Tay Valley Township supports…

ERO number

019-6813

Comment ID

91548

Commenting on behalf of

Tay Valley Township

Comment status

Comment approved More about comment statuses

Comment

Tay Valley Township supports a number of the proposals in the Draft 2023 Provincial Planning Statement:

• Climate change mitigation and adaptation are of great importance to Tay Valley Township. The Township has already experienced exacerbated flooding, as well as drought, and other devastating impacts such as the derecho, extreme heat, and increased disease carrying pathogens (Lyme disease, West Nile virus, etc.). Tay Valley has adopted a Climate Action Plan approved by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities and has a Green Energy and Climate Change Working Group;

• Retention of natural hazards policies related to flooding and slopes is welcome because the Township contains 32 lakes and 9 rivers and many steep slopes;

• Low Impact Development as it relates to stormwater management through green infrastructure (swales, permeable pavement, etc.) will help to maintain the Township’s rural landscape and supports biodiversity and is usually cheaper than pipes and concrete to manage stormwater;

• Watershed Planning (undertaking planning at the scale of watersheds) provides better protection of the Township’s many lakes and rivers than planning by artificial municipal boundaries;

• Water Resource Systems planning provides for better ecological and hydrological integrity for the Townships 32 lakes and 9 rivers; and

• Retention of policies on human made hazards is welcome as the Township contains some brownfields, etc.

Tay Valley Township also has strong concerns about a number of proposals in the Draft 2023 Provincial Planning Statement:

• Loss of local control. The 2020 Provincial Policy Statement (PPS) states that, “Municipal Official Plans are the most important vehicle for implementation of this Provincial Policy Statement and for achieving comprehensive, integrated and long-term planning”. The 2023 Draft Provincial Planning Statement removed that statement and added section 4.3.3.2 which states that Official Plans and Zoning By-laws, “shall not contain provisions that are more restrictive than policy 4.3.3.2 except to address health or safety concerns”. Tay Valley Township objects to this major curtailment of its ability to manage land uses throughout its geography.

The Draft 2023 PPS gives the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing the power to override municipal decisions (e.g., Official Plan, Minister’s Zoning Orders) and impose the development of large carbon-footprint housing that is more profitable for developers to build instead of supplying affordable housing.

• Loss of rural landscape. The 2023 PPS removed wording from the 2020 PPS that stated “rural settlement areas shall be the focus of growth and development” and that sought “compatibility with the rural landscape”. Tay Valley Township has eight Hamlets. The remainder of its geography is largely rural (approximately 70%) or agricultural land (approximately 30%). With the removal in the Draft PPS 2023 of the requirement for a comprehensive review to justify settlement area expansion, Tay Valley Township’s landscape will face pressure to allow low density inefficient development that is the hallmark of sprawl (as defined by the Ontario Professional Planners Institute, the American Planning Association, and the American Farmland Trust).

Sprawl style land use has been shown repeatedly to cost municipalities more money in inefficient infrastructure costs than clustered development (e.g., in studies by Hemson, Smart Prosperity Institute, Bloomberg, and Strong Towns, etc.).

• The Township would like to see language included in the Draft 2023 PPS requiring new settlement area designation and settlement expansion to demonstrate financial sustainability of infrastructure costs, avoid leapfrog development, and protect other provincial interests (e.g., mitigate climate change, protect biodiversity, provide a range of housing types, etc).

• The removal of the requirement for consideration of “cross-jurisdictional issues” makes it unclear whether sprawl style development could occur on the borders of the Township without its input.

• Loss of agricultural land. Agricultural lots makes up 27% of all lands in Tay Valley Township. The multiple dwellings and multiple severances proposed for the first time in prime agricultural land represent a seismic change in Ontario’s land use policies. The impact of allowing three residential units on prime agricultural land and allowing for the severance of up to three lots in prime agricultural land would affect lots in two of the three geographic townships in Tay Valley Township (Bathurst and North Burgess) that have not seen their land use pattern change in decades.

Permitting these severances and additional dwellings reduces Tay Valley residents’ food security by allowing sprawl on the Township’s most productive farmland.

• Reversal of affordable housing. The housing stock in Tay Valley Township is currently 98% single family dwellings. The Draft 2023 PPS proposes to remove the 2020 PPS definition of “affordable” for both rental units and home ownership based on the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s (CMHC) definition of “affordable” as a household paying no more than 1/3 of their income for shelter. This definition continues to be the standard for housing providers. Changing wording to encourage a range of housing options is a step backward in achieving affordable housing.

A recent study by WSP for Lanark County indicated that less than half of the residents in Lanark County could afford to purchase a house in 2022. To provide a greater range of housing options, the province should support the County of Frontenac’s proposal for it to provide a public utility for communal septic services so that multi-unit dwellings could be offered in Tay Valley Township’s eight Hamlets.

• Removal of Natural Heritage Systems. The natural heritage features of Tay Valley Township are unique. Tay Valley Township lies at the southernmost point of northern Ontario ecosystems and the northernmost point of southern Ontario ecosystems. It is the easternmost point of the biosphere known as The Land Between (headwaters for most of southern Ontario) and the westernmost point of the Frontenac Arch Biosphere.

The Draft 2023 PPS removes the entire section of the 2020 PPS covering the protection of Natural Heritage (including significant wetlands, woodlands and wildlife habitat). Instead a box with the statement that “natural heritage policies remain under consideration by the government” was all that was offered. The Township believes that it is premature of the province to present a document designed to guide land use across the province without a section on natural heritage.

• Increased environmental impacts. Changes presented in the Draft 2023 PPS that allow more scattered low-density housing, reduce the previous 2020 PPS focus on waste management, and are silent on protecting biodiversity will undermine the ability of the Township to achieve the objectives in its Climate Action Plan.

• Lack of Indigenous consultation. The Township sits on unceded Algonquin Territory. The province has not communicated with local indigenous communities about increasing sprawl within their traditional territories. In addition, the Draft 2023 PPS requires municipalities to undertake early engagement with Indigenous communities and coordinate with them on land use planning matters to facilitate knowledge-sharing, support consideration of Indigenous interests in land use decision-making and support the identification of potential impacts of decisions on the exercise of Aboriginal or treaty rights. However, without providing funding, the province is promoting a superficial approach to engagement.

• Economic Impacts to the Township. The Draft 2023 PPS will result in increased costs to Township for undertaking liaison with the County Housing Manager, consulting with Indigenous interests; watershed planning; promotion of inefficient land use, and increased costs for infrastructure.

For specific responses to the ERO questions please see below.

1. What are your thoughts on the policies that have been included from the PPS and A Place to Grow in the proposed policy document, including the proposed approach to implementation?

The Township is opposed to many of the proposed policies because they are a huge step backward in community and land use planning and the harm the policies will do does not even seem necessary. (See attachment 1.)

Reports by The Alliance for a Liveable Ontario, the Regional Planning Commissioners of Ontario (RPCO) and others have concluded that there is more than enough land within existing urban boundaries across the Greater Golden Horseshoe to accommodate and exceed the housing target set by the province. In fact, the RPCO concluded that Ontario has more than 1.25 million permits approved to build, but because there is no set timeline by which a developer must build the home they are not being built.

The Township is opposed to the policies that promote sprawl development by:
• removing the previous requirement that planning authorities establish and implement minimum targets for intensification and redevelopment within built-up areas,
• allowing Settlement Area boundary expansion or creation of a new Settlement Area without a comprehensive review or the requirement to demonstrate the need for expansion,
• allowing 3 severances on Agricultural land plus 2 additional dwelling units for the primary dwelling
• reducing density targets from 80 units/ha to 50 units/ha in 29 large and fast-growing municipalities.

Sprawl development has many negative consequences that planners have worked hard to prevent over the past 50 years in Ontario. Sprawl consumes farmland. Sprawl consumes nature whose features (plants, streams, insects, fish and animals) provide biodiversity.

This sprawl development is low density development (one home per lot) so it does not provide a wide enough range of housing types to produce affordable housing.

These sprawl policies do not provide enough density outside of Large and Fast-Growing Municipalities to support transit. Lack of access to transit means whole groups of residents cannot live in sprawl subdivisions which increases inequity. More cars and no transit means sprawl promotes a decrease in air quality.

The policy proposals for lowered density that increase sprawl also increase greenhouse gas emissions due to the need to travel by car to get to work or stores. The policy proposals related to sprawl increase greenhouse gases in the atmosphere because the carbon sequestration provided by the plants is lost when they are built on for housing and roads. These policy proposals accelerate climate disruption and make it harder for Tay Valley Township to meet its Climate Action Plan goals for mitigation.

The policy proposals related to encouraging housing on farmland threaten food security which makes it harder for Tay Valley to meet its Climate Action Plan goals for adaptation to climate disruption.

The proposed wording change in Section 2.1.4 of “complete communities” rather than the previous reference to “healthy, livable and safe communities” focuses on combining uses (housing, stores, schools) which is a good thing. But it leaves out any focus on promoting health and wellness, connection, programming for arts and recreation, etc.

The Township supports the retention of the policies on natural hazards, human made hazards and climate change.

The Township supports the added definition of Low Impact Development as it relates to stormwater management through green infrastructure (swales, permeable pavement, etc.).

The Township supports the added definition of Watershed Planning as undertaking planning at the scale of watersheds provides better protection of natural resources than planning by municipal boundaries.

The Township also supports the added definition of Water Resource Systems because recognizing that nature is best described through a systems perspective, rather than as discrete segments provides for better ecological and hydrological integrity.

2. What are your thoughts on the proposed policy direction for large and fast-growing municipalities and other municipalities?

Although the Township is not one of the 29 large and fast-growing communities, the impacts from the sprawl development that will occur from their reduced density targets will affect Tay Valley residents through increased air pollution, increased greenhouse gas emissions, and greater food insecurity.

3. What are your thoughts regarding the proposed policies to generate housing supply, including an appropriate range and mix of housing options?

The Township is concerned that Proposed Policy 2.2.1(a) removes the former definition and requirement that planning authorities establish and implement minimum targets for the provision of housing which is affordable to low- and moderate-income households. Instead, planning authorities would be required to co-ordinate land use planning and planning for housing with Service Managers to address the full range of housing options, including “housing affordability needs.”

The Township is concerned that the 2023 Proposed Provincial Planning Statement removes the requirement for compatibility with the rural landscape.

The Township would welcome funding to undertake the province’s requirement for “early engagement with Indigenous communities and to coordinate with them on land use planning matters to facilitate knowledge-sharing, support consideration of Indigenous interests in land use decision-making and support the identification of potential impacts of decisions on the exercise of Aboriginal or treaty rights”. Without funding for Indigenous communities to undertake studies, it will be difficult to have meaningful discussions.

4. What are your thoughts on the proposed policies regarding the conservation of agriculture, aggregates, natural and cultural heritage resources?

The Township believes it is a dereliction of responsibility by the province that a new Provincial Planning Statement would be presented without any description of Natural Heritage Policies.

The Township shares the serious concerns of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, Dr. Wayne Caldwell, Guelph University and the Ontario Farmland Trust that the proposed changes to agricultural policies will make it easier to establish more housing within prime agricultural lands (see attachments 2 and 3).

The Township is concerned that Draft policy 4.3.2.4 would permit a principal dwelling associated with an agricultural operation “to be located in prime agricultural areas as an agricultural use”.

The Township is concerned that following from 4.3.2.4, Draft policy 4.3.2.5 would permit,” subordinate to the principal dwelling, up to two additional residential units in prime agricultural areas, provided certain conditions are met, including compliance with the minimum distance separation formulae and the appropriate provision of sewage and water services (among other requirements)”.

While the Township supports additional residential units, it does not support those units then being able to be severed as is proposed by policy 4.3.3.1, meaning up to three lots may be created, potentially conflicting with the concept that they are subordinate to the principal dwelling.

With the estimated increase in number of houses that could be built on Agricultural land provided by Dr. Caldwell, the Township believes serious questions about groundwater supply, nitrate dilution capacity, and the ability of livestock operations to expand need to be answered before these policies are adopted.

Dr. Caldwell also questions whether these new lots will even increase affordable housing supply. “Will most farmers take the opportunities quickly to sever and then sit on these lots for their children or for a rainy day?”

The Township strongly objects to this form of development being proposed because it typifies sprawl with all its negative impacts.

The Township believes the province’s policy on aggregates should be revised as, again, the amount of aggregate extraction approved is well over the amount needed well into the future.

The Township only has one designated heritage building and that is privately owned so the requirements for maintenance are not of particular significance.

5. What are your thoughts on the proposed policies regarding planning for employment?

The Township does not have a concern with the changes to employment lands as it contains very little land with that designation. The Township does wonder if by scoping the test for employment conversion, some residential developments may be negatively impacted by being built beside industrial uses in employment lands.

6. Are there any other barriers to, or opportunities for, accelerating development and construction (e.g., federal regulations, infrastructure planning and approvals, private/public partnerships for servicing, provincial permitting, urban design guidelines, technical standards, zoning, etc.)?

Perhaps the province should consider a lapsing date for development approvals if housing is not built since research by the Regional Planning Commissioners of Ontario reported that over 1.2 million units of housing have received development approvals but builders are not building these approved units.

The province should contribute funds to create co-operatives as they are one of the most effective ways to provide long term affordable housing.

The province should also require all new housing to meet Net Zero standards these standards produce lower heating and cooling bills thereby making housing more affordable.

The province should identify its land holdings that could be set aside to create affordable housing (using the Canada Mortgage and Housing Association definition).