NOTICE OF PASSING OF
ZONING BY-LAWS 1507-2025, 1508-2025 AND 1509-2025
(Under the
Planning Act)
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TAKE NOTICE that
the City of Toronto passed Zoning By-laws 1507-2025, 1508-2025 and 1509-2025 on
December 17, 2025, with respect to: (1) permitting
certain small-scale retail, service and office uses on residentially-zoned
properties on select major streets in neighbourhoods; (2) permitting
small-scale retail stores and ancillary eating establishments on select sites
in neighbourhood interiors within the Toronto and East York District; and (3)
updating home occupation permissions city-wide. These Zoning By-laws form
part of the City of Toronto's Expanding Housing Options in Neighbourhoods
(EHON) initiative, through the Neighbourhood Retail and Services study.
An explanation of
the purpose and effect of the Zoning By-laws is attached. No map is included in
this notice on the basis that Zoning By-law 1508-2025 and Zoning By-law 1509-2025
apply city-wide, while Zoning By-law 1507-2025 applies to the Toronto and East
York District in its entirety.
A statutory public meeting was held on October 30, 2025, where the Planning
and Housing Committee considered two hundred and sixty-eight (268) written
submissions and twenty-four (24) oral submissions and Toronto City Council
considered one hundred and twenty-two (122) written submissions in making the
decision. Please see item PH25.3: https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.PH25.3.
IF YOU WISH TO APPEAL TO THE ONTARIO
LAND TRIBUNAL:
Take notice that an appeal to the Ontario Land Tribunal in respect to
all or part of these Zoning By-laws may be made by filing a notice of appeal
with the City Clerk, Attention: Raneisha Hemmings, Registrar
Secretariat, 100 Queen Street West, 2nd Floor West, Toronto, ON. M5H 2N2, no
later than 4:30 p.m. on January 13, 2026. If delivering in-person, drop
off at the Registry Services Counter, Toronto City Hall. The filing of notice
of appeal after 4:30 p.m., in person or electronically, will be deemed to have
received the next business day.
A Notice of Appeal must:
(1) set out the reasons for the appeal; and
(2) be accompanied by the fee prescribed
under the Ontario Land Tribunal in the amount of $1,100.00 for each application
appealed payable by certified cheque or money order to the Minister of Finance,
Province of Ontario.
If
you wish to appeal to the Ontario Land Tribunal (OLT) or request a fee
reduction for an appeal,
forms
are available from the OLT website at www.olt.gov.on.ca.
Who Can File An Appeal:
Only a specified person or public body as defined in the Planning Act
that made oral submissions at a public meeting or written submissions to the
council before the Zoning By-laws were passed, the registered owner of any land
to which the Zoning By-laws would apply that made oral submissions at a public
meeting or written submissions to the council before the By-laws were adopted, and
the Minister may appeal the Zoning By-laws to the Ontario Land Tribunal.
No person or public body shall be added as a party to the hearing of the
appeal unless, before the
Zoning By-laws were adopted, the person or public body made oral
submissions at a public meeting or written submissions to the Council or, in the opinion of the Ontario Land Tribunal,
there are reasonable grounds to add the person or public body as a party.
Getting Additional
Information:
A copy of the Zoning By-laws and corresponding background information are
available for public inspection by contacting Michael Noble, Manager, by phone
at 416-397-4816, or by e-mail at Michael.Noble@toronto.ca, or Margherita
Cosentino, Senior Planner, by phone at 437-779-2357, or email at Margherita.Cosentino@toronto.ca.
Compliance with Provincial laws respecting Notice may result in you
receiving duplicate notices.
Dated at the City of Toronto on December 24, 2025.
John D. Elvidge
City Clerk
Owner: City-Initiated
Authority: Item
PH17.1, Planning and Housing Committee
The purpose and effect of Zoning By-laws 1507-2025,
1508-2025 and 1509-2025 is to support building complete, connected communities across
Toronto by: (1) permitting certain small-scale retail, service and office uses
on residentially-zoned properties on select major streets in neighbourhoods; (2)
permitting small-scale retail stores and ancillary eating establishments on corner
lots of identified Community Streets, as well as adjacent to schools, parks or
commercial sites in neighbourhood interiors within the Toronto and East York
District; and (3) updating home occupation permissions city-wide. The Zoning
By-laws also minimize potential adverse impacts on neighbours by establishing
clear performance standards and size limitations for these uses.
(1) Zoning By-law 1509-2025
amends the Zoning By-law to:
·
Expand commercial use permissions on major streets within
all Residential Zones (including the R – Residential Zone, RD – Residential
Detached, RS – Residential Semi-Detached, RT – Residential Townhouse, and RM –
Residential Multiple Zone);
·
Apply the new commercial use permissions on major
streets city-wide, with select major streets and major street segments
excluded, as listed comprehensively in the By-law;
·
Enable a broad range of retail, service and office
uses along major streets to support the daily needs of current and future
residents, including small stores, cafes, medical offices, after-school
programs, cleaners, barbers and professional offices; and
·
Mitigate potential negative impacts by limiting the
size of new establishments to 150 square metres, or 400 square metres total
across all units within an apartment building, as well as establish performance
standards for matters such as storage of waste and recycling.
(2) Zoning By-law 1507-2025
amends the Zoning By-law to:
·
Allow for small-scale retail stores and ancillary
eating establishments on select residentially zoned sites within neighbourhood
interiors, including on the corner sites of “Community Streets”, as well as
sites adjacent to existing non-residential uses, such as schools and parks;
·
Apply the new commercial permissions for neighbourhood
interiors exclusively to the Toronto and East York District in its entirety;
and
·
Mitigate potential negative impacts by limiting the
size of new establishments to 110 square metres, not allowing outdoor patios,
restricting on-site food preparation, and establishing performance standards
for matters such as the storage of waste and recycling.
(3) Zoning By-law 1508-2025
amends the Zoning By-law to:
·
Apply the expanded permissions for home occupations
city-wide to all zones where they are currently permitted;
·
Allow a limited number of clients and employees to
attend the premises of a home occupation, as well as allow home occupations to operate
in an ancillary building; and
·
Maintain other existing Use Specific Regulations for home
occupations that mitigate potential negative impacts, including limiting the
size to a maximum of 100 square metres or 25% of the dwelling unit in which the
home occupation is located, whichever is lesser.