Committee moves to require site plan control for energy-generation facilities

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The Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee today approved amendments to the City’s Site Plan Control By-law.

The Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee today approved amendments to the City’s Site Plan Control By-law. Site plan control is the process the City uses to ensure land development is safe, functional and in line with the City’s standards for construction. The amendments approved today would require site plan control for all battery energy storage systems, natural gas generation facilities and renewable energy generation facilities proposed in Ottawa.

Additional changes to the by-law would ensure it complies with recent amendments the Province made to the Planning Act to exempt residential buildings with 10 or fewer dwellings from site plan control. In addition to such residential-only buildings, the Committee also approved exempting small mixed-use buildings from site plan control, provided they meet certain conditions. Applicants proposing to add up to five units to an existing building would also be exempt, provided there are no changes proposed to the building’s exterior.

The Committee approved amendments to the Official Plan and related planning policies to delegate minor zoning applications to staff for decision. To help simplify and shorten the process for certain zoning amendment applications, the proposed changes would update the criteria for considering an amendment to be minor.

City staff would be delegated authority to consider surplus farm severances. These routine applications occur when a lot zoned Agriculture (AG) is purchased to be used for agricultural purposes while the farmhouse lands are severed and must be rezoned to prohibit future residential development.

The criteria would also be updated to include applications seeking a height increase up to five storeys or 25 per cent of the current permitted building height. That would ensure height-increase requests are proportionate to existing permissions and would prevent an applicant from seeking significant additional height through a minor rezoning. Applications that do not meet the amended criteria would still be processed as major re-zonings.

Recommendations from today’s meeting will rise to Council on Wednesday, November 13.

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