Winter Fun Day is this Saturday

Join us at Kingsmere Park on January 25th from 12pm to 3pm for an afternoon of horse-drawn sleigh rides, skating and marshmallow toasting. Members of your community association will be serving up hot dogs (for purchase), hot chocolate (complementary) and coffee (courtesy of Bridgehead). We’ll also have arts and crafts in the fieldhouse. Weather reports are calling for a daytime temperature of 0oC and 5 cm of snow, so it should be a beautiful day.

Neighbours of all ages welcome. Hope to see you there!

Deadline extended to comment on zoning discussion paper

The GPCA received the following email from the City of Ottawa, regarding the Residential Fourth Density (R4) Zoning Review: 

The City of Ottawa has produced a Discussion Paper proposing changes to the R4 family of zones, in order to enable and encourage the development of small, affordable and context-sensitive infill apartment dwellings in and around downtown. The Discussion Paper and other materials can be found at Ottawa.ca/R4Zoning. 

***Please note that the deadline to comment on this Discussion Paper has been extended to February 21, 2020.*** 

Comments can be sent to Tim Moerman:
Email: tim.moerman@ottawa.ca or R4Zoning@ottawa.ca
Mail:    R4 Zoning Review
            c/o Tim J. Moerman
            Ottawa City Hall
            110 Laurier Avenue West
            Mail Code 01-14
            Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1
Fax:     (613) 580-2459 

R4 Phase 2 Zoning Review: Executive Summary

liveable city needs affordable housing suited to a range of household types, tenures and incomes. The city’s R4 family of zones is intended to permit low-rise apartment buildings, which are an essential part of a healthy and diverse housing mix. 

However, the existing R4 rules were established decades ago, and are increasingly misaligned with today’s realities of lot fabric, land costs and changing demand. Instead of regulating low-rise apartment development, the current zoning typically prevents or discourages it. This has exacerbated an ongoing and increasingly dire shortage of rental apartments, rising rents and hardship for the one in three Ottawa households who rent their homes. 

The R4 Phase 2 Zoning Review will help to improve housing affordability and choice in neighbourhoods in and around downtown by enabling and encouraging the development of small, affordable and context-sensitive infill apartment dwellings within the current R4 zone. 

The proposed zoning changes will: 

  • Revise the lot width and area standards to permit as-of-right low-rise apartment buildings to be developed without the need for lot consolidation or variances; 
  • Enable buildings of eight to twelve units, within the currently permitted envelope and height limits, on R4 lots that otherwise would have been restricted to three or four units. These changes will tend to produce more affordable and adaptable two- and three-bedroom apartments, instead of the large but expensive units encouraged by the current zoning; 
  • Introduce basic design standards to the zoning, including requirements for facade articulation and for doors, windows and balconies facing the street. This will help to ensure that new apartment buildings are not anonymous and faceless boxes, but instead integrate with and contribute to the public realm; 
  • Modify current amenity area requirements to focus on intensive, quality greenspace and trees more appropriate to an urban site and context; and, 
  • Ensure that surface parking is not permitted to replace, encroach upon or degrade the green spaces, trees, walkways and other functional areas needed to ensure a compatible infill apartment building. 
  • The proposed zoning changes will apply only to lands currently zoned R4, and only within a defined part of the inner urban area (being generally Wards 12 through 17.) Within those lands, substantive changes will apply only to the Three-unit Dwelling, Low-rise Apartment Dwelling and Stacked Dwelling typologies as defined by the Zoning By-law. (Figure 1.) 

Map of R4 Phase 2

Figure 1: Map of the R4 Phase 2 Study Area 

 The City is seeking feedback on these proposals no later than February 21, 2020. 

 

Rink Update – 2020-01-03

Thanks to everyone for your patience with the rink as we wait for better weather before skating can begin.  We created base ice between Dec. 17 and Dec. 21.  Then everything had to be put on hold with the warmer outdoor temperature.

After the freezing rain and snowfall earlier this week, both rink surfaces were cleared.  Thank you to the individuals that powered through the difficult snow and ice!

The weather is forecasted to get colder on Sunday (Jan. 5).  We are going to flood both ice surfaces on Sunday morning – provided the temperature is below -3C to -4C – and I am hopeful we can open for skating in the afternoon.

Reminders to anyone using the rink:
– always close both gates to the hockey rink when you are the last to leave
– always shovel the rink surface before and after using it (skaters and hockey players must shovel if they want to use it)
– remove the hockey nets from the ice surface if you are the last to leave
– stay off the ice when the temperature is above freezing
– stay off the ice when the “Rink Closed” signs are out

All of the items above help expedite flooding to create a better ice surface.

Volunteers Needed

We have 1 person volunteering to supervise from 5-7pm on Sunday, and we still need volunteers to supervise the following upcoming shifts:

  • 2 of 3 shifts on Sunday Jan. 5
    • 1pm-3pm
    • 3pm-5pm
  • 6pm-9pm Thursday Jan. 9
  • 6pm-9pm Friday Jan. 10

(we already have volunteers for Monday through Wednesday)

The fieldhouse cannot be opened for skaters to warm up or change unless we have a supervision volunteer.

Please sign up at https://signup.com/go/YZfwwOi and/or notify Adam.

City of Ottawa – Rental Accommodations Study Update

On September 30, the GPCA received the following email from the City of Ottawa:

Please be advised that Maclaren Municipal Consulting’s recommendations for the Rental Accommodations Study are now available on ottawa.ca.

Staff will consider these recommendations and supporting arguments as we prepare final recommendations for the staff report, scheduled for publication in early November. The staff report will be considered at a Special Meeting of the Community and Protective Services Committee on November 15, 2019 and City Council on November 27, 2019.

Please direct any questions or comments regarding the above reports to jerrod.riley@ottawa.ca.

Further, on October 4, the GPCA received the following email from the City of Ottawa:

Please be advised that the third consultation for the Rental Accommodations Study is now active.

English: https://engage.ottawa.ca/rental-accommodations-study

French: https://participons.ottawa.ca/etude-sur-les-logements-locatifs

These surveys will close on October 18.

City of Ottawa – Rental Accommodations Study Update

The GPCA received the following email from the City of Ottawa.  I am posting it here for community awareness:

Community Associations:

The Public Policy Development Branch of Emergency and Protective Services would like to provide you with an update on the next key steps in the Rental Accommodations Study, including the upcoming releases of both the consultant’s report as well as the staff report.

The consultant reports from Maclaren Municipal Consulting are being finalized, and will include their recommendations along with a summary of the consultations conducted to date. The consultant reports will be published online once they have been translated and made accessible, and we will provide you with a notification and a live link to those as soon as it is available.

Please be advised that the Chair of the Community and Protective Services Committee will be calling a Special Meeting of the Committee, scheduled for November 15, 2019 at 9:30 am. A formal notice from the Clerk’s Office will follow shortly.

In advance of the special meeting, the staff report will be released on Monday, November 4th, 2019. This staff report will include recommended policy frameworks for the regulation of rental housing and short-term rental accommodations as well as recommendations concerning additional hotel, motel, and bed and breakfast regulation.

Also in advance of the special meeting, one final round of consultations lead by staff will occur prior to the release of the staff report. This will include an online survey, available on ottawa.ca from October 4 to October 18 and two public meetings:

Rental Housing Ben Franklin Place October 22, 6-8 pm
Short-Term Rental Accommodations Nepean Sportsplex October 23, 6-8 pm

In addition to these public meetings, staff continue to welcome written submissions from community associations and concerned stakeholders. Please direct your questions and comments to this email address.

Thank you,

Sincerely,

Jerrod

Jerrod Riley
By-law Review Specialist | Spécialiste, Examen des règlements municipaux
Emergency and Protective Services / Services de protection et d’urgence
Tel / tél. : 613-580-2424, ext. / poste 13580