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Ryerson, Township of

Township of Ryerson November 8, 2013

Read the Letter
239(2)(e) Litigation or potential litigation
litigation (potential)
zoning/planning

The Ombudsman reviewed a closed meeting held by council for the Township of Ryerson that relied on the litigation or potential litigation exception to discuss a rezoning application. Council had not yet reached a decision on the rezoning application. The Ombudsman found that since no decision had been reached on the application, and there was no pending litigation or notice of an intent to take specific legal action, there was no reasonable prospect of litigation, and therefore the discussion did not fit within the litigation or potential litigation exception.

239(2)(e) Litigation or potential litigation
zoning/planning
third party present

The Ombudsman reviewed a closed meeting held by council for the Township of Ryerson to discuss a rezoning application with the applicant. Council and the applicant reviewed details related to a proposed haul route and site plan. Although the municipality did not rely on it, the Ombudsman considered whether the discussion fit within the litigation or potential litigation exception. The purpose of the litigation or potential litigation exception is to enable the parties to prepare their positions in private. The presence of the applicant in the closed meeting defeated that purpose. Therefore, the discussion did not fit within the litigation or potential litigation exception.

239(2)(f) Solicitor-client privilege
third party present
legal advice (none exists)
waiver
zoning/planning

The Ombudsman reviewed a closed meeting held by council for the Township of Ryerson to discuss a rezoning application for a quarry. The meeting was closed under the exception for solicitor-client privilege. The applicant was present during the closed session and reviewed with council the details related to a proposed haul route and site plan. The municipality’s solicitor wrote the cover letter that accompanied the site plan documents. The letter set out the solicitor’s position on the draft terms. The Ombudsman found that the presence of the applicant during the meeting constitutes a waiver of any solicitor-client privilege that might have applied to the discussion. Further, the solicitor’s letter contained comments directed at the third party, not legal advice to the municipality. Therefore, the discussion did not fit within the exception for solicitor-client privilege.

Township of Ryerson, January 4, 2013

Read the Letter
239(2)(f) Solicitor-client privilege
zoning/planning
legal advice (written)
legal advice

The Ombudsman reviewed a closed meeting held by council for the Township of Ryerson to discuss a zoning application for a proposed quarry. Towards the end of the meeting, council received and reviewed a written memo from the municipality’s solicitor containing legal advice related to the application. While the municipality did not rely on the exception for solicitor-client privilege, the Ombudsman found that the portion of council’s discussion that considered the legal advice contained in the memorandum fit within that exception.

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The Ontario Ombudsman’s work takes place on traditional Indigenous territories across the province we now call Ontario, and we are thankful to be able to work and live on this land. 

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