Tag Archive for: LBNA

Join the Long Branch Neighbourhood Association (LBNA) for the 2025 Tree for Free Event and claim one of 12 native trees or shrubs to revolutionize our community!

🌿 These local heroes soak up 22 kg of carbon dioxide yearly, cool streets by 5°C, and create havens for birds and bees, boosting biodiversity. Thriving in Toronto’s climate, they save water, skip chemicals, and demand little care. They lift property values, spark joy, and unite neighbors, while honoring Indigenous land stewardship, weaving us into our region’s vibrant history.

One tree or shrub can purify air, shield our shoreline, and inspire a greener tomorrow!

Event Details:

  • Date: Saturday, May 31, 2025
  • Time: 9:30 AM–11:45 AM (walk-ups at 11:45 AM, limited supply)
  • Location: Colonel Sam Smith Park
  • Registration: Order by May 15, 2025, at https://lbna.ca/tree2025/
  • Last year, hundreds of natives reshaped Long Branch—let’s make 2025 our greenest yet! Don’t miss this chance to plant a legacy and fuel our climate-resilient future.
  • Contact: trees40@lbna.ca

With the passage of Bill 23 in December, 2022, Ontario residents no longer have the right to appeal a Committee of Adjustment (COA) decision.

This presupposes that the COAs deliver well-thought-out decisions based on evidence and application of existing regulations.

Applications that go before the COA generally fall into one of two broad categories. Minor variance applications typically are for new housing or renovations to an existing home. These are by far the majority. The other category is Consent applications – severances of a property into 2 or more parcels of land for some form of new construction.

The COA Process

When a minor variance application is to go before the COA, formal notices are sent out to neighbouring properties within a 60 meter radius. Residents are allowed to voice opposition by writing letters of objection or speaking before the COA panel during the formal hearing on an application. Often, residents’ concerns are about shadowing of their properties, lack of privacy and the style and/or scale of the proposed structure. Sometimes, there is only one minor variance being requested, but we have seen examples with as many as 8 minor variances.

The COA allows 5 minutes to each resident to express their opinions and concerns. The applicant likewise has 5 minutes to present his/her case, but also have the right to 5 minutes to offer a rebuttal to residents’ concerns before the committee renders its decision.

It may sound unfair to limit each resident to 5 minutes of speaking, but the COA has a huge volume of applications to process. In 2017, for example, the COA closed out 4,344 applications across the City – a little over 17 applications per working day. In 2017, COA panels across Toronto approved 3,398 of those applications – approximately 78%.

A Consent application usually ends up being at least 3 applications: one to sever the property and the other applications would centre around minor variances on the construction on the resulting parcels of land. At the COA, all of the sub-applications for a Consent application are heard together as one.

As with a minor variance application, residents are notified, they have the right to submit their concerns in writing and/or orally before the COA. Each resident is still only allowed to speak for 5 minutes, and the applicant has 5 minutes to present and another 5 minutes to rebut.

Obviously, Consent applications are more complex than straight minor variance applications. Applicants must show that the severance fits within the character of the neighbourhood and they also have to present their case for why the structures on the resulting parcels of land require minor variances.

We feel the way the COA currently handles Consent applications does a disservice to Toronto residents by inhibiting their ability to present evidence in opposition to the application.

The LBNA has been involved in over 20 appeals at TLAB – the majority of them consent applications. Unlike the 15 to 30 minutes the COA typically allows for hearing a consent application, some of the appeals have taken several days.

In introducing Bill 23, the Ford government sought to remove some of the roadblocks to construction of new homes. It appears they considered that one of those roadblocks was appeals by residents of COA decisions. They could argue that some of the appeals go on for days or months and seemingly point the finger at the residents as the root cause of lengthy appeals.

But let’s take a closer look at the length of these appeals.

The TLAB Process

At TLAB, the Applicant presents their case first, and the first witness is almost always a professional land use planner – an expert witness. In virtually every case we have participated in, the Expert Planner’s testimony takes up a full working day. They present their analysis of the neighbourhood and arguments about why their client’s proposal fits with The Planning Act, The Official Plan and the Bylaws. It can take up to a full day to cross-examine the evidence presented by these Planners, who often rely on their professional status and experience to present opnions about a proposal that are given weight by an adjudicator. Some of these Planners perform analyses that can only be described as superficial, and it takes time to show the holes in their arguments.

It’s not the residents that determine the content or duration of the presentation of evidence on behalf of an Applicant. It’s the lawyer representing the Applicant.

Sometimes, it feels like the applicants’ lawyers try to intimidate residents with the amount of material they present. The document filings and procedures can also be so intimidating, residents seem driven to find a lawyer to represent them. But not many residents can afford the cost of legal counsel, which can amount to between $20 and $50K depending on how long the hearing runs.

Deputation to the Planning and Housing Committee

In 2019, the LBNA presented some proposed amendments to the COA Process to make it more user-friendly. We saw the process as convenient for COA staff and panel members but onerous for residents. Here are some of the recommendations.

Separate Sessions

COA hearings typically are/were held between 10 am and 4 pm. While the COA posts an agenda noting the applications to be heard and the order in which they will be heard, residents have to commit to setting aside at least a 2-hour window. Because hearings on individual applications vary tremendously in duration, it is next to impossible to guarantee exactly at what time any application will be heard. On top of this, residents have to take time off work to attend COA hearings and this may also add commute times from their place of work. For residents who are hourly paid, attendance at a COA hearing could also mean sacrificing income.

The LBNA suggested holding applications for minor variance hearings during normal business hours, since these usually are the most straightforward cases, and represent the bulk of the COA hearings anyway.

Separate Streams

We also proposed severance applications be handled through a separate stream and process vs. minor vairance applications.

We suggested holding severance hearings during the evening to make it easier for residents to fully participate and express their concerns and also because, in any given month, the number of severance applications usually is relatively small compared to minor variance applications.

Perhaps the City should simply allow severance applications to bypass COA and go straight to TLAB. It’s obvious, by the time they take to argue, that severance applications are far more complex than minor vairance applications. And TLAB takes a more thorough, evidence-based approach to adjudication compared to the COA. Plus, in their written decisions, TLAB hearing chairs explain the reasoning behind their decisions, which the COA does not do, so there is more transparency than with the COA.

Perceived Bias

As noted above, the high approval rate for severance applications in Long Branch between 2014 and 2018 gave residents the impression the COA panel held bias in favour of developers. Here are some of the factors that we feel helped form this impression.

The COA panel during this time period seemed to consist of the same members time after time. While a normal COA panel consists of 5 members, often there were only 3, which Planning deems a quorum.

Frequently, during hearings, we would see the COA panel members huddle to confer. While this may be entirely innocent, it gives the impression of collusion.

The COA decisions are written with what is called “boilerplate” text outlining the reasons – that is, the SAME reasons appear on hundreds of decisions. Not only does this lack transparency, but it also is not in keeping with the spirit, let alone the intent of Section 45.8.1 of The Planning Act, which requires COA to not only describe the reasoning behind the decision, but also to describe the impact of oral and written submissions.

There is a legal principle known as “reasonable apprehension of bias”.

In the Canadian judicial system, a judge must not only be unbiased but also appear unbiased.

It is difficult to prove an adjudicator appears to hold a bias, let alone actually have one. The legal test involves proving that “a reasonable and informed person, with knowledge of all the relevant circumstances, viewing the matter realistically and practically, would conclude that the judge’s conduct gives rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias”. And the burden of proof would fall on the shoulders of the residents.

Note that, in the context of Reasonable Apprehension of Bias, the wording focuses on judges and does not appear to apply to other adjudicatory bodies such as the COA. Perhaps it should. And perhaps panel members should be required to formally swear an oath that they will be impartial in their duties.

Training

While the Long Branch Neighbourhood Character Guidelines were formally introduced in January, 2018, we did not have the impression the COA panel members actually understood how they were to be used. They seemed to accept the applicants’ representations that their proposals conformed with the guidelines in the face of more fact-based analysis by residents.

We also had the impression the COA panel members did not understand there are environmental chapters in the Official Plan – notably about protection of the urban forest – that need to be given weight.

Therefore, we proposed the COA panel members be given more thorough training on the Character Guidelines as well as on the environmental policies in the Official Plan.

Action by Planning

As far as we can tell, City Planning might be giving the COA panel members more training as we recommended, though the curriculum is not shared with us.

However, on issues like reasons for decisions, separation of applications into two streams (Minor Variance and Consent), Planning has done nothing.

What You Can Do

If you think the above arguments make sense, then please consider contacting our City Councillor, Amber Morley to let her know you’d like to see changes in the Planning process with respect to the COA.

October 19th – on Zoom

Hear where each candidate stands on your key issues!

Toronto’s Municipal Elections will be held October 24th, and there are 6 candidates running for City Councillor in Ward 3. Make informed voting decisions by hearing where each candidate stands on the key issues that are important to you. 

We recently completed our annual survey of members and thank everyone who took the time to respond.

The top 5 issues in order of priority were

1. Tree canopy loss and climate change
2. Neighbourhood Development
3. Neighbourhood Crime and Safety
4. Affordable Housing
5. Public Transit

The LBNA, along with several partner South Etobicoke resident associations, has developed questions for the leading candidates to answer these and other key election topics during the upcoming Virtual All Candidates Debate on Wednesday, October 19th from 7 – 8:30pm prior to the October 24th, 2022 Municipal Election. 

 The agenda for the meeting will be as follows:

 – Short opening remarks from each of the candidates
 – Candidates will be asked a series of pre-set questions on the top issues identified through our survey and those of the other Neighbourhood Associations of their members.  Each candidate will be given the opportunity to respond.
 – Rapid fire questions for all candidates to respond to from the audience 
 – Short 1 minute closing comments from each candidate.

If you would like to know more about the candidates, you can find more on the event page.

Register now to reserve your virtual seat. (Once you register you will be sent the Zoom link)

See you on October 19th!

The Long Branch Neighbourhood Association (LBNA) is excited to announce the fourth annual Long Branch TreeFest.  This free, annual event at the beautiful Marie Curtis Park brings together the community, in a fun celebration of nature and trees. Enjoy live music by local artists. Sign up for eye-opening nature and history walks. With fun activities and over 40 exhibitors and vendors, there is lots to do for the entire family.

Get warmed up for some great tree walks, back by popular demand. Take off on guided Tree Identification Walks by the super knowledgeable Sylvia Jorge, a Masters in Forest Conservation graduate from the University of Toronto. Set out with CCFEW Brian Bailey on his guided Nature Walks and gain from his valuable insights and experience. Is history your passion? Join Ken O’Brien on his amazing Guided Hurricane Walks. 

There will be entertainment for both young and old and our vendors tend to specialize in crafts.

To learn more, visit our TreeFest website at www.longbranchtreefest.ca 

The LBNA’s Tree for Free event returns on Saturday, September 17th at Colonel Samuel Smith Park.

We’ll be distributing free trees to Toronto residents between 10 am and 12:30 pm.

Trees need to be ordered in advance, and you can do so up to Wednesday, September 14th.

To participate, click here to be taken to our shop page, where you can select the species you’d like. All are native trees, so are well suited to our growing conditions.

Quantities are limited, so don’t delay placing your order. Because the funding for this program comes from the City of Toronto, it is limited to residents of Toronto and all trees must be planted on private property within the City of Toronto.

One of the things we learned from all the COA and TLAB hearings we’ve been involved in is how to counter the arguments the builders’ planners use to suggest their clients’ proposals “fit” with neighbourhood character.

Our first exposure was one planner who regularly trotted out large colour-coded maps of the neighbourhood. The colours on his maps represented lot frontages and sometimes density (or FSI).

The idea is that if what the planner’s client is proposing is similar to a colour coded category that seems prominent, then it is a fit.

Colour coded map created by a professional planner, depicting lot frontages for a section of Long Branch.

While we would have liked to replicate this kind of presentation, we didn’t know how to get the data that allowed these maps to be created.

Where to Find the Data

I asked the Secretary-Treasurer of the COA how I could go about obtaining property data and she referred me to someone in Planning who managed the data. The person I dealt with was very helpful, asking what kind of data I wanted and for which streets in the neighbourhood. She quoted me a price for the data I specified and I had an Excel spreadsheet in a couple of days.

The spreadsheet I received was a single file with the data sorted by street address, and it had not only frontage, but also lot depth, lot area, tax roll number and more.

Once data is in Excel, it can be sorted in many ways – by street, by lot frontage, FSI and combinations thereof.

Numbers vs. “Impression”

The first practical application of data analysis was in the case of 38 Thirty Sixth Street, the first Long Branch case to be heard by the TLAB.

In this hearing, the parties were the City and the Builder, who wanted to sever the property and build two oversized homes. The builder was appealing a decision by the COA to refuse his application and had retained a high-priced lawyer to represent him.

On the first day of the hearing, the builder’s lawyer took up most of the day with her expert planning witness, who brought up and read page after page of policies and regulations. I don’t recall seeing much data. After being cross-examined by the City, it was approaching 3:00 when the Chair announced there would be another day of hearings and sought agreement on the dates from the lawyers. When they decided upon a date, I raised my hand and indicated that I would be out of the country on business on the chosen date and asked if I could present before the hearing was adjourned for the day.

The Chair asked if I could present my evidence in a half-hour and I said I could.

I was sworn in and presented a series of PowerPoint slides that illustrated the analysis I had performed on the neighbourhood. Here’s an example of one of the slides.

Chart showing distribution of densities of homes (FSI) on a street in Long Branch

The slides I presented completely undermined the case the builder’s planner had presented. She only asked me two questions in her cross-examination of me. “You’re not a professional planner, are you?” To which I replied, “No. I’m a professional engineer and an expert in analyzing data”.

The data analysis was cited as a factor in the TLAB decision refusing the application.

I don’t know what exactly transpired on the second day of that hearing, but the City would have presented their case and their planning witness, and I know several neighbours spoke on behalf of the residents.

Since then, we have used the same approach to analyzing property data in every TLAB case in which the LBNA was involved. When I have been a Participant, I’ve presented similar charts. Christine Mercado, our Chair, has presented graphics similar to what the builder’s planning witnesses have prepared. Here’s an example:

Colour coded map of a section of Long Branch illustrating property frontages.

Amalgamation of Data

When we started out, we had to purchase property data piecemeal from the City, and we frequently saw overlaps where we had clusters of severance applications in certain pockets of Long Branch.

We felt it would be helpful to organize all the data we’d purchased into a single database and we set this up in a cloud-based database app called AirTable, so that we could share the data with others. We now have over 1800 properties in our database, covering most of Long Branch.

Are the Data Out of Date?

Something the builders’ Planners sought to do to discredit our data was to claim that the City’s property data are out of date. They claimed they had better quality data that they manually updated through building permits and minor variance applications.

The truth is, the Planners all had to start out by buying data from somewhere – namely the City. The City’s property data comes from MPAC, the provincial body that maintains records on property valuations that municipalities use as the basis for assessment for property taxes. It is highly unlikely the City would want to allow that data to become out of date because it would impact tax revenue.

In addition, the public can access applications for minor variances and the resulting decisions from what is called the Application Information Centre in the City’s website. So we were able to update our AirTable entries as such decisions were made. Similarly, building permit applications are also publicly accessible through the City’s website and, more importantly, we have residents on the ground who are aware of construction activity such as renovations and additions to help us keep our data as current as the Planners’.

Conclusion

Data are facts. Hard evidence. They are more than opinions or “overall impressions” And they allow ordinary residents to present compelling evidence that effectively counters the opinion evidence that professional planners are allowed to present.

They help level the playing field.

Admittedly, analyzing data can be tedious. But, if you are comfortable with Excel and PowerPoint, you can create some compelling charts that can effectively challenge what builders’ planners can present.

And the LBNA is here to help with advice.