Sidewalk patios to be allowed year-round under proposed Ottawa bylaw - Action News
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Ottawa

Sidewalk patios to be allowed year-round under proposed Ottawa bylaw

It may not feel like patio season yet, but a proposed city bylaw could mean that at this time next year you might be quaffing a beer on an Ottawa sidewalk patio under the bright March sun.

New bylaw would also make Streetside Spot pilot project permanent

A patron at the Lieutenant's Pump in Ottawa holds a beer on a frigid April 2016 afternoon. A proposed city bylaw could allow patios in Ottawa to stay open year-round. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

It may not feel like patio season yet, but a proposed city bylaw could mean that at this time next year you might just be quaffing a beer on an Ottawa sidewalk under the bright March sun.

City councillors are expected to consider a new bylaw today, one that wouldgovern sidewalk patios startingApril 1, 2017, and allowthem to use audio speakers, pay cheaper monthly rates and even stayopen through the winter.

Now that Ontario allows servers to carry alcohol across a public sidewalk, the bylaw would apply topatios using public rights of way in front of businesses andat the curb.

It would also make permanent the Streetside Spot pilot project, whichsaw seven private patios and four small public parkspop up in on-street parking spaces during the summer of 2016.

In their report, city staff notepatios have become more and more popular and are a good way to animate the city's shopping and dining thoroughfares.

Staff saidthey received 87 applications for sidewalk patios in 2016, up from 68 a decade before.

New rates, new seasons

Up until now, Ottawa patio season, at least according to the city's encroachment bylaw, has officially ended on Sept. 30.

But with sidewalk patios now getting their own bylaw, staffrecommend they be allowed to continue through the winter months to give business owners more flexibility if the weather is nice.

This deck-like structure was installed on Beechwood Avenue as part of the Streetside Spots pilot project. The new bylaw being discussed today also proposes to make the pilot project permanent. (Joanne Chianello/CBC)

The bylaw would see businesses pay monthly permits, instead of daily fees,to keep patios on public space. Summer rates would be set at$22.76 per square metre per month, from April through the end of October, which staff say should work out to a 22 per cent drop in fees.

Businesses would pay $8.94 per square metre per month from November through March, and could no longer get away with encroaching on sidewalks after the summer season without paying fees.

Pedestrians would get 2 metres

During consultations over the last year, staff saidthe two issues that drew the most response concernedhow wide a space to leave for pedestrians,and whether to allow audio speakers on patios.

They've settled on setting a standard two-metre wide berth for pedestrians, although 46 existing sidewalk patios that don't leave that much space will be grandfathered for 2017.

As for speakers, they will be allowed and subject to the city's noise bylaw.

TheLowertownCommunity Association took part in the consultations, and has written a letter to city councillors, concerned thatstaff recommendations have changed greatly since a draft set was released last November.

The association is wonderinghow the idea of permitting sidewalk patios year-roundmade itsway into the new bylaw, when those issues weren't raised earlier.

It's also concerned about snow removal on crowded streets in the ByWard Market.

The city's transportation committee is expected to consider the proposed bylawand hear from the publicwhen it meets today at city hall.