City Council Agenda

 

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SPECIAL OTTAWA CITY COUNCIL
AGENDA 34

Wednesday,  May 27, 2020

 10:00 am

By Electronic Participation

 

This meeting will be held through electronic participation in accordance with the Municipal Act, 2001, as amended by Bill 187, the Municipal Emergency Act, 2020, and an Order in Council of March 28, 2020, which amended the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act and prohibits organized public events of more than five people.

 

MOMENT OF REFLECTION

 

ROLL CALL

 

CONFIRMATION OF MINUTES

 

Confirmation of the Minutes of the Council meeting of May 13, 2020.

 

 

DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST INCLUDING THOSE ORIGINALLY ARISING FROM PRIOR MEETINGS

 

 

COMMUNICATIONS

 

Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO):

 

 

·          

COVID-19 Update: Municipal Fiscal Request, Emergency Orders, Pandemic Pay, LTC Homes Commission, Extended School and Child Care Closures, and Summer Camps

 

 

·          

COVID-19 Update: Continued Fiscal Stabilization Request + Re-opening Start

 

 

Response to Inquiries:

·          

OCC 20-09 - Intensification in the Downtown Core

 

Other Communications Received:

 

·          

Submission received containing the names of 3720 individuals requesting that Ottawa City Council not approve the expansion of the urban boundary (see Planning Committee and Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee Joint Report 3).

 

REGRETS

 

Councillors D. Deans (See Motion No. 20/1 of September 25, 2019) and
R. Chiarelli advised they would be absent from the City Council meeting of 27 May 2020.

 

 

MOTION TO INTRODUCE REPORTS

 

Councillors S. Moffatt and L. Dudas  

 

 


COVID-19 REMARKS BY MAYOR WATSON

 

VERBAL UPDATES

 

MEDICAL OFFICER OF HEALTH

 

 

1.

COVID-19 VERBAL UPDATE FROM THE MEDICAL OFFICER OF HEALTH

 

CITY MANAGER

 

2.

COVID-19 VERBAL UPDATE FROM THE CITY MANAGER

 

REPORTS

 

INTEGRITY COMMISSIONER

 

 

3.

INTERIM REPORT TO COUNCIL ON AN INQUIRY RESPECTING THE CONDUCT OF COUNCILLOR CHIARELLI

 

REPORT RECOMMENDATIONS
That Council receive this report for information.

 


 

COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

PLANNING COMMITTEE AND AGRICULTURE AND RURAL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE JOINT REPORT 3

 

 

4.

NEW OFFICIAL PLAN – GROWTH MANAGEMENT STRATEGY

COMMITTEE MEETING INFORMATION

Delegations: The committee heard 93 delegations on this item

Debate: The committee spent 27 hours and 10 minutes on this item

Vote: The committee CARRIED the report recommendations with multiple amendments and directions to staff, on a division of 10 YEAS to 1 NAY

Position of Ward Councillor: City-wide 

Position of Advisory Committee:  N/A


PLANNING COMMITTEE AND AGRICULTURE AND RURAL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS, AS AMENDED


That Council
:

1.            approve the Balanced Scenario as the Residential Growth Management Strategy for the new Official Plan as described in Document 1 attached, which accommodates 51 per cent overall of residential growth through intensification, with an intensification target that increases to 60 per cent in the 2041 to 2046 period;

2.            approve the inclusion of new urban residential and employment land expansion of between 1,350-1,650 gross hectares, which is to be selected using the criteria identified in Document 6 for residential land, and for employment land on the basis of strategic additions to the urban employment lands base, with the final amount and location of new urban residential and urban employment land to be brought forward when the draft Official Plan is tabled in Q4 2020;

3.            approve the following corrections be made the main report -

A.           replace Figure 4, page 24, so that the Built-up Area Units, Greenfield %, and Greenfield Units columns accurately reflect the intended intensification rate target scenario for each of the rows from 2018-2021 to 2041-2046:

replace

 Timeframe

Urban Units

Intensification %

Built-up Area Units

Greenfield %

Greenfield Units

2018-2021

24,300

40%

12,100

50%

12,100

2021-2026

38,800

47%

19,800

49%

19,000

2026-2031

35,800

56%

19,400

46%

16,500

2031-2036

31,200

68%

19,300

38%

11,800

2036-2041

27,400

80%

20,500

25%

6,800

2041-2046

24,300

100%

24,300

0%

-

2018-2046

181,800

64%

115,500

36%

66,300


with

Timeframe

Urban Units

Intensification %

Built-up Area Units

Greenfield %

Greenfield Units

2018-2021

24,300

40%

9,700

60%

14,600

2021-2026

38,800

47%

18,200

53%

20,600

2026-2031

35,800

56%

20,100

44%

15,800

2031-2036

31,200

68%

21,200

32%

10,000

2036-2041

27,400

80%

21,900

20%

5,500

2041-2046

24,300

100%

24,300

0%

-

2018-2046

181,800

64%

115,500

36%

66,300

 

B.           amend the following references to add -  “ and an additional exception for the Village of Manotick only with respect to the lands within the Village which run along the western shore of the Rideau River.” 

                                              i.        Page 37 - under d. Conflicting Rural Use Factors:

Land within one kilometre of a Village will not be considered, except for the village of Notre-Dame-des-Champs which is already almost fully surrounded by the urban area.

                                            ii.        Page 54 - under RURAL IMPLICATIONS, first paragraph:

The City proposes, through the Urban Expansion Detailed Evaluation Criteria, to maintain a 1-kilometre buffer around existing Villages that are adjacent to the urban area so that they remain distinct from the evolving suburban areas. The only exception will be for the Village of Notre-Dame-des-Champs, which is already surrounded by existing and proposed urban development and for which a buffer is not possible.

4.            approve that the following corrections be made to the Supporting Document 1 -Residential Growth Management Strategy for the New Official Plan:

A.           replace Figure 47, page 45 so that the Balanced Scenario Built-up Area units of “14,600” shows “82,400”:

replace

Timeframe

Urban Units

Intensification %

Built-up Area Units

Greenfield %

Greenfield Units

2021-2026

38,800

40%

    15,500

60%

    23,300

2026-2031

35,800

40%

    14,300

60%

    21,500

2031-2036

31,200

40%

    12,500

60%

    18,700

15-year total

105,800

40%

    42,300

60%

    63,500

Balanced scenario

 

    14,600

      75,100

Post-2036 surplus

 

    

    11,700


with

Timeframe

Urban Units

Intensification %

Built-up Area Units

Greenfield %

Greenfield Units

2021-2026

38,800

40%

    15,500

60%

    23,300

2026-2031

35,800

40%

    14,300

60%

    21,500

2031-2036

31,200

40%

    12,500

60%

    18,700

15-year total

105,800

40%

    42,300

60%

    63,500

Balanced scenario

 

    82,400

      75,100

Post-2036 surplus

 

    

    11,700

 

B.           on page 45, Methodology Gross Developable Area, first sentence, replace “995” with “1,281”, to read as follows: “The Balanced scenario requires a portion of projected growth to occur on 1,281 hectares of urban area expansion lands.”

C.           amend the following references to add – “ and an additional exception for the Village of Manotick only with respect to the lands within the Village which run along the western shore of the Rideau River.”  

                                              i.        Page 7 - under Urban: Expansion Area last bullet

Land within 1km from an existing Village (except Notre-Dames-des-Champs, which is already predominately surrounded).

                                            ii.        Page 48 – second paragraph last bullet

Land within one kilometre of an existing Village (except Notre-Dame-des-Champs).

                                           iii.        Page 50 - under Conflicting Rural Use Factors

Generally, land within one kilometre of a village will not be considered unless the village is already partially surrounded by the urban area, for example Notre Dame-des-Champs.

5.            approve that:

A.           Criteria 6 “Availability of Rapid Transit” be renamed “Availability of Rapid Transit or Transit Priority - Isolated Measures”, and that points be included in Criteria 6 as follows:

a.            6 points for “Within the proximity of an existing Transit Priority Corridor - Isolated Measures”

b.            2 points for “Within the proximity of a future Transit Priority Corridor - Isolated Measures”

B.           Criteria 7 “Proximity to Nearest Rapid Transit Station” be renamed “Proximity to Nearest Rapid Transit Station, Transit Priority Corridor – Isolated Measures or Park and Ride Feeding the Rapid Transit System”, and that points be included in Criteria 7 as follows:

a.            for locations within 1.9 km of a Park and Ride feeding a Rapid Transit System and Transit Priority – Isolated Measures, 2 points maximum

C.           Document 1 and 6 are to be revised where applicable to reflect these changes

6.            approve the following additional exclusions to lands, parcels and clusters of parcels that are to be considered for candidates for inclusion into any proposed urban or village boundary expansion:

a.         lands in an Agricultural Resource Area are to be excluded from any and all consideration as candidate parcels for inclusion in the urban or village boundary

b.         lands in an Agricultural Resource Area are not to be evaluated, considered or ranked in any way that would allow lands to be even remotely associated or considered for inclusion in expanded urban or village settlement areas

7.            direct staff to adjust the scoring criteria to account for the impacts to existing agricultural and livestock operations and the Minimum Distance Separation;

8.            approve that Agricultural Resource Area lands are not to be used for urban infrastructure such as storm ponds, water and wastewater infrastructure, sports fields or other uses that support the development of new suburban communities;

9.            approve that, to recognize and protect the importance of mineral aggregate production (as defined in the Official Plan as ‘Bedrock Resource and Sand and Gravel Resource Areas’) for Ottawa’s construction and infrastructure needs that staff be directed not to score, evaluate, consider or rank in any way residential candidate parcels adjacent to or within 200 metres of Bedrock Resource and 200 metres of Sand and Gravel Resource Areas as identified on Schedule A and B of the Official Plan, unless the landowner can provide evidence by a qualified subject matter expert that the resource will be exhausted by 2036;

10.         approve that staff be directed to, when the official plan is presented in Q4 2020, include in their report (on a conceptual basis) the tool kit that will help the City reach its intensification goals. For clarity, the report is not expected to present the details but general trends such as new R4 zones on arterial roadways, permit semi-detached in R1 zones as some potential examples;

11.         approve that any rural parcels that are beyond the catchment area of an already-planned transit station will need Council confirmation of a funding source or mechanism for any necessary transit network extensions, and any other component of required municipal infrastructure, prior to the approval of its implementing secondary plan; 

12.         approve that staff in Planning, Infrastructure and Economic Development will further consider and detail the requirements of secondary plans for greenfield development as part of the new draft Official Plan to be tabled by the end of 2020;

13.         approve that the draft Official Plan policies should be coordinated with the City’s Refresh of the 10 Year Housing and Homelessness Plan and assess implementation and enabling strategies such as:

a.            updated definitions of affordability including an analysis of the geographic differences of affordability within the City; and

b.            the role of Inclusionary Zoning in providing affordable housing; and

c.            providing enabling policies that support the 10 Year and Homelessness Plan in areas of land use, infrastructure, transportation, and the City’s use of its own assets and real estate;

14.         approve that staff:

A.           bring forward policies in the draft Official Plan to ensure that any urban expansion areas are being planned, funded, phased and built so that  the necessary infrastructure and community amenities are in place and coordinated with the development approvals process;

B.           establish clear guidelines for developers to notify residents who have purchased a home or land within the development of all infrastructure and amenities which will be required to be constructed or upgraded as a condition of application approval, and timelines be made publicly available to increase accountability and transparency of the application process;

15.          approve that, in order to encourage and support development at our transit stations and along the transit corridor, staff be directed to advise the appropriate Standing Committee(s) and Council how complex it would be to change current City land disposal polices to create a competitive process for City-owned lands and air rights at rapid transit stations and along the rapid transit network that would offer City owned land at nominal costs in exchange for tangible public benefits (such as long term affordable rental housing) that equals or exceeds the value of the lands or air rights;

16.         approve that:

A.           in addition to the numerical criteria recommended in Document 6 that Committee recommend that Council approve the following additional evaluation lens:

“That all candidate parcels lands shall be reviewed primarily against the policy directions contained in the Council approved OP policy directions known as the “Five Big Moves” and the numeric criteria.  That evaluation will demonstrate how the future development of the lands would advance the policy directions contained therein”.

B.           the Criteria Section of the Staff report Page 38 Section e. Scoring and selecting land be amended by the following:

After the sentence “The first evaluation will likely identify lands that readily complete existing communities in a logical and efficient manner.” Add the following:

“However, many of the growth communities outside the greenbelt are largely complete within the current urban boundary. Where additional expansion lands are recommended, it should be demonstrated, that development of these new lands can be accommodated by existing and planned community amenities.

As Agricultural Resource Area lands will not be considered for inclusion for urban or village expansions, that staff compile the complete list of all candidate parcels required to satisfy the 2046 urban expansion land requirements (comprising extensions to existing communities and other General Rural Area  lands to establish a new community(ies), consistent with Section 2.2.1.4 of the approved Official Plan). 

Further, that the complete list of recommend candidate properties be presented to Committee and Council for approval.”

 

PLANNING COMMITTEE REPORT 23

 

5.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 841, 845, AND 855(A) GRENON AVENUE

COMMITTEE MEETING INFORMATION

Delegations: The committee heard nine delegations on this item

Debate: The committee spent 1 hour and 50 minutes on this item

Vote: The committee Carried the report recommendations with an amendment to Document 2

Position of Ward Councillor: Councillor Kavanagh is opposed to the report recommendation. Her comments are noted in the report. 

Position of Advisory Committee:  n/a

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS, AS AMENDED

That Council approve:

1.         an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 841, 845, and 855(A) Grenon Avenue to permit a four-storey apartment building, as detailed in Document 2, as amended by the following:

a.         that Document 2 be replaced with the following: “The proposed change to the City of Ottawa Zoning By-law No. 2008-250 for 841, 845, and 855(A) Grenon Avenue: 1. Rezone the lands as shown in Document 1 from R1O and R3A to R4M”; and

2.         that pursuant to the Planning Act, subsection 34(17), no further notice be given.

 

 

 

6.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 1946 SCOTT STREET

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS, AS AMENDED

That Council approve:

1.         an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 1946 Scott Street to allow for the redesign of a previously approved nine-storey apartment building, as detailed in Document 2, as amended by the following:

a.         that the following changes be made to 1. b) in Document 2:

i.          delete the second provision (hyphen);

ii.         third provision: delete “or 90 m, whichever is the lesser” and replace “storey below” with “sixth storey” to read “at and above the ninth storey, the building must be setback an additional 2 m from the rear wall of the sixth storey”;

iii.        fourth provision: delete “or 84 m, whichever is the lesser” to read “at and above the seventh storey, a building must be setback a minimum of 400 mm from the front wall of the principal building”;

iv.        fifth provision: delete “or 90 m, whichever is the lesser” and replace “storey below” with “sixth storey” to read “at and above the ninth storey, the building must be setback 2 m from the front wall of the sixth storey”;

v.         seventh provision: replace “2.45 m” by “2.3 m” to read “minimum soft landscaped area abutting the rear lot line: 2.3 m”;

vi.        ninth provision: replace “2.45 m” by “2.3 m” to read “minimum soft landscaped buffer of a parking lot abutting the rear lot line: 2.3 m”;

vii.       twelfth provision: replace “double traffic lane” by “two-direction controlled single traffic lane” to read “minimum width of a two-direction controlled single traffic lane driveway providing access to a parking lot or parking garage: 3 m”;

viii.      add the provision: “minimum width of an aisle providing access to parking spaces in a parking lot or parking garage: 5.5m.”

2.         that pursuant to the Planning Act, subsection 34(17), no further notice be given.

 

7.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 341 AND 343 TWEEDSMUIR AVENUE

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
That Council approve an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 341 and 343 Tweedsmuir Avenue to permit the reduction of select zoning performance standards in order to convert an existing pair of three-unit dwelling into four-unit low-rise apartment dwellings, as detailed in Document 2.

 


 

8.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 5924 AND 5938 HAZELDEAN ROAD

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS, AS AMENDED

That Council:

1.         approve an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 5924 and 5938 Hazeldean Road to permit 76 stacked townhouses and ten back-to-back townhouses, as detailed in Document 2;

2.         direct staff to work with the applicant to achieve the following ahead of subsequent site plan control approval:

a)        the applicant must provide a letter of intent to secure off-site parking spaces to be made available to condominium owners for overflow parking on such terms as the applicant may determine;

b)        the applicant must obtain approval of the detailed design for traffic calming on Victor Street;

c)        the applicant must provide transit passes to all its residents for a period of one year; and d) the applicant must include a clause in all purchase and sale agreements, and a notice on title, advising purchasers that each unit only comes with 1.0 parking space.

3.         approve that pursuant to the Planning Act, subsection 34(17), no further notice be given.

 

 

BULK CONSENT AGENDA

 

PLANNING COMMITTEE REPORT 23

 

 

A.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 134 AND 136 WILLOW STREET

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
That Council approve an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 134 and 136 Willow Street to permit the reduction of select zoning performance standards in order to convert an existing pair of three-unit dwellings into four-unit low-rise apartment dwellings, as detailed in Document 2.

 

B.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 866 AND 898 EAGLESON ROAD; 1325, 1355 AND 1365 TERRY FOX DRIVE

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
That Council approve an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 866 and 898 Eagleson Road; 1325, 1355 and 1365 Terry Fox Drive to permit residential land uses and two new park blocks as detailed in Document 2.

 

C.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT – 1158 OLD SECOND LINE ROAD

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
That Council approve an amendment to Zoning By-law 2008-250 for 1158 Old Second Line Road to permit 47 two storey townhouse dwellings on private streets, as detailed in Document 2.

 

D.

REDUCED PARKING REQUIREMENTS FOR AUTOMATED TECHNOLOGIES

 

COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
That Council direct staff to bring forward an amendment to the zoning by-law to reduce the parking requirements where automated technologies would serve to reduce the number of parking spaces necessary for certain warehouse and light industrial uses or components thereof.

 

MOTION TO ADOPT REPORTS

 

Councillors S. Moffatt and L. Dudas

 

 

MOTIONS OF WHICH NOTICE HAS BEEN PREVIOUSLY GIVEN

MOTION

Moved by Mayor J. Watson
Seconded by Councillor T. Tierney

WHEREAS on March 11, 2020 the World Health Organization assessed COVID-19 as a global pandemic; and

WHEREAS the Government of Ontario and the City of Ottawa have each declared a State of Emergency as a result of the current COVID-19 pandemic under the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act, 1990and

WHEREAS the COVID-19 pandemic presents the greatest financial challenge that Canadian cities and communities have seen in generations and many are on the brink of financial crisis as revenues are plummeting, costs are rising, and municipalities cannot run deficits which puts them, and the essential services they provide, further at risk; and

WHEREAS the financial impact to the City of Ottawa resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic is currently estimated at a net loss of $66 million if the state of emergency continues until June, $123 million if it continues until September, and $186 if it continues until December (and this excludes financial impacts to the Ottawa Police Service, Ottawa Public Health, and Ottawa Public Library); and

WHEREAS on April 22, 2020 the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) formally requested the federal government provide at least $10 billion in direct emergency operating funding for Canadian municipalities; and

WHEREAS this request for federal emergency funding included $7.6 billion in direct allocations (like the federal gas tax fund) for all local governments, plus $2.4 billion for municipalities with transit systems, as well as additional funding for municipalities facing extraordinary challenges, such as those struggling to support vulnerable populations; and

WHEREAS in order to be effective nationwide, federal funding must be straightforward, direct and flexible, which means a single transfer that municipalities can use as needed, with no requirement for provinces to match funds;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the City of Ottawa unequivocally support the position of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, and join the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) and other Canadian municipalities in lobbying the federal government regarding the urgent need for direct emergency funding for local governments; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of Ottawa, in coalition with the Large Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario (LUMCO), advocate with the provincial government for immediate funding to address public transit revenue losses and ensure the liquidity of Ontario municipalities, as well as to realign capital and service delivery responsibilities with sustainable revenue streams, including new revenue tools for municipalities; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that City Council request that the Mayor, on behalf of the City of Ottawa, write a letter to the federal government formally requesting they meet with Big City Mayors Caucus and the Large Urban Mayors Caucus of Ontario, in order to determine the best way to help municipalities fund current operations and maintain appropriate service levels during the COVID-19 crisis, and allow for service levels to be quickly re-established during the recovery period.

 

 

MOTION

Moved by Councillor M. Fleury
Seconded by Councillor C. McKenney

WHEREAS drug use, overdoses and addictions continue to be a problem in the City of Ottawa, with overdose emergency department visits that have almost quadrupled and hospitalization rates that have more than doubled between 2009 and 2019, with Fentanyl and analogues implicated in almost 73% of opioid related deaths;

WHEREAS, local drug checking data (2019) from Sandy Hill’s CTS indicates that 96.7% of drugs bought as opioids and 42.2% of drugs bought as stimulants contain illicit fentanyl, fentanyl analogues or other synthetic opioids;  

WHEREAS drug use, overdoses and addictions continue to increase costs to governments (for services such as shelters, healthcare, and emergency services); 

WHEREAS addiction issues have also been destructive to communities and their economic well-being due to rising crime and violence associated with the drug trade; 

WHEREAS Ottawa Inner City Health, as a community health partner of the City of Ottawa, aims to improve the health and access to health care for people who are chronically homeless and integrate health care services so that homeless individuals can receive the same quality of health care as other Canadians; 

WHEREAS since August 2017, Dr. Jeff Turnbull and Ottawa Inner City Health successfully launched Canada’s first ever Managed Opioid Program (MOP) in Ottawa providing controlled amounts of pharmaceutical-grade narcotics (this prescription of narcotics is referred to as providing a “Safe Supply”), housing, and other supports to 25 individuals, with positive impacts and successes for individuals including stabilizing lives and decreasing crises and decreasing petty crime in communities; 

WHEREAS previous overdose rates of participants in the pilot project averaged three times a week, and other people who use drugs are pleading to be accepted into the program as a life-saving measure;

WHEREAS CTV Ottawa’s “In-Depth: “‘A City in Crisis’ Part 3”’ on April 3rd 2019 by Catherine Lathem, covered the positive impacts and individual successes of this small scale pilot project and it’s positive impacts on stabilizing the lives of those with addictions in Ottawa;

WHEREAS the COVID-19 pandemic has further demonstrated the lack of supports for our City’s most vulnerable and has also highlighted the vulnerabilities in communities where petty crimes and panhandling are main sources of income to fuel addictions which are increasingly impacting small businesses and residents;

WHEREAS offering a Safe Supply of drugs to users will save lives and reduce the community impacts of addictions;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED the City of Ottawa take action to expand the Safe Supply of drugs to the population in Ottawa that meets the criteria for those most in need, by asking the Mayor to write to the Provincial and Federal ministers of health asking them to implement and fund the expansion of Safe Supply in Ottawa to provide immediate supports to people who use drugs and decrease burdens on communities experiencing the impacts of addiction.

MOTION

Moved by Councillor J Leiper
S
econded by Councillor R. Brockington

WHEREAS the Owner of the lands at 1960 Scott Street was party to Section 37 Agreements with the City of Ottawa registered as Instrument No. OC1882453 and OC2141507 on April 21, 2017 and September 11, 2019 respectively; and

WHEREAS such Agreements, in part, directed $270,000 that has been provided by the Owner, to a Ward 15 specific fund for affordable housing; and

WHEREAS the specific funds for affordable housing have not been budgeted or allocated towards any projects at this time; and

WHEREAS it is at the request and direction of the Ward Councillor to have $50,000 of the above funds redirected towards a budget for a future sidewalk project on Elmgrove Avenue; and

WHEREAS there is a reasonable planning relationship between the proposed development subject to the intent of the Section 37 Agreement and the community benefit of a sidewalk on Elmgrove Avenue;

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that Council approve the redistribution of the existing funds in the following manner:

a) $50,000 be directed from the existing Ward 15 specific fund for affordable housing towards the Elmgrove Avenue sidewalk project.

 

MOTIONS REQUIRING SUSPENSION OF THE RULES OF PROCEDURE

 

NOTICES OF MOTION (FOR CONSIDERATION AT SUBSEQUENT MEETING)

 

NOTICE OF INTENT

 

·          

Notice of Intent from the Ottawa Community Housing Corporation to hold the Annual General Meeting of the Shareholder at the Council meeting scheduled for June 10, 2020.

 

 

·          

Notice of Intent from Marchés d’Ottawa Markets Municipal Services Corporation to hold its annual Meeting of the Member during the City Council meeting of June 10, 2020.

 

 

MOTION TO INTRODUCE BY-LAWS

 

Councillors S. Moffatt and L. Dudas

 

 

THREE READINGS

 

a)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to designate certain lands at cour Stanhope Court on Plan 4M-1655, as being exempt from Part Lot Control.

b)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 1158 Old Second Line Road.

c)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 341 and 343 Tweedsmuir Avenue.

d)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 841, 845 and 855A Grenon Avenue.

e)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 866 and 898 Eagleson Road and 1325, 1355 and 1365 Terry Fox Drive.

f)             A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 134 and 136 Willow Street.

g)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 1964 Scott Street.

h)           A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2008-250 to change the zoning of the lands known municipally as 5924 and 5938 Hazeldean Road

i)             A by-law of the City of Ottawa to designate certain lands at rue Grackle Street and rue Rallidale Street on Plan 4M-1653, as being exempt from Part Lot Control.

j)              A by-law of the City of Ottawa to amend By-law No. 2003-499 respecting fire routes.

k)            A by-law of the City of Ottawa amending By-law No. 50 of 2000 respecting the procurement of goods, services and construction for the City of Ottawa.

 

CONFIRMATION BY-LAW

 

Councillors S. Moffatt and L. Dudas  

 

 

INQUIRIES

 

ADJOURNMENT

 

Councillors S. Moffatt and L. Dudas  

 

 

Simultaneous interpretation of these proceedings is available. 
Accessible formats and communication supports are available, upon request.

 

 

NOTICE

The City of Ottawa continues to take COVID-19 seriously, and in following the advice of provincial and federal governments, is making significant changes to services and programming to help protect health and wellbeing of the community. City Hall is temporarily closed to help stop the spread of COVID-19. In-person Committee and Council meetings have been cancelled. Such meetings, as warranted, will be held electronically until further notice. For more information about service disruptions, please visit our COVID-19 webpage: https://ottawa.ca/en/health-and-public-safety/covid-19-ottawa.

Members of the public may watch the Council meeting live on RogersTV or the Ottawa City Council YouTube page.  For more details and updates visit https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/your-city-government/watch-or-listen-council-meetings

 

IN CAMERA ITEMS

In Camera Items are not subject to public discussion or audience.  Any person has a right to request an independent investigation of the propriety of dealing with matters in a closed session. A form requesting such a review may be obtained, without charge, from the City’s website or in person from the Chair of this meeting.  Requests are kept confidential pending any report by the Meetings Investigator and are conducted without charge to the Requestor.

 

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