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Active Zoning Amendment Applications

The following list contains the current Zoning Amendment applications for the Township of Drummond/North Elmsley. For information on current development applications, please contact the Planning Division at 613-267-6500 ext. 230.

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Thursday, 14 March 2024 16:26

Building, Planning & Septic Services

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Building, Renovating & Demolition

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Find your Zoning using the Interactive Map

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Septic Services

Wednesday, 27 January 2021 10:54

Official Plan and Zoning Map

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The Township of Drummond/North Elmsley has developed two geographical information system (GIS) maps to help residents and business owners find out the Official Plan and Zoning status of properties within the Municipality. Click on one of the buttons below to view an interactive map.

Official Plan Map

Zoning Map

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 16:36

Zoning

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The Township’s Zoning By-law is the main tool that implements the policies of the Official Plan and it contains the current rules and regulations that guide a specific property’s uses;

  • where buildings and structures can be located (e.g. setbacks);
  • the types of buildings permitted on a property and
  • how they may be used; and how a site can be designed (e.g. required lot sizes, building heights, and parking requirements). 

Related Documents

Zoning

Zoning By-law
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Zoning By-law Map
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Interactive Maps

Official Plan Map

Zoning Map

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 13:51

Conservation Authorities

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If you are planning to build or alter land (e.g. excavate or fill) near a wetland, watercourse, or along a shoreline, you may require a permit from a Conservation Authority or municipal planning approval.

MVCA and RVCA administer a permitting process to protect people’s lives and property from natural hazards such as flooding and erosion, and to maintain the watershed’s health.

MVCA    RVCA

Source Water Protection

Drinking water source protection safeguards public health by protecting the municipal drinking water supply from contaminants like sewage, fuel and chemicals. If water sources become contaminated, treatment can be much more expensive or even impossible.

Ontario’s Clean Water Act provides the legislative framework for Source Protection in Ontario. It ensures communities prevent contamination of their municipal drinking water supplies by developing collaborative, watershed-based source protection plans that are locally driven and based on science.

In Drummond/North Elmsley Township, the Mississippi-Rideau Source Protection Plan  applies and has been in effect since 2015. The Mississippi-Rideau Source Protection Plan contains policies to protect our current and future drinking water supplies from threats of contamination or overuse.  Municipal drinking water can come from groundwater wells that draw water from underground aquifers, or surface water, which draws water from lakes and rivers. Source protection policies related to significant drinking water threats only apply in designated drinking water protection zones. These vulnerable areas are also known as Intake Protection Zones (IPZ) and Wellhead Protection Areas (WHPA).  Different policies apply to different parts of the IPZ or WHPA because certain areas are more vulnerable to contamination.

 

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 13:49

Site Plan Control

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Site plan control is a site-specific process that is generally required for more complex development (commercial, industrial, multiple unit residential, etc.) and any development in or near environmentally sensitive areas or along the Rideau corridor. The site plan control agreement is registered on title and is intended to guide development on a site to ensure its compatibility with surrounding land uses.

Site plan controls are used to ensure that:

  • developments are built and maintained in the way that Council approved;
  • new developments meet certain standards of quality and appearance;
  • there is safe and easy access for pedestrians and vehicles;
  • the appearance and design features of buildings, and their sustainable design, are satisfactory;
  • there is adequate landscaping, parking, and drainage;
  • nearby properties and waterbodies are protected from incompatible development.

 Site Plan By-law

 

 

 

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 13:47

Severances and Subdivisions

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What is a land severance? A land severance is the authorized separation of a piece of land to form a new lot or a new parcel of land. This is commonly known as a consent. It is required, if you want to sell, mortgage, charge or enter into any agreement (at least 21 years) for a portion of your land. If a portion of property is being transferred between a property to an abutting property, a consent application is required for a lot addition.

For a land severance or lot addition proposal to be approved, it must be consistent with the Provincial Planning Statement and conform to the Lanark County Sustainable Communities Official Plan and the Township Official Plan. Additionally, all severed and retained lots must adhere to the Township Zoning By-law

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 13:00

Planning Fees

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Planning Fees are as follows:

Type of ApplicationFeeType of ApplicationFee
Consent Proposal Review Fee$400.00 for the first lot $200 for each additional lotPlan of Subdivision$3,550.00 Deposit
Deeming By-law$300.00Planning Site Inspections not included elsewhere$125.00
Inspection by other Departments$125.00Road Closure Application$4,000.00 Deposit (without survey) $6,000.00 Deposit (with survey)
Lifting a Holding Zone$400.00Site Plan Agreement$725.00
Minor Variance$800.00Zoning By-law Amendment$1075.00
Official Plan Amendment$1,775.00 DepositZoning Compliance$50.00

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 12:51

Official Plan

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Drummond/North Elmsley’s Official Plan is the key planning policy document that guides development in the Township and is a statement about where and how development should take place now and into the future. The Plan defines generalized land use designations including “Rural”, “Hamlet”, “Wetland”, “Agriculture” and others, as well as policies governing all uses of land. The Official Plan reflects the community’s values regarding development and is adopted by Council and approved by the Province (Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing). All planning applications must meet the policies of the Official Plan. On July 25th 2012 the Township’s new Official Plan came into effect once the Ministry’s approval was finalized.

Related Documents

 

 

Tuesday, 19 June 2018 12:50

Minor Variances

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The Committee of Adjustment considers minor variance applications under the Planning Act  relating to minor variances from the provisions of the Township’s Zoning By-law, permissions for extensions, enlargements or variations of existing legal non-conforming uses.

A minor variance does not change a zoning By-law; it only excuses you from a specific requirement of the by-law and allows you to apply for a building permit.

You should apply for a minor variance if you are requesting a small variation from the requirements of the Zoning By-law. There are four tests a minor variance must meet under Section 45(1) of the Planning Act. An application must pass all four tests to be considered a minor variance.

  • Is the application minor?
  • Is the application desirable for the appropriate development of the lands in question?
  • Does the application conform to the general intent of the Zoning By-law?
  • Does the application conform to the general intent of the Official Plan?
Tuesday, 19 June 2018 12:44

Planning Applications

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