| 145921 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Congestion Management Plan - 2026 Spring Update | 2026.IE28.1 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>Managing congestion is a top priority for the City of Toronto (the “City”). Like many large and thriving urban centres, Toronto experiences congestion as demand for road space exceeds available capacity. In Toronto, this challenge has been exacerbated by a history of car-oriented land use planning; transit expansion that has not kept pace with growth; extensive state-of-good-repair and growth-related capital work; rapid population growth; and a substantial increase in development activity. Since 2013, the City has maintained a Congestion Management Plan, under which it has advanced measures to reduce and manage congestion.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>In 2025 City Council approved the creation of Toronto’s first Chief Congestion Officer. This new senior role has a mandate to reduce and mitigate congestion in the city by providing strategic advice and guidance to the City’s senior leadership, Mayor and City Council, working across divisions to coordinate city actions, and engaging as the primary liaison with external partners on congestion-related matters. The Chief Congestion Officer commenced duties on January 5, 2026.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report provides the initial observations of the Chief Congestion Officer in relation to the management of congestion. It also outlines the early actions of the Chief Congestion Officer in the role, areas identified for further work and the approach envisioned by the Chief Congestion Officer to deliver long-term congestion management in the city. The approach identifies four streams for focus: policy and planning, capital investment, operations, and internal City processes.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This broader approach to managing congestion will require a more robust and holistic Performance Measurement Framework. The Chief Congestion Officer in collaboration with other City divisions and agencies will develop and implement a robust new Performance Measurement Framework, including several key performance indicators. This Performance Measurement Framework will be aligned with the City’s objectives for managing congestion, and strive to capture the impact of current and future initiatives and external factors, in a transparent, consistent, and data-driven manner. This will help ensure that investments and operational initiatives to manage congestion deliver tangible benefits for the public and advance core objectives around congestion management.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report also provides a Spring 2026 update on initiatives detailed in previous Congestion Management Plans, including ongoing efforts to expand successful programs, strategically upgrade infrastructure, and implement new data-driven technologies.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Since 2013, successive Congestion Management Plans have advanced several key operational and tactical measures to reduce the impact of the various pressures on the transportation network. These measures are having a positive impact, as demonstrated by improvements to the City’s Travel Time Index, implementation of the Road Disruption Activity Reporting System leading to a reduction of average road occupancy duration, and faster transit travel times as a result of signal priority on Lines 5 and 6. Other positive outcomes are associated with increased Traffic Agent presence, and expansion of Smart Traffic Signals and Intelligent Intersections infrastructure. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Five key tactical pillars underpin the multi-year Congestion Management Plan (2026-2028) outlined in this report:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Pillar 1: Reduce the Impact of Construction;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Pillar 2: Expand Traffic Management;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Pillar 3: Improve Surface Transit;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Pillar 4: Use AI and Smart Technologies; and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Pillar 5: Shift How People Travel.</p>
<p><br />As part of Pillar 1, Transportation Services proposes updates to Chapter 743 of the Toronto Municipal Code which will support enhancements to managing the impact of construction encroachments in the public right-of-way. These Chapter 743 updates include structural changes and additions to enhance clarity and better reflect the current regulatory process related to the intake and review of applications, requests for modifications, and inspections; they also refine the Road Disruption Activity Reporting System system by strengthening enforcement tools, clarifying fees, and adding a close-out process. Finally, the report proposes exemptions and / or a proportional reduction of certain Road Disruption Activity Reporting System fees for street events and for residential development projects with eligible affordable and rent-controlled housing.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>In response to Council direction (<a href="https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.MM35.15">2025.MM35.15</a>), and aligned with efforts under Pillar 3, Transportation Services has reviewed the existing Transit Signal Priority program and has begun implementing measures under an Enhanced Transit Signal Priority policy along the two new Light Rail Transit corridors and the Spadina streetcar route. This includes working with the Chief Congestion Officer on a plan to accelerate implementation of Enhanced Transit Signal Priority measures at current and new Transit Signal Priority locations in 2026 and beyond.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Implementation of this Congestion Management Plan requires a $299.4 million total investment between 2026 to 2028. The recently approved Transportation Services 2026 Budget includes the funding and resources to deliver the initiatives described in this report (see Appendix 4 for more details).</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The report is jointly delivered by the Chief Congestion Officer and Transportation Services.</p> | 28 | 1 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report | ACTION | Amended | Main | Committee | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | ACTION | true | Amended | … | … | … | … | — | — | — | — |
| 145896 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | ADOPTED | N | Redesign Study of the Intersection of Eglinton Avenue West and the Allen Road Expressway - April 2026 Update | 2026.IE28.2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>Since the opening of the newly designed Eglinton Avenue West and Allen Road expressway intersection in 2023, traffic capacity issues at the intersection have caused traffic congestion along Eglinton Avenue West. With many neighbourhood streets being used as short-cuts to Allen Road, traffic congestion is also significantly impacting neighbourhood streets.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>On February 5, 2025, City Council directed the General Manager, Transportation Services, to initiate a study to examine redesign options to improve the operation of the Eglinton Avenue West and Allen Road intersection, and to report to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee in the first quarter of 2026 with a progress update and recommended workplan.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report includes:</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- An update on the status and work plan of the Eglinton and Allen Intersection Study as per Council request; and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- A summary of the recent monitoring results following the traffic pattern changes implemented in December 2025 to reduce infiltration on local streets in the neighbourhood.</p> | 28 | 2 | CMMTTEE | IE | 8 - Eglinton - Lawrence, 12 - Toronto - St. Paul's | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report |
| 146059 | REPORT | N | Y | SUPPL | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Approach to Public Electric Vehicle (EV Charging) Three-Year Plan | 2026.IE28.3 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>This report provides an initial three‑year implementation and funding plan to expand equitable access to public Electric Vehicle charging to residents and workers in the City of Toronto, leveraging a delivery model for City-owned property that is focused on prioritizing Canadian suppliers, along with complimentary initiatives that aim to remove barriers to the development of charging infrastructure on non-City owned lands. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>A commercial agreement between the City of Toronto, the Toronto Parking Authority, and a Proponent (the “Collaboration Agreement”) is proposed as the most effective mechanism to finance and deliver at‑scale public Electric Vehicle charging on City‑owned properties. The Collaboration Agreement enables accelerated deployment through an experienced Canadian partner, while significantly reducing long-term operational risks and financial risks to the City by leveraging the partner’s capital rather than requiring major upfront municipal investment. During the initial three-year phase of the Collaboration Agreement, the Proponent's investment in the City's Electric Vehicle Charging Program ("the Program") is estimated to be $35.8 million.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The City’s initial three-year plan, supported through the proposed Collaboration Agreement, with major negotiated terms outlined in Confidential Attachment 1, aims to address the need for accessible public Electric Vehicle charging, and is aligned with Council direction, including the Key Negotiating Principles adopted by Council in IE23.8 – Approach to Public Electric Vehicle Charging Delivery Model, existing City strategies, and the City’s Strategic Planning Framework. Additionally, the plan was informed by initial demand and utilization modeling to estimate energy demand from the bottom up by incorporating local community, visitor, commercial (including vehicle-for-hire), and corridor-based requirements, complemented by external initiatives such as The Atmospheric Fund’s work on non-City private and public properties.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>To date the siting of the City's existing network of Electric Vehicle chargers was focused exclusively on locations operated by the Toronto Parking Authority, including their off-street parking lots and Pay and Display parking spaces. Building on the Council direction in IE16.5, going forward the approach to determining locations will take a more holistic view of opportunities to leverage City real estate and assets where they can support the greatest uptake of charging, including on-street permit parking spaces and other city owned parking lots, where appropriate and aligned with broader city objectives. Decisions will be based on demonstrated need and access, and Council-approved policy directions, rather than discretionary or ad hoc considerations. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>To address any gaps in service, the following City-owned properties are being considered as possible charging locations:</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- On-street, residential paid permit parking;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Toronto Parking Authority on-street, pay-and-display locations;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Corporate locations with public parking access; and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Toronto Parking Authority off-street Car Park locations.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The three‑year plan will advance Electric Vehicle charger network growth in areas with demonstrated Electric Vehicle uptake while ensuring equity‑focused investments where private‑market delivery is unlikely. Implementation will follow a dual‑track approach:</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Commercially financed deployments under the Collaboration Agreement, and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- City‑led, data‑driven investments to address system gaps and priority use‑cases.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Attachment 1 includes utilization data related to both Toronto Parking Authority on-street and off-street locations, illustrating the need to refine modelling efforts to increase usage, and highlighting the benefit of the Proponent's investments in outreach and education that will assist in enabling broader Electric Vehicle adoption. Attachment 2 details the proposed siting and deployment process, along with the City inputs that will factor into future demand and utilization modeling to ensure public access is clearly factored into decision making when determining site locations. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>The negotiated terms of the proposed Collaboration Agreement provides strong protections for residents and Electric Vehicle users by ensuring transparent pricing for Electric Vehicle charging, based around the cost of electricity, that does not employ surge‑style or dynamic peak‑pricing practices.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>In addition, the Collaboration Agreement embeds clear procurement and supply‑chain controls that require the Proponent’s compliance with Canadian trade obligations, including Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and other relevant agreements. These controls ensure a fair, competitive process among qualified Canadian and Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement‑compliant suppliers and vendors, prioritizing local economic participation, and support high‑quality, standards‑aligned infrastructure delivery.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Together, these customer‑focused safeguards aim to protect the City’s interest in providing equitable access to public Electric Vehicle charging, while mitigating investment risks and maintaining alignment with TransformTO, Sidewalks to Skylines (2025–2035), and the City’s Carbon Accountability Framework.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This approach is timely; there is a renewed focus on improving the domestic supply chain and promoting Electric Vehicle adoption as a result of recent federal announcements, and recent oil price volatility is expected to lead to accelerated Electric Vehicle adoption from 2026-2029. The federal government has earmarked $1.5 billion in investment for Electric Vehicle charging infrastructure, provided through the Canada Infrastructure Bank. Additionally, recently updated standards as part of a broader national automotive strategy are anticipated to drive up Electric Vehicle adoption and the need for Electric Vehicle charging infrastructure for urban households who rely on public chargers, Electric Vehicle drivers in condos, and commercial fleets that benefit from fast charging options. This Collaboration Agreement positions the City to proactively and successfully ensure the required infrastructure is put in place to meet anticipated needs.</p> |
| 145922 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | NO_ACTN | N | Approach to Public Electric Vehicle (EV Charging) Three-Year Plan | 2026.IE28.3a | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>The purpose of this report is to advise that Executive Director, Environment, Climate and Forestry will be submitting a report that provides an update on the approach to public electric vehicle charging three-year plan to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee on April 7, 2026.</p> | 28 | 3 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report | ACTION | No Action | Main | Committee | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … |
| 145923 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | AMENDED | N | The Electrification Advantage | 2026.IE28.4 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>This report responds to multiple directives related to increasing local renewable energy generation and reducing dependence on natural gas combustion at the Portlands Energy Centre. Specifically, this report responds to direction received as part of the Mayor’s Economic Action Plan in Response to United States Tariffs for City Staff to work with Toronto Hydro and The Atmospheric Fund to develop a report titled “The Electrification Advantage”.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report also addresses recommendations in Item 2025.IE26.14 that were referred to the Executive Director, Environment, Climate and Forestry. As it relates to recommendation 1 in 2025.IE26.14, while the Independent Electricity System Operator’s (IESO) provincially-developed 2025 Integrated Regional Resource Plan for Toronto is not incompatible with the City's TransformTO Net Zero Strategy Action Plan, the plan alone will not achieve the City's climate goals. This report outlines actions the City is continuing to take, within its authority, that will build on the Integrated Regional Resource Plan by pursuing all cost-effective local energy efficiency, renewable energy and storage options, as well as maximizing local energy conservation/efficiency and local distributed energy resources.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report also outlines the City's actions to improve affordability, air quality, and reduce climate pollution and avoid unnecessary natural gas combustion at the Portlands Energy Centre. These include significantly increasing local distributed energy generation and storage, and through measures that shift electricity demand off-peak, above the minimums outlined in the Independent Electricity System Operator's Integrated Regional Resource Plan, in alignment with the City's 2040 net zero target.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>As it relates to recommendation 2 in 2025.IE26.14, Toronto Hydro cannot develop a separate electricity plan for the City of Toronto. The electricity sector involves multiple actors, including the Ontario Ministry of Energy and Mines, the Ontario Energy Board, the Independent Electricity System Operator, Ontario Power Generation, Hydro One, and local distribution companies such as Toronto Hydro. The City and Toronto Hydro operate within provincial regulatory and market frameworks and cannot act unilaterally.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The report sets out four interconnected advantages of electrification for Toronto:</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Energy Security Advantage: Investment in the electricity grid and widespread electrification enables Toronto to be more self-sustaining and resilient in the face of geopolitical challenges;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Economic Growth Advantage: Affordable and reliable electricity supports economic development in cleantech, mixed-use development, clean infrastructure, and transit expansion;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Affordability Advantage: Through thoughtful grid investment and rate design, electrification can reduce overall energy costs for Torontonians; and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Climate Advantage: Electrification is the most effective and scalable pathway to achieving Toronto’s Council-adopted TransformTO climate goals.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Through coordinated efforts by the City, Toronto Hydro, and The Atmospheric Fund, actions are underway and planned (as outlined in Section 4) to reduce soft costs (e.g., connection timelines), accelerate rooftop and parking lot solar and battery storage (including on City assets), expand demand flexibility and non-wires alternatives, enable low-carbon thermal energy networks (e.g., Enwave’s Deep Lake Water Cooling System), and advance provincial and federal collaboration to remove barriers and unlock financing.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Ultimately, progress will depend on collaboration with the Government of Ontario, regulators, system operators, and market participants to evolve policies, programs, and planning approaches over time.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Progress will be reported through the Annual TransformTO Net Zero Progress and Accountability Report.</p> |
| 145895 | PRESENT | N | N | MAIN | PRESENT | RECEIVED | N | Update on OMERS Climate Action Plan | 2026.IE28.5 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>At its meeting on March 29, 30 and 31, 2023, City Council considered Item MM5.1 and requested OMERS to make a presentation to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee on a climate strategy.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>At its meeting of September 20, 2023, the Infrastructure and Environment Committee considered item IE6.1 and invited OMERS to make an annual presentation to Infrastructure and Environment Committee on the OMERS Climate Action Plan.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The Infrastructure and Environment Committee will receive an update from the Chair of the OMERS Administration Corporation Board of Directors, the Vice President, Sustainable Investing, OMERS, and the Associate Director, Global Sustainable Investing and Operations, Oxford Properties, on the OMERS Climate Action Plan, including progress achieved to date.</p> | 28 | 5 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | — | — | Presentation | Presentation | Received | Main | Committee | … | … |
| 145894 | LETTER | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Seeking Clarity on the City of Toronto's Application to the Community Sport and Recreation Infrastructure Fund | 2026.IE28.6 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>City Council on December 16 and 17, 2025, referred Administrative Inquiry IA35.3 from Councillor James Pasternak, Ward 6, York Centre, regarding Seeking Clarity on the City of Toronto's Application to the Community Sport and Recreation Infrastructure Fund, and Answer IA35.3a from the City Manager to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee for consideration.</p> | 28 | 6 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | 1776830400000 | … | Letter | ACTION | Amended | Main | Committee | … | … | … | … | … | … | … |
| 145888 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | ADOPTED | N | Delegation of Authority for Crossing Agreements | 2026.IE28.7 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>This report seeks standing delegated authority for the General Manager, Parks and Recreation, to enter into crossing agreements, or permits for construction of a crossing, necessary to allow City infrastructure to cross a third party's lands or infrastructure. This would include parks, multi-use trails, roads, park bridges, recreation infrastructure, and construction access routes, which are required to cross another organization's lands or infrastructure (e.g., railway corridors or oil and gas pipelines) in the course of implementing an approved City capital project. Delegating this standing authority would streamline existing authorities and provide a consistent approach aligned with other Divisions (Engineering and Construction Services, Toronto Water and Transportation Services) that have similar delegated Authority for crossing agreements granted through <a title="https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2013.PW20.4" href="https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2013.PW20.4">Item - 2013.PW20.4</a> for their respective infrastructure work.</p> | 28 | 7 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report | ACTION | Adopted | Main |
| 146055 | REPORT | N | N | SUPPL | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Community Sports Equipment Sponsorship | 2026.IE28.8 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>This report responds to City Council direction in Item <a href="https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.MM33.18">2025.MM33.18</a> requesting the Deputy City Manager, Community and Emergency Services to work with Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities to identify a Canadian vendor to install and operate community sports equipment stations in City parks, with at least one station installed in each of the Community Council areas by the start of summer 2026, and to report back to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee on the proposed sponsorship, including consideration of a series of conditions specified by Council.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Jumpstart approached the City with a proposal to introduce community-based sports equipment lending in City parks. Jumpstart identified Equip Club SA (“Equip”) as its delivery partner in participating Canadian municipalities, including Vancouver, Ottawa, Surrey, and Coquitlam to date. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>In response to Council direction, staff conducted an interdivisional review of the proposal against Council’s specified conditions to consider, including Canadian vendor participation, at least one station installed in each of the Community Council areas by the start of summer 2026, data privacy, digital access considerations, and alignment with City policy frameworks. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>This report summarizes the assessment and provides additional information on a potential one-year pilot sponsorship.</p> | 28 | 8 | CMMTTEE | IE | All |
| 145900 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | NO_ACTN | N | Community Sports Equipment Sponsorship | 2026.IE28.8a | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>This report responds to City Council direction in Item <a href="https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.MM33.18">2025.MM33.18</a>, requesting the Deputy City Manager, Community and Emergency Services, to work with the Canadian Tire Jumpstart Foundation to identify a Canadian vendor to install and operate community sports equipment stations in City parks, with at least one station installed in each of the Community Council areas by the start of summer 2026, and to report back to the Infrastructure and Environment Committee on the feasibility of a partnership, based on considerations specified by Council. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>In response to Council direction, staff conducted an interdivisional review of the proposal for each of the specified conditions, including Canadian vendor participation, Ward Councillor consultation, compliance with privacy and record-keeping legislation, alignment with the City’s Sponsorship Policy, measures to bridge the digital divide, data governance considerations related to minors, and alignment with the Parks and Recreation Facilities Plan. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>The report provides the outcome of the proposal review by staff and will outline recommended next steps.</p> | 28 | 8 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report |
| 145872 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | ADOPTED | N | Durham Boundary Facilities Agreement Renewal - Kingston Road Bridge over the Rouge River | 2026.IE28.9 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>The purpose of this report is to seek City Council approval to renew an agreement between the City of Toronto and the Regional Municipality of Durham (Durham Region) for the cost-sharing and maintenance of the Kingston Road Bridge, which is shared equally by both parties. The agreement also covers winter road maintenance for the extended segment of Kingston Road to Altona Road, for which Durham Region is fully responsible for all associated costs. The previous agreement between the two jurisdictions was in effect from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2025. The proposed renewal agreement is based largely on the same terms and conditions as the previous agreement.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The renewed agreement would have an initial term of one (1) year from the date of execution by both parties and would automatically renew annually thereafter. It may be terminated by either party with sixty (60) days written notice, or on another date mutually agreed upon. If substantive changes to the agreement's terms or responsibilities arise that could result in additional costs or risk to either party, Transportation Services would report to City Council to seek authority for any necessary amendments.</p> | 28 | 9 | CMMTTEE | IE | 25 - Scarborough - Rouge Park | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report |
| 145873 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | ADOPTED | N | Traffic Control Signals - Victoria Park Avenue | 2026.IE28.10 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>As Victoria Park Avenue borders two Community Council areas, City Council approval of this report is required.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Transportation Services is requesting approval to install traffic control signals at the following intersections:</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Victoria Park Avenue and Belmore Avenue</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Victoria Park Avenue and Sloane Avenue</p>
<p> </p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">- Victoria Park Avenue and Ruscica Drive/Innismore Crescent</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Based on the assessments undertaken, the installation of traffic control signals at these intersections are recommended and should enhance safety for all road users.</p> | 28 | 10 | CMMTTEE | IE | 16 - Don Valley East, 21 - Scarborough Centre | N | 1776830400000 | … | Report | ACTION | Adopted | Main | Committee | … | … |
| 145892 | LETTER | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | POSTPONE | N | Utility Construction Photo Documentation | 2026.IE28.11 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>City Council on November 12 and 13, 2025, referred Item AU10.9 to the December 4, 2025 meeting of the Infrastructure and Environment Committee for consideration.</p> | 28 | 11 | CMMTTEE | IE | 1 - Etobicoke North, 2 - Etobicoke Centre, 5 - York South - Weston, 14 - Toronto - Danforth, 23 - Scarborough North | N | — | … | Letter | ACTION | Deferred | Main | Committee | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … | … |
| 145893 | REPORT | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | NO_ACTN | N | Supplementary Report - Utility Photo Documentation, Traffic Control Device Removal and Utility Work in Ward 14 | 2026.IE28.11a | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>At its meeting on July 23 and 24, 2025, City Council adopted Item 2025.AU9.7, titled “Audit of Transportation Services: Improving the Utility Cut Permit Process and Inspection Processes”.</p>
<p><br />This supplementary report provides an update on the continued implementation of enhancements to the City’s Road Disruption Activity Reporting System (RoDARS), including the requirement for utility companies to submit post-completion forms with before‑and‑after photos once work has been completed.</p>
<p><br />This report also provides an update on permits, scheduling and coordination of utility work in Ward 14, specifically on Woodfield Road, Riverdale Avenue, Grant Street, and Danforth Avenue. In addition, it outlines updates regarding the removal of traffic control devices following the completion of construction.</p> | 28 | 11 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | — | … | Report | ACTION | No Action | Main | Committee | … |
| 145652 | LETTER | N | N | MAIN | ACTION | OOORDER | N | Review of Highly Polluting Personal Watercraft | 2026.IE28.12 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>General Government Committee recently recommended approval of 20-year renewals of 24 waterfront boat club leases, including a condition that jet ski rentals will be prohibited on these leased lands. During debate, evidence was presented that most of the clubs would strongly welcome expansion of this restriction to include privately owned jet skis, as well as those that are rented. It also became obvious that privately owned jet skis have been a large part of the conflict relating to the Humber Yacht Club which led staff not to propose renewing its lease.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>However, staff also confirmed that they have neither studied nor consulted the public on whether additional steps should be taken to reduce noise and water pollution associated with jet skis and two stroke boat engines at these clubs. Both are well known to pump petroleum products into the water in which they operate. Much cleaner boat engines are available, including an increasing variety of clean electric engines, which could be used if charging facilities were made available.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>A separate study of the safety of personal watercraft is underway, per 2025.MM33.20, but this did not include an examination of pollution impacts or cleaner engine alternatives.</p> | 28 | 12 | CMMTTEE | IE | All | N | — | … | Letter | ACTION |
| 146084 | LETTER | N | N | NEW | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Repairs and Rehabilitation on Wilson Avenue Due to Contract BFPP (21 ECS-LU-04FP) | 2026.IE28.13 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>Over many years the Wilson Village Business Improvement Area invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in wonderful public realm and beautification initiatives along Wilson Avenue. Extra funding was given to these improvements via s 37 contributions. During the implementation of BFPP (21 ECS-LU-04FP) much of the work including garden beds, interlocking brick, decorative sidewalks had been damaged or destroyed. While some disruption was expected this goes beyond the reasonable. Recent attempts to get the restoration work underway have not been overly successful.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Quite frankly, the road and sidewalks and the public realm are a complete mess. After much urging a modest clean up of litter and debris did take place but this has been insufficient. The roadway is severely damaged and years of investment by local businesses is at risk. It is essential that repairs be done immediately. No road closures will be granted after May 26, 2026 due to the opening of the Roger’s Stadium concern season which is just down the street.</p> | 28 | 13 | CMMTTEE | IE | 6 - York Centre | N | 1776830400000 | … | Letter | ACTION | Amended |
| 146085 | LETTER | N | N | NEW | ACTION | AMENDED | N | Watermain Cleaning and Relining on Various Streets in the Sheppard Avenue / Chesswood Drive Area | 2026.IE28.14 | Y | Y | Y | Y | <p>On March 20, 2026 a construction notice was distributed by Toronto Water concerning Contract 26TW-CPI-03CWD. This is a watermain cleaning and relining on various streets in the area. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>There are growing concerns about the above referenced project. Chesswood Drive was the subject of a major construction project in 2023 which included road resurfacing, off road cycle tracks and sidewalk construction. The project was highly disruptive to local businesses. There were unjustified lane closures and periods of time when the project was abandoned by subcontractors. A town hall with local businesses had to take place the local Councillor received numerous complaints throughout the term of the project. There is deep concern at the possible inconvenience and cost of tearing up the street again with the proposed watermain work. There are also considerable questions being raised as to why such recent work could be torn up again.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Second, the construction route for 26TW-CPI-03CWD includes Sheppard Avenue which is a key entry and exit point to the Roger’s Stadium, which holds 52,200 people and has 17 concerts booked in May 2026. The concert season starts on May 26, 2026. It is unclear from the notice whether there will be lane and / or road closures and the notice seems written for home owners even though it the work is to take place on streets that are in employment lands. If there are lane and / or road closures during the construction period this will result in total mayhem, traffic congestion and gridlock in the area. </p> | 28 | 14 | CMMTTEE | IE | 6 - York Centre |