaluation and hydrological evaluation is
required. Policy change is required to add these studies in addition to an
Environmental Report. Items 9 to 13 of the proposed amendment addresses
these conformity issues.
· Items 9, 10 and 11 explain the criteria for environmental reports while Item 12
introduces requirements for natural heritage and hydrological evaluations for
features within Natural Heritage System lands designated in the Greenbelt
Plan. Item 13 provides a minor exception for farm related buildings.
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 7
""
:'
. Item 14 continues existing required elements to be addressed in an
environmental report.
. Item 15 revises technical wording for studies that would assess the impact of
lands close to known waste disposal sites.
· Item 16 introduces minor technical revisions to current provisions for
environmental site assessments of lands suspected of being contaminated.
. Items 17 and 18 revise wording to add light and safety studies to current
requirements for impact studies whenever noise, vibration, dust and odour
are generated or new or expanded uses are proposed within the impact areas
of such nuisances. Item 19 proposes the inclusion, in an earlier section of the
official plan, of light, as a matter that can impact the enjoyment of people's
properties.
. Finally, Item 20 clarifies that the need for retail impact studies will also be
determined through the pre-submission consultation meeting with City staff.
3.4 Other Implications
. The City should prepare standard terms of reference for studies not currently
addressed in the Official Plan. Such terms of reference lead to products that
meet the requirements of City and agency staff and address an appropriate
level of technical analysis. This can lead to more responsive applications and
quicker application review times.
. It is also recommended that the City prepare a standard fees agreement to
require that the costs of any necessary peer reviews of required studies or
legal and related consulting costs for City support of an application at a court
or the Ontario Municipal Board are paid by the applicant.
. The peer review cost agreement may be triggered for many of the studies that
may be submitted since the City does not have the expertise to review studies
such as environmental, hydrogeology and some other types of studies.
Outside consulting assistance may be required to review such studies. The
application fees however are not sufficient to cover the costs of retaining
outside consulting assistance.
. Requiring an applicant to enter into a fees agreement to cover peer review
costs as part of the complete application requirements provides the City with
resources necessary to undertake a thorough and complete review of each
and ever application.
. Staff will consider whether a fee should be charged for the pre-submission
consultation meetings and protocol established for scheduling and other
administrative aspects of such meetings.
4.0 RESULTS OF CIRCULATION
4.1 Resident Comments
None received to date;
Information Report No. 21-08
Page 8
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4.2 Aaencv Comments
None received to date;
4.3 City Department Comments
None received to date;
5.0 PROCEDURAL INFORMATION
5.1 Official Plan Amendment Approval Authoritv
· Region of Durham approval of this City initiated amendment will be required,
as this is part of an official plan review.
5.2 General
· Written comments regarding this proposal should be directed to the Planning
& Development Department;
· Oral comments may be made at the Public Information Meeting;
· All comments received will be noted and used as input in a Planning Report
prepared by the Planning & Development Department for a subsequent
meeting of Councilor a Committee of Council;
· If you wish to reserve the option to appeal the decision on this Amendment,
you must provide comments to the City before Council adopts any by-law for
this proposal;
· If you wish to be notified of Council's adoption of any official plan amendment,
you must request such in writing to the City Clerk.
6.0 OTHER INFORMATION
6.1 Attachments
1. Table 1: Complete Applications and Pre-submission Consultation
approaches of other municipalities
2. Draft Informational Revision and Official Plan Amendment
3. Draft By-law to require pre-consultation
k~
Steve Gaunt, MCIP, RPP
Principal Planner - Policy
SG:jf
Attachments
Copy: Director, Planning & Development
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Catherine Rose, MCIP, RPP
Manager, Policy
ATTACHM!NTI~~~~"W)
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TABLE 1
COMPLETE APPLICATION
AND
PRE-SUBMISSION CONSULTATION
APPROACHES OF OTHER
MUNICIPALITIES
Table 1- Complete Application and Pre-submission Consultation Approaches of other municipalities.
Municipality ! Is pre- Are studies Can additional I Location of list ! Are there Listing of Studies j Are studies I
consultation scoped in pre- studies be of studies separate lists described?
required in the consultation? identified in I required (in of studies for
Official Plan? pre- OP, Appendix, each
consultation? other) application?
Township of Brock No N/A N/A OP No . Environmental Impact Assessment Partially
. Flood Plain and Erosion Hazard Study
I . Hydrogeological Study
I . Retail Market Study (Economic Impact Study)
. Agricultural Impact Study
. Noise and Vibration Analysis Study
. Air Emissions Study
. Soils Study
. Stormwater Management Study
. Archaeological Study
I . Community or Urban Design Report
I . Municipal Fiscal Impact Study
I . Traffic Impact Study
I . Other studies as determined by Township
Town of Ajax Yes Yes Yes OP No . Planning Rationale Report Yes
. TrafficjTransit Impact Study I (Appendix)
. Parking Utilization Study
. Traffic Management Plan
. Heritage I mpact Statement j
. Archaeologica I Assessment i
. Noise/Vibration Study
. Grading, Drainage and Stormwater Management Plan
. Hydrogeological Report and Servicing Options Report
. Functional Servicing Plan
. Geotechnical Report
. Slope Stability Report
. Master Environmental Servicing Plan
. Environmental Impact/Review Study
. Phase I Environmental Assessment
. Agricultural Assessment
. Air Quality Study
. Contamination Management Plan
. Lighting/Photometric Plan
. Tree Inventory and Preservation Plan
. Urban Design Guidelines
. Sun/Shadow Study
. Master Block Plan
. Cross Section Drawings/View and Vista Renderings
. Park Facility Fit Plan
. Rental Housing Conversion Study
. Retail Impact Study
. Market Impact Study
. Financial Impact Study
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Table 1- Complete Application and Pre-submission Consultation Approaches of other municipalities.
Municipality Is pre- Are studies Can additional location of list Are there
consultation scoped in pre- studies be of studies separate lists
required in the consultation? identified in required (in of studies for
Official Plan? pre- OP, Appendix, each
consultation? other) application?
T own of Wh itby Yes r Yes No OP No
listing of Studies
Are studies
described?
Planning Rationale Report
Settlement Capacity Study
Social Impact Assessment
Functional Servicing Report
Servicing Options Report
Grading and Drainage Plan
Stormwater Management Plan
Hydrogeology Report
Well Impact Study
Soils Report
Geotechnical Report
Noise/Vibration Study
Construction Management Plan
Environmental Impact Study
Phase 1/11 Environmental Impact Study
Natural Heritage Evaluation
Hydrological Evaluation
Contaminant Management Plan
Natural Hazard Study
Subwatershed Study
Tree Inventory and Preservation Study
Refuse/Recyclable Storage and Pick-up Plan
Edge Management Plan
Odour Study
Contour Information (including Conservation Authority Regulatory lines)
Mineral Aggregate Extraction Study
Agricultu ra I Assessment
Statement of Conformity with Minimum Distance Separation Formula
Traffic Impact Study
On-site traffic Management Plan
Parking Study
Parking Management Plan
Haul Route Plan
Retail Market Impact Study
Retail Market Capacity Study
Financial Impact Study
Housing Market Study
Rental Housing Study
Heritage Impact Assessment
Archaeological Assessment
Cultural Heritage Assessment
Urban Design Study
Sun/Shadow Study
Lighting Plan and Signage Study
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Table 1- Complete Application and Pre-submission Consultation Approaches of other municipalities.
Municipality Is pre- : Are studies Can additional Location of list Are there listing of Studies f Are studies
consultation scoped in pre- studies be of studies separate lists described?
required in the consultation? identified in required (in of studies for
Official Plan? pre- OP, Appendix, each
consultation? other) application?
Town of Markham Yes Yes Yes OP Yes . Land Use Planning Report Yes
(but they are . Market Impact Study
mostly the . Urban Design Study
same) . Agricultural Impact Assessment
. Environmental Impact Study
. Environmental Site Assessment
. Servicing Study
. Traffic Management Study
. Archaeological Assessment
. Cultural Heritage Impact Statement
. Land Use Compatibility Assessment
. Tree Inventory and Preservation Plan
. Subwatershed Study
. Noise/Vibration Study
. Community Facilities and Services Needs Assessment
. Development Charges Background Study
. Financial Impact Study
. Parking Utilization Study
Town of Aurora Yes Yes Yes Schedule Yes . Planning Justification Report No
(but they are . Functiona I Servici ng Report
mostly the . Stormwater Management Report
same) . Transportation Study
. Parking Study/Analysis
. Naturai Heritage Evaluation
. Geotechnical Study
. Hydrogeologica I Study
. Tree Preservation Protection and Replacement Strategy
. Landform Conservation Study
. Urban Design Report
. Market Analysis and Financial Impact Study
. Archaeological Assessment
. Heritage Evaluation
. Noise Study
. Soils Report
. Shadow and/or Massing Study
. Lighting Study
Town of Oakville Yes Yes Yes ; OP No . Planning Justification Report Yes
. Heritage Impact Study/Assessment
. Cultural Heritage Report
. Market Impact Study
. Financial Impact Study
. Capital Impact Assessment
. Tree Inventory and Preservation Study/Arborist Report
. Functional Servicing Study/Stormwater Management Report
. T _,urr.,~ Impact Study/Assessment
1"...._:
I
;.n:?A;
?':l
""""<;
o
-:;:3'
~--..n
Page 3
Table 1- Complete Application and Pre-submission Consultation Approaches of other municipalities.
Municipality I Is pre- Are studies Can additional I location of list Are there I Listing of Studies Are studies
I consultation scoped in pre- studies be I of studies separate lists described?
consultation? identified in I required (in of studies for I
I required in the I
I Official Plan? pre- lop, Appendix, each '
consultation? other) application?
I . Noise and Vibration Report
. Geotechnical/Soils Report
I I . Environmental Assessment
I . Urban Design Brief
. Environmental Implementation Report
City of Burlington Yes Yes Yes OP No . Planning Justification Report No
. Stormwater/Functional Drainage Report
. Water & Wastewater Service Report
. Tree Inventory and Preservation Study
. TrafficjTransportation Impact Study
. Parking Study
. Hydrogeology Study
. Agricultural Impact Study
. Market Impact Study
. Financial Impact Study
. Environmental Evaluation Report
. Noise and Vibration Study
. Shadow Analysis Plan
. Park Concept Plan
. Phase 1/11 Environmental Assessment/Record of Site Condition
. Sensitive Land Use Report
. Landfill Impact Study
. Employment/Residential Needs Analysis
. Archaeological Report
. Risk Study
. Utility and Telecommunications Service Report
I Richmond Hill Yes Yes Yes OP No I . Environmenta I/Natura I Heritage Yes
I . Cultura I Heritage/Archaeological Resources
i . Tra nsportation
! . Servici ng/I nfrastructu re
i
i . Financial/Market Impacts
I . Development Impacts (Noise, Vibration, etc...)
! I . Planning Matters (Wetland policy, ORM, etc...)
--L ___
~
~.
;~
Xi<'
~~:?
~
rn"
~tt
~t
::J f
=-, :.-4!
~a
Page 4
~.._i';
,1
,~t
AITA,.(:f",;f~.n,~::U'r"}~ ,"'.. TO
,..!l..$il ~ll1jf~~c,I'" a ff"lf":"~ .
,<I 1- /'f'i'~~
F&EPOFrr# i _ ~ ~
DRAFT AMENDMENT
AND
INFORMATIONAL REVISION
TO TH E
CITY OF PICKERING
OFFICIAL PLAN
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Infor~ational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
,J
PURPOSE:
The purpose of this Amendment and Informational
Revision is to change policies and informational text
of the Pickering Official Plan to set out the
requirements for complete applications and for
mandatory pre-consultation before submission of
applications for Official Plan amendments, Zoning By-
law amendments, plans of subdivision and plans of
condominium, in accordance with Sections 22(5),
34(10.2), and 51(18) of the Planning Act, R.S.O. 1990
c.P.13.
The amendment also sets out requirements for
complete applications and mandatory pre-
consultations for site plan applications.
LOCATION:
This amendment applies to all lands within the City of
Pickering.
BASIS:
On January 1, 2007, the Planning Act was amended
by Bill 51, the Planning and Conservation Land
Statute Law Amendment Act, 2006 to provide a
number of additional planning and development
control tools for municipalities.
Among these is the ability of a municipality to require
studies to be submitted at the time of application and
to refuse consideration of an application if these
studies are not submitted; in other words, if the
application is not 'complete'. However, in order to
avail itself of these powers, the municipality must
include provisions in the Official Plan relating to the
requirements of a 'complete application'. These
provisions are to document the information or material
that the municipality considers it may need in order to
review the full range of matters relevant to an
application. This complete application provision
applies to Official Plan Amendments, Zoning by-law
amendments, plans of subdivision and 'plans of
condominium. This amendment also requires a
complete application provision for site plan
applications.
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
(J
In addition, Bill 51 introduced provisions permitting a
municipal council, by by-law, to require applicants to
consult with the municipality prior to submission of a
planning application. City Council has passed such a
by-law, and this Amendment proposes to add a policy
to the Official Plan to provide for mandatory pre-
consultation for planning applications for Official Plan
amendments, Zoning by-law amendments, plans of
subdivision, plans of condominium and site plan
approvals.
UNDERLINED = NEW TEXT
STRIKEOUT = DELETED TEXT
UNCHANGED = RETAINED TEXT
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT AND
INFORMA TIONAL
REVISION:
Chapter Fifteen - Development Review, of the Pickering
Official Plan be amended by:
1'0 On page 287, by Informational Revision, amending
paragraph three by adding the words "to constitute a
complete application" to the end of the first sentence,
deleting and replacing the remainder of the
paragraph, as follows:
"This Chapter outlines the various reports that are required
to be submitted in conjunction 'with a development
application The reports may be required to address a Yv~ariety
of matters depending of the type of proposal and its location.
Some types of reports that may be required include a
planning analysis of the benefits. and impacts of the proposal;
a retail market anal) sis; a ground'[9\rater study; a noise impact
study; and a tree in v entof} and presen ation study to
constitute a complete application. An application would be
deemed to be complete when all required information as set
out in this Chapter has been submitted to the City. A
standard list of required studies is provided for all
development applications. However. during the pre-
submission consultation with the applicant. staff may advise
of studies from the standard list that would not be required
or may be scoped in extent. or may request additional
information dependent on the complexity of the application."
2
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
7
2. On Page 289, by Informational Revision, deleting
paragraph one of "Supporting Reports" in its entirety
and replacing it with the following:
. Deleting the existing Informational paragraph:
"Depending on the type, purpose and location of a
de"v~elopment application, .v~arious supporting reports
may be required. The policies in this section detail
both general and specific requirements for the
~3sion of .v.arious supporting reports."
. Adding the following new. Informational
paragraph:
"An application is deemed complete when all of the
required items and supporting reports provided in
sections 15.2 to 15.14 are submitted. The policies in
this section detail specific requirements for the
submission of various supporting reports. Other
reports n1ay be required by other sections of tllls
Plan."
3. Deleting policy section 15.2 in its entirety, including
the Informational side note and replacing with new
Informational side note and new policy section 15.2
as follows:
. Deleting the existing Informational side note:
~ITY POLICY
Impact Rp()rts "
. Deleting existing section 15.2:
"15.2 City Council may require the proponents of
de velopmcnt, to submit for re.~:ic V..,T in
conjunctian n1.th development applications,
appropriate itr..,~entory, impact and mitigation
reports associated \\ith one or more physical,
social, ecanomic ar en ~ironmental considerations
such as transportation, noise, .vibration, parking-,
shado ning, ",ind, natural hazards and
resources, heritage resources, market conditions,
finances, recreation opportunities, senices and
infrastructure. "
3
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
d
· Adding the following new Informational side
note:
"CITY POLICY
Pre-submission Consultation"
· Adding the following new policy section 15.2:
"15.2 City Council shall require applicants to pre-
consult with the municipality prior to
submitting an application for an official plan
amendment, zoning by-law amendment, draft
plan of subdivision, draft plan of condominium
or site plan approval. The pre-submission
consultation meeting will be held with the
applicant, City staff and any other government
agency or public authority that the City
determines appropriate. At the pre-submission
consultation meeting;
(a) the list of required studies set out in sections
15.5A or 15.5B may be scoped depending on
the nature of the application. The CityJQ
consultation with applicable agencies, ma~
also prepare terms of reference for any of the
required studies which would set out the
required study information, analysis and
recommendations; and
(b) additional studies may be determined
necessary for submission with the
application based on the nature of the
application. "
4. Deleting policy section 15.3 in its entirety, including
the Informational side note, and replacing with the
new Informational side note and new policy section
15.3, as follows:
· Deleting existing Informational side note:
"CITY POLICY
DtU!(jp,litfrt AlafrCl[f'lttnt"
4
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
)
· Deleting existing policy section 15.3:
"15.3 City Council may require the proponents of
development to submit, and develop in
accordance vlith, one or tHOle short-er-leng-tettfl
management plans controlling itnpacts or
pro-.;iding enhancements, sueh as tree
management, storm-.",-ater management,
construction management plan, edge matlagcment
plan, cn....1ronmental construction matlagement
plan, or a rchabilitatien-~
. Adding the following as an Informational side
note:
"CITY POLICY
Complete Application"
. Adding the following new policy section 15.3:
"15.3 City Council shall not accept an application for
an official plan amendment, zoning by-law
amendment, draft plan of subdivision, draft plan
of condominium, or site plan approval until the
following has been submitted to the City:
(a) a complete application fonn;
(b) any information or materials prescribed by
statute and regulation;
(c) a record of pre-submission consultation;
(d) the prescribed application fee(s);
(e) a fees agreement with the City to cover all
required peer review costs as referred to in
Section 15.4 as well as legal and consulting
costs incurred by the City where the City
appears at the Ontario Municipal Board or
in Court in support of the application:
(f) all studies set out in Section 15.5 for an
official plan amendment. zoning by-law
amendment. draft plan of subdivision and
draft plan of condominium application; and
(g) all studies set out in Section 15.6 for a site
plan application."
5. Renumbering policy section 15.4, in its entirety, and
moving it to appear in the new policy section 15.5C,
below, and deleting the Informational side note to
existing policy section 15.4. Replacing policy section
15.4 with the following new policy section 15.4,
including a new Informational side note, as follows:
5
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
· Deleting existing Informational side note to
policy section 15.4:
"CITY POLICY
A~-.}upjx)rling-R.ep{jrts and P !am-!!
· Add the following new Informational side note:
"CITY POLICY
Peer Review of Required Studies"
· Adding the following new policy section 15.4:
"15.4 City Council shall require all of the matters set
out in Sections 15.3, 15.5A, and/or 15.5B to be
completed to the satisfaction of the City prior to
the City accepting the application as complete.
Once an application is deemed complete, City
Council a) may require a peer review by a
qualified consultant of any of the studies
required in sections IS.5A and 15.5B; and b) will
retain the peer reviewer at the applicant's
expense in accordance with a fees agreement as
provided for in Section 15.3 (e) and c) will retain
appropriate professionals to support the
municipal decision at the Ontario Municipal
Board.. or in Court."
6. Deleting policy section 15.5, in its entirety, along with
its Informational side note, and replacing it with a new
. Informational side note and a new policy section
renumbered as policy section 15.5A. Introducing a
new Informational side note and a new policy section
15.58. Renumbering existing policy section 15.4 as
new policy section 15.5C, as follows:
· Deleting existing Informational side note, as
follows:
"CITY POLICY
uta! OJli.:ia/ .I)/an .f1/1hnd,7iCI~:.J "
6
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
'I
. Deleting existing section 15.5, as follows:
"15.5 When considering applications to amend this
Plan, in addition to other dc-..,Telopment re-..ie-.v
fefJUirem en ts, Cit)' Coi:lfteil sh all co llsidet-the
twerall benefit to the community of the proposal;
accordingly, Council shall,
(a) require all applications to be accompanied
by a Planning ...A~alysis e ;aluating the
proposal against the relevant goals,
objecti-;es, and general purpose and
intent of this Plan; and
. (b) discourage amendments that arc contrary to
the goals, objectives, and general purpose
and intent of this Plan."
. Adding the following new Informational' side
note:
"CITY POLICY
Required Studies for an Official Plan Amendment. Zoning Bv-Iaw
Amendment. [Jraft Plan ~f SubdilJision. and Drqft Plan of
Condominium Approval"
. Adding the following new policy section 15.5A:
"15.5A City Council shall require the following
materials and studies prepared by qualified
experts, as scoped or expanded as a result of the
pre-submission consultation required by
section 15.2, to be submitted at the time of
application for an official plan amendment.
zoning by-law amendment. draft plan of
subdivision, and draft plan of condominium
approval:
(i) a planning rationale report which
considers the overall benefit to the
community and evaluates the proposal
against the relevant goals. objectives.
policies and general purpose and intent of
this Plan, the Regional Official Plan, the
Provincial Policy Statement, the Growth
Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe.
the Oak Ridges Moraine Conservation
Plan and the Greenbelt Plan, where
applicable;
(ii) a transportation study:
(iii) a shadow study:
(iv) a wind study;
7
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
. Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
')
,,::-
(v) a statement of compliance with heritage
conservation designation or conservation
district policies;
(vi) an archaeology assessment;
(vii) a functional servicing study addressing
municipal water and wastewater servicing.
For smaller site-specific applications, a
site servicing study may be required in
lieu of a functional servicing study;
(viii) a drainage and stormwater management
study, including preliminary grading;
(ix) a flood plain impact engineering stud~ as
referred to in subsection 15.31(f))
~) an agricultural report as referred to in
section 15.6;
(xi) a site suitability study as referred to in
section 15.7;
(xii) an environmental report as referred to in
section 15.8;
(xiii) a natural heritage evaluation as referred to
in subsection 15.9; .
(xiv) a hydrological evaluation as referred to in
subsection 15.9:
(xv) a hydrogeology and water budget study;
(xvi) an impact study on potential aggregate
extraction as referred to in subsection
10.8(b );
(xvii) an aggregate extraction assessment study
as referred to in subsection 10.8(b) and
sections 15.33 and 15.35
(xviii) an assessment of lands within 500 metres
of a Known Waste Disposal Site as.
referred to in section 15.12A;
(xix) a Phase I environmental site assessment,
and a Phase II environmental site
assessment if the Phase I environmental
site assessment shows potential for
contamination.. as referred to in section
15.12B;
(xx) a waste disposal community impact study
as referred to in section 15.36;
(xxi) a noise study as referred to in subsection
15.13(a);
(xxii) a vibration study as referred to in
subsection 15.13(c);
(xxiii)a dust and/or odour study as referred to in
subsection 15.13(b );
(xxiv) a lighting study as referred to in section
15.13;
(xxv) a retail impact study as referred to in
section 15.14;
(xxvi) a sustainable development report;
8
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
,.)
(xxvii) an urban design brief which indicates
how relevant development and/or urban
design guidelines and related policies of
this Plan are proposed to be
.i.m.vletnented;
(xxviii) a financial impact study;.
(xxix) an architectural design study; and
(xxx) a raihvay corridor safety study. "
· Adding the following as a hew Inf ormational
side note:
"CITY POLICY
Required Studies for Site Plan Approval"
· Adding the new policy section 15.58, as
follows:
"15.5B City Council shall require the following
materials and studies prepared by qualified
experts, as scoped or expanded as a result of the
pre-submission consultation provided for by
section 15.2, to be submitted at the time of
application for site plan approval:
(i) a transportation study;
(ii) a shadow study;
_ (iii) a wind study;
(iv) a statement of compliance with heritage
~onservation designation or conservation
district policies;
(v) an archaeology assessment~
(vi) a site servicing study addressing
municipal water and wastewater servicing;
(vii) a drainage and stormwater management
study, including preliminary grading;
(viii) a floodplain impact engineering study as
referred to in subsection 15.31(f);
(ix) a grading plan:
(x) a landscape plan;
(xi) an agricultural report as referred to in
section 15.6;
(xii) a site suitability study as referred to in
section 15.7;
(xiii) an environmental report as referred to in
Section 15.8;
(xiv) a report demonstrating compliance with
the Oak Ridges Moraine Conservation
Plan;
(xv) an assessment of lands within 500 metres
of a Known Waste Disposal Site as
referred to in section 15.12A;
9
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
'4
(xvi) a Phase I environmental site assessment,
and a Phase II environmental site
assessment if the Phase I environmental
site assessment shows potential for
contamination as referred to in section
15.12B, and.. if warranted.. a record of site
conditions;
(xvii) a waste disposal community impact study
as referred to in subsection 15.36;
(xviii) a noise study as referred to in section
15.13(a);
(xix) a vibration study as referred to in section
15.13( c);
(xx) a dust and/or odour study as referred to in
section 15.13(b );
(xxi) a lighting study as referred to in section
15.13(b );
(xxii) a sustainable development report;
(xxiii)an urban design brief which indicates how
relevant development and/ or urban
design guidelines and related policies of
this Plan are proposed to be implemented;
(xxiv) an architectural design study;
bLxv) a constnlction Inanagelnent plan; and
(xxvi) a railway corrido'r safety study."
· Renumbering existing policy section 15.4 as
policy section 15.5C, inserting here, and
amending as follows:
"15.5C City Council, in considering any supporting
report or management plan, shall consult
with the relevant conservation authority,
provincial ministry, regional department, and
other relevant group or agency on the
appropriateness and a pproval of the report or
plan."
7. Deleting existing policy section 15.6, in its entirety,
including the informational side note and replacing
with the following new policy section 15.6 and new
Informational side note, as follows:
· Deleting existing Informational side note to
section 15.6, as follows:
"CITY POLICY
L.J"c:;/ OJli...ia! ..D-!tilt 11;rufrd,1u,tts ni:hiti Rttra! LLilrdJ "
10
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
~)
· Deleting existing policy section 15.6 as follows:
~--In accordal1ee-wit-h-seetions 2.26 and 2.30 of-tMs
Plan, City Council may permit certain uscs in
the rural area and expansions to existing
settlements, and may designate ne",,".T
settlements, by amendment to this Plan; ";. hen
considering such applications, City Council
shall require all applications to be accompanied
h) the follo\.\ing, in addition to any other
applicable development re yiev.T requirements,
including the Planniflg-Analysis required by
section 15.5,
(a) an .Agricultural Report demonstrating to the
City's satisfactiatt that the proposed use or
settlement,
(i) -yvill not significantly ad"yTersely affect the
amount or quality of Class 1 to 3
agricultHralland;
(ii) is located and! or operated in
compliance ~ith the l\finimum Distance
Separation Formulae as amended fffl-m
time to time;--and
. (iii) cannot be accommodated on less
significant agricultural lands, in a rural
settlement, or in the urban area; and
(b) ftft- En".nronmcntal Report meeting the
requirements of section 15.9 and
demonstrating to the City's satisfaction that
the proposed use or settlement,
(i) "Jtill not ad"yTersely affect the quality, or
function of natural features and
resources, including ground ~Tater; and
(ii) is energy efficient and cw...it-oftftlentaUy
appropriate in terms of its form, ..,vatcr
usage and St: ~Tage dis~
. Adding a new Informational side note:
"CITY POLICY
Agricultural Areas: Supporting Information to Permit Non-
Agricultural Uses"
11
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
i_
i......}
. Adding a new.policy section 15.6, as follows:
"15.6 .when considering applications for non-
agricultural uses on lands designated
Agricultural Areas, Open Space System or Oak
Ridges Moraine Countryside Areas by this Plan,
or for the expansion of livestock facilities, City
Council shall require an Agricultural Report
prepared by a qualified expert. The Agricultural
Report shall demonstrate. to the City's
satisfaction, that the proposed use or lot,
(a) complies with the minimum distance
separation policy;
(b) minimizes impacts on surrounding
agricultural operations and lands to the
extent feasible;
(c) a need for additional lands to be designated
to accommodate the proposed use;
(d) that the use or lot is not located on lands
which comprise specialty crop areas;
(e) that there are no reasonable alternatives
which avoid agricultural areas; and
(f) that there are no reasonable alternative
locations in agricultural areas with lower
priority agricultttrallands."
8.
Amending policy section 15.7,
Informational side note, as follows:
including
its
. Amending Informational side note to policy
section 15.7, as follows:
"CITY POLICY
Rural Stt:!e)'lJelft,; Areas
Supporting Information for-A liJ1(j f Ha,1tk: Expan.Jion
NonAgricultural Uses"
12
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & I nformational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
./
. Amending policy section 15.7, as follows:
"15.7 In accordance vdth scctions 2.32 and 14.2(h) of
thfs--P-lan,---Gity--C-{}tfficil---flH\y---perm-i-t-tnfno-r
expansions to the hamlets of Crccn"Noed,
Kinsale and Balsam ""ithout amendment to the
Plan; V\-'hen considering such applications, City
Council shall require, in addition to any other
applicable de",,'clopment re\.ie";.' requirements, all
applications to be accompanied b) inf{)rmation
demettstrating to the satisfaction of the City in
consultation \-"yith other rele ,,'ant agencies, that,
When considering the approval of non-:
agricultural uses in the Rural Area, City Council
shall require a site suitability study prepared by
qualified experts. The site suitability study shall
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the City, in
consultation with other relevant agencies. that:
(a) the development will have an adequate
supply of potable water and soil conditions
are satisfactory for the effective operation of
a private \vaste sewage system on each
proposed lot; and
(b) there will not be any adverse impacts on the
supply of water or the soil and groundwater
conditions of adjacent properties."
9. Deleting the Informational side notes to existing policy
sections 15.8 and 15.9 and replacing with a new
Informational side note to revised policy section 15.8,
as follows:
. Deleting Informational side note of policy 15.8,
as follows:
"CITY PObIbV
EItl/if'i51t/1lenta! RtpJrt" ;\Iq; bi: required"
. Deleting Informational side note of policy 15.9,
as follows:
UCITY POLICY
E,;tiffhtlltC,;:a! RcpJr/; Required"
. Adding a new Informational side note for the
revised policy section 15.8, as follows:
"CITY POLICY
13
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official plan
'1
,.
Environmental R~borts Required"
10. Renumbering policy section 15.9 as section 15.8 (a)
and amending new policy section 15.8 (a) as follows:
"15.8 City Council,
(a) using Appendix II to this Plan as a guide,
shall for major development, and may for
minor development, as determined through
a pre-submission consultation in Section
15.2, require the submission and approval of
an Environmental Report as part of the
consideration of a development application
or a public infrastructure project; and,"
11. Renumbering policy section 15.8 as section 15.8 (b)
and amending as follows:
(b) despite section, 15.9, the Guidelines in
Appendix II, may, through the pre-
submission consultation in Section 15.2..
require the submission and approval of an
Environmental Report as part of its
consideration of any other developtnent
application or public infrastructure project.
12. Adding new policy section 15.9, as follows:
"15.9 City Council,
for development or site alteration within 120
metres of a key hydrologic feature or within 120
metres of a key natural heritage feature located
within the Natural Heritage System of the
Greenbelt Plan.. shall require a natural heritage
evaluation and hydrological evaluation to be
prepared by qualified experts. For development
adjacent to a key natural heritage features
located outside of the N amral Heritage System
but within the Protected Countryside of the
Greenbelt Plan, the policies of section 15.8 (a)
, shall apply. "
13. Amending policy section 15.10 and amending its
Informational side note such that the Informational
side note and policy section 15.10 reads as follows:
14
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
9
. Amending Information side note, as follows:
"CITY POLICY
Environmental Reports: ~Sx,-'Cpti(m Exembtion for Agricultural Uses"
. Amending policy section 15.10, as follows:
15.10 Despite Section 15.8 (a), agricultural uses
including the construction of farm related
buildings are exempted from the requirements
of sections 15.8 (b) and 15.9, except for uses
adjacent to Known Waste Disposal Sites, and
subject to the policies of sections 15.8 (b) and
15 .12A. "
14. Amending line 3 of the first paragraph of policy
section 15.11 to remove reference to policy section
15.9, as follows:
15.11 City Council shall require that the
Environmental Report submitted in accordanc.e
with sections- 15.8 ftftd--t5.9 include at least the
following:
15. Renumbering subsection (i) of policy 15.11 as new
policy section 15.12A, amending policy section
15.12A and adding a new Informational side note, as
follows:
Adding as an Informational side note for section
15.12A, the following:
"CITY POLICY
J upporting Information for L:mds within 500 metres of a Known
Waste Disposal Site"
. Amending the renumbered policy section 15.12A
as follows:
15.12A for a Report submitted under section 15.9 City
Council shall require, for lands on or within 500
metres of a Known Was te Disposal Site, Gity
Council shall require an the assessment shattld
of risks from landfill gases and leachate_ to the
satisfaction of the City_ that:
15
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
" J
fi1(a)be ~ carried out by a qualified engineer;
~b )examine~ the potential affects of the
waste disposal site on the proposed
developOlent; and
~c)make~ recommendations on the
construction and phasing of development to
ensure the implementation of the Report's
recommendations including monitoring for
lands on or within 500 metres of a Known
Waste Disposal Site."
16. Renumbering policy section 15.12 as section 15.128,
deleting the existing Informational side note for
existing policy section 15.12 and replacing with a new
" side note for new policy section 15.128, as follows:
· Deleting existing Informational side note for
section 15.12, as follows:
"CITY POLICY
Enf:Je'r(}1fmCft:a! 11f~'di: an Cf}I;ta;lliHat~d-J.ite.s"
. Adding as an Informational side note for
section 15.128, the following:
"CITY POLICY
Environmental Site Assessment"
. Amending renumbered policy section 15.128,
as follows:
"~
"15.12B On lands suspected of being contaminated (for
example: sites where filling has occurred; lands
used for industrial, transportation or utility
purposes; certain commercial properties such as
gas stations, auto repair garages and dry
cleaning plants), City Council shall,
16
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
(a) require the proponents of development to
complete prior to any approvals for the site
an environmental audit a Phase I
environmental site assessment. and a Phase
II environmental site assessment if the
Phase I environmental site assessment
shows potential for contamination, in
accordance with provincial guidelines and
legislation as may be amended from time to
time, to identify anyon-site contamination,
and following completion of the audit
assessment, should contamination be found,
require the restoration of the site to a
condition suitable for the intended uses,
before permitting the establishment of the
uses; and
(b) prohibit residential uses on lands previously
used for automobile repairs, for service
stations, for fuel storage, or for the disposal
of construction waste or debris unless. the
site is first restored in accordance with
provincial guidelines and legislation as may
be amended from time to time.
17. Revising the Informational side note to policy section
15.13, as follows:
- "CITY POLICY
Noise, Vibration, IJust1 Light, Safery and Odour Studies"
18. Revising policy section 15.13 as follows:
15.13 On lands affected by noise, vibration, dust,
light, safety concerns and/or odours, City
Council, shall require ~ the proponent ef
sensitive land uses to complete a an ft6i.se
impaet appropriate study, prepared by a
qualified expert. as specified in subsections a).
b), and c) below to the satisfaction of the City in
consultation with relevant agencies, as follows:
tit DO on lands affected by noise, if----tlte
proposed de velopment is for proposals
for new sensitive land uses within 300
metres of a railway right-of-way or an
arterial road, and for proposals for new
land uses (including. but not limited to.
commercial and industrial uses) that
may introduce new sources of noise
adjacent to sensitive land uses. City
Council shall require the proponent to
complete a noise study. and.
17
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
',- .2
(i) shall require appropriate measures
to mitigate any adverse effects from
the noise identified by the study,
and
(ii) shall only permit development if
attenuation rneasures satisfactory to
the City are undertaken to prevent
or mitigate adverse impacts, which
measures may include, but not be
limited to berming, fencing and the
imposition of building setbacks to
be undertaken as a condition of
approval.
(e) shall require the proponent of de l' elopmcnt
to- complete an appropriate Roise, vibration,
dust or odour analysis prep-ared b) a
qualified consultant, to the satisfaction of
the City in consultation ......"ith reley...yant
agencies, ......\.yhere, noise, \dbration, dust or
odour Ie l' els are anticipated to be
tmaeeeptable.
(b) for proposals for new sensitive land uses in
proximity to sources of dust, light, and/or
odours, and for proposals for new land
uses that may introduce or increase existing
light.. dust or odours, City Council shaD
require the proponent to complete an
appropriate dust:- light.. and/ or odour
analysis, and
(i) shall require appropriate measures to
mitigate any adverse effects from the
dust, light, and/or odours identified by
the study, and
(ii) shall only permit development if
attenuation measures satisfactory to the
City are undertaken to prevent or
mitigate adverse impacts, which
measures may include, but are not
limited to: buffering or imposition of
separation distances between the
respective land uses to be undertaken as
a condition of approval.
18
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
5
(c) shall require the proponent of development
to complete a viDration impact study,
vrepared to the satisfaction of the City in
consultation -......ith relevant agencies, if the
pfflJWSed-develepment-is for$JWosals !hat
would introduce new sensitive uses on lands
within 75 metres of a railway right-of-way,
and City Council shall require the proponent
of development to complete
(i) a vibration impact study, and shall
require appropriate measures to
mitigate any adverse effects from the
vibration identified by the study, and
(ii) a railway corridor safety study and shall
require that all proposed development
adjacent to railways provides
appropriate safety nleasures such as
setbacks, berms and security fencing to
the satisfaction of the City, in
consultation with the appropriate
railway.
19.' Amending Information side note and policy section
10.22 (page 140) to add the effect of light as a
concern, as follows:
. Amending Informational side note as follows:
CITY POLICY
Noise, Vibration, Dust, Light and Odour
. Amending policy section 10.22 as follows:
"10.22 City Council recognizes that people's normal use
and enjoyment of property may be affected by
unacceptable levels of noise, vibration, dust, light
and/or odours; accordingly, Council shall require
proponents of affected developments to
adequately address noise, vibration, dust, light
and/ or odours, and where necessary, to
incorporate into such developments, appropriate
mitigation measures as may be specified in a
. required analysis (see section 15.13)."
20. Revising policy section 15.14 to introduce the need
for a pre-submission consultation and to separate the
required issues that a retail impact study is to address
into subsections i) and ii), as follows:
19
ATTACHMENT #2 TO INFORMATION REPORT # 21-08
Draft Amendment & Informational Revision to the City of Pickering Official Plan
4
15.14 Outside of the Downtown Core, City Council, in
the review of development proposals for new or
expanded gross leasable floor space for the
retailing of goods and services, (a) shall for the
development of 2,500 square metres or greater of
floor space, and (b) may for the development of
less than 2,500 square metres of floor space, as
determined through a pre-submission
consultation in Section 15.2, require a retail
impact study,
(i) to justify the proposed floor space for the
retailing of goods and services, and
(ii) to demonstrate that such additional floor
space will not unduly affect the viability of
any lands designated or developed fQr the
retailing of goods and services.
IMPLEMENTATION:
The provisions set forth in the Pickering Official Plan,
as amended; regarding the implementation of the
Plan shall apply in regard to this Amendment.
INTERPRETATION:
The provisions set forth in the Pickering Official Plan I
as amended; regarding the interpretation of the Plan
shall apply in regard to this Amendment.
20
; M~
;)
DRAFT BY-LAW
TO REQUIRE
PRE-SUBMISSION
CONSUL TATION
(~'\
\. ,I
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF PICKERING
BY-LAW NO XXX/08
Being a by-law to require consultation with the City prior to submission of
applications for official plan amendments, zoning by-law amendments, site plans
and plans of subdivision.
WHEREAS Subsections 22(3.1),34(10.0.1),41(3.1) and 51(16.1) of the Planning Act,
R.S.O. 1990 c.P.13 authorize municipalities to pass by-laws to require land use
planning applicants to consult with the municipality before submitting applications for
official plan amendments, zoning by-law amendments, site plans and plans of
subdivision;
WHEREAS Council wishes to have applicants discuss the merits of planning
applications with City staff before the applications are submitted to the City, to ensure
that the appropriate studies and other requirements are completed to the satisfaction of
the City, prior to final submission;
AND WHEREAS Council wishes to provide City staff with an opportunity to determine
and provide advice about City submission requirements, and identify to the applicant
which agencies and senior levels of government will need to be consulted before an
Application is deemed complete;
NOW THEREFORE THE COUNCil OF THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF
PICKERING HEREBY ENACTS AS FOllOWS:
1. Applicants shall consult with the City's Planning & Development Department prior
to submitting requests to amend the City's Official Plan or zoning by-laws, and
prior to submitting applications for site plans and plans of subdivision approval.
2. Planning applications submitted to the City prior to a required consultation
meeting will not be accepted as Planning Act applications or processed by the
City until after the consultation meeting.
3. If an applicant is proposing to, or is required to, submit more than one
application for planning approval in support of a single development proposal, a
single meeting with Planning & Development staff can satisfy the requirement to
consult.
ATTAC,i1~t~~MT'~ ;; ~O
.... -.' .('..,~.~ \,) ~ .1/ :';~~~~~i1l,'r;,::wy~ I ! .
- 2 -
/
BY-LAW read a first, second, and third time and finally passed this
2008.
day of
David Ryan, Mayor
Debi A. Wilcox, City Clerk
, ~
~...)
CiUI tJ~
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 22-08
FOR PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING OF
November 3, 2008
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PUBLIC MEETING REQUIREMENTS
OF THE PLANNING ACT, R.S.O. 1990, chapter P.13
SUBJECT: Draft Plan of Condominium CP-2008-02
S. R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.
Part of Block Y Plan 16
City of Pickering
1.0 PROPERTY LOCATION AND DESCRIPTION
- the subject lands are located at the southeast corner of the intersection of
Bayly Street and St. Martins Drive;
a property location map is provided for reference (see Attachment #1 );
- the property is currently being developed for the townhouse development;
- the site's topography is relatively flat;
access to the townhouse development will be provided by a driveway off of
St. Martins Drive and a future access from Bayly Street will be provided with
the development of the mixed use portion of the project;
surrounding land uses are:
north - across Bayly Street is the CN rail line and Highway 401;
south - townhouses and apartment building;
east - open space lands being the Douglas Ravine;
west - on the opposite side of St. Martins Drive are detached dwelling
lots that front onto Tanzer Court.
1.1 Backaround
City Council on October 3, 2006 passed By-law 6705/06, which was
subsequently approved by the Ontario Municipal Board, that permits the
mixed use development including the 120 townhouse dwelling unit on the
subject lands which was a result of zoning amendment application (A 06/06);
at the time of the rezoning application the owners of the property had
indicated that applications for condominium would be forthcoming for this
development;
Information Report No. 22-08
Page 2
-)
2.0 APPLICANT'S PROPOSAL
the applicant proposes to establish tenure for 120 townhouse dwelling units
on the subject lands through a common element condominium description
(see Applicant's Submitted Plan, Attachment #2);
freehold ownership is proposed for the future townhouse dwelling units
through a common element condominium for private internal roads, parking,
landscaping and services.
3.0 OFFICIAL PLAN AND ZONING
3.1 Durham Reaional Official Plan
designates the subject lands as Living Areas;
areas designated as Living Areas are intended to be predominantly used for
housing purposes, and may include limited office, retail and personal service
uses;
in consideration of development applications in Living Areas the intent of the
Plan is to achieve a compact urban form, including intensive residential,
office, retail and service and mixed uses along arterial roads and in
conjunction with present and potential transit facilities;
Bayly Street where it abuts the subject lands is designated as a Type A
Arterial Road;
the applicant's proposal conforms with this designation;
3.2 Pickerina Official Plan
the Pickering Official Plan designates the subject lands as Mixed Use Area -
Mixed Corridors Area;
permissible uses within Mixed Use Area - Mixed Corridors Area include,
amongst others, a variety of residential uses including townhouses and
apartment buildings, retailing of goods and services, offices and restaurants;
the Pickering Official Plan establishes a density range of over 30 and up to
and including 140 dwelling units per hectare for development within a Mixed
Use Area - Mixed Corridors Area;
the subject lands are within the Bay Ridges Neighbourhood of the Official Plan;
the subject lands are within a Detailed Review Area and the Bay Ridges
Plaza Redevelopment Guidelines have been adopted by City Council;
Schedule II of the Pickering Official Plan - Transportation System designates
Bayly Street where it abuts the subject site as a Type A Arterial Road;
Type A Arterial Roads are the highest order arterial road and are designed to
carry large volumes of traffic at moderate to high speed;
Bayly Street is designated as a Transit Spine where a higher level of transit
service is to be encouraged;
Schedule II of the Pickering Official Plan - Transportation System designates
S1. Martins Drive where it abuts the subject site as a Collector Road;
Information Report No. 22-08
Page 3
, ~
Ii : I
'-', '....)
Collector Roads are designed to provide access to individual properties, to
local roads, and to other collector and arterial roads;
the applicant's proposal conforms with this land use designation and complies
with the policies of the Pickering Official Plan;
3.3 Zonina By-law 3036
- the lands are zoned "SA-LW', 'MD-H6" and "SA-8" which are residential
zones in Zoning By-law 2520, as amended by By-laws 6705/06 and 6786/07
that permits the development;
- the applicant's proposed Plan of Condominium development complies with
the requirements of the Zoning By-law.
4.0 RESULTS OF CIRCULATION
4.1 Resident Comments
no resident comments received to date;
4.2 Aaency Comments
the Region of Durham and the Toronto Region Conservation Authority have
no objection to the application subject to certain conditions; (see
Attachments #3 to #4);
the following agencies or departments advised they have no objection to the
application: Durham Catholic District School Board; Durham District School
Board; Enbridge Gas Distribution; Veridian Connections; Canada Post; eN
Rail (see Attachments #5 to #10);
4.3 Staff Comments
4.3.1 Site Plan
a Site Plan Agreement has been approved and registered for the 120
townhouse dwelling units on the subject lands;
details pertaining to site functioning and site design/layout for this
development have been addressed through the Site Plan approval process;
construction of the townhouses in ongoing in accordance with the Site Plan
Agreement;
4.3.2 Common Element Condominium Description
the purpose of the application is to establish whether the common element
condominium description is the appropriate form of tenure for this residential
development;
Information Report No. 22-08
Page 4
a common element condominium refers to a residential development where
each dwelling unit is individually owned (freehold ownership), and where
amenities or physical features are collectively owned by the unit owners as
tenants in common;
it is anticipated that a future common element condominium corporation will
be established to permit a community of individually owned homes and
maintain joint services, amenities and physical features of the development
through a common element condominium corporation;
5.0 PROCEDURAL INFORMATION
written comments regarding this proposal should be directed to the Planning
& Development Department;
oral comments may be made at the Public Information Meeting;
all comments received will be noted for consideration by the Director,
Planning & Development Department prior to a decision on the application;
if you wish to reserve the option to appeal the City's decision, you must
provide comments to the City before the Director, Planning & Development,
issues conditions of draft approval for the proposal;
if you wish to be notified of a decision regarding this proposal, you must
request such in writing to the City Clerk;
if a person or public body that files an appeal of a decision of the Director,
Planning & Development in respect of the proposed plan of condominium
does not make oral submission at the public meeting, or make written
submissions to the Director before the proposed plan of condominium is
approved or refused, the Ontario Municipal Board may dismiss the appeal.
5.1 Further Processina
in accordance with City Council policy and Delegation By-law 5391/01 no
further Planning & Development Reports on this application will be forwarded
to Council;
the Director, Planning & Development will make a decision on the application
after all comments from the circulated departments, agencies and public have
been received and assessed;
if appropriate the Director, Planning & Development will issue proposed
conditions of approval for the subject application;
6.0 OTHER INFORMATION
6.1 Appendix No. I
list of neighbourhood residents, community associations, agencies and City
Departments that have commented on the applications at the time of writing
report;
Information Report No. 22-08
2.
Page 5
6.2 Information Received
- full scale copies of the Applicant's submitted plan are available for viewing at
the offices of the City of Pickering Planning & Development Department:
6.3 Company Principal
- the owner of the subject lands is S. R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.;
Stephen Warsh is a principal of S. R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.
Qrf;i7~
Lynda Tftylor, MCIPjRPP
Manager, Development Review
Ross Pym, MCIP, R
Principal Planner - Development Review
RP:jf
Attachments
Copy: Director, Planning & Development
,:)
APPENDIX NO. I TO
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 22-08
COMMENTING RESIDENTS AND LANDOWNERS
(1 ) none received to date
COMMENTING AGENCIES
(1) Durham Planning Department
(2) Toronto Region Conservation Authority
(3) Durham Catholic District School Board
(4) Durham District School Board
(5) Enbridge Gas
(6) Veridian Connections
(7) Canada Post
(8) CN Rail
COMMENTING CITY DEPARTMENTS
(1 ) none received to date
<.1
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PROPERTY DESCRIPTION PLAN M16 N PT BlK Y NOW RP 40R3151 PART 2 TO 5 PART 1
OWNER SR & R BAY RIDGES lTD.
FILE No. CP2008-02
DATE SEPT. 7, 2008
SCALE 1 :5000
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FULL SCALE COPIES OF THE APPLlCANT's
SUBMITTED PLAN ARE AVAILABLE FOR VIEWING AT
THE CITY OF PICKERING PLANNING &' DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT.
THIS MAP WAS PRODUCED BY THE CITY OF PICKERING
PLANNING .t DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT,
INFORMATION ct SUPPORT SERVICES,
AUGUST 18. 2008.
The Regional
Municipality
of Durham
Planning Department
605 ROSSLAND ROAD E
4TH FLOOR
PO BOX 623
WHITBY ON L 1 N 6A3
CANADA
905-668-7711
Fax: 905-666-6208
C:-mail: planning@
Jgion .durham .on .ca
www.region.durham.on.ca
A.L. Georgieff, MCIP,HPP
Commissioner of Planning
If Service Excellence
for our Communities"
ATTACHMENT#2-TO
INFOOM/\JiONREPORT# S?t~ -()8
September 29, 2008
Mr. Ross Pym, MCIP, RPP
Principal Planner
Development Review
City of Pickering
. One The Esplanade
Pickering ON L 1 V 6K7
Re: Post Circulation
Comments to Draft Approval of Plan of Condominium
File: C-P-2008-02
Applicant: S.R. & R. Bay Ridges Limited
Location: Part of Lot 23, BFC (Range 3)
Municipality, City of Pickering
We have received the above-noted 'plan of condominium application for
review. The application proposes a private condominium roadway and
parking for a townhouse development. Site plan and rezoning
applications have been approved by the City for ~he townhouse
development and the units are currently under construction. The plan of
condominium application is only for the private condominium roadway.
The Region has no objection to draft approval of this plan of condominium.
The following condition of approval shall be complied with prior to
clearance by the Region for registration of the plan:
Condition 1: The owner shall have the final plan prepared on the basis of
the' approved draft plan of condominium C-P-2008-02,
prepared by R. Avis Surveying Incorporated, project number
2379-0, dated July, 7, 2008, which illustrates a private
condominium' roadway and parking.
Please provide Dwayne Campbell, the planner responsible for this file,
, with a copy of the draft approved plan and conditions of draft approval at
such time as draft approval is in effect. R E eEl V E 0
Sincerely,
SEP 29 2008
CITY OF PICKERING
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
OEPARTMENT
UJ-.4J
Richard Szarek, Project Planner
Current Planning
cc:
Works Department - Pete Castellan
h :\2-4 \2008\PiCkering\C-p-2008-02\COmmen* DA
100% Post Consumer
onserRvaNiron
for The Living City
September 22, 2008
ATTACHMar:.#-:-~O ,:;2;2 - (J R
INFORi\ttATION RIJ10R~ #
7
VIAE-MAIL AND MAIL
RECEIVED CFN
XREF CFN 38686.01
SEP 2 6 2008 XREF CFN 39234
CITY OF PICKERING
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
DEPARTMENT
Ross Pym
Planning and Development Department
City of Pickering
One The Esplanade
Pickering, ON L 1V 6K7
Re: Draft Plan of Condominium Application No. CP-2008-03
1215 - 1235 Bayly Street {San Francisco by the Bay, Bay Ridges Plaza}
City of Pickering
5. R. & R. Bay Ridges Limited
Dear Mr. Pym:
Thank you for the opportunity to review the Draft Plan of Condominium application submission. We offer
the following comments.
Conditions of Draft Plan of Condominium Approval
Further to our review of the approved Site Plan Application, we offer the following conditions of Draft Plan
of Condominium Approval:
1. Owner to convey the valley land and buffer block to public ownership prior to the registration of the
condominium.
2. Owner to apply for and obtain a permit under O. Reg. 166/06 for the sanitary sewer crossing of
the Pine Creek south of Radom Street, west of Douglas Avenue in Douglas Park prior to the
registration of the condominium.
Please note that this condition may not apply if the proposed sanitary sewer is not required by the
City of Pickering and/or Region of Durham.
3. Owner to prepare and implement a Ravine Stewardship Plan for the valley slopes, to TRCA
satisfaction, prior to the registration of the condominium.
Clearance Fee
By copy of this letter, the applicant is advised that the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority has
implemented a revised fee schedule for our planning application review services. Thank you for providing
the initial application fee. This application is now subject to a $3,450 minor condominium clearance fee.
The applicant is responsible for fee payment and should forward the clearance fee to this office as soon
as possible. Please disregard if the fee has already been sent.
We trust this is satisfactory. Please feel free to contact me if you have any further questions.
Si erely, ~
v H. Jd~R~P' ~RTPI
anager, Development Planning and Regulation
Planning and Development
Extension 5311
cc: Steven M. Warsh, Partner, S & R Development Group Limited (bye-mail)
F:\HOME\PUBLlC\OEVELOPMENT SERVICE~MRtGtGN\Pdmlt<liB~a5 - 1235 BAYLY _5.00C
5 Shoreham Drive, Downsview, Ontario M3 N 1 S4 (416) 661-6600 FAX 661-6898 www.trca.on.ca
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Durham Catholic District School Board
Sept 4th 2008
Ross Pym, MCIP, RPP
Principal Planner - Development Review
Planning & Development Department
City of Pickering
One The Esplanade
Pickering, Ontario. L 1 V 6K7
RE: Draft Plan of Condominium CP-2008-02
S.R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.
Part of Block Y Plan 16
City of Pickering
Please note that the above noted Draft Plan of Condominium will be forwarded to
the Durham Catholic District School Board's Board of Trustees on September
22nd 2008 for consideration. The Board of Trustees' official comments will be
sent to your department after September 22nd 2008.
Planning staff at the Durham Catholic District School Board currently have "NO
OBJECTION" to the above noted plan.
Please notify me if you have any questions or concerns.
s~uours;f l
tr ()- ~~.
Jody Dale
Assistant Planner,
Durham Catholic District School Board
Telephone: 905-576-6707
1-877-482-0722 ext. 2211
C.c. Gerry O'Neill, Manager Planning & Admissions
:jd
650 RossJand Road West, Oshawa, Ontario L 1 J 7C4
Tel 905 576-6150 Toll Free 1 877 482-0722
www.dcdsb.ca
Paul Pulla B. Be., B. Ed., MSe. Ed. Director of Education I Secretary I Treasurer
~~\CT SC~
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Facilities Services
400 Taunton Road East
Whitby, Ontario
L 1 R 2K6
Telephone: (905) 666-5500
1-800-265-3968
Fax: (905) 666-6439
A.nJ~~CHMENT# f~ TO
1M~OiR~\~JrnON nEPORT# .9;1 -- (', S
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August 26, 2008
The City of Pickering
Planning Dept., Pickering Civic Centre
One The Esplanade
Pickering, ON
LIV 6K7
RECEIVED
SEP 0 2 2008
CITY OF PICKERING
PbANN'NQ & O~V~l.OPMI!NT
OEf3AAfMmNf
Attention: Mr. Ross Pym
Dear Mr. Pym
RE: Draft Plan of Condominium CP-2008-02
S. R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.
Part of Block Y Plan 16
City of Pickering
Staff has reviewed the infonnation on the above noted application and has
the following comlnents...
1. Approxilnately 55 clen1entary pupils could be generated by the
above noted application.
2. It is intended that any pupils generated by the above noted plan be
accomtnodated within an existing school facility.
3. Under the mandate of the Durham District School Board, staffhas
no objections.
Yours truly,
<:
cJCUl~~
Christine Nancekivell,
Senior Planner
I:\PROPLAN\DA T A\PLNG\SU8'\CP200S-02. DOC
I\TTACHMENT#J TO .1 5?
k"5iE".~~D"\? # l'" '?;/ t.., ~
!f'{B:~'~::J'~~ ~ ' ..- :~:
ENBRIDGE
ENBRIDGE GAS DISTRIBUTION INC.
SEPTEMBER 3, 2008
500 Consumers Road
North York ON M2J 1 P8
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 650
Scarborough ON M1K 5E3
ROSS PYM, MCIP, RPP
PRINCIPAL PLANNER
CITY OF PICKERING
DEVELOPMENT REVIEW
PICKERING CIVIC COMPLEX
ONE THE ESPLANADE
PICKERING ON L 1V 6K7
RECE'"EO
St.? 0 8 1008
\c\<.EA\~$
C\T'i OF ~E\JE.LOPME
PLANN\~~:A~'nJ\E.N"
Dear Sirs:
RE: DRAFT PLAN OF CONDOMINIUM
S.R. & R. BAY RIDGES LTD.
PART OF BLOCK Y PLAN 16
CITY OF PICKERING
Enbridge Gas Distribution requests that the following conditions be included in the
subdivision agreement:
1 . The developer is responsible for preparing a composite utility plan that allows
for the safe installation of all utilities, including required separation between
uti I ities.
2. Streets are to be constructed in accordance with composite utility plans
previously submitted and approved by all utilities.
3. The developer shall grade all streets to final elevation prior to the installation of
the gas lines and provide Enbridge Gas Distribution Inc. with the necessary
field survey information for the installation of the gas lines.
4. It is understood that the natural gas distribution system will be installed within
the proposed road allowance. In the event that this is not possible, easements
will be provided at no cost to Enbridge Gas Distribution Inc.
~,(~~<>~'.,Ci"~MENT r,lTO
!j'=.' , <.~ ,;/, '") .' L' K
R~~:POt~ 9 1# cxC>< ,. ,
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I
Enbridge also requests that the owner / developer contact our Regional Sales
Development department at their earliest convenience to discuss installation and
clearance requirements for main, service and metering facilities.
Yours truly,
",-- ..
I.~
Tony Ciccone
Manager, Network Analysis
Distribution Planning
(416) 758-7966
(416) 758-4374 - FAX
TC:
-2008 MON 01:34 PM veridian
FAX NO.
PI 02
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AlTACHMENT# ~" TO
C ""J., , ') _ /) 0'
REPORT# ><.;x; ....' Q..
.~
VERIDI.AN'
CONNECTIONS
DEVELOPMENT APPLICATION :REVIEW
I PROJECT NAME:
I ADDRESS/PLAN:
I MUNICIPALITY:
S.R. & R. B~.y Ridges Ltd. - D.raft Plan of COlldo11'lllliLLlTl.
Part of Block 'Y'~ Phm 16
i
i
Pickering
REF NO.:
CP -2008-02
SD'BMISSION .DATE:
A~lgllSt 13,. 2008
The following is ;11\ overvil::w of !:hI:: gcne1,:1l1:equireml::nts the Applic;\Ilt is Iikdy to meet in aider to obl:ain a complete
clecr3~cal power supply system to tIlis site: and W:ilhil1 the site whett subdivision in t;01ne for.m is .involved. The
COl111nen t~ below nrc ba~ed 011 preHrninary ,lnfo1nlal~()11 Dilly lind ate $l.lbject 1:0 revision. In all cases V eddiall's ~tandard
Conditions of Sel\T1c;:e doctU'nc:nt set~ Ol.lt the ttc..luirelnents, tetlllJ and condit.iDl1~ for the provision of el~(.:tdc service.
Tbh review docs 1101: constil:utc 4111 Offer to Connect.
1. Other:
The legal pbn is O'L:~t:di\ted. TJle latesl: ~hould ~how a bla.nlcet eas~mellC Q?arts 128-256 no longer ,~ecded). Site is
~d.rcady b-1.111t and t;:ncr~td,
Tcchnic::;1l Repre~el1tative:
'Telcphoflr:::
Jotdo.n You.ng
Ext. 3242
Ib-
PP/df
P: \dfdzzell\Dcvelopmcll( Applicarjoli Revitw\Pickenng\2008\S.R.&R. Bay Ridges Ltd. . ParI; of Block y~ Plan 16.do(
r dX ~~II t.. D~
"'%~or;;);;);rOItJItJ
ItJO'~~'ItJO 1tJ~.ItJ~
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~rrACHMENT#.~TO
f~EPORY:# bI';?' () t:/
,5
CANADA
POST
~.
POST,ES
CAN'ADA
Derivery Planning PH (416) 2~5-5385
1860 Midra~d Ave FX (416) 755..9800
Scarborough On M1P SA1
ugust 19\ 2008
I
ity of Pickering
Panning & Development Department
1 The Esplanade
P ckering On L 1V 6K7
Afention: Ross Pym
Re: Draft Plan of Condominium C.P-200S-02
S~ R. & R. Bay Ridges Ltd.
Part of Block Y Plan 16
! City of Pickering
I
Dear Ross~
Ttank you for the opportunity to comment on the above noted plan.
As a condition of draft approval, Canada Post requires that the owner/developer
cdmply with the following conditions:
I '
oM The owner/developer agrees to include on all offers of purchase and sale, a
st~tement that advises the prospective purchaser that mail delivery will be from a
dJsignated Community MaHbox.
I
- The owner/developer wiU be responsible for notifying the purchaser of the exact
Cbmmunity Mailbox locations prior to the closing of any home sale.
I
- The owner/devefoper will consult with Canada Post Corporation to determine
sJitable locations for the placement of Community Mailbox and to indicate these
fo~ations on the appropriate servicing plans.
T~e owner/developer will provide the following for each Community Mailbox site
a1d include these requirements on the appropriate servicing plans:
-1n appropriately sized sidewalk section (concrete pad) as per municipal
standards, to place the Community Mailboxes on.
.lny required walkway across the boulevard, as per municipal standards.
I
- htny required curb depressions for wheelchair access.
............. ~...,..... LI':::J
rl
. - ~he owner/developer further agrees to determine and provide a suitable
tf.mporary Community Mailbox location(s), which may be utilized by Canada Post
u til the curbs, sidewalks and final grading have been completed at the
p rmanent Community Mailbox locations. This will enable Canada Post to
p, ovidemail delivery to the new residences as soon as the homes are occupied.
ATIACHMEN'f '#,,2......-. TO
?~"7. ~!f-;^. . t~"I~'.JlJ. Pl. <). /) R
it'(S:S""\Ji't ~ * 0< t;7< c...
Should you require further, information, please do not hesitate to contact me at
t~e above mailing address or telephone number.
!
I
SIncerely,
. I
/~/~:.~J
D~bbie Greenwood
DFlivery Planner
Canada Post
I
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f1~ rTli~""Jh :'~ t o'~ r '# ,.t...J:-- . ~I
F~EPOR.T1t
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Pym, Ross
From:
Sent:
To:
Subject:
Attachments:
NICK.COLEMAN@cn.ca
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 2:53 PM
Pym, Ross
CP-2008-02, SR&R Bay Ridges Ltd '
Easement in gross.pdt; Railway Noise Consultants.pdt
Ross, CN has reviewed the proposed draft plan, and has no objections in principal, as the residences will be fairly
removed from the railway corridor. However, there does not appear to have been a noise assessment undertaken to
ensure compliance with MOE and CN criteria. As a minimum, eN will be seeking the attached environmental easement
on title to units within 300 metres of the railway right-of-way.
Regards,
Nick
Nick Coleman, B.Sc.
Jnager, Community Planning & Development
eN Business Development & Real Estate
1 Administration Road
Concord, ON L4K 1 B9
T. 905-760-5007, F. 905-760-5010
nick.coleman@cn.ca
1
~ITACHMENT#,~TO
REPOR~r# ;I;; ~. c) R
j'"\
''"''''/
SCHEDULE"B"
TRANSFER OF EASEMENT
(To be attached to Form 1 - Transfer/Deed of Land)
(7) Interest/Estate Transferred
WHEREAS the Transferor is the owner of those lands located in the City of *
and Province of Ontario, being composed of * and herein referred to as the "Easement
Lands";
IN CONSIDERATION OF the sum of TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) now paid by
the Transferee to the Transferor (the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby
acknowledged by the Transferor), the Transferor transfers to the Transferee, its successors
and assigns, a permanent and perpetual easement or right and interest in the nature of a
permanent and perpetual easement over, under, along and upon the whole of the Easement
Lands and every part thereof for the purposes of discharging, emitting or releasing thereon or
otherwise affecting the Easement Lands at any time during the day or night with noise,
vibration and other sounds of every nature and kind whatsoever arising from, out of or in
connection with any and all present and future railway facilities and operations upon the
Dominant Tenement and including, without limitation, all such facilities and operations
presently existing and all future renovations, additions, expansions and other changes to such
facilities and all future expansions, extensions, increases, enlargement and other changes to
such operations (herein collectively called the "Operational Emissions").
THIS Easement and all rights and obligations arising from same shall extend
to, be binding upon and enure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective officers,
directors, shareholders, agents, employees, servants, tenants, sub-tenants, customers,
licencees and other operators, occupants and invitees and each of its or their respective heirs,
executors, legal personal representatives, successors and assigns. This Easement shall be read
with all changes of gender and number as required by the context in each case and the
covenants and obligations of each party hereto, if more than one person, shall be joint and
several.
Easement in gross.
Citlf c~
REPORT TO
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
COMMITTEE
Report Number: PD 37-08
Date: November 3, 2008
From:
Neil Carroll
Director, Planning & Development
Subject:
Rinal Enterprises Inc.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1906
Cougs Investments Ltd.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1913
Ballymore Building (Pickering) Corp.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1915
Dare-Dale Developments Limited
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1916
Rondev Homes Ltd.
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1920
Rondev Homes Ltd. I ACPA Corporation Ltd. I Bianchi; Vincenzo, Lisa,
Gabriale and Liliana I Digirolamo, Filomena and Anna
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1923
Woodsmere Properties Limited
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1943
Marshall Homes (Altona) Limited I D'Oliveira, Anthony and Allison
Helbling, Gertrude
Plan of Subdivision 40M-1958
Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision
Recommendation:
1. That Report PD 37-08 of the Director, Planning & Development regarding the
Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision 40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915,
40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943 and 40M-1958 be received;
2. That the highway being Monica Cook Place within Plan 40M-1915 be assumed
for public use;
3. That the highway being Holbrook Court within Plan 40M-1916 be assumed for
public use;
4. That the highway being Granby Court within Plans 40M-1920 and 40M-1923 be
assumed for public use;
Report PO 37-08
November 3, 2008
. t,
Subject: Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision
H 40M-1906/40M-1913/40M-1915/40M-1916
../ 40M-1920/40M-1923/40M-1943/40M-1958
Page 2
5. That the hig~ways being Stroud's Lane and Treetop Way within Plan 40M-1943
be assumed for public use;
6. That the highways being Fawndale Road, Stover Crescent, Littleford Street and
Stonehampton Court within Plan 40M-1958 be assumed for public use;
7. That the services required by the Subdivision Agreements relating to Plans
40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915, 40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943
and 40M-1958, which are constructed, installed or located on lands dedicated to,
or owned by the City, or on lands lying immediately adjacent thereto, including
lands that are subject to easements transferred to the City, be accepted and
assumed for maintenance, save and except from Blocks 10 and 11, Plan
40M-1906; Blocks 28 and 29, Plan 40M-1915; Blocks 23, 24 and 25, Plan
40M-1920; Blocks 42,43,44 and 45, Plan 40M-1923; Block 16, Plan 40M-1943
and Blocks 35, 36, 37 and 38, Plan 40M-1958;
8. That the Subdivision Agreements and any amendments thereto relating to Plans
40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915, 40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943
and 40M-1958, save and except from Blocks 30, 32, 33 and 34, Plan 40M-1923
and Block 16, Plan 40M-1943, be released and removed from title;
9. That Council enact a By-law to dedicate Block 26, Plan 40M-1920 as public
highway; and
10. That Council enact a By-law to dedicate Blocks 17 and 18, Plan 40M-1943 as
public highways.
Executive Summary: The City entered into Subdivision Agreements with the
above-noted developers for the development of Plans 40M-1906, 40M-1913,
40M-1915, 40M-1916, 40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943 and 40M-1958. As all works
and services within these plans have been completed to the satisfaction of City staff, it
is appropriate to assume the roads and services within these plans under the
jurisdiction of the City and release the developers from the provisions of the Subdivision
Agreements.
Financial Implications: There are no new financial implications to the City as a
result of this recommendation.
Sustainability Implications: The final assumption of these plans of subdivision is
an administrative process that legally concludes the City's acquisition of necessary
roads and other infrastructure. It does not directly impact the City's sustainability
initiatives.
Report PO 37-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision
40M-1906/40M-1913/40M-1915/40M-1916
40M-1920/40M-1923/40M-1943/40M-1958
Page 3
..}
Background: The City entered into Subdivision Agreements with the above-noted
developers for the development of Plans 40M-1906, 40M-1913, 40M-1915, 40M-1916,
40M-1920, 40M-1923, 40M-1943 and 40M-1958. As the developers have now
completed all works and services to the satisfaction of City staff, it is appropriate to
assume the roads and services within these Plans, save and except from Blocks 10 and
11, Plan 40M-1906; Blocks 28 and 29, Plan 40M-1915; Blocks 23, 24 and 25, Plan
40M-1920; Blocks 42, 43, 44 and 45, Plan 40M-1923; Block 16, Plan 40M-1943 and
Blocks 35, 36, 37 and 38, Plan 40M-1958.
It should be noted that the roads fronting the lots/blocks within Plans 40M-1906 and
40M-1913 are located within an adjacent Plan of Subdivision. Accordingly, for the
purposes of this report, authorization is being requested for the release and removal of
the Subdivision Agreement and its amendments from title only.
Further, it is also appropriate to release the developers from the provisions of their
respective Agreements with the City, as follows:
1. Plan 40M-1906
Subdivision Agreement dated April 21, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T837788;
2. Plan 40M~1913
Subdivision Agreement dated August 5, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T847917;
3. Plan 40M-1915
Subdivision Agreement dated August 5, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T845992;
4. Plan 40M-1916
Subdivision Agreement dated April 7, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T847285;
5. Plan 40M-1920
Subdivision Agreement dated June 23, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T862135;
6. Plan 40M-1923
Subdivision Agreement dated June 23, 1997 and registered as Instrument No.
L T862151 (save and except from Blocks 30, 32, 33 and 34);
7. Plan 40M-1943
Subdivision Agreement dated April 6, 1998, registered as Instrument No.
L T882394 (save and except from Block 16); and
8. Plan 40M-1958
Subdivision Agreement dated February 1, 1999 and registered as Instrument No.
L T893875.
Report PD 37-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Final Assumption of Plans of Subdivision
40M-1906/40M-1913/40M-1915/40M-1916
40M-1920/40M-1923/40M-1943/40M-1958
Page 4
Attachments:
1. Location Map - Plan 40M-1906
2. Location Map - Plan 40M-1913
3. Location Map - Plan 40M-1915
4. Location Map - Plan 40M-1916
5. Location Map - Plan 40M-1920
6. Location Map - Plan 40M-1923
7. Location Map - Plan 40M-1943
8. Location Map - Plan 40M-1958
9. Draft By-law to dedicate Block 26, Plan 40M-1920 as public highway
10. Draft By-law to dedicate Blocks 17 and 18, Plan 40M-1943 as public highways
Prepared By:
Approved/Endorsed By:
N
Director, Planning & Development
t( "0~r-t
Denise Bye, Supervisor
Property & Development Services
DB:bg
Copy: Chief Administrative Officer
Recommended for the consideration
of Pickering City CouncUw.
if
,""
Recommendation approved:
Chief Administrative Officer
Director, Corporate Services & Treasurer
Director, Office of Sustainability
Director, Operations & Emergency Services
Director, Planning & Development
City Clerk
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PROPERTY DESCRIPTION 40M-1906
OWNER VARIOUS
FILE No. SUBDIVISION COMPLETION AND ASSUMPTION
DATE SEPT. 2, 2008 DRAWN BY JB
SCALE 1 :5000 CHECKED BY RP
l'
Data ~our<i:es:
C Teronet Enterprises Inc. and its suppliers. All rights Reserved. Not 0 plan of survey.
c 2005 MPAC and its suppliers. All rights Reserved. Not 0 plan of Survey.
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SCALE 1 :5000 CHECKED BY DB
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Roadded.506
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THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF PICKERING
BY-LAW NO.
Being a By-law to dedicate Block 26, Plan
40M-1920 as public highway.
WHEREAS The Corporation of the City of Pickering is the owner of
Block 26, Plan 40M-1920 and wishes to dedicate it as public highway.
NOW THEREFORE, the Council of The Corporation of the City of
Pickering HEREBY ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:
1. Block 26, Plan 40M-1920 is hereby dedicated as public highway
(Granby Court).
BY-LAW read a first, second and third time and finally passed this 17th
day of November, 2008.
I'
J.
David Ryan, May
Debi A. Wilcox, City Clerk
Roadded. 507
tJ
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF PICKERING
BY-LAW NO.
Being a By-law to dedicate Blocks 17 and 18,
Plan 40M-1943 as public highways.
WHEREAS The Corporation of the City of Pickering is the owner of
Blocks 17 and 18, Plan 40M-1943 and wishes to dedicate them as
public highways.
NOW THEREFORE, the Council of The Corporation of the City of
Pickering HEREBY ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:
1. Block 17, Plan 40M-1943 is hereby dedicated as public highway
(Treetop Way).
2. Block 18, Plan 40M-1943 is hereby dedicated as public highway
(Stroud's Lane).
BY-LAW read a first, second and third time and finally -passed this 17th
day of November, 2008.
Debi A. Wilcox, City Clerk
Citlf 01
REPORT TO
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
COMMITTEE
Report Number: PD 43-08
Date: November 3, 2008
I, , "1
f
PICKERING
From:
Neil Carroll
Director, Planning & Development
Subject:
Zoning By-law Amendment - A 11/08
Grant Morris Associates Ltd.
1789, 1795, 1801 & 1805 Pine Grove Avenue
1790,1792, 1794, 1804, 1806, 1808 & 1810 Woodview Avenue
(Part of Road Allowance Between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1
Parts 2,3,5 - 9, 11 - 13,15, 17, 18,20,22,24,26 - 30,32,33 &
35,40R-25121)
City of Pickering
Recommendation:
1. That Zoning By-law Amendment Application A 11/08 submitted by Grant Morris
Associates Ltd. to amend the existing zoning on the rear of the subject properties
to permit reduced side yard widths, reduced building height and an increased lot
coverage on lands situated on Part of Road Allowance Between Lots 34 & 35,
Concession 1, Parts 2,3,5 - 9,11 -13,15,17,18,20,22,24,26 - 30,32,33 &
35, 40R-25121 be approved.
2. That City Council endorse the creation of more than 3 lots to proceed by Land
Division for the properties at 1795 Pine Grove Avenue and 1804, 1806 & 1808
Woodview Avenue; and
3. Further, that the amending zoning by-law to implement Zoning By-law
Amendment Application A 11/08 as set out in Appendix I to Report PO 43-08 be
forwarded to City Council for enactment.
Executive Summary: The applicant proposes to amend the existing zoning on the
rear of the subject properties to permit reduced side yard widths & building height, and
increased lot coverage (see Location Map and Applicant's Submitted Plan, Attachments
#1 & 2).
The application involves 11 properties owned by 7 owners, and is represented by
Grant Morris Associates Ltd. The owners request that the zoning on the rear portion of
the subject properties be changed to reflect development standards similar to those
recently established for adjacent properties fronting Rockwood Drive. The owners may
apply in the future for land severances to sever the rear of their properties to create
new lots fronting onto Rockwood Drive. Rockwood Drive has recently been extended to
connect the road in its entirely from Hogarth Street to Pine Grove Avenue.
. Report PD 43-08
November 3, 2008
I II ,Subje~t) Zoning By-law Amendment Application (A 11/08)
~"-
Page 2
This application represents orderly development and a zoning similar to that which
exists in the neighbourhood.
It is recommended that this application be approved and the draft by-law be forwarded
to City Council for enactment.
Financial Implications: No direct costs to the City are anticipated as a result of the
proposed zoning by-law amendment.
Sustainability Implications: The proposed zoning will enable future severances to
create new building lots which will utilize existing services found along Rockwood Drive.
Background:
1.0 Comments Received
1.1 Before the Information Meeting (see Information Report Attachment #3)
The Regional Municipality of Durham - no concerns
The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority - no objections
Veridian Connections - no objections
one comment was received from a neighbouring resident addressing
concerns relating to existing on-site conditions;
1.2 At the September 2, 2008, Information Meeting
none received (see Minutes, Attachment #4);
1.3 Following the Information Meeting
none received;
Report PD 43-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Zoning By-law Amendment Application (A 11/08)
Page 3
,3
2.0 Discussion:
2.1 Proposed zoning by-law will ensure new development along the
undeveloped portion of Rockwood Drive will be in character with the
existing neighbourhood
The applicant requests that the zoning provIsions of By-law 6005/02, which
applies to the lands south of the subject properties, be extended and applied to
the subject properties with the exception of the front yard depth.
The applicant has requested to retain a 7.5 metre front yard depth for two
reasons: the lots are deep, on average ranging between 50 to 60 metres in
depth, as well as existing dwellings constructed along Rockwood Drive have
minimum front yard depths of 7.5 metres or greater. This has resulted in the
development of its own unique character throughout the neighbourhood.
Staff supports the applicant's request as it will permit development reflective of
the existing character of the neighbourhood.
Staff also recommends an increased lot coverage which is reflective of current
subdivision standards used by the City.
An Architectural Design Statement has not been submitted by the applicant;
however, it will be required for all new lots created through the Land Severance
application process. The Architectural Design Statement will ensure that new
dwellings constructed will be in character with the existing neighbourhood.
2.2 Planning Staff support land severance applications which may have the
potential to create in excess of three additional lots for specific properties
subject of this Zoning Amendment Application
There are two property owners which have lands capable of creating more than
three additional lots (1795 Pine Grove Avenue & 1804, 1806 & 1808 Woodview
Avenue). If an applicant proposes to create more than three additional lots, the
City of Pickering's Official Plan requires the applicant to undertake a Draft Plan
of Subdivision unless the applicant receives Council endorsement. If Council
endorsement is received, the applicant is entitled to sever their property through
Land Division. The Subdivision process is a process that is generally more
time-consuming and is more expensive than a Land Severance process.
The subject properties are connected by an internal road (Rockwood) and are
situated within an infill area, therefore it is reasonable that additional lots be
created by land severance.
Report PD 43-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Zoning By-law Amendment Application (A 11/08)
4
Page 4
2.3 Existing site conditions are being monitored by City Staff
Neighbouring residents expressed concerns pertaining to the existing on-site
conditions of the subject properties. Their concerns included: debris, grading &
seeding of surrounding properties, lighting along Rockwood Drive and the status
of an existing large shed.
These matters of concern are ongoing issues within the confines of the subject
properties which are being monitored by City Staff, and are not matters subject
. of this Zoning Amendment Application.
The large shed which currently exists on the east side of Rockwood Drive (as
part of 1792 Woodview Avenue) is a matter that will be addressed through the
Land Severance process if a severance is proposed to separate the existing
shed from the existing dwelling at 1792 Woodview Avenue. The zoning by-law
for the City of Pickering does not permit accessory structures (such as sheds,
gazebos, garages etc.) in a residential zone without a main dwelling. As one of
the conditions of severance a stand-alone existing shed will be required to be
removed from a severed lot.
2.4 By-law to be forward to Council
The attached by-law schedule included as Appendix I to this report implements
Staff's recommendation to approve the applicant's request. A freestanding by-
law with a new schedule is proposed. It is recommended that the attached
freestanding by-law and schedules be forwarded to Council for enactment should
Council approve this application.
3.0 Applicant's Comments
The owner is aware of and supports the recommendations of this report.
APPENDIX:
Appendix I: Draft Implementing Zoning By-law
Attachments:
1 . Location Map
2. Applicant's Submitted Plan
3. Information Report
4. Statutory Public Information Meeting Minutes
Report PD 43-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Zoning By-law Amendment Application (A 11/08)
Page 5
:J
Prepared By:
Approved I Endorsed By:
Neil Carroll MCIP P
Director, Planning & Development
AY:cs
Attachments
Copy: Chief Administrative Officer
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6
APPENDIX I TO
REPORT PO 43-08
DRAFT BY-LAW
ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT APPLICATION A 11/08
l
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF PICKERING
BY-LAW NO.
Being a By-law to amend Restricted Area Zoning By-law 3036, to
implement the Official Plan of the City of Pickering, Region of Durham in
Part of Road Allowance between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1, Parts 2, 3,
5 - 9,11 -13,15,17,18,20,22,24,26 - 30,32,33 & 35, 40R-25121, in
the City of Pickering (A 11/08)
WHEREAS the Council of the Corporation of the City of Pickering deems it desirable to
permit the development of lots for detached dwellings with minimum frontages of 15.0
metres on the subject lands, being Part of Road Allowance between Lots 34 & 35,
Concession 1, Parts 2, 3, 5 - 9, 11 - 13, 15, 17, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26 - 30, 32, 33 & 35,
40R-25121 in the City of Pickering;
AND WHEREAS an amendment to By-law 3036, as amended, is therefore deemed
necessary;
NOW THEREFORE THE COUNCIL OF THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF
PICKERING HEREBY ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:
1. SCHEDULE I
Schedule I attached to this By-law with notations and references shown thereon
is hereby declared to be part of this By-law.
2. AREA RESTRICTED
The provisions of this By-law shall apply to those lands in the City of Pickering,
designated "s 1-15" on Schedule I attached to this By-law.
3. GENERAL PROVISIONS
No building, land or part thereof shall hereafter be used, occupied, erected,
moved, or structurally altered except in conformity with the provisions of this By-
law.
4. DEFINITIONS
In th is By-law,
(1) (a) "Dwellinq" shall mean a building or part of a building containing one or
more dwelling units, but does not include a mobile home or trailer;
(b) "Dwellinq Unit" shall mean one or more habitable rooms occupied or
capable of being occupied as a single, independent, and separate
housekeeping unit containing a separate kitchen and sanitary facilities;
(c) "Dwellinq, Sinqle or Sinqle Dwellinq" shall mean a single dwelling
containing one dwelling unit and uses accessory hereto;
(d) "Dwellinq, Detached or Detached Dwellinq" shall mean a single
dwelling which is freestanding, separate, and detached from other
main buildings or structures;
(2) (a) "Floor Area - Residential" shall mean the area of the floor surface
contained within the outside walls of a storey or part of a storey;
(b) "Gross Floor Area - Residential" shall mean the aggregate of the floor
areas of all storeys of a building or structure, or part thereof as the
case may be, other than a private garage, an attic, or a cellar;
(3) (a) "Lot" shall mean an area of land fronting on a street which is used or
intended to be used as the site of a building, or group of buildings, as
the case may be, together with any accessory buildings or structures,
or a public park or open space area, regardless of whether or not such
lot constitutes the whole of a lot or block on a registered plan of
subdivision;
(b) "Lot Coveraqe" shall mean the percentage of lot area covered by all
buildings on the lot;
(c) "Lot Frontaqe" shall mean the width of a lot between the side lot lines
measured along a line parallel to and 7.5 metres distant from the front
lot line;
(4) "Private Garaqe" shall mean an enclosed or partially enclosed structure
for the storage of one or more vehicles, in which structure no business or
service is conducted for profit or otherwise;
By-law No.
Page 3
)
(5) (a) "Yard" shall mean an area of land which is appurtenant to and located
on the same lot as a building or structure and is open, uncovered, and
unoccupied above ground except for such accessory buildings,
structures, or other uses as are specifically permitted thereon;
(b) "Front Yard" shall mean a yard extending across the full width of a lot
between the front lot line of the lot and the nearest wall of the nearest
main building or structure on the lot;
(c) "Front Yard Depth" shall mean the shortest horizontal dimension of a
front yard of a lot between the front lot line and the nearest wall of the
nearest main building or structure on the lot;
(d) "Rear Yard" shall mean a yard extending across the full width of a lot
between the rear lot line of the lot, or where there is no rear lot line, the
junction point of the side lot lines, and the nearest wall of the nearest
main building or structure on the lot;
(e) "Rear Yard Depth" shall mean the shortest horizontal dimension of a
rear yard of a lot between the rear lot line of the lot, or where there is
no rear lot line, the junction point of the side lot lines, and the nearest
wall of the nearest main building or structure on the lot;
(f) "Side Yard" shall mean a yard of a lot extending from the front yard to
the rear yard, and from the side lot line to the nearest wall of the
nearest main building or structure on the lot;
(g) "Side Yard Width" shall mean the shortest horizontal dimension of a
side yard of a lot between the side lot line and the nearest wall of the
nearest main building or structure on the lot;
(h) "Flankaoe Side Yard" shall mean a side yard immediately adjoining a
street or abutting on a reserve on the opposite side of which is a street;
(i) "Flankaoe Side Yard Width" shall mean the shortest horizontal
dimension of a flankage side yard of a lot between the lot line adjoining
a street or abutting on a reserve on the opposite side of which is a
street, and the nearest wall of the nearest main building or structure on
the lot;
U) "Interior Side Yard" shall mean a side yard other than a flankage side
yard.
By-law No.
Page 4
i j 1
5. PROVISIONS
(1) (a) Uses Permitted ("S1-15" Zone)
No person shall within the lands designated "s 1-15" on Schedule I
attached to this By-law, use any lot or erect, alter, or use any building
or structure for any purpose except the following:
(i) detached dwelling residential use
(b) Zone Requirements ("S1- 15" Zone)
No person shall within the lands designated "s 1-15" on Schedule I
attached hereto, use any lot or erect, alter, or use any building except
in accordance with the following provisions:
(i) LOT AREA (minimum):
460 square metres
(ii) LOT FRONTAGE (minimum):
15 metres
(iii) FRONT YARD DEPTH (minimum):
7.5 metres
(iv) INTERIOR SIDE YARD WIDTH (minimum): 1.2 metres
(v) FLANKAGE SIDE YARD WIDTH (minimum): 2.7 metres
(vi) REAR YARD DEPTH (minimum):
7.5 metres
(vii) LOT COVERAGE (maximum):
A 38 percent for all buildings and structures on a lot;
B despite clause A above, where a one-storey detached
dwelling with an attached private garage is constructed on a
lot, the attached private garage shall be excluded from the
calculation of lot coverage.
(viii) BUILDING HEIGHT (maximum):
9.0 metres
(ix) DWELLING UNIT REQUIREMENTS: maximum one
dwelling unit per lot and minimum gross floor area residential of
100 square metres.
By-law No.
Page 5
'!
I
(x) PARKING REQUIREMENTS:
A minimum one private garage per lot attached to the main
building;
B any vehicular entrance of which shall be located not less
than 6 metres from the front lot line, and not less than 6
metres from any side lot line immediately adjoining a street
or abutting on a reserve on the opposite side of which is a
street; and,
C maximum projection of the garage front entrance from the
wall containing the main entrance to the dwelling unit shall
not exceed 2.5 metres in length, whether or not such garage
has a second storey, except where a covered and
unenclosed porch or veranda extends a minimum of 1.8
metres from the wall containing the main entrance to the
dwelling unit, in which case no part of any attached private
garage shall extend more than 3.0 metres beyond the wall
containing the main entrance to the dwelling unit.
(xi) SPECIAL REGULATION:
Notwithstanding .clause 5.7(b) of By-law 3036, as amended,
uncovered steps and platforms exceeding 1.0 metre in height
above grade may project a maximum of 2.5 metres indepth into
the required rear yard of a lot provided no part thereof exceeds
6.0 metres in width.
6. BY-LAW 3036
By-law 3036, is hereby amended only to the extent necessary to give effect to
the provisions of this By-law as it applies to the area set out in Schedule I
attached hereto. Definitions and subject matters not specifically dealt with in this
By-law shall be governed by relevant provisions of By-law 3036, as amended.
Page 6
By-law No.
2
7. EFFECTIVE DATE
This By-law shall come into force in accordance with the provisions of the
Planning Act.
BY-LAW read a first, second, and third time and finally passed this 17th day of
November, 2008.
David Ryan, Mayor
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Debi A. Wilcox, City Clerk
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City of Pickering Planning & Development Department
PART OF ROAD ALLlOWANCE BETWEEN LOT 34 & 35, CONCESSION 1
PROPERTY DESCRIPTION PARTS 2,3,5-9,11-13,15,17,18,20,22,24,26-30,32,33 & 35, 40R-25121
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DATE MAY 14, 2008
SCALE 1 :5000
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FILE No.
GRANT MORRIS ASSOCIATES LTD.
A 11/08
DRAWN BY JB
CHECKED BY AY
OWNER
Uata Sources:
e Teranet Enterpri!'le!'l Inc. and it" "upplier!'l_ All rights Re"erved. Not a plan of !'Iurvey.
i5 2005 MPAC and its suppliers. All rights Reserved. Not a plan of Survey,
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INFORMATION COMPILED FROM APPLICANTS
SUBMITTED PLAN
A 11/08 -
GRANT MORRIS ASSOCIATES L TO.
1822 1823
W 1829
:::> 1818 1836
Z 1827 W 120 124 1 28 1 32
W 1814 >
> 136 1828
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> 0
0 1821 1802 0 1822
a: ~ 121 125 129 133
(9 1819 1798 ~ W
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W 1817 1794 0 1795 Z
Z a: w
a.. 1815 1790 1791 1818 >
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1811 1786 1787 1814
1809 1783 1812 ~
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1810 >
1805 0
1808 0
1806 0
1801 ~
1804
1802
1799
1800
1795
1796
1793 1794
1791 1792 V
1789 1790
1734 W 1735
1788
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1730 a: 1731 1786
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1726 1727 1794
1781 0 1:
1722 0
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THIS MAP WAS PRODUCED BY THE CITY OF PICKERING PLANNING &
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT, PLANNING INFORMATION SERVICES
DIVISION MAPPING AND DESIGN, MAY 14,2008.
Citq 01
INFORMATION REPORT NO. 16-08
FOR PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING OF
September 2, 2008
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PUBLIC MEETING REQUIREMENTS
OF THE PLANNING ACT, R.S.O. 1990, chapter P .13
SUBJECT:
Zoning By-law Amendment - A 11/08
Grant Morris Associates Ltd.
1789,1795,1801 & 1805 Pine Grove Avenue
1790,1792,1794,1804,1806, 1808 & 1810 Woodview Avenue
(Part of Road Allowance between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1
Parts 2,3,5 - 9,11 -13,15,17,18,20,22,24,26 - 30,32,33 &
35,40R-25121)
City of Pickering
1.0 PROPERTY LOCATION AND DESCRIPTION
- the subject properties are comprised of the rear yards of lots fronting
Woodview Avenue and Pine Grove Avenue (any resultant development of the
rear yards will front Rockwood Drive) north of Hogarth Street, south of Prohill
Street.(see Location Map, Attachment #1);
- the subject properties have a combined lot area of approximately 3 hectares
(see Applicant's Submitted Plan Attachment #2);
- there are 11 properties involved with this application; most properties
currently support one detached dwelling on an existing lot.
2.0 APPLICANT'S PROPOSAL
- the applicant has requested to amend the existing zoning on the rear portions
of the existing lots to a similar or the same zoning requirements currently
applicable to Rockwood Drive (see Attachment #4);
- the applicant currently represents seven property owners (for the 11
properties) which intend to sever the rear of the subject properties creating a
total of 20 lots fronting Rockwood Drive with minimum lot frontages of
15.0 metres;
Information Report No. 16-08
~~ (1
Page 2
- the applicant has filed applications for severance with the Region of Durham
Land Division Committee on the properties of 1805 Pine Grove Avenue
(LD 040 & 041/08) and 1792 & 1794 Woodview Avenue (LD 055 - 058/08);
these applications are conditionally approved (see Applicant's Submitted Plan
Attachment #2).
3.0 OFFICIAL PLAN AND ZONING
3.1 Durham Reaional Official Plan
- the Regional Plan designates the subject properties Urban Areas - Living
Areas, which shall be used predominantly for housing purposes;
- the proposal complies with the Durham Regional Official Plan;
3.2 Pickerina Official Plan
- the City of Pickering Official Plan designates the subject properties Urban
Residential- Low Density Area within the Highbush Neighbourhood;
- these areas are intended primarily for residential purposes having a net
residential density up to and including 30 dwellings per net hectare;
- the existing lots which currently front onto Pine Grove Avenue and
Woodview Avenue and the proposed lots fronting Rockwood Drive will create
a net residential density of approximately 10 dwellings per net hectare;
- the Plan identifies Rockwood Drive as a Local Road which generally provides
access to individual properties, local roads, other collector roads, whereas
Pine Grove Avenue and Woodview Avenue are identified as Collector Roads
which generally carry greater volumes of traffic than local roads;
- the Highbush Neighbourhood policies recognizes a through road connection
of Rockwood Drive from Pine Grove Avenue to Hogarth Street;
- the extension of Rockwood Drive is now complete, which allows frontage
through the rear of the subject properties;
- the proposal complies with the Pickering Official Plan;
3.4 Zonina By-law 3036
- the subject properties are currently zoned 'R4' - Fourth Density Residential
Zone, which requires a minimum lot frontage of 15.0 metres and a minimum
lot area of 460 square metres;
the applicant requests to amend the existing zoning to a zone classification
reflecting either the existing zone found to the north (Zoning By-law Number
5770100) or south (Zoning By-law Number 6005/02) of the subject properties
which will maintain the existing character found along Rockwood Drive (see
Attachments #4 & 5);
an amendment to the zoning by-law is required to allow for the future lots
fronting Rockwood Drive to have the same yard setbacks, lot coverage,
height requirements and garage projections permitted along Rockwood Drive.
Information Report No. 16-08
Page 3
'}
4.0 RESUL IS OF CIRCULA liON (See Attachments #6, 7, 8 & 9)
4.1 Resident Comments
none received to date;
4.2 Aaencv Comments
The Regional Municipality of Durham
no objections (see Attachment #6);
The Toronto and Region
Conservation Authority
no objections (see Attachment #7);
Veridian Connections
no objections (see Attachment #8);
4.3 City Department Comments
Development Control
no objections (see Attachment #9);
4.4 Staff Comments
in reviewing the application to date, the following matters have been identified
by staff for further review and consideration:
. to ensure the zoning proposed to the rear of the subject properties will
conform with the existing neighbourhood through zoning requirements
already established along Rockwood Drive immediately to the north and
south;
. the Planning & Development Department will require the applicant to provide
an Architectural Design Statement for properties that will be developed along
Rockwood Drive which are affected by this Zoning Amendment Application as
part of any land severance application proposed on the properties;
. as per Section 15.26(b) of the Pickering Official Plan, no more than three
additional lots may be created through land severance; Council will have to
give their consideration to allow for new additional lots in access of three to
be created through the land severance process;
. Planning Staff support land severance applications which may have the
potential to create in access of three additional lots for the subject properties
identified on Attachment #3.
5.0 PROCEDURAL INFORMA liON
- written comments regarding this proposal should be directed to the Planning
& Development Department;
oral comments may be made at the Public Information Meeting;
Information Report No. 16-08
hd
)
~
Page 4
all comments received will be noted and used as input in a Planning Report
prepared by the Planning & Development Department for a subsequent
meeting of Councilor a Committee of Council;
if you wish to reserve the option to appeal Council's decision, you must
provide comments to the City before Council adopts any by-law for this
proposal;
if you wish to be notified of Council's decision regarding this proposal, you
must request such in writing to the City Clerk.
6.0 OTHER INFORMATION
6.1 Appendix No. I
list of neighbourhood residents, community associations, agencies and City
Departments that have commented on the applications at the time of writing
report;
a summarY of the Zoning By-law requirements for properties along Rockwood
Drive, By-law 5770/00 and By-law 6005/02 is attached (see Attachment #5);
6.2 Company Principal
- the owners of the subject properties are listed below:
. Ciancio, Jose & Liliana
. Deschenes, Gary & Susan
. Gallo, Cesare
. Lodu, Donna & Thomas
· Martinko, David & Janet
. Oppedisano, Cosmo, Rosetta
. Skidmore, Gail
(1795 Pine Grove Avenue)
(1792 - 1794 Woodview Avenue)
(1801 Pine Grove Avenue)
(1790 Woodview Avenue)
(1805 Pine Grove Avenue)
(1789 Pine Grove Avenue)
(1804 - 1810 Woodview Avenue)
- the applicant is Grant Morris c/o Grant Morris & Associates Ltd.
ORIGINAL SIGNED BY
Ashley Yearwood
Planner I
AY:jf
Attachments
Copy: Director, Planning & Development
ORIGINAL SIGNED BY
Lynda Taylor
Manager, Development Review
'..2
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APPENDIX NO. I TO
INFORMATION RE'PORT NO. 16-08
COMMENTING RESIDENTS AND LANDOWNERS
(1) none received to date
COMMENTING AGENCIES
(1) The Regional Municipality of Durham
(2) The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority
(3) Veridian Connections
COMMENTING CITY DEPARTMENTS
(1) Planning & Development Department - Development Control
PI
Excerpts from
Planning & Development
Committee Meeting Minutes
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
7:30 pm - Council Chambers
Chair: Councillor O'Connell
(I)
PART 'A' - PLANNING INFORMATION MEETING
1 .
Zoning By-law Amendment Application A 11/08
Grant Morris Associates Ltd.
1789,1795,1801 & 1805 Pine Grove Avenue
1790, 1792, 1794, 1804, 1806, 1808 & 1810 Woodview Avenue
(Part of Road Allowance between Lots 34 & 35, Concession 1
Parts 2, 3, 5-9, 11-13, 15, 17, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26-30, 32,
33 & 35, 40R-25121), City of Pickerinq
A public information meeting was held under the Planning Act, for the purpose of
informing the public with respect to an application submitted by Grant Morris
Associates Ltd. for property municipally known as 1789, 1795, 1801 & 1805 Pine
Grove Avenue and 1790, 1792, 1794, 1804, 1806, 1808 & 1810 Woodview
Avenue.
Lynda Taylor, Manager, Development Review gave an outline of the
requirements for a Statutory Meeting under the Planning Act. She also noted
that if a person or public body does not make oral or written submissions to the
City before a by-law is passed, that person or public body are not entitled to
appeal the decision of City Council to the Ontario Municipal Board, and may not
be entitled to be added as a party to the hearing unless, in the opinion of the
Board, there are reasonable grounds to do so.
Ashley Yearwood, Planner I, gave an overview of zoning amendment application
A 11/08.
Grant Morris, 397 Sheppard Avenue, the. applicant appeared before the
Committee in support of the application. Mr. Morris noted that he would be
meeting with hydro soon to sign an agreement regarding street lighting.
No members of the public in attendance at the public information meeting
spoke in support or opposition to Application A 11/08.
1
Citlf iJ~
REPORT TO
PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT
COMMITTEE
Report Number: PD 42-08
Date: November 3, 200;8
From:
Neil Carroll .
Director, Planning & Development
Subject:
Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study: Growing Durham
Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report,
prepared by Urban Strategies Inc. et ai, dated September 23, 2008
Phase 5
Recommendation:
1. That Report PD 42-08 of the Director, Planning & Development, regarding the
Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report, dated
September 23, 2008, presenting the draft recommendations for Phase 5 of the
Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study, be received;
2. That the comments contained in Report PD 42-08 on the Draft Recommended
Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report for the Region of Durham Growth
Plan Implementation Study be endorsed, and further that the Region of Durham
and its consultants be requested to make the following changes:
a) Expand the extent of land identified for future living area around Kinsale,
extending both to the west and to the east to Lake Ridge Road, so as to
create a threshold of growth for a complete neighbourhood;
b) Revise the policy restricting major office development from employment
areas, such that it permits major office development at selected freeway
interchanges, thereby taking advantage of transit and increasing employment
densities;
c) Reconsider the timing of the lands in the centre of northeast Pickering
identified for future employment in the post-2031 period, so as to maximize
the logical and orderly extension of services and infrastructure; and
d) Implement the timing changes recommended by Regional Planning
Committee on October 14, 2008, to bring lands for future living area at the
north limit of northeast Pickering from post-2031 to pre-2031, and to change
the lands in northeast Pickering adjacent to Lake Ridge Road from pre-2031
to post-2031; and
3. Further, that a copy of Report PD 42-08 and Pickering Council's resolution on
the matter be forwarded to the Region of Durham, Urban Strategies Inc. et ai,
other Durham Area Municipalities, the Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, and
the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
J)
,-
Page 2
i .
Executive Summary: On September 23, 2008, the Region of Durham released for
comment a report entitled Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions.
The report is the preliminary recommendations from Phase 5 of Region's Growth Plan
Implementation Study, entitled Growing Durham. The Study is being undertaken for the
Region by Urban Strategies Inc., Watson & Associates and TSH. The Region of
Durham is undertaking public and stakeholder consultation for this study.
The consultants should be congratulated on completing a significant amount of work
refining the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and policy directions in a short
period of time. A copy of the Recommended Growth Scenario is provided as
Attachment #1 to this Report to Council. The Region requests comments on the Draft
Report by October 24, 2008. A Final Report is to be released on November 25, 2008.
Pickering Council commented on the Phase 3 & 4 Report, Scenario Evaluation and
Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper dated June 10, 2008. Many
of Council's comments have been addressed in the latest Report (see discussion in
section 3.6 of this Report to Council).
Staff's review of the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report
concludes with four main findings:
(a) the overall density and housing mix assuniption~ to achieve the intensification and
density targets are supportable;
(b) the arrangement of future living area and future employment area is logical with
the exception of the inadequate extent of living area around the existing Hamlet of
Kinsale (see Item 1 on Appendix I to Report PO 42-08);
(c) the policy direction focusing major office development (being greater than 10,000
square metres or 500 or more employees) to "centres" and "corridors" and
restricting them from employment areas should be revised to permit major office
development at selected freeway interchanges to take advantage of transit and to
increase the number of jobs per hectare; and
(d) the creation of a 'hole' within the 2031 urban area for northeast Pickering should
be reexamined to take advantage of logical and orderly servicing (see Item 2 on
Appendix I to Report PD 42-08).
A revision to the timing of certain future living area lands in northeast Pickering
recommended by Regional Planning Committee on October 14, 2008, is also of no
concern to staff (see items 3 and 4 on Appendix I to Report PD 42-08).
The time frame for commenting on the Study Report is extremely limited, and
insufficient to accommodate Council's meeting schedule. The November 3, 2008
Planning & Development Committee is the earliest possible time frame in which to
provide comment. Accordingly, the recommendations of the Planning & Development
Committee will be forwarded to the consultants as well as the follow-up
recommendation of Council.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 3
3
Financial Implications: No direct implications from providing comments on this
phase of the Growing Durham Study.
Sustainability Implications: Responsible Development, one of the five objectives in
Pickering's framework for sustainability, is central to the purpose of the Growing
Durham Study. The comments and recommendations contained in this Report to
Council are intended to support the importance of achieving intensification in existing
built up areas and meeting minimum density targets in new Greenfield areas, planning
new Greenfield areas as complete communities and strengthening existing settlements,
creating opportunities for major office jobs in employment areas; and extending urban
areas in a logical and orderly fashion.
Background:
1.0 The Growina Durham Study
1.1 Section 1, the Introduction, of the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and
Policy Directions Report summarizes the Growing Durham Study to date.
The introductory chapter of the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy
Directions Report is provided as Attachment #2 to Report to Council PD 42-08 as
it gives a synopsis of the following relevant background material: the scope and
objectives of the Growing Durham Study; the work completed to date on the
initial growth assessment, the scenario evaluation and the preferred growth
scenario; the directions of Regional Planning Committee, the Consultation
Process; and the purpose and structure of the Draft Recommended Growth
Scenario and Policy Directions Report.
A copy of the full Report is available for viewing at the Pickering Planning &
Development counter, and may be downloaded from the Region of Durham's
website at www.reoion.durham.on.ca .
1.2 Pickering Council commented on the Scenario Evaluation and Preferred
Recommended Growth Scenario Working Paper that was released on
June 13, 2008.
On July 17, 2008, Council considered the recommendations of Report to Council
PD 32-08 on the Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario (see text of Report
PD 32-08, Attachment #3). While Council generally supported the land use
structure set out in the Preferred Growth Scenario, a number of revisions were
recommended to the land use structure and a number of clarifications were
requested. A copy of Council's resolution on the matter is provided as
Attachment #4.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
44
Page 4
2.0 The Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policv Directions Report
2.1 The Draft Report presents a growth scenario for Durham Region
comprising a map, related policy directions, and characteristics of
development to achieve that growth.
The Recommended Growth Scenario is based on a market-influenced but
policy-driven approach. The map showing the location, type and timing of
development must be read in the context of key policy directions, and with an
understanding of the assumptions on density and housing mix for the different
types and locations for growth.
2.1.1 The map showinQ the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario shows existinQ and
proposed development areas and time frames for development.
A copy of the map showing the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario is
provided as Attachment #1 to this Report to Council. For existing urban and
designated Greenfield urban areas, the map shows a number of structural
elements where growth is to be accommodated. These structural elements
include existing and proposed centres, mobility hubs, regional and local
corridors, and waterfront villages. Employment and living areas, existing and
proposed GO Station are also identified.
For proposed new urban areas, the map shows the future employment and living
areas, with an additional indication of whether the land is required prior to 2031
or between 2031 and 2056. The urban structure elements of future centres, and
future regional and local corridors are also identified.
2.1.2 The Report provides draft policv directions for a number of key topics.
The topics and selected policy directions are listed below. The full list of policy
directions (except for those pertaining to the Northern Communities) is provided
in Attachment #5:
1) Guiding principles and objectives;
2) Regional urban structure;
3) Intensification;
4) Designated Greenfield lands;
5) Employment;
6) Infrastructure planning, transit and servicing;
7) Environment;
8) Phasing growth;
9) Urban boundary expansion; and
10) Monitoring and ongoing review.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 5
r
:)
The Report also identifies some implementation tools to assist in achieving the
objectives of the study. Most of the tools are not new, or were identified in the
latest changes to the Planning Act. Some of tools are not yet available for use in
Ontario. However, the consultant's intent in identifying them is to ensure the
Regional Plan enables their use should the necessary legislation or regulations
come into effect.
2.1.3 Appendix D of the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Report describes the characteristics of the urban structure elements necessary
to meet the intent of the policy directions.
The Growing Durham Study proposes a number of "urban structure elements" to
build the urban fabric. Some examples of these structural elements include
urban growth centres, mobility hubs, regional corridors, waterfront villages,
nodes and living areas.
For each of these structural elements,. the consultants have assigned a specific
set of assumptions on the mix of housing forms, the average and minimum
density ranges, and examples of existing developments that represent the type
of structural element. These assumptions, as well as photographs of
representative developments are detailed in Appendix D to the Draft
Recommended Growth Scenario Report. It is anticipated that some but not all of
this detail would be incorporated in the policies for new development.
2.2 The Draft Recommended Growth Scenario is the result of the consultants
review of comments, revised assumptions and analysis, and assessment
of growth against the Study's objectives.
Many changes were made by the consultants in moving from the Preferred
Growth Scenario of June 2008 to the Recommended Scenario of September 2008.
Many of the changes are interrelated.
Attachment #6 to this Report to Council identifies key changes made by the
consultants that are particularly relevant to Pickering. The changes include
modifying assumptions for the housing demand and supply forecasts, revising
the employment demand and supply forecasts, reexamining growth from both a
Regional perspective (top down) and from the local perspective (bottom up),
adjusting the arrangement of lands for future employment and living area,
differentiating between lands required to 2031 and lands need to 2056, and
checking the resulting land use structure against the principles and objectives of
the Growing Durham Study.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
, i, ,I b
Page 6
3.0 Discussion
3.1 Based on review to date, staff supports the revisions to the housing mix,
densities, and assignment of growth to future corridors and centres to
achieve the requirements of the Provincial Growth Plan.
The Recommended Growth Scenario Report does not yet include details of all of
the modeling for each municipality yet. It is anticipated that these details will
appear in the Final Report. Based on the aggregate information that is available
to date, the consultants appear to have reached a housing density and
employment mix that will achieve the Provincial Growth Plan targets for existing
built up areas and new Greenfield development. The average densities will be
higher than those experienced in Pickering in recent years, and the proportion of
low density housing will be less. Pickering will supply a significant amount of the
medium and high density development in the Region. Higher intensities of
development are consistent with a more sustainable, transit-supportive
community.
3.2 The future living area around the existing Hamlet of Kinsale should be
expanded to create a sufficient threshold for a complete neighbourhood.
Staff generally agrees with the location of future employment lands and future
living area lands in northeast Pickering, with the exception of the small extent of
living area around Kinsale. For employment lands in northeast Pickering, the
consultants have reflected Council's request to increase the depth of
employment lands along Highway 407 in Pickering. Compared to the Preferred
Growth Scenario of June 2008, Pickering has nearly twice as much future
employment land identified in this area.
In northeast Pickering, most but not all of the future living area lies north of the
Seventh Concession Road. One area to the south is around the existing Hamlet
of Kinsale. Although specific numbers are not provided, very limited amount of
new living area is identified. Staff recommends a larger extent of future living
area be established around Kinsale so that it may achieve a threshold for a
complete neighbourhood. Staff suggests a minor expansion to the west and
expansion to the east to Lake Ridge Road (see the lands identified as Item 1 on
Appendix I). Strengthening an existing hamlet is also consistent with one of the
Study's principles, reinforcing and building on existing regional settlement and
i nfrastructu re patterns.
3.3 The policy direction focusing major office development to "centres" and
"corridors" in living areas should be relaxed to allow selected locations for
major office at freeway interchanges in employment areas.
Staff supports the concept that a primary location for major office development
(defined as offices over 10,000 square metres or having 500 or more employees)
are "centres" and "corridors" in the living area.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 7
l
However, policy direction restricting major development from employment areas
is missing opportunities to maximize intense development around freeway
interchanges, particularly where a transit system is in place.
To illustrate this point, the recently completed Highway 407 (Seaton)
Employment Lands Study commissioned by the Province of Ontario as part of
the implementation of the Central Pickering Development Plan recommended a
designation of "Office-Oriented Centres" at Highway 407 interchanges. The
rationale for this designation included taking advantage of future transit stations
and helping increase the jobs per hectare ratio in the employment area.
It may be appropriate to establish criteria for the introduction of major office
subject to conditions such as the transit being in place and other design
performance criteria such as underground parking to minimize the footprint of the
office in the employment lands.
The consultants are requested to exempt Seaton from this proposed policy
direction.
3.4 Staff recommends the consultants re-examine the 'hole' in the 2031 urban
fabric for northeast Pickering that would leave significant, serviced future
employment area in the post 2031 urban area.
In developing the Draft Preferred Growth Scenari~, the consultants added lands
for future employment area required for 2031 along Highway 407 in Whitby, in
the vicinity of the 401-407 connectors. There were two reasons for this. The first
was to address this area's highly accessible location. The second was to add
future employment area to the future living area in north Whitby to allow the
creation of complete communities. Staff has no concern with the identification of
employment land along Highway 407 in the vicinity of the Whitby 401-407
connector and concurs that it is a strategic location for employment.
However, based on the latest information about servicing for northeast Pickering
and northwest Whitby, it appears the lands in the vicinity of the connector will be
at the very end of the proposed sanitary sewer. The sewer is expected to be
extended from the west to the east (that is, from Pickering to Whitby). Yet, the
Draft Report identifies the lands a~ound the connector as required within the
2031 horizon. Significant upfront funding is likely to be required (by the Region,
or by landowners) to extend servicing to this strategic location within.
There is only a finite amount of employment land required to 2031. Therefore,
the addition of land in Whitby required a decrease in future employment land
elsewhere in the Region, more specifically in Pickering. As a result, future
employment lands in northeast Pickering located along Highway 407 are delayed
to the 2032-2056 period.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 8
I l' ) d
It is staff's opinion that these lands will be serviced sooner than the lands near
the connector, because servicing will be extended north in Pickering to living
area lands required to 2031. This will leave a 'hole' in the 2031 urban fabric.
With these lands in a different time frame, important planning and other studies
such as development charges are unable to include these lands.
The consultants are requested to re-examine the timing of the central block of
future employment area in northeast Pickering, (see the lands identified as Item
2 on Appendix I) One option would be to reconsider the timing of lands for future
employment area adjacent to the airport to the post 2031 time frame.
3.5 Staff has no objection to the changes recommended by Regional Planning
Committee on October 14, 2008, to the timing of certain Future Living Area
lands in Pickering.
During the consultation period on the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and
Policy Directions Report, a meeting of Regional Planning Committee was held.
Committee passed a motion to advance the timing of the future living area at the
north-central edge of northeast Pickering to the 2031 time frame, and to delay
the timing of a block near Lake Ridge Road to 2032-2056 time frame. Items 3
and 4 on the map provided on Appendix I illustrate this change.
Both blocks of land are at the end of their respective servicing lines and both
blocks of land are within Pickering. Staff has no objection to this change.
3.6 Most but not all of Council's comments on the Preferred Growth Scenario
of June 13, 2008 were included in the Draft Recommended Scenario.
Pickering Council requested numerous changes to the Preferred Growth
Scenario (see Council Resolution, Attachment, #4, and a copy of the
Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario from June 13, 2008, Attachment #7).
Some of the key changes that appear to have been addressed in the Draft
Recommended Scenario are as follows: expanding the width of the employment
land designation near Westney Road and Lake Ridge Road; reserving
employment and living area lands needed beyond 2031; supporting watershed
plans as prerequisites to secondary planning; clarifying and simplifying the
characteristics of nodes, centres and transit villages; identifying policy directions
to prohibit major retailing in employment areas; and identifying strong policy
directions for phasing. In addition, the Region of Durham Council has supported
the preparation of a fiscal impact and infrastructure study for the final growth
scenario, as Pickering Council requested.
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 9
9
Specific employment figures are not identified in the Draft Recommended
Growth Scenario and Policy Directions Report, so it is not clear what
assumptions were made about the Central Pickering Development Plan's
provision for 35,000 jobs in Seaton. The Recommended Growth Scenario does
not expand the future centres in northeast Pickering to the Highway 407
transitway, nor did the Region hold a public meeting in Pickering, as requested
by City Council.
4.0 Next Steps
Comments on the Report are requested by October 24, 2008. Urban Strategies
has been advised that Pickering will be submitting its comments following the
Planning Committee of November 3, 2008. There is an extremely short time
frame for commenting as the Final Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy
Directions Report will be released on November 28, 2008.
Following a comment period on the Final Report, Regional Planning staff will
draft an amendment to the Durham Regional Official Plan to implement the
Growing Durham Study. The amendment will then be processed according to
normal procedures including public meeting,
Appendix:
I: Extract of Figure 3B: Recommended Growth Scenario: Balanced Growth
Attachments:
1. Draft -Recommended Growth Scenario, September 23, 2008
2. Introductory Chapter to Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Directions
Report, Growing Durham Study, September 23, 2008
3. Text of Report to Council PD 32-08
4. Council Resolution #140/08, July 14, 2008 for Report PD 32-08
5. Summary of Key Policy Directions by Topic
6. Summary of Main Revisions to the Assumptions, Methodology or Analysis
Having Reference to or Impacting Pickering
7. Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario, June 13, 2008
Report PD 42-08
November 3, 2008
Subject: Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy Directions
Page 10
It'
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Prepared By:
Approved/Endorsed By:
(?~
Catherine Rose, MCIP, RP
Manager, Policy
Neil Carroll, PP
Director, Planning & Development
CR:cs
Copy: Chief Administrative Officer
Recommended for the consideration
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In 2006 HiE:: Province of Ontario rcic~ased Fie Growth Pian
for' the Greater Golden Horseshoe, In accordance 'vvith
Hie policies of Fie Growth Pian, the of Durhan1 is
required to pian for 960.000 peopie and 350,000
vvcrk:ng, Uv:~ LiY thc: yedr 2031. The' of
Durharn ha:::; recenty undertaken conipreheriS!V'e ~:::;tuc1ie:,s
as part of HH:::
Officiai Pian (nOP) rCVlf>N prOCC:3s
(wh:cl1 concludecJ Ofh~lai Pi;,Hi !\n)endnlE~nt 1J,4;,
()n tile Officldl PiEH"1 ReView process :3rH1
In resoonsc tel trH; Growth Pi;:H1 (frection. t.he of
Durharn inl1!(:rtec.! the Durt18!rl in 200T
TIllS study \lVIII prepare recornrncndcd policy responses th;::~t
vyi li the Ofhci2 i PIa n into \vith the
Growth Piarl policies, In panicular, the mdm objectives of
Hie Durllanl study are to:
,. /\llocate the populatlon and 2:nployrrlen1 forecasts
in Schecluie :3 of U"")c Growth Pi:Jn to the
iJrCa
n'1U(liClpalr\:iCS for
penoci 203.1.. With <.~ n extended
()utloo~~ t.o 2056 to ;]ssist iongpfange :nfrastnlctufc
11 Dcvc~iop a strategy and poi:cles to ph21s(~ in and ach:cvc
a 40';~: annual rate of resll::1enba! Intensification \vithin trv:;
Bulitl,lp Area by 2015:
· Plan for Gesignateci Greenfield areas to achieve a
rnirwrwrn denSIty of 50 peopie and Jobs per hectar(;;
· Plan tor a cOlrhined densit.y of 200 people and johs. per
ihiocta re in
Urban Gi'owth Centres;
is> Assess the aciequ3cy of the supply emDiov!ilent lands
to (:1ccornnlcdate the Grovvtri Pian forecasts and key
principies trle
OffiCial Pian; and
$1 Assess the need kit iJrlJan bouncJary expanS!Yi and new
urban Janet
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The Durham StuCy (esuiL~ l(l a r-ccornrnencled
Cro\<vth Scenario for Durhanl to 203.1.. and
rccornrnendations to tnanage
in the
in
a manner that conforms to the Gro\vth Plan policles,
lniplementation of the GnJwtr~ Plan will have n-np!lcations
on the pattenis. economic c18vs!opnlent,
tr;::jnsportation and infrastructure networks, anC natura!
systerns, ;\ rnaJor component of thiS stuCjy riDS
the sceue of the~3e Ifr pi icatlons, hcwv' they
~)c:c~ t]
urr);:Hl patH::rn that dppr'()pnatJ,: fc)r
l)Y policy rccnrnmendat;ons an(j tools to
~ ill plernent Hie desl (C;'C] pattern of growUi,
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The
2007 and has
DtnllcWl
:n
been lmderta~\en !1l five phases, as jilustrated in
.1. The report of Uie hrst t\VO p1'!aS2S, tiUe{j "Phase .1. & 2:
Surnrnary of Understanding cHid initial GrowU1 J\sses:;:;rncnt"
"!na,ial Growth I\sse'ssrne'nt."), was re!ea:.::;ed in
cHaft form in Decernber 2007, Hnd in final fonn in May
;?008, Tli;:)t tepof"t outlined a basel!;'H;:: ()f
ell (rer':t
tJf'()jectcd patterns in the F(c'!!i(Y) The report of
third (",H"H.1 fourU"i pha~)esi titlecj "SCS!)C;lrlO E\/aluation and
ReconHiK:ncied Preferred Growt1'J Scendno Paoer
(the "Growth Scenano Vvod<,ing Paper") was r(;!cased jn
lJl'aft fO(nl In May 2008. and in hnal fonr, With reVISions as
per duccton frOlll Planning Committee, HI June 2008, An
overview eaCfl of Uiese reports is pnwided !)elow,
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Base C=ase Scenario
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Rehnetnents to Base Case
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ltegional C;ro\vth Plan ()utlook
Alternative Growth Scenarios
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Preferred C;ro\vth Scenario
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rtecornlncndcd C;ro\vth Scenario
1. C:ontinuing a [)o111inant
Western Anchor
2. Focusing on a C=entral
Hub for Durhan1
3. Iteinforcinba Existina
b
C:0111111Unities
Principles! Goals
()bjectives
Measures
High, Mediu111, Lovv
F~ine tuning the preferred
gro\vth scenario
Irnplelnentation irnplications
& strategies
Policy reconllnendations
9
,1
rhe Initial Growth .Assessrnent 2'7,
20(8) an overvie\v of the (ec()n na iSSd nee
and irdtial growth assessrncnt cornponetlts of tin:::
Durharn The report thecl cstah!isfl(:d
2) rnarket-.drjven Base Case Growth Scenario ("Base
assessed recent and anticipated rnarhc~l
conditions, as well as the population forecast
in the Provincial Growth PiEHl, The Base
Case was esta blished to assess whether the rnarket.
d nven sccna r~o 'NOU ld rcsu 1t in the; aclj ievcrncnt of
the intensification and designated Greetlfield !anc!s
and whether the Regior'J has a sufficic:nt
supply of It.Hld withm the current urban boundary to
accornrnoda1.e the planned growth, 'rhe Inlt.ia! Growth
Assessment concluded U1Dt between 2006 and 2031
on the basis of rnarket forecast the Region would not
deh ievc: the C; rowth Pia n mtcnsi-rication or the
Greenfield cornbined and that Futu(e
Crowth Areas would be t.o accornrnodate the
forecast levels of growtho
1 .:2
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The Growth Scena ria Working (June 13.
provided t.he out.conlf; of the t.hird and fourtli
of the Durharn in (r Uk:
report:
I Growth Plan Outlook rrlo(k~,j
to address Growth Plan
Outlook budt on the: Base'
Case Scenario and reflned it to how, at a
regional Durhanl Gould conforrn to the Growth
10
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Plan
Dnd
of aCC0t11rrlodating the forecasts
the Growth Plan
Hlree Alternative Growth Scenanos and
initialloca! a!iocatlons, [)ased on a
Influenced Crowth F)!an Outlook !nfluencc.:d
Out 100!\"): d neJ
~ Provided an assessrnent of throe A!ternativ(~ (:)rovvth
Scenarios and on this basis recornnlended a
Preferred Growth Scenario, The f)ret'erred Growth
Scenaric) (Scenario 3) was HUed REINFORCING
EXISTING COiVl/\:1UNITfES, arKl involved the
for !ancis for future growtl1 in a rnanner
that reinforced the urban structure <H1(j
distrihuted gr()wth across the The Scenario
ba!a need futu re growth across the La ke
Ontario slJoreline and rneasurcd
growth in the Northern cornrnunitles.
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The Growth Sc'enrH"IO Working
to Durhanl
(Planning on June 3.2008. Planning
Ccnnnlitt.ee directed the consult.ant to consider
the follovving reflnernents to H)e influenced
to nIt-: PrefE:rrecJ Scena rio:
east o"f tl'lC <Jirport
lands;
{f An
a long the
of the ern ployn~lerlt IfJ ncJs
407 extension in i\Jortheast
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south to Higrlway 7;
$ As a r(;sult of any additional terrn ernp!oyrnerlt
!<Hle! need in future urban jandsl the extension of
future living Area lands m North \Nhitby to
Road:anci
., The identification of
Mobility Hub candidcHe,
Planning CornrniUee direction was incorporat'ed into
a revised Growth Scenario \/Vorhing which \vas
re..re!eased June 2008,
Town Centre as a
A consultation period was initiated
the JUlIe :J3, 2008 rcrc:iease of the
Pa peL t.,s of the consu !t;Jtion process, a pu b! Ie
open !')ouse was held on June 25, 2008 where the
alternative scenario evaluation and preferred
growth scenario were ltl addition,
wod\ing sessions were: hEdd with a rea rnunicipaj
staff to discuss Hie finclings in the report and collect
feedbacl\"
At the end of the consultation aH
fonnaJ subnl1sslons and cornrnent.s received at the
public open house and working sessions with area
rnunicipa1 staff were collected, synthesized and
considered as pa rt of the ren ned and lJO! icy
rccornrnendations included In thIs report A surnrnary
of the subrnissions will be subrnittecl t.o Planning
COrlHnrttee under separate report
\V
,nr S
The rnain purpose of this final of the Growi!jg
Durharn is to utilize detailed analys!s to create
'(1 necornrnended Growth Scenario for Durhan!. This
report, the "Recornn1cncJed Gtowth Scenario and
"
~:-)
i-I ,~ -
Policy Directions "Growth Scenario and
Policy Directlorjs a Recorn rnendec1
Growth Scenario for Cornrnittee
consideration, The report is structured around thc~
process of developing a Recornrnetldcd Growth
Scerla rIO,
The
the
rna nagerncnt that have beetl cons!c1erc'cJ
the r1ecornrnended Groi/v'th Scenario
It then descrlbes the retincrnents
that were uncl(:'.rtahen to the
and
Hie toea! iy ! nf! uencecl !\na for the F'refcned
REINFOr1CfNG EXISTiNG COt,AtVIUNfTfES
SectIon 3 a ISO provides the outcorne of
the ref! nod at the level a nd the
LaCEd!y I nf! uenced to 2031, a nc! to 2056,
Section 4 reviews the allocations arHj lJrban structure
H18 G rO\rvth PIa n OfJjectives and
of REINFORCING EXISTING COtvll\:1UNrr!ES and
identifies final adjusttnents
Recornrnendcci Growth Scenano,
to finalize the
Section 5 of the rc:port outlmes
for Dudlarn in conforrnity with the Growth
Plan and accornrnodating growth in rpore conlpact
forms in tl and rnanner. Section
C conc:!udes with recornmended policy
directions in support of Hie f~ecornmended Growth
ScenarIo, the Recornrnended Growth
Scenario, inlplernentation and policy direcUons
the foundation and direction for long terr))
patterns that wi!! create sustainable
and corn cornrnuniUes as envisioned in DurhEHn's
OfficiE11 PLan and Province1s Growth Plan.
11
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REPORT TO
COUNCIL
']
.I
PICKERING
Report Number: PD 32-08
Date: July 14, 2008
From:
Neil Carroll
Director, Planning & Development
Subject:
Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study: Growing Durham
Phases 3 & 4
Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred Growth
Scenario Working Paper, prepared by Urban Strategies Inc. et ai,
dated June 13, 2008
Recommendations:
1. That Report PD 32-08 of the Director, Planning & Development, regarding the
Revised Growth Scenario Working Paper presenting the outcomes of
Phases 3 & 4 of the Region of Durham's Growth Plan Implementation Study be
received;
2. That the comments contained in Report PO 32-08 on the Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario for the Region of Durham Growth Plan
Implementation Study be endorsed, and that the Region of Durham be
requested to:
a) support the land use structure with Planning Committee directions noted,
shown on Figure 13 B and provided as Attachment #2 to Report PO 32-08
with the following further refinements:
· increase the depth of the future Employment Areas in Pickering along
Highway 407, east of Westney Road, to a minimum 600 metres, and
where appropriate, increase the depth on selected blocks up to
1,000 metres;
· support the designation to future Employment Areas of the remnant parcel
of "whitebelt" lands located east of the airport and north of large block
Planning Committee directed be designated as future Employment Areas;
and
· expand to the south the Future Centres designation, currently shown at
the two intersections of the Seventh Concession Road with Salem and
Lakeridge Roads, to incorporate the Highway 407 transitway stations and
adjacent lands, thereby allowing mixed residential, commercial and high
intensity office uses, and consider designation of a future transit village on
the south side of the Highway 407 transitway;
Report PO 32-08
July 14, 2008
Subject:
d
Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 2
b) in updating the tables and charts respecting population and employment for
Pickering corresponding to the revisions to the Recommended Preferred
Growth Scenario, increase the employment figures for Pickering to include
the 35,000 jobs identified by the Provincial Central Pickering Development
Plan for Seaton, and allocate jobs arising from the future Employment Areas,
future Living Areas and intensification in South Pickering, at a ratio of no less
than one job for each three new residents as is applied across the rest of the
Region;
c) in detailing the policies for the Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario,
· establish strong phasing policies respecting the timing and process for
local municipalities to bring new "whitebelt" lands into the urban area in
order to address the logical and orderly phasing of growth with municipal
fiscal priorities;
· establish new policies prohibiting large format retailing from future
Employment Areas;
· establish strong phasing policies respecting future Living Areas that may
be affected by incompatible noise from a possible future Pickering airport
so as to prevent major residential or other noise sensitive uses from being
established until a decision is made on a possible future Pickering airport;
and
· better clarify the different characteristics of Transit Villages, Urban Nodes,
Future Centres and Waterfront Villages;
d) with respect to strategic future Employment Areas addressing the need
beyond the 2031, work with the Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal to
establish policies permitting the Region to acknowledge as part of current
Regional Plan conformity amendment, the long term intended use for these
lands as future Employment Area;
e) support the City of Pickering in its request to the Ministry of Transportation in
commenting on the Highway 407 Environmental Assessment, to relocate the
proposed Highway 407 maintenance yard from the south side of the
proposed interchange with Salem Road to allow maximum intensification
around the Highway 407 transitway;
f) obtain from Urban Strategies and forward to area municipalities the detailed
information on the amount, types and locations of intensification used in the
background work not contained in the Working Paper; and
3. Lastly, that a copy of Report PO 32-08 and Pickering Council's resolution on the
matter be forwarded to the Region of Durham, Urban Strategies Inc. et ai, other
Durham Area Municipalities, the Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal, the
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, and the Ministry of Transportation.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 3
~)
/
Executive Summary: On June 13, 2008, the Region of Durham released for
comment a report entitled Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred
Growth Scenario Working Paper, incorporating the Directions of Regional Planning
Committee on June 3, 2008. The report is the outcome of Phases 3 & 4 of the
Region's Growth Plan Implementation Study, entitled Growing Durham. The Study is
being undertaken for the Region by Urban Strategies Inc., Watson & Associates and
TSH. The Region requests comments by July 14, 2008.
Phases I & 2 of the Study examined issues related to growth in each municipality, plus
an analysis of how growth would occur if current trends continued. Phases 3 & 4
analyzed alternative growth scenarios for the Region and resulted in a Recommended
Rreferred Growth Scenario. Phase 5 will be the refinement of the Preferred Growth
Scenario, and will be the basis for the preparation and processing of an amendment to
the Durham Regional Official Plan in late 2008 and early.2009.
For Pickering, the Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario as revised by Planning
Committee, identifies the need to designate lands beyond the current urban area
(South Pickering and Seaton) to accommodate future employment and residential land
needs to 2031. The Scenario is shown on Firgure 13B and is provided as
Attachment #2 to this Report to Council. In essence, all lands in north-east Pickering,
commonly referred to as the "whitebelt" lands in the Provincial Places to Grow Plan, are
proposed for future urban uses.
Also for Pickering, the Scenario includes the identification of a Mobility Hub at South
Pickering's GO Station, a Waterfront Village around Frenchman's Bay, and includes
intensification in Pickering's Urban Growth Centre and other corridors and centres.
Staff supports the Revised Recommended Growth Scenario, subject to a number of
further revisions. These revisions include the following:
. increasing the depth of the future Employment Area lands adjacent to Highway 407;
. updating the employment tables to reflect the 35,000 jobs set out for Seaton in the
Central Pickering Development Plan while maintaining Pickering's jobs to residents
ratio at no less than 1:3 elsewhere in Pickering;
. expanding the Future Centres in north-east Pickering at Salem and Lake Ridge
Roads to pick up intensification and mixed use opportunities associated with the
Highway 407 transitway;
. identifying a remnant of whitebelt lands as future Employment Areas; and
. providing detailed background work on intensification.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
.....'")
....~
'\
July 14, 2008
Subject:
,\
'".J
Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 4
Building on this last point, the Region is also requested to support the City in its
comments on the Highway 407 Environmental Assessment to eliminate the proposed
works yard on the south side of the Highway 407/Salem Road interchange. The
purpose is to allow maximum intensification around the Transitway.
In moving forward to Phase 5 the Region and its consultants need to establish a strong
policy framework addressing the following:
· phasing on the timing and process to bring new lands into the urban boundary;
· phasing to reflect the uncertainty of an airport being constructed and the resulting
potential for some Living Area lands to experience noise if an airport is developed;
· protecting for strategic, long term Employment Areas beyond 2031; and
· clarifying the distinguishing characteristics of the Urban Nodes, Waterfront Villages,
Future Centres and Transit Villages.
Financial Implications: No direct implications from providing comments on the
Phases 3 & 4 Working Paper of the Growing Durham Study
Sustainability Implications: The recommendations contained in this Report to
Council respecting increasing the employment assigned to Pickering, increasing the
depth of the future Employment Areas, and requiring the timely phasing of new urban
areas are aimed at increasing the economic sustainability of the City.
Recommendations to establish expanded Urban Centres and 1 or Transit Villages
around the Highway 4071 Salem and Lake Rridge interchanges is intended to enable
responsible development to occur around a transit station.
1.0 Background
1.1 The Region is implementing the Province's Growth Plan for the Greater
Golden Horseshoe through a Growth Plan Implementation Study entitled
"Growing Durham".
In August, 2007, the Region of Durham commenced a 5-Phase Growth Plan
Study. The Growth Plan Implementation Study has three fundamental purposes:
to provide a policy framework that meets the Growth Plan requirements; to
develop a growth strategy that will guide the Region's development until 2031;
and to allocate that growth to the individual local municipalities. The study is
being undertaken for the Region by Urban Strategies Inc., Watson & Associates
and TSH.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
"'-1
Report PD 32-08
i,.~ _
(.I
July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 5
'I
,
In February 2008, Pickering City Council commented to the Region on the
Growth Plan Implementation Study Draft Phase 1 & 2 Report: Summary of
Understanding and Initial Analysis (see Report PD 08-08, Attachment #1).
Phase 1 & 2 of the Study examined growth issues in each municipality and
analyzed growth patterns if current development trends did not change.
Phase 3 & 4 of the Study examined alterative scenarios for growth within
Durham, evaluated those scenarios, and recommended a preferred growth
scenario. In late May and early June, 2008, the following reports were released
by the consultants:
· Scenario Evaluation and Consultant Recommended Preferred Growth
Scenario Working Paper, dated May 27, 2008;
. Addendum Report, dated June 2, 2008 (issued to correct mapping errors
following meeting with area municipal staff); and,
. Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario
Working Paper, dated June 13, 2008 (incorporating the directions of Regional
Planning Committee on June 3, 2008).
Regional Planning Committee has now invited public and agency comment by
July 14, 2008 on the Preferred Growth Scenario with direction certain revisions
appear in the June 13th Revised Working Paper. Refinement of the Preferred
Growth Scenario is continuing in cooperation with regional and local municipal
staff.
Phase 5 of the Study will be the refinement of the Preferred Growth Scenario
and development of a Durham policy framework to achieve the intensification
targets, greenfield density targets, and related policies and provisions of the
Places to Grow Plan. That work is anticipated in September, with an
amendment to the Durham Regional Official Plan following in early 2009.
The City is also required to bring its Official Plan into conformity with the Places
to Grow Plan. The City's work requires details arising from the next Phase and
the final amendment.
1.2 The Revised Growth Scenario Working Paper continues to identify a
shortfall in urban land to accommodate both residential and employment
uses.
The Working Paper shows that the population and employment allocated to
Durham Region by the Province using the intensification and density targets set
out in Places to Grow, requires land beyond lands currently designated for urban
uses in the Regional Plan. These lands are commonly referred to as the
"whitebelt" lands in the Places to Grow Plan. .
CORP0227-07/01 revised
-)
Report PD 32-08
July 14, 2008
Subject:
.2
Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 6
In Phases 1 & 2, the consultant's report showed that, without policy chanoes,
accommodating the Growth Plan targets of 960,000 residents and 350,000 jobs
for Durham by 2031 would require lands for additional low and medium-density
residential units with shortfalls of 3,122 hectares of living area land and 505
hectares of employment lands. The market "base case" assumed 350/0
intensification in existing built areas (below the Growth Plan requirement of
400/0); and a greenfield density of 44 persons and jobs per hectare in greenfield
urban areas (below the Growth Plan requirement of 50 people and jobs per
hecta re).
In Phase 3 & 4, the consultant's working paper showed that with policy chanoes
to increase densities for low density housing from 25 units per net hectare to
28 uph, achieve the 400/0 intensification target within the built-up areas, and
achieving 47 persons and jobs per hectare in the greenfield areas, additional
urban land is required, but it is only two-thirds of that required under the base
case assumptions..
1.3 The consultants evaluated several Alternative Growth Scenarios for
Durham Region, and ultimately recommended Scenario 3: Reinforcing
Existing Communities.
The growth scenarios proposed differing amounts OT and locations for
intensification and new urban living and employment areas. The three scenarios
evaluated were:
1. Continuing a Dominant Western Anchor - directing most new growth to
Pickering and Whitby;
2. Focusing on a Central Hub for Durham - directing most new growth to the
current central core of the Region in Whitby/Oshawa/Courtice; and,
3. Reinforcing Existing Communities - balancing the forecasted growth across
the Lake Ontario shoreline municipalities with enhanced growth in northeast
Pickering and a strategic reserve of employment lands along the future
Highway 407 alignment.
The consultants recommended Scenario 3. It proposes balanced growth across
the Lake Ontario shoreline municipalities and measured growth in the Northern
communities. Further, it reinforces all key drivers important to the economic
prosperity of the Region.
1.4 Regional Planning Committee directed revisions be made to Scenario 3 to
enhance opportunities for growth in northeast Pickering prior to accepting
it as the Recommended Preferred Scenario and circulating it for
consultation.
CORP0227 -07 /01 revised
Report PD 32-08
-")
-~
'~}
July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 7
I
,)
Figure 13B from the consultant's Revised Growth Scenario Working Paper is
included as Attachment #2 to this Report to Council. This Figure is titled
Scenario 3 - Reinforcing Existing Communities: Lands Beyond the Urban Area
Boundary and Urban Structure (showing directions from June 3rd Planning
Committee). Regional Planning Committee is seeking comments on this
Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario by July 14, 2008. Further detailing of
Scenario 3 is still continuing as further meetings occur between study
consultants and regional and local municipal staff.
For Pickering, the revised Preferred Growth Scenario proposes designation of
another block of land east of the Pickering Airport site as future Employment
Areas. It also proposes increasing the depth of the future Employment Areas
along Highway 407 stretching from approximately Highway 7 to north of
Highway 407 and northwards towards the Seventh Concession Road. Future
Living Area designations are proposed east of Greenwood, around Kinsale and
north of the Highway 407 Employment Areas,. Future Centres are proposed at
the intersection of the Seventh Concession and Salem Road and the Seventh
Concession Road and Lake Ridge Road. A Mobility Hub 'has been reinstated at
downtown Pickering's Urban Growth Centre. Staff support these changes.
The forecasts in the Revised Working Paper suggest that the revised scenario
would attract 40,595 new jobs to Pickering by 2031 out of a total of 142,805 new
jobs for Durham as a whole and 132,875 additional residents out of a Durham
total of 411,304. However, since the consultants have not yet revised the job or
residential population forecast to reflect Planning Committee directions for more
employment lands in northeast Pickering, further adjustments to these numbers
are anticipated.
2.0 Discussion:
2.1.1 Most of staff's earlier concerns with Scenario 3 were addressed by the
directions of Planning Committee on July 3rd, although a number of further
refinements are recommended.
Many of staff's concerns with the May 27 Working Paper conclusions have been
addressed in the recent changes made to the Preferred Scenario Three - the
'Reinforcing Existing Communities' scenario, including:
. location of a mobility hub in downtown Pickering;
. designation of more employment lands both east of the Pickering Airport
lands and along Highway 407;
. designation of more Living Area lands in north-east Pickering.
A number of concerns remain.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
......
:)
'f
July 14, 2008
Subject:
4
Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 8
2.2 The depth of the future Employment Areas adjacent to Highway 407 should
be increased to between 600 and 1000 metres.
Whereas the May 27th Working Paper included 400 metre wide bands of
employment lands along both sides of Highway 407 east of Westney Road in
Pickering, the June 13th revision, responding to Planning Committee directions,
indicated that the long-term employment land need should be reviewed in this
location. In order to accommodate larger parcel sizes and better realize the
locational advantages of a 400 level highway, the width of the employment
bands should be widened to 600 metres generally and up to 1,000 metres in
depth in selected locations. Staff support the suggestions of the study
consultants made at a recent meeting with staff to extend the employment
designation north to the Seventh Concession from Westney to Salem, and south.
to Highway 7 for the lands between Living Area designations proposed around
Kinsale and Greenwood.
2.3 The remnant piece of "whitebelt" lands east of the Pickering Airport site
should be designated as future Employment Areas.
The Revised Preferred Scenario proposes designating the large area of whitebelt
land east of the airport lands as employment area, leaving three small remnant
parcels as continued whitebelt lands. The remnant whitebelt parcels should
also be designated either as Living Area or Employment Area at this time.
2.4 The two proposed Future Centres along the Seventh Concession Road
should be expanded to the south to include lands adjacent to the
Highway 407 Transitway and or considered for Transit Village
designations.
Future Centres proposed for the Seventh Concession Road at both Salem and
Lake Ridge Roads have the potential to serve as transit villages with a range of
transit supportive land uses and densities if expanded southwards to incorporate
the transit stations proposed on the south side of Highway 407. It is
recommended that the two proposed Future Centres be expanded southwards to
incorporate the transitway stations and a broad range of transit supportive land
uses and densities be permitted.
2.5 Characteristics of several designation, including Transit Villages, Urban
Nodes, Future Centres and Waterfront Villages should be clarified
In order to understand the roles in the new urban structure of Pickering and the
Region of Durham of the new proposed features, clarification of proposed
functions, land uses and densities should be provided.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
--:>
-i!-J
July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 9
r--
~)
2.6 The jobs allocated to Pickering should assign the 35,000 jobs identified by
the Central Pickering Development Plan to Seaton, while maintaining at
least a 1:3 jobs per resident ratio for the rest of Pickering's growth.
The consultants are requested to provide detailed background work on
intensification. This information is required to enable staff to determine where
and to what extent residential growth is being assigned to the Urban Growth
Centre and other intensification corridors and centres. Also, staff requires
information on the amount of jobs assigned related to intensification. This
information is requested at the consultant's earliest convenience.
Staff recognizes the tables in the Working Paper on population and employment
have not been revised to reflect the changes directed by Planning Committee.
These revised tables should be also be forwarded as soon as possible to staff.
In revising the tables for Pickering, the Region and the consultants must address
the current under-allocation of jobs in Seaton.
The total allocation of 40,595 jobs to Pickering in the Recommended Preferred
Scenario to 2031 appears to disregard the jobs 35,000 jobs identified for Seaton
in the Provincial Central Pickering Development Plan. If the 35,000 jobs are part
of the figure of 40,595 jobs, the remaining jobs to be created in the rest of
Pickering to 2031 is only about 5,600 jobs. Yet our population (outside of
Seaton) is expected to increase by????
The consultants have indicated that if a Federal airport is developed, 10,000 jobs
will be added to the Pickering jobs allocation as a bonus but is not allocated in
the scenario at this time.
In revising the tables for the Revised Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario,
it is recommended that 35,000 jobs for Seaton be included as a baseline, and
the remaining jobs allocations for the rest of Pickering by 2031 be at a ratio of no
less than 1:3 jobs per resident. This ratio is realistic in light of the City's strategic
2.7 Phasing policies should be included in the Regional Plan addressing the
timing for area municipalities to bring new urban areas on stream so as to
minimize the City and Regional fiscal impacts.
While it is appropriate to designate lands in north-east Pickering for future Living
Areas and future Employment Areas at this time, policies should be introduced to
phase the timing of actual development.
For Pickering, new development areas should not be to compete with the build-
out of Seaton, for employment or residential uses. Similarly, intensification is a
key element of achieving the City's vision of its Downtown Urban Growth Centre.
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
'J
-~ /~
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July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
() Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 10
The City and the Region should not be burdened with the costs of providing
several sets of services and facilities for the new residents and employment area
at the same time.
In addition, new development areas immediately east of the potential future
airport may be impacted by noise should an airport be constructed. Phasing
policies should restrict the timing of these lands being developed for urban uses
until a decision on the development and timing of the possible airport are
reached.
A decision has not been reached on how piped services will be provided to
north-east Pickering yet. However, the Regional Master Water and Sanitary
Services Plan is underway to address this matter. There are two different
options for sanitary that would result in different phasing of development. Thus,
phasing policies should coordinate the timing of development with the Region's
servicing strategy and completion of related fiscal impact and financing studies.
Municipal fiscal impact and financing studies will also be required.
Accordingly, it is recommended that policies be introduced in the official plan
amendment to appropriately phase the future growth of Durham Region to
ensure o'rderly and efficient provision of municipal services.
2.8 The Durham Regional Official Plan, and the Places to Grow Plan should
prohibit large format retailing in strategic employment areas.
The current policy for Employment Areas in the Durham Regional Official Plan
permits, by amendment, the introduction of "retail warehousing". This type of
development is now widely known as the large format retailing, or power centres.
Large format retailing is usually a low intensity use that primarily serves the
residential areas (Living Areas). Yet, when located in Employment Areas, there
is usually infrequent transit service and little or no ability for walk-to customers.
Large format retailing (or retail warehouses) should be expressly prohibited in the
future Employment Areas along Highway 407 and other strategic and locations
such as the freeway links, through both amendments to the Durham Regional
Official Plan, and addition of new provisions in the Places to Grow Plan. City
staff is making similar comments in responding to the recently released
Provincial Discussion Paper on Planning for Employment.
The Central Pickering Development Plan contains a policy prohibiting large
format retailing in the lands designated Employment Areas.
3.0 Other Information
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
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July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 11
7
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3.1 The Region of Durham is considering a financial impact study of the
Preferred Growth Scenario.
Area municipal staff had recommended that the Growing Durham Study add a
component that analyses the financial impact of the alternative growth scenarios.
This information was to provide input to the scenario evaluation process.
However, Regional staff opted to recommend a subsequent financial impact
study of the Preferred Growth Scenario.
Regional staff have indicated that a financial impact study could be completed in
approximately 18 months at significant cost with consultants conducting the
study. The fiscal impact of the Preferred Scenario will not be available when
final decisions are reached on a growth strategy or on the official plan
amendment. Further, no data will be provided on the financial impacts of the
growth strate~~ on local municipalities. Regional Tri-Committee, at its meeting
held June 10 , 2008, requested that Regional staff report back with a more
detailed outline of a financial impact study including a work program, the timing
and costs.
3.2 The Study is moving into Phase 5: refinement of Durham's Preferred
Growth Scenario and development of the related policy framework.
Following receipt of comments from area municipalities, other stakeholders and
the public including the comments made at the June 25th public meeting, the
consultants will continue to refine the Preferred Growth Scenario and develop
the policy framework. Area municipalities can request meetings if required with
the consultants. In addition, a meeting with area municipalities is scheduled for
late July or early August to provide an additional opportunity for input from area
municipal staff into the development of the Phase 5 work.
Attachments:
1. Text from Report Number PD 08-08
2. Figure 138 - Scenario 3 - Reinforcing Existing Communities, from Growing
Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred Growth
Scenario Working Paper, as revised June 3, 2008 by Planning Committee;
prepared by Urban Strategies Inc. et ai, dated June 13, 2008..
Prepared By:
Approved/Endorsed By:
CORP0227-07/01 revised
Report PD 32-08
July 14, 2008
Subject: Growing Durham - Revised Scenario Evaluation and Recommended
?) Preferred Growth Scenario Working Paper Page 12
',)
ORIGINAL SIGNED BY
ORIGINAL SIGNED BY
Steve Gaunt, MCIP, RPP
Senior Planner
Neil Carroll, MCIP, RPP
Director, P & D
ORIGINAL SIGNED BY
Catherine Rose, MCIP, RPP
Manager, Policy
SG:??
Copy: Chief Administrative Officer
Director, Corporate Services & Treasures
Director, Office of Sustainability
Director, Operations & Emergency Services
Division Head, Municipal Property & Engineering
Recommended for the consideration
of Pickering City Council
Thomas J. Quinn, RDMR, CMM III
Chief Administrative Officer
CORP0227-07/01 revised
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CORPORATE SERVrCES DEPARTMENT
CLERKS DIVISION
DIRECTIVE MEMORANDUM
July 24, 2008
To:
Neil Carroll
Directorl Planning & Development
From:
Debi A. Wilcox
City Clerk
Subject
Direction as per Minutes of the Meeting of City Council
held on July 14, 2008
Director, Planning & Development, Report PO 32-08
Region of Durham's Growth Plan Imprementation Study: Growing Durham
- Phases 3 & 4
- Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred Growth
Scenario Working Paper, prepared by Urban Strategies Inc. et aI, dated
June 13, 2008, as revised to show Regional Planning Directions
COUNCIL DECISION
RESOLUTION # 140/08
1. That Report PO 32-08 of the Director, Planning & Development, regarding
the Growth Scenario Working Paper, dated June 13, 2008, presenting the
outcomes of Phases 3 & 4 of the Region of Durham's Growth Plan
Implementation Study be received;
2. That the comments contained in Report PO 32-08 on the Recommended
Preferred Growth Scenario for the Region of Durham Growth Pfan
Implementation Study be endorsed, and that the Region of Durham be
requested to:
a) support the land use structure with Planning Committee directions
noted, shown on Figure 13 B and provided as Attachment #2 to Report
PO 32-08 with the following further refinements:
· Increase the depth of the future Employment Areas in Pickering
along Highway 407, east of Westney Road, to 1,000 metres south of
Highway 407 between the Greenwood and Kinsale areas and in the
vicinity of Lakeridge Road and the connector to Highway 401;
· support the designation to future Employment Areas of the remnant
parcel of liwhitebelt" lands located east of the future potential airport
site; and ,. ,
· expand to the south the Future Centres designations I currently
shown at the two intersections of the Seventh Concession Road with
Salem and Lakeridge Roads, to incorporate the Highway 407
Subject: Directive Memorandum
Report PO 32-08
Page 2
July 24, 2008
transitway stations and adjacent lands, thereby allowing mixed
residential, commercial and high intensity office uses, and consider
designation of a future transit village on the south side of the
Highway 407 transitway;
b) in updating the population and employment tables for Pickering to
reflect Planning Committee's revisions to the Recommended Preferred
Growth Scenario, increase the employment figures for Pickering to
include the 35,000 jobs identified by the Provincial Central Pickering
Development Plan for Seaton, and allocate jobs arising from the future
Employment Areas, future Living Areas and intensification in South
Pickeringl at a ratio of no less than one job for each three new residents
as is applied across the rest of the Region, as further clarified in Section
2.6 to Report PO 32-08;
c) in detailing the policies for the Recommended Preferred Growth
Scenariol
· establish strong phasing policies respecting the timing and process
for local municipalities to bring new "whitebelt" lands into the urban
area in order to address the logical and orderly provision of
infrastructure and phasing of growth with municipal fiscal priorities;
· establish new policies prohibiting large format retailing within future
Employment Areas;
· establish strong phasing policies respecting future Living Areas that
may be, affected by incompatible noise from a possible future
Pickering airport so as to prevent residential or other noise sensitive
uses from being established until resolution of the appropriate noise
protection standard and a decision on the development and timing of
the possible airport are reached; and
· better clarify the different characteristics of Transit Villages} Urban
Nodes} Future Centres and Waterfront VI'fIages}'
d) with respect to strategic future Employment Areas needed beyond
20311 work with the Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal to
establish policies permitting the Region to acknowledge as part of
current Regional Plan conformity amendment, the long term intended
use for these lands as future Employment Areas;
e) support the City of Pickering in its request to the Ministry of
Transportation in commenting on the Highway 407 Environmental
Assessment, to relocate the proposed Highway 407 maintenance yard
from the south side of the proposed interchange with Salem Road to
allow maximum intensification around the Highway 407 transitway;
f) obtain from Urban Strategies Inc. and forward to area municipalities the
detailed information on the amount, types and locations of
intensification projected for the existing urban areas used in the
background work not contained in the Working Paper;
Subject: Directive Memorandum Page 3 'I
Report PO 32-08 July 241 2008
g) Support the production of a financial impact study of the Preferred
Gro\Nth scenario;
h) Support the updating of the watershed plans with the Toronto Region
Conservation Area as appropriate; and
i) That the City of Pickering request the Regional Municipality of Durham
to hold a public open house in Pickering prior to the next phase of the
study.
3. Further, that a copy of Report PO 32-08 and Pickering Council's resolutjon on
the matter be forwarded to the Region of Durham, Urban Strategies Inc.,
other Durham Area Municipalities, the Ministry of Energy & Infrastructure, the
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, and the Ministry of Transportation.
Please take any action deemed necessary.
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Debi Wilcox
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Copy: Chief Administrative Officer
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Summary of Key Policy Directions by Topic
(from Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Directions Report
Growing Durham Study)
The topics and main policy directions identified for consideration are listed below:
(1) Guiding principles and objectives: The five principles and objectives are:
maximize Durham's competitive advantage; strengthen mobility within and beyond
the Region; encourage healthy and sustainable communities; reinforce and build
on existing regional settlement and infrastructure patterns; protect and enhance
the Region's existing legacies; and live in harmony with the environment;
(2) Regional urban structure: Regional and local official plans should generally
reflect the proposed urban structure; establish density and housing unit mix targets
to achieved desired densities; establish site plan control by-laws for the purpose of
achieving complete communities; provide for compact forms of development to
evolve over time;
(3) Intensification: Regional policies to allow for direct access onto regional
corridors in order to facilitate medium and higher density development which fronts
onto these roads; local plans to designate areas appropriate for intensification, to
encourage intensification, and to demonstrate how the municipality will meet the
minimum intensification target established in the Growing Durham Study; include
design and site plan policies; stable residential neighbourhoods are not considered
appropriate for major residential;
(4) Designated Greenfield lands: Designate Greenfield lands with an urban
structure that supports complete communities; establish minimum densities,
heights and tailored density ranges to meet the intent of both regional and local
urban structure elements; establish targets that will contribute to the Greenfield
density target of 50 jobs and persons per hectare; include policy and community
design direction that promotes development which accommodates growth in a
positive urban form; require a minimum 300/0 of new residential areas within living
areas but outside centres and corridors to be other than detached dwellings;
Regional policies to provide direct access on to Regional corridors specifically for
medium and high density development;
(5) Employment: Bring employment lands to meet 2031 regional employment land
needs into the new urban boundary; monitor and review employment land needs
every five years; protect strategically located employment lands sufficient to meet
the long term regional employment land need to 2056; do not allow the 2056
employment land supply to be used for other purposes ahead of 2031 unless a
corresponding decrease in the 2031 living area is made; provide for a range of
employment uses, including employment lands, employment corridors, prestige
employment and offices under 10,000 square metres or 500 employees;
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(5) Employment (con't); DecIsions of Regional Council to refuse conversion of
employment lands shall not be subject to appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board;
major retail or any retail greater than 300 square metres and that is not ancillary to
the employment is not permitted on employment lands; provision and servicing of
employment lands should provide for a range of market choice, with a minimum
five-year supply of. serviced and developable land at all times at the local level;
development applications for large sites should be required to submit phasing
plans to show compliance with density targets will be achieved over time;
(6) Infrastructure planning, transit and servicing: Phase development in an
orderly and sequential pattern linked to regional and local transportation and
infrastructure capital investment plans; identify infrastructure priority areas in the
built up area to support intensification; review recommended growth scenario
against Regional water and wastewater master plan; Region to explore innovative
and sustainable infrastructure technologies; Transit infrastructure to be
incorporated in infrastructure capital planning with a Transit First Priority; explore
feasibility of new GO Transit service; integrate new Transit stations and corridors
into Durham Transit Master Plan; create a 25 and 50 year capital planning
strategy;
(7) Environment: Require watershed planning in advance of secondary plans and
plans of subdivision; protect natural heritage features in accordance with the
Provincial Policy Statement; encourage sustainable design practices;
(8) Phasing growth: Undertake five-year growth management reviews; require
secondary plans for any development on lands greater than 20 hectares in size;
require master plans for redevelopment of smaller parcels of land that need to be
considered comprehensively; consider use of holding provisions; develop growth
infrastructure capital plans in accordance with long servicing plans, growth
management reviews and phasing;
(9) Urban boundary expansion: Include in the 2031 urban boundary land that is
needed to provide for the forecasted growth of both residential and jobs that
responsibly utilizes land and structures urban growth to create complete and
healthy communities; protect long term employment land needs; area
municipalities to provide for a 10 year local housing and employment needs
through logical and sequential development patterns within each phase; urban
boundary expansions beyond 2031 will require a comprehensive Regional review
process, except for the use of long term employment land for a Provincially or
Regionally significant employer; 400/0 Region-wide intensification target in existing
urban area to be met; size of urban boundary expansions to be consistent with
creating complete new communities at the secondary plan level;
(10) Monitoring and ongoing review: Monitor development patterns across the
Region related to annual intensification targets, Greenfield densities and urban
growth centre densities; Regions and area municipalities to undertake five-year
growth management reviews; Region and area municipalities to work
collaboratively to overcome challenges, and find and advocate for creative
solutions for achieving objectives of the Growing Durham Study.
4
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Summary of Main Revisions1 to the Assumptions, Methodology or Analysis
Having Reference to or Impacting Pickering
C Between the Scenario Evaluation and Recommended Preferred Growth Scenario
Working Paper and the Draft Recommended Growth Scenario and Policy
Directions Report, Growing Durham Study)
Staff has identified the following main revisions for Pickering:
(1) Increasing the amount of high density in the housing demand forecast to meet
the Greenfield density target of 50 jobs and persons per hectare;
(2) Refining the housing supply needs, recognizing the specific provisions of the
Seaton lands (to be planned for up to 70,000 persons);
(3) Detailing the targets for the Urban Growth Centres as 100 jobs per hectare and
100 persons per hectare to achieve the required 200 jobs and persons per
hectare;
(4) Detailing the housing mixing Urban Growth Centres as 200/0 medium density
units and 800/0 high density units;
(5) Increasing the employment forecast for Durham Region to 375,000 (from the
350,000 allocated by the Provincial Growth Plan), to recognize Durham Region's
objective of providing jobs and population at a ratio of one to two;
(6) Assuming a Pickering Airport would generate a total of 10,000 jobs, both direct
(on-site) and indirect (spin-off jobs, located off the Federal lands); 4,500 indirect
jobs are included within the 375,000 employment forecast; the 5,500 direct jobs
would be in addition to the 375,000 jobs forecast;
(7) Increasing the employment land density from 26 jobs per gross hectare to 27
jobs per gross hectare (for comparison, the employment area at Whites
Road/Granite Boulevard achieves a density of about 23 jobs per gross hectare);
(8) Assuming 580/0 of Durham's employment growth will be on employment lands
(the remaining 420/0 occurs primarily within the living areas, such as office, retail,
personal services, and institutional);
(9) Increasing the width of the employment band along Highway 407 extension
northeast Pickering: south to Highway 7, and north to the Seventh Concession
Road on the western side of northeast Pickering;
(10) Identifying a Mobility Hub in Pickering consistent with the Metrolinx draft Report;
(11) Meeting the minimum 400/0 intensification target for the Region commencing in
2015 and each year thereafter; individual municipalities have different
intensification rates: Pickering's is a minimum 380/0 since Pickering has a high
proportion of the new development outside the build-up area;
(12) Adding future centres and corridors to the new urban areas and assigning a
more intense development mix than surrounding living area;
(13) Distinguishing the land for future living area required prior to 2031 and post
2031, and similarly distinguishing the lands for employment area required pre
and post 2031;
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(14) Re-allocating 5,000 units of the low density residential demand for the 2031 time
frame from Pickering, Ajax and Whitby to Oshawa as it has a supply of existing
designated urban land; Pickering and Whitby would have required new urban to
be designated; the effect of the re-allocation for Pickering is that some future
living area would now be identified in the post-2031 time frame; and
(15) Identifying additional future employment land along the Highway 407 corridor in
the vicinity of the Highway 401-407 connector in northwest Whitby, for the 2031
time frame; the rationale was because of the area's strategic location with
respect to future accessibility; and complement the future living area identified
for Whitby; the effect of this identification for Pickering is that some of the future
employment area is in the post 2031 time frame.
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SCENARIO 3 - REINFORCING EXISTING C()MMUNITIES
LAND BEY()ND URBAN AREA BOUNDARY AND URBAN STRUCTURE
NOTE: DnliCTION FROl'.'l Pl!\NNING CO~IMITTEE ON JUNE 3.2008 IS INDICATED IN RED BOXES. THE CONSULT.'\NTTEA:-'IIS REVIEWING THE
LONG TERM FUTUIU Ef\'lPLOY~lENT LAND NEED AND HvlPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE LIVING AIZEA LAND NEED.
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I INCLUDE AS LONG TERM [' REVIEW lONG-TERM I INCLUDE AS FUTURE J REVIEW LONG-TERM' :
EMPlOYMENT lAND EMPlOYMENT LAND NEED l LMNG AREA lAND EMPLOYMENT lAND NEED I,
ALONG 407 CORRIDOR ALONG .0407 CORRIDOR I_
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REFLECT PICKERING AS A """'G',;: ~._
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transit village: ex/sUng/future
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UOIT/DUrhi;lm College
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FIGURE 13B
N01E:THE ILLUSTRATED t\RE.'\ IS BASED ON FUTURE GROWTH LANDS IDENTlFIEDTHROUGHTHE LOCALLY INFLUENCED OtJ'TLOOK FOR RESlDENTIALAND EMPLOYMENT USES AND FUTURE CENTRES.
THE ILLUSTR,ATED AREA ALSO REFLECTS STRATEGICALLY LOCATED EMPLOYMENT LANDSAND LANDS RESERVED TO PROVIDE CONTIGUOUS RESIDENTlAL DEVELOPMENTS. DUE TOTHE SCALE OF
[\.1APPING.THE TOTAL FUTURE GROWTH AREAS ILLUSTRATED FOR EACH SCENARIO INCLUDE ALL NATURAL HERIT.'\GE AND HYDROLOGIC FEATURES. HIGHWAY -W7 RIGHT OF WAY .~ND MAJOR
HYDRO CORRIDORS, ONCE THESE FE:\TURES1\RE REMOVED.THE REMAINING LAND AREAS APPROXIMATELY REPRESENT THE GROWTH PLAN GROSS LAND NEED FOR LAKE ONTARIO SHORELINE
MUNICIPALITIES FOR THE SCEN,'\RIo.
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