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Mayor John Tory's Toronto

Coming to Economic Development next week.

EC4.6 - Temporary Signs By-law Review​

Consideration Type: ACTION

Wards: All

Public Notice Given​

Origin​

(May 16, 2023) Report from the Executive Director, Municipal Licensing and Standards

Recommendations​

The Executive Director, Municipal Licensing and Standards recommends that:

Amendments to the Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 693, Signs

Placement Requirements for A-Frame and Portable Signs

1. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to require that, when located on public property, A-frame and Portable Signs must be placed curbside and, in the Furnishing, and Planting Zone, as described by the City of Toronto's Streetscape Manual, whenever possible and adhere to any separation distances established by the Executive Director, Municipal Licensing and Standards.

2. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to include minimum separation distances, as established by the Executive Director, Municipal Licensing and Standards, for A-frame and portable signs from installations and utilities such as bicycle rings, fire hydrants or fire connections, intersection, or pedestrian crossovers, postering columns, benches, garbage/recycling bins, and transit stops and shelters as a location requirement.

3. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to include that an A-frame or Portable Sign may be moved or removed by the Executive Director, Municipal Licensing and Standards:

a. If location requirements are not met;

b. If space is required by the City of Toronto or other entity with the appropriate rights over public property such as a utility company for any reason including the installation of street furniture or construction; or

c. If space is required by the Toronto Transit Commission, including for operational, accessibility, or public safety reasons.

4. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to increase the pedestrian clearway requirement to 2.5 metres for streets identified in Appendix A of the Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 742, Sidewalk Cafes, Parklets and Marketing Displays.

5. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to align Portable Sign regulations with existing A-frame Sign regulations by specifying that Portable Signs also cannot be displayed or erected along the right-of-way areas along Bloor Street East and Bloor Street West between Avenue Road and Sherbourne Street, or along Yonge Street south of Davenport Road.

6. City Council amend Chapter 693, Signs to align Portable Sign regulations with existing A-frame Sign regulations by specifying that:

a. Where the frontage associated with the main, front wall of a building is 6.1 metres or less, a maximum of one Portable Sign per building may be displayed regardless of the number of businesses in the premises;

b. Where the frontage associated with the main front wall of a building is more than 6.1 metres, display a maximum of two Portable Signs per premises regardless of the number of businesses in the premises; and

c. Despite 6a. and 6b., if a building is on a corner property with two or more walls adjacent to a highway, one additional Portable Sign may be displayed adjacent to the side wall of the building.
 
Lots of money to give to the cops, and to rebuild a crumbling elevated highway that we knew should've been removed in the 1990s, but apparently not a celebration we've been doing at Nathan Phillips Square since Dominion Day was renamed to Canada Day in 1983.

City staff confirmed to blogTO that the Canada Day function usually held at Nathan Phillips Square, the central public space that reliably hosts entertainment for all types of occasions, will not be taking place this year.

"Due to resource constraints, the city is no longer planning to activate celebrations at Nathan Phillips Square this year," a spokesperson for the city said, noting that residents and visitors can still commemmorate the day with other public events, such as the Ashbridges Bay fireworks, a fan favourite.
 
Lots of money to give to the cops, and to rebuild a crumbling elevated highway that we knew should've been removed in the 1990s, but apparently not a celebration we've been doing at Nathan Phillips Square since Dominion Day was renamed to Canada Day in 1983.


LOL!! This city is SO CHEAP.
 
LOL!! This city is SO CHEAP.
Funny how the "economic engine of the country" and the centre of so much of its wealth has to scrimp.

At this point, I don't care if Quebec finally separates; open the constitution up to allowing large cities autonomy outside of the province.
 

The whiplash is striking.

To willfully, consciously make a decision that you ought to know is politically untenable, unpopular and otherwise absurd, so much so that it will be ordered reversed ought to be a firing offense. I'm not one for being rabid about such things, we all make mistakes; but this is another level of foolishness.

If you didn't know better, you're not competent for the job.
 
They'd better not! Anyone who has been to a European city where these things are in abundance would roll their eyes at this nonsense.

Toronto's puritan resistance to the slightest hint of change is getting really old.

Or America. Shared dockless scooters are all over NYC and San Antonio. I was in Vegas recently. They had e-scooter rental companies and tours of the city on e-scooters. That would be amazing for tourism in Toronto, if they weren't still stuck in the stone age.

 
Or America. Shared dockless scooters are all over NYC and San Antonio. I was in Vegas recently. They had e-scooter rental companies and tours of the city on e-scooters. That would be amazing for tourism in Toronto, if they weren't still stuck in the stone age.

It was John Tory who was against scooter sharing. He was against alcohol in parks too. I'm glad he's gone.

Another thing that needs to be legalized is pepper spray (especially)for women. I know it falls under federal law but a Toronto mayor could put pressure on the Prime Minister to make it happen.

Pepper spray is legal in all 50 US States, why not in Canada??!!
 

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