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Canada | Publication | August 26, 2025
Following amendments to the Planning Act in 2022,1 there had been some uncertainty as to the recourses available to abutting property owners when faced with decisions by municipalities granting applications for minor variances to their neighbours (i.e. permitting them to deviate from the requirements of a zoning bylaw).
In NOVA Chemicals Corp. v Dow Chemical Canada ULC,2 the Ontario Divisional Court confirms that aggrieved neighbours have the right to seek judicial review of such decisions despite amendments removing their statutory rights of appeal. It also confirmed that municipalities cannot rely on boilerplate reasons to justify their decisions.
Section 45 of the Planning Act allows a municipal committee of adjustment to grant minor variances to property owners where four criteria are met. The variance must:
In late 2022, the Planning Act was amended to speed up development. Notably, the amendments limited who had a right to appeal minor variance decisions to the Ontario Land Tribunal. As a result of the legislative amendments, abutting property owners are now generally precluded from appealing a decision granting their neighbours a minor variance.
The amended legislation was first interpreted by the Divisional Court in Loeb v Toronto (City). 3 There, the court suggested judicial review was not available to abutting property owners. In its view, the Ontario legislator was unlikely to have intended, by removing the right of third parties to appeal, that they be allowed to proceed directly before the courts.4 The court in Loeb also held that committee of adjustment decisions failing to comply with s. 45(8.1) of the Act, which requires that a decision be supported by written reasons responding to any submissions opposing the minor variance, were not invalid.5
The court considered the same issues in NOVA with a very different outcome.
NOVA and Dow are competitors in the plastics industry and owners of abutting properties in St. Clair Township. Dow applied to the local committee of adjustment for a minor variance from the bylaw’s setback and height requirements to build an addition. The requested variance sought to eliminate the setback and nearly double the height of the existing building (exceeding the bylaw’s height requirement).
NOVA presented written and oral submissions at the hearing of the minor variance application opposing the addition’s construction. Despite these objections, the variance was granted to Dow.
NOVA successfully sought judicial review and the Divisional Court quashed the committee of adjustment’s decision.
Dow relied on the 2022 amendments to argue that NOVA did not have standing to seek judicial review. The court rejected this argument. It found that the nature of the variance requested, namely one that would allow building an addition right on the property line, was itself “strongly supportive of granting the applicant standing.”6 The absence of a right of appeal did not close the door to judicial review for an aggrieved or affected party.7
The court confirmed that a committee of adjustment’s failure to explain its decision in responsive reasons is sufficient to invalidate that decision. Here, the committee had failed to do so and provided “reasons in name only” that gave “no clue” as to the decision’s justification.8 This is contrary to s. 45(8.1) of the Planning Act and the Supreme Court’s guidance in Vavilov: 9
The court rejected Dow’s argument that boilerplate reasons were sufficient given the low degree of fairness owed to parties by committees of adjustment. Nova confirms that the inadequacy of reasons is, in and of itself, sufficient for quashing a committee of adjustment’s decision.12
When contrasted with the outcome in Loeb, two key lessons can be learned from Nova:
NOVA was represented in the Ontario Divisional Court by Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP.
The authors would like to thank Caitie Isles, summer student, for her contribution to preparing this legal update.
The Planning Act, RSO 1990, c P.13 was amended in 2022 by the More Homes Built Faster Act, 2022, S.O. 2022, c. 21.
NOVA Chemicals Corp. v Dow Chemical Canada ULC, 2025 ONSC 4334
Loeb v. Toronto (City), 2024 ONSC 277.
NOVA at para 45, citing Vincent v. Degasperis (2005), 2005 CanLII 24263 (ON SCDC), at para 11.
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