Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: January 22, 2025 - 17:56
Council approves start of work on Renovictions By-law
January 22, 2025
Council today directed City staff to seek information on recent amendments to the Residential Tenancies Act and determine the scope for a renovation licence and relocation by-law for Ottawa, commonly referred to as a renovictions by-law and how that legislation will be enforced.
Staff will undertake a by-law review and to report back to the Committee by Q2 2026. This work would consider the feasibility, legality and practicality, and could inform a new by-law that would seek to prevent illegal or bad faith evictions of tenants made under the pretext of renovations or repairs.
Addressing renovictions ultimately rests with the Province, which provides Ontarians with tenant protection by prohibiting illegal evictions and setting conditions when a legal eviction is required. The Government of Ontario recently made legislative changes to strengthen those tenant protections.
Council approved the Pinecrest and Queensview Stations Secondary Plan, introducing policies to guide the area’s transformation from a light industrial area. Over the next 25 years, the plan aims to foster a high-density mixed-use hub that will attract new housing and employment opportunities, improve connectivity and add new and expanded parks near the two LRT stations.
The secondary plan area centres around Pinecrest and Queensview stations, extending from Dumaurier Avenue and Morrison Drive in the west to the Pinecrest Creek valley in the east. The plan includes developing a new 6,000-square-metre park, making Queensview Drive a complete street, developing a new recreation complex, improving connectivity to neighbourhoods and establishing height limits to improve the predictability of development.
Council also today tabled its Mid-term Governance Review report. The report suggests changes to committee structures and mandates. Council will consider the report at its meeting on Wednesday, January 29.
Changes proposed in the report include:
- Dissolving the Light Rail Sub-Committee and renaming the Transit Commission to the Transit Committee
- Bringing revised terms of reference for the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee and the Finance and Corporate Services Committee back to Council for approval
- Reducing the frequency of standing committee meetings to six regular meetings per year, excepting the Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee, the Built Heritage Committee, and the Planning and Housing Committee which will generally continue with current schedules to meet statutory timelines
- Updating various matters related to advisory bodies, local boards and governance-related by-laws and policies
More snowfall is in the forecast for parts of British Columbia’s south coast after heavy snow battered the region earlier in the week.Environment Canada says a low-pressure system is creating “bands of flurries” over Vancouver Island, with accumulation exceeding 5 centimetres possible in some areas.
February 8, 2025 - 14:36 | | The Globe and Mail
The Ontario Liberal Party has purchased airtime during Sunday’s Super Bowl broadcast to run two 30-second campaign ads attacking Progressive Conservative Premier Doug Ford, who has triggered an early election for Feb. 27.One ad, titled “The People Always Come Last in Doug Ford’s Ontario,” uses recent comments Mr. Ford made during a hot-mic moment, in which he unwittingly said on camera that he had wanted Donald Trump to become U.S. president.
February 8, 2025 - 14:19 | Frédérik-Xavier D. Plante | The Globe and Mail
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said she will be asking for an expedited review from the province's auditor general, who said this week that he is examining "concerns or allegations related to contracting and potential conflicts of interest" within the province's health authority.
February 8, 2025 - 14:03 | | CBC News - Canada
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