Item 13 — Freezing Direct Control Bylaw References
Understanding what Direct Control Districts are, what changed, and what both sides say about it
What Happened
Bylaw 21P2024 inserted a new subsection 22(1)(d) into the Land Use Bylaw. This subsection came into force on December 31, 2024, and addresses a specific technical problem created by the deletion of the old residential zones covered in Item 2.
The problem was this: some Calgary properties are governed by Direct Control Districts whose bylaws reference sections of the main Land Use Bylaw by number. When those sections were deleted on January 1, 2025, those references would have pointed to nothing. Subsection 22(1)(d) fixes that by freezing those references as they stood on December 31, 2024.
What Is a Direct Control District?
The Basic Definition
A Direct Control District is a special zoning designation that applies to a specific property or group of properties and is governed by its own individual bylaw rather than by the general Land Use Bylaw rules. Direct Control Districts are used when a property has unique characteristics or circumstances that make the standard zoning rules inappropriate or insufficient.
How They Work
When a property is designated Direct Control:
Council passes a specific bylaw for that property
That bylaw sets out the rules that apply to development on the site
Those rules often reference sections of the general Land Use Bylaw for certain standards
The property is governed by the combination of its specific Direct Control Bylaw and the referenced sections of the general bylaw
Why They Exist
Direct Control Districts exist because:
Some sites are too complex or unique to be governed by standard zoning rules
Some developments require a negotiated set of conditions between the landowner and the City
Some heritage or sensitive sites need more tailored protection than standard zones provide
Some mixed-use or innovative developments need rules that do not fit neatly into existing categories
What Was the Problem?
The Reference Problem
Many Direct Control Bylaws reference specific sections of the Land Use Bylaw by number. For example a Direct Control Bylaw might say something like:
Single Detached Dwellings on this site must comply with all rules referenced in the R-C1 District.
When the R-C1 District was deleted on January 1, 2025, that reference pointed to a section that no longer existed. Without a fix that Direct Control Bylaw would have become ambiguous or unenforceable in the sections that referenced the deleted zones.
The Scale of the Problem
The problem was not isolated to a handful of properties. Direct Control Districts are used across Calgary and many of them reference the old residential zone sections that were deleted. Without a systematic fix the deletion of those zones could have created widespread uncertainty about what rules applied to Direct Control properties.
What Does the Fix Do?
The Freezing Mechanism
Subsection 22(1)(d) provides that where a Direct Control Bylaw references one of the old residential zone designations — R-C1L, R-C1Ls, R-C1, R-C1s, R-C1N, R-C2, R-1, R-1s, R-1N, R-2, or R-CGex — that reference is deemed to be a reference to the section as it stood on December 31, 2024.
In plain language this means:
The old zone rules continue to exist for the purposes of Direct Control Bylaws that reference them
Those rules are frozen at their December 31, 2024 state
They do not evolve or change going forward
They apply only to the Direct Control properties that reference them and not to any other properties
What This Achieves
The freezing mechanism ensures that:
Direct Control Bylaws that reference old zone sections remain functional and enforceable
The deletion of the old zones does not create legal ambiguity for Direct Control properties
Owners and occupants of Direct Control properties continue to have a clear set of rules governing their sites
Why Did the City Take This Approach?
Preserving Existing Agreements
Direct Control Bylaws represent negotiated agreements between landowners and the City. Those agreements often took significant time and resources to reach. Allowing the deletion of the old zones to inadvertently undermine those agreements would have been unfair to the parties involved and legally problematic for the City.
Legal Certainty
Planning decisions, development permits, and property transactions all depend on certainty about what rules apply to a given property. Creating ambiguity about the rules governing Direct Control properties would have undermined that certainty across a significant number of sites.
Practical Necessity
The alternative to freezing the references would have been to amend every affected Direct Control Bylaw individually to update the references. Given the number of Direct Control properties in Calgary that would have been an enormous administrative undertaking. The freezing mechanism achieves the same protective outcome with a single provision.
What Are the Concerns About This Change?
Rules Frozen in Time
The most significant concern about the freezing mechanism is that the rules governing affected Direct Control properties are now locked at their December 31, 2024 state permanently:
Those rules will not evolve as the rest of the Land Use Bylaw evolves
Future amendments to R-CG rules will not apply to Direct Control properties that reference the old zones
Over time the frozen rules may become increasingly out of step with the surrounding regulatory environment
Property owners in Direct Control Districts may find themselves governed by rules that bear little relationship to current planning standards
Complexity for Property Owners
For owners of properties in Direct Control Districts the freezing mechanism creates a more complex regulatory environment:
Their property is governed by a combination of their specific Direct Control Bylaw and frozen rules from a deleted zone
Understanding what rules apply requires reading multiple documents and understanding how they interact
Professional advice may be needed to navigate the regulatory framework for even relatively simple development applications
Inconsistency Across the City
The freezing mechanism creates a situation where:
Most Calgary residential properties are governed by current R-CG rules
Direct Control properties that reference old zones are governed by frozen rules from deleted zones
The rules that apply in one location may be significantly different from those that apply next door
Critics argue this inconsistency is difficult to justify and explain to property owners and the public
A Temporary Fix That May Become Permanent
Some planning observers have suggested that the freezing mechanism was intended as a short-term fix to avoid immediate legal problems but that it risks becoming a permanent feature of the regulatory landscape:
There is no sunset clause requiring the City to update affected Direct Control Bylaws within a defined timeframe
The administrative work of updating those bylaws individually is significant
Without a clear commitment to do that work the frozen rules may remain in place indefinitely
Critics argue the City should have committed to a systematic review and update of affected Direct Control Bylaws rather than relying on a freezing mechanism
What Does This Mean in Practical Terms?
For Owners of Direct Control Properties
If your property's Direct Control Bylaw references an old residential zone designation your rules are now frozen at December 31, 2024
Your property continues to be governed by a combination of your Direct Control Bylaw and those frozen rules
Future changes to R-CG rules will not automatically apply to your property
If you want to understand exactly what rules govern your property you should review your Direct Control Bylaw and seek professional planning or legal advice if needed
For Neighbours of Direct Control Properties
The rules governing a Direct Control property next to you may be different from the rules governing your property
Development on that site is governed by its specific Direct Control Bylaw and frozen zone rules rather than current R-CG rules
The Development Authority will apply those specific rules when evaluating applications on that site
For the City
The freezing mechanism provides immediate legal certainty for affected Direct Control properties
It avoids the administrative burden of amending every affected Direct Control Bylaw individually
However it creates a long-term regulatory inconsistency that will need to be addressed eventually
The City has not publicly committed to a timeline for reviewing and updating affected Direct Control Bylaws
Key Facts
Section added: Subsection 22(1)(d) of Land Use Bylaw 1P2007
Date it came into force: December 31, 2024
What it does: Freezes references to old residential zone designations in Direct Control Bylaws at their December 31, 2024 state
Old zones affected: R-C1L, R-C1Ls, R-C1, R-C1s, R-C1N, R-C2, R-1, R-1s, R-1N, R-2, and R-CGex
Why the City did it: To preserve the enforceability of Direct Control Bylaws that reference deleted zone sections and avoid legal ambiguity
Primary concern among critics: The frozen rules create long-term regulatory inconsistency and complexity for Direct Control property owners with no committed timeline for resolution
Who is most affected: Owners of properties in Direct Control Districts whose bylaws reference the old residential zone designations
Read the full bylaw: calgary.ca
See the related proposal: [Link to Item 13 Proposal — insert once created]
Next: Item 14 — Changes to Future Urban Development District References →
0 commentaire