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Planning Case Study: Charleston Lake

Planning Case Study: Charleston Lake. Case Study: Charleston Lake. Official Plan and Zoning /by-law processes & technical issues 1993 lake trout report Draft Official Plan New lake trout report: January 2006 Approved Official Plan: March 14, 2006 Draft Zoning By-law

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Planning Case Study: Charleston Lake

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  1. Planning Case Study:Charleston Lake

  2. Case Study: Charleston Lake • Official Plan and Zoning /by-law processes & technical issues • 1993 lake trout report • Draft Official Plan • New lake trout report: January 2006 • Approved Official Plan: March 14, 2006 • Draft Zoning By-law • Public Meeting: July 11, 2006 • Conclusions

  3. 1993 Inland Lake Trout Management in S-E Ontario • Restates many 1977 recommendations • Voluntary measures: • Upgrade septics • Reduce phosphorus inputs • Discourage lawns • Retain vegetation

  4. 1993 Inland Lake Trout Management in S-E Ontario • Encourage Municipal Planning: • 30 m setback • Reduce nutrient flow • Encourage back lots • buffers

  5. Draft Official Plan • Discussed & supported previous study conclusions about trout • Acknowledged new Charleston Lake Study was being prepared • Set out interim policies • Indicated these would be replaced in late 2006, based on new study

  6. New MOE Charleston Lake Report (January 2006) • Lake “at capacity” • “No new shoreline development shall be permitted which will result in increased phosphorus loadings” • “300 m setback for sewage systems for new development”

  7. New MOE Charleston Lake Report (con’t) • 30 m setback for all structures • For existing lots, 30 m setback (building and septics) or “as remote from the water as the lot will allow”

  8. Approved Official Plan, as modified by Municipal Affairs (March 14, 2006) • “Generally, the creation of new lots will not be permitted within 300m of highly sensitive lakes” • New development may proceed within 300m on existing lots of record only”

  9. Approved Official Plan(con’t) • “Council will not consider any application that involves the creation of a new lot, residential units, or any non-residential development on” at capacity lakes, except when: • 300m + • Circuitous drainage of 300m • Drainage to another basin

  10. Draft Zoning By-law • Would have established a 300m holding zone (H) around Charleston Lake but would automatically allow: • Repair • Internal renovations • New septics at least 30m back • Other activities on existing lots require a process to remove (H) • No new waterfront lots

  11. Public Meeting (July 11, 2006) • No supporters attended! • Objectors were loud & clear: • Unfair to put the most onerous restrictions on the vacant land • Lack of restrictions on upstream waterbodies • “as remote as the lot will allow” is unfair to owners with deep lots • Fails to regulate cattle out of watercourses • Needs to be more reasonable • Work on new Zoning By-law suspended

  12. Conclusions • Planning is a long, complex process • Difficult to get long-term support • Many players involved – varying levels of scientific understanding • Election year has special challenges • When an important lake planning issue emerges, all must share the planning/regulatory pain

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