REGULAR COUNCIL
AGENDA
 

C-06/2021 - Regular Council
-
Town of Pelham Municipal Office - Council Chambers
20 Pelham Town Square, Fonthill

​During the ongoing global pandemic, Novel Coronavirus COVID-19, the Town of Pelham Council will continue to convene meetings in compliance with Provincial directives.  Attendance by  most Members of Council will be electronic.  Public access to meetings will be provided via Livestream  www.youtube.com/townofpelham/live and subsequent publication to the Town's website at www.pelham.ca. 


B. Lymburner, Community Emergency Management Co-Ordinator

D. Cribbs, Chief Administrative Officer

Mr. Robert Salewytsch, Program Manager - Transit Services,
Niagara Region Transit On Demand Pilot Renewal

1. By-law 4333(2021) - Being a by-law to amend By-law #4068(2019) confirming various appointments to Boards, Commissions, and Committees of the Town of Pelham;  And to remove and appoint members to the Pelham Public Art Committee (Schedule O).

2. By-law 4334(2021) - Being a by-law authorizing the implementation of a 2021 spray program respecting the gypsy moth, and to Repeal and Replace By-Law 4208(2020)

3. By-law 4335(2021) - Being a by-law to amend Zoning By-law 1136 (1987), as amended, for lands located at 855 Chantler Road (north side of Chantler Road lying west of Church Street), legally described as Concession 12 and Part of Lot 17 in the Town of Pelham. The Zoning By-law Amendment rezones the lands from the Agricultural (A) zone to the following site-specific zones: Agricultural – 304 (A-304) & Agricultural – 305 (A-305). Joyce and John Sonneveld, File No. AM-01-2021

4. By-law 4336(2021) - Being a by-law to amend Zoning By-law 1136 (1987), as amended, for lands 1409 Station Street & 0 Summersides Boulevard (north side of Summersides Boulevard east of Station Street), legally described as legally as Part of Lots 7, 8, 9, 13 & 14, Registered Plan 717, Part of Thorold Township; Lot 166 & 167, Geographic Township of Thorold, in the Town of Pelham, from the Agricultural (A) zone to a site specific Residential 2 (R2-306) zone, a site specific Residential Multiple 1 (RM1-307) zone, a site specific Residential Multiple 1 (RM1-308) zone and an East Fonthill Open Space (EF-OS) zone. Mountainview Homes (Niagara) Ltd. File No. AM-08-20.

Moved by Mayor Junkin

Seconded by Councillor Olson

WHEREAS Council for the Town of Pelham recently approved hard surfacing along the Steve Bauer Trail between 1106 Line Avenue and Port Robinson Road,

AND WHEREAS it is recognized that the Minimum Maintenance Standards (MMS) and Pelham’s Winter Operations Policy provide that paved sidewalks and multi-use paths are cleared of snow and ice, however due to the fact that the Steve Bauer Trail is a recreation trail that is not maintained during the winter months as noted in the Staff Report #2020-0080, winter maintenance has not been undertaken during the 2020-2021 winter season;

AND WHEREAS this hard surfaced area of the Steve Bauer Trail between 1106 Line Avenue and Port Robinson Road has experienced a significant increase in multi-use participants since the paving has been completed;

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT Staff be directed to provide a report outlining the estimated additional costs that would be associated with including this portion of the Trail in the contract for sidewalk and multi-use path snow clearing as part of the 2022 budget;

AND THAT the report be provided for Council’s consideration prior to the 2022 budget deliberations.

Moved by Councillor Stewart

Seconded by Councillor Haun

WHEREAS the Province of Ontario, through the Planning Act, requires that the Region of Niagara conduct a municipal comprehensive review (MCR) of its Official Plan whereby decisions must be made as to how all of the population and employment growth is to be accommodated in the local municipalities for the years 2031 to 2051;

AND WHEREAS since June 2019 the Province has amended a number of Provincial Statutes and policies that impact how municipalities plan for growth including the following:

• The Provincial Policy Statement,
• A Place to Grow: The Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe,
• The Development Charges Act,
• The Planning Act,
• The Environmental Assessment Act, and
• The Conservation Authorities Act;

AND WHEREAS these significant Provincial changes include:

• reduced density targets in new greenfield development from 80 persons and jobs per hectare to 50 persons and jobs per hectare,
• reduced intensification targets from 60% beyond 2031 to 50%,
• setting minimum population and employment growth forecasts that can be exceeded subject to Provincial approval,
• extended the planning horizon from 2041 to the year 2051,
• introduced market demand as a consideration in determining the housing mix, and
• revisions to how municipalities fund growth;

AND WHEREAS these Provincial changes signal an abrupt shift from the emphasis on creating compact and complete communities to a planning regime that facilitates lower density and car dependent communities;

AND WHEREAS several Regions throughout Ontario have declared climate change emergencies and must consider the role of land use planning in their strategies to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions;

AND WHEREAS these Provincial changes create pressure to convert more class 1, 2 and 3 farmland in to urban uses than would otherwise be necessary which is contrary to Niagara’s Official Plan as it relates to the protection of the agricultural system in Niagara;

AND WHEREAS ensuring that Ontarians have access to healthy safe food in the future requires thoughtful consideration of the long term impact of converting thousands of acres of prime agricultural lands in the Greater Golden Horseshoe to urban uses;

AND WHEREAS the change of the planning horizon to 2051 by the Province means that future municipal councils and the public will have little power to change decisions where they will grow after 2031 to the 2051 planning horizon;

AND WHEREAS in the rural areas internet service is often poor, making it difficult for rural residents to participate in zoom calls;

AND WHEREAS Niagara Region has adopted a public engagement initiative for the Niagara Official Plan review that includes public surveys, stakeholder input, direct public input and a Planning Advisory Committee;

AND WHEREAS the current pandemic is making effective, in person public consultation impossible at a time when robust, informed public consultation is needed more than ever;

AND WHEREAS the nature of work has evolved in response to the pandemic which may cause long term changes to the assumptions underlying the province's Land Needs Assessment.

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT Pelham Council request the Niagara Regional Chair to write to request the Province to allow the Region to delay its final report on its Official Plan Review until proper, in person, informed consultation with the public has been conducted on the growth concepts and the preferred growth concept;

AND FURTHER THAT the Province be requested to allow the new Regional Official Plan which identifies non-discretionary components of a Regional Urban Structure that support local plans and priorities inside the current urban boundaries, exempt from the requirement for in-person consultation with the public;

AND FURTHER THAT the Province be requested to suspend the timetable for municipal conformity to the Growth Plan and the Provincial Policy Statement to ensure that the public can fully participate in the process of planning their communities for the growth planning period covering 2031 to 2051;

AND FURTHER THAT the Province suspend the deadlines it has set for conformity until the Land Needs Assessment Framework can be revisited to adjust to the significant changes to the nature of work that are reducing office space and parking space needs.

AND FURTHER THAT this resolution be circulated to Premier Doug Ford, the Honourable Steve Clark, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, Niagara’s Local Municipalities, the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, the leaders of the Provincial opposition parties, Niagara’s MPP’s, and the Greater Golden Horseshoe municipalities.

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