![]() To read this article in its original form, click here. Josh Matlow and Kristyn Wong-Tam are Toronto city councillors. Unfortunately, they spend too much time defending appeals by developers at the OMB. It’s time to free Toronto from the OMB. Our city’s planning staff should spend their time designing complete neighbourhoods with access to transit, vibrant business areas, green space and social supports. A 2009 study found developers come out on top 64% of the time at the OMB. Deep-pocketed developers can hire the best lawyers, planners and other experts to argue their case. The current OMB hearing process is too cumbersome, expensive, time-consuming and legalistic to facilitate wide-ranging citizen participation. It is wrong that Toronto’s elected local representatives and professional planners are ignored by appointed OMB members from Windsor or Wawa who generally have only a vague understanding of our city and the fabric and character of our neighbourhoods. Though commonly referred to as an “appeals” body, the OMB treats appeals of municipal planning decisions to the OMB as “de novo”, or new, giving little deference to the rulings of elected city councils. In many cases they run to the OMB at the first opportunity. Developers are proposing new condominiums that are too high and dense. The Province is mandating higher densities in areas such as Yonge-Eglinton and Yorkville but not taking into consideration the added stress on fully-enrolled schools, narrow streets and sidewalks and our crowded subway system. The bill would remove the City of Toronto from the purview of the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB). Paintings all go to the benefit of the arts district and art programs around the area. Its a two day event with live music and painting. ![]() That’s why we went to Queen’s Park Thursday to speak about Bill 20 - the Respect for Municipalities Act (City of Toronto). Urban Scrawl 8 August 23rd and 24th made for a pretty cool weekend spent at Columbuss own Urban Scrawl 8. The tribunal’s powers to overrule decisions made by elected municipal representatives are anti-democratic and often lead to planning decisions that support the development industry over our communities and our official plan. The Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) is a quasi-judicial, unelected and unaccountable provincial body that has the final say on all planning decisions in Ontario. ![]()
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