Showing posts with label Bancroft Bancroft Council Notes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bancroft Bancroft Council Notes. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Council Watch: Big Decisions on Bancroft’s Upcoming June 23rd Special Meeting

As a homeowner or business owner in the Bancroft area, keeping tabs on local government isn't just about politics—it’s about protecting your lifestyle, your wallet, and your property values. The Town of Bancroft Council meeting is set for a Special Open Session on June 23, 2026, to tackle several heavy-hitting infrastructure, safety, and operational issues.  

Here is your comprehensive, deep-dive breakdown of the most impactful decisions to be made, the brewing controversies, and exactly what they mean for our local real estate and rural lifestyle.





1. The Hastings Street North Promenade: Private Access vs. Public Liability


The Deep Dive & Staff Reports


Council will review a delegation from local property owner Brian Lawrence regarding 45 Hastings Street North, where two main-floor businesses operate: a real estate office at the front and a spa at the rear. The spa relies heavily on a side entrance accessed via municipal land. The town's approved design for the new Promenade development introduces a formal, consistent 5-foot-wide leased walkway to preserve access while meeting modern accessibility standards.  

Brian Lawrence will present two alternative options (Options A and B) attempting to shorten the defining fence or route traffic directly onto the main concrete Promenade path to avoid moving expensive building infrastructure, like HVAC units.  


However, the staff report submitted by General Manager Andra Kauffeldt strongly defended the original design. Staff pointed out that property owners on both sides of the Promenade have been aware of these access encroachments since construction fencing went up in late 2024. Changing the design now would trigger immediate financial penalties for the Town due to extra developer fees. More importantly, routing private business traffic directly through the public walkway without a lease leaves the town vulnerable.  



The Big News & Controversy


This is a massive point of discussion for downtown business owners. The core conflict rests on who should pay to maintain private business access on public land. The town’s position is clear: public resources should not be used to maintain an access route that primarily benefits a private entity. To protect taxpayers, the Town is requiring a formal lease agreement costing $50.00 per month ($600.00 annually). Under this lease, the private property owner assumes full liability and must maintain comprehensive general liability insurance of at least $2,000,000.00.  


The Local Perspective


For the unique downtown lifestyle of Bancroft, the Promenade represents a modernization effort designed to make our core more walkable and attractive. But for local small businesses, it highlights the rising costs of regulatory compliance. The town has stated it isn't legally obligated to solve these entry/exit structural issues for private buildings but is offering the lease as a practical "good neighbour" compromise.


PROPERTY IMPACT NOTE: For commercial property values in downtown Bancroft, accessibility is everything. A secure, leased 5-foot walkway ensures long-term operational viability and barrier-free options for customers. However, prospective buyers of downtown commercial assets must thoroughly audit site plan agreements and municipal encroachments. Encroachments lacking formal leases represent a significant risk to future resale value.


2. Unlocking the Dungannon Landfill: A $343,000 Modernization Blueprint


The Deep Dive & Staff Reports


In an extensive review of our regional infrastructure, Council will recieve a Supplemental Information staff report regarding the Landfill Optimization Study for the Dungannon Waste Disposal Site, compiled by Cambium Inc.. The site holds an estimated remaining lifespan of 63 years in its active cells, which balloons to 150 years when factoring in approved, undeveloped phases.  


To pull the waste department out of an operational deficit—which sits at $700,868 for 2026 due to the loss of provincial recycling revenue—staff recommended a complete structural overhaul.


Council will look at the option to have staff to engage Cambium Inc. to execute a multi-year modernization plan with capital allocations capped at $343,000, fully funded from the Landfill Reserve. The immediate actions could include:  


 1. A single 80-foot weigh scale system ($138,000) slated for 2028 to eliminate manual, visual volume calculations.  
 2. Exploring a fully automated scale house entry/exit arm system to reduce future staffing costs.  
 3. Relocating the brush burn pile away from public vehicle traffic. A huge beef I have had the the dump in the past
4Executing a single-season waste composition audit ($25,000) to establish baseline data for custom rural diversion strategies.  


The Big News & Controversy


The headline story here is Bancroft’s option to accept waste from neighbouring municipalities. Neighboring areas like Faraday (6 years of site life left), Tudor Cashel (8 years), and Wollaston (6 years) are fast running out of space. By accepting up to 1,500 metric tonnes of external waste per year, Bancroft can generate up to $300,000 annually in gross revenue (based on an industry benchmark of $200 per metric tonne).  


The controversy? Doing this will shave 22 years off the current 63-year lifespan of our active landfill cells. To protect local interests, staff recommended that a specific post-closure surcharge be added to every single external invoice. This ensures neighbouring communities directly fund our long-term post-closure asset obligations, which currently sit at $730,600. One other point that I want to make here is Bancroft has not been successful with being partners with the neighbouring municipalities lately. Is working with outside municipalities on this project a good idea or should relationships be repaired on all aspects including the North Hastings Community Centre?


The Local Perspective


This plan directly protects lake health and the local environment. A massive component of the approved strategy is constructing a dedicated Household Hazardous Waste containment structure ($10,000) to gather materials like batteries and paint year-round. Currently, when these items are turned away at the gate, they often end up illegally hidden in residential clear bags, risking severe environmental contamination to our local water tables and rural landscapes.


PROPERTY IMPACT NOTE: Long-term municipal waste capacity is an invisible driver of waterfront property values. Buyers flocking to the Kawarthas and Highlands expect reliable, long-term municipal services. By safeguarding 150+ years of landfill capacity while creating new revenue streams to offset local property tax burdens, Bancroft keeps residential tax rates stable, directly supporting residential real estate values.


3. Worker Safety and Escalating Multi-Million Dollar Facility Deficiencies


The Deep Dive & Staff Reports


Council received a sobering report from PINCHIN Ltd. regarding Ventilation and Thermal Load Assessments conducted at the Public Works Garage and the Parks/Cold Storage Buildings at 60 Monck Street. The engineering reports revealed that both leased provincial facilities suffer from inadequate ventilation, presenting an immediate compliance risk under the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) when diesel heavy equipment and snowplows are cold-started indoors.  

In the Cold Storage building, visible diesel smoke accumulated to levels that forced engineers to halt monitoring due to safety concerns. Furthermore, a significant pigeon infestation in the cold storage truck bays has created an indoor biohazard of bird feces.  


Council will look to authorize an immediate emergency allocation of up to $30,000 from the Health, Safety and Accessibility Reserve to take immediate action:  


1. Wildlife Management: Engaging specialists to humanely remove the pigeons and remediate the toxic bird droppings.  

2. Compressed Air System Installation: Procuring a non-permanent, transportable compressed air system for the trucks. This system keeps vehicle air tanks constantly pressurized, allowing operators to start snowplows and immediately drive them out of the building to warm up outside, eliminating toxic exhaust buildup indoors.  


The Big News & Controversy


The underlying crisis is financial. While the $30,000 acts as a temporary patch, the PINCHIN reports identified a staggering $1,108,525 in required mechanical ventilation and thermal upgrades across both buildings. Combined with previous Building Condition Assessments, the Town is looking at a $2,528,525 bill just for equipment—and that doesn't even include basic labour, structural reinforcing for roof-mounted HVAC systems, lead paint/asbestos abatement, or a recent TSSA inspection warning that the Public Works oil boiler needs massive, immediate upgrades to remain operational. Some really scary numbers which I can’t believe will be a huge shock to council. Do they have a plan for these numbers or is it next councils problem?


The Local Perspective


This is framed strictly as a public service update to protect the people who protect our community. Our public works staff keep our rural roads open and safe through brutal winter storms. While Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) are being co-authored with the Joint Occupational Health and Safety Committee to manage the building gates and doors safely in the interim, the long-term reality means Council faces tough decisions ahead regarding whether to heavily invest in these aging facilities or build a brand-new, centralized municipal garage.


PROPERTY IMPACT NOTE: If the town is forced to absorb millions in unplanned capital facility upgrades, it puts upward pressure on the municipal portion of property taxes. For local buyers and sellers, keeping an eye on these facility costs is essential, as the resolution will directly dictate Bancroft's long-term capital expenditure budgets.


4. Community Survey Results: Fixing What We Have


The Deep Dive & Staff Reports


Council will officially receive the results of the Recreation and Data Project Community Survey, presented by Specialist Sarah Phoenix. Garnering massive regional engagement, 63% of respondents were year-round residents, while 33% were regional users, primarily from Hastings Highlands (45%) and Faraday (32%).  


The primary takeaway from the data is clear: our community is not demanding expensive, shiny new developments. Instead, the public is overwhelmingly requesting that the Town maintain and strengthen its existing core assets—specifically our parks, gathering spaces, multi-use trails, and waterfront access points.  


The Big News & Controversy


The clearest seasonal gap identified by residents is the severe lack of winterized, four-season recreational options. Residents noted that winter operations are highly restrictive, preventing families from fully enjoying the area during the colder months. The primary barriers to participation are entirely practical: high program costs, lack of variety, and fragmented municipal communication.  


The Local Perspective


Bancroft functions as a critical regional hub for the surrounding smaller townships. Local community markets and seasonal festivals (such as the Gemboree, Indigenous Expo, and Rally of the Tall Pines) are massive drivers of community connection and local small business support. Staff will now use this data to focus on "quick wins," such as improving digital communication and addressing low-cost maintenance issues.


PROPERTY IMPACT NOTE: A robust, well-maintained parks and trail system is a primary driver of the rural and waterfront real estate market. Access to nature and reliable recreation options are exactly what urban buyers look for when relocating to the area. Strengthening our existing trail networks and ensuring clean, accessible spaces directly preserves high residential demand.


5. Summary of Council Minutes & By-Laws Passed


Also in the session, Council will likely formally execute several corporate housekeeping measures through three readings of key municipal by-laws:  


 By-Law No. 43-2026: Approved a Professional Services Agreement with Hiland Inc., effective retroactively to May 26, 2026.  

 By-Law No. 44-2026: Amended By-Law No. 18-2024 to officially repeal the civil marriage solemnization powers previously delegated to Jennifer Peplinski, who is no longer employed by the Town.  

 By-Law No. 45-2026: The standard confirming by-law to validate all structural proceedings of the June 23, 2026, meeting.  


Navigate Bancroft's Real Estate Market with a Local Expert


Local laws, infrastructure upgrades, and landfill lifespans might seem like distant issues, but they hit home quickly when they impact your property taxes, your neighborhood safety, or your business operations. Navigating these regional shifts requires deep local insight, whether you are looking to buy a waterfront cottage or sell a commercial asset in town.


As your local real estate expert with Re/Max Professionals North, I closely monitor these municipal developments to help you make informed decisions. If you have questions about how these latest council decisions impact your property values or your next move, reach out today. Let's work together to protect your investments and leverage Bancroft's future growth.


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πŸ“ž 705-927-6236 πŸ‘€ Brad Sinclair | Re/Max Professionals North πŸ“ Your Inside Source to the Kawartha Real Estate Market

Council Watch: Big Decisions on Bancroft’s Upcoming June 23rd Special Meeting

As a homeowner or business owner in the Bancroft area, keeping tabs on local government isn't just about politics—it’s about protecting ...