
DNE (564)
Voting Day was Monday, October 22, 2018
The new Council takes office on December 1, 2018 for a four year term ending November 14, 2022.
Quentin Norword - Information not provided Notice of default issued
Official Results
Office | Name |
---|---|
Reeve | Fournier, Steve |
Councillor - Drummond Ward | Kehoe, Paul |
Councillor – Drummond Ward | Matheson, John |
Councillor – North Elmsley Ward | Sachs, George |
Councillor – North Elmsley Ward | Scissons, Ray |
School Board Elections
Office | Name |
---|---|
Upper Canada District School Board | MacPherson, William |
Catholic District School Board of Eastern Ontario | Cooney, Jennifer |
Conseil des ecoles publiques de l'Est de l'Ontario | Stitt, Colette |
Le Conseil des Ecoles Catholiques de Langue Francaise du Centre-Est | Anouk Tremblay |
Community Food Calendars are now available for Perth, Smiths Falls, Almonte, Carleton Place and Lanark Highlands, Brockville, and Rural Leeds Grenville. The calendar includes location and dates for Community Meals and Food Banks.
Click on a location to download your Community Food Calendar.
Community Food Calendars Now Available
The Code Road Reuse Centre is open when the Landfill is opened.
First Come, First Served - no holds! Only DNE residents can donate to the CODE ROAD ReUSE CENTRE, but ANYONE can come in and SHOP FOR FREE.
Funding Available
The Treasury Department is responsible for all the financial activities which include revenue collection of taxes, accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, budget, investment, financial planning, debt management and financial reporting.
The Clerk's Office and staff provide corporate, customer and statutory services to the public, other departments and external agencies. A few of the key activities include:
- to operate the Clerk's Office in accordance with the statutory requirements of the Municipal Act, Planning Act and other related statutes, as well as directions from Council and the CAO
- to provide legislative support to Council and Committees;
- to prepare Agendas, Minutes, By-laws, Agreements and related corporate documents;
- to record Council and Committee proceedings and maintain the official records of the Municipality (by-laws, minutes, policies agreements etc.);
- to respond to requests for access to municipal records received under the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act;
- to serve as a general information office with respect to a broad range of inquiries from the public;
- to conduct municipal and school board elections;
- to provide secretarial services and administrative support to Municipal advisory committees, and ad-hoc committees as determined by Council;
- to administer the Line Fences Act;
- to administer the Livestock Damage Program
The Public Works Department is responsible for approximately 250km of municipal roads, & 14 bridge structures. The ongoing maintenance and patrolling of these assets are fundamental duties of the department.
Regular Council meetings are open to the public. Citizens are encouraged to attend Council to observe our municipal government in action. Council meetings are held on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month at 3:00 p.m. Council and Committee of the Whole agendas on our Council and Committee Calendar. Agendas are posted on the Friday preceding the Council meeting and minutes are posted once they have been approved by Council.
Speaking at a Council Meeting
A Delegation Request Form must be completed in full in order to appear before Council. Your request, with accompanying documents, must be received no later than the Thursday prior to the date of the Council meeting. Delegates are permitted to speak for 10 minutes. Debate is not permitted at this time.
- Individuals are asked to step forward to the podium and state their name.
- All concerns must be directed to Council.
- Delegations wishing to address Council must notify and provide the Clerk with a written copy of the submission by 12:00 noon on the Thursday before the Council meeting in order that the delegations may be listed on the agenda and the subject of the delegation be identified.
- No person shall be permitted to address Council on a subject not on the agenda unless by permission of Council by a two-thirds majority vote.
- Delegations addressing Council shall be limited to a maximum of 10 minutes. No one group or delegation may appoint more than 2 persons to speak on their behalf.
- Members of Council only may ask questions of the deputations. All questions of deputations shall be addressed through the Chair.
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The Township of Drummond/North Elmsley has 5 members of Council. The Reeve and Councillors are elected by the constituents of the Township and serve a 4-year term. It is the role of Council to:
- Represent the public and consider the well-being and interests of the municipality;
- Develop and evaluate the policies and programs of the municipality;
- Determine which services the municipality provides;
- Ensure that administrative policies, practices and procedures and controllership policies, practices and procedures are in place to implement the decisions of council;
- Ensure the accountability and transparency of the operations of the municipality, including the activities of the senior management of the municipality;
- Maintain the financial integrity of the municipality; and
- Carry out the duties of council that are set out by various pieces of legislation.
The Township’s Zoning By-law is the main tool that implements the policies of the Official Plan and it contains the current rules and regulations that guide a specific property’s uses;
- where buildings and structures can be located (e.g. setbacks);
- the types of buildings permitted on a property and
- how they may be used; and how a site can be designed (e.g. required lot sizes, building heights, and parking requirements).
Related Documents
Interactive Maps
If you are planning to build or alter land (e.g. excavate or fill) near a wetland, watercourse, or along a shoreline, you may require a permit from a Conservation Authority or municipal planning approval.
MVCA and RVCA administer a permitting process to protect people’s lives and property from natural hazards such as flooding and erosion, and to maintain the watershed’s health.
Source Water Protection
Drinking water source protection safeguards public health by protecting the municipal drinking water supply from contaminants like sewage, fuel and chemicals. If water sources become contaminated, treatment can be much more expensive or even impossible.
Ontario’s Clean Water Act provides the legislative framework for Source Protection in Ontario. It ensures communities prevent contamination of their municipal drinking water supplies by developing collaborative, watershed-based source protection plans that are locally driven and based on science.
In Drummond/North Elmsley Township, the Mississippi-Rideau Source Protection Plan applies and has been in effect since 2015. The Mississippi-Rideau Source Protection Plan contains policies to protect our current and future drinking water supplies from threats of contamination or overuse. Municipal drinking water can come from groundwater wells that draw water from underground aquifers, or surface water, which draws water from lakes and rivers. Source protection policies related to significant drinking water threats only apply in designated drinking water protection zones. These vulnerable areas are also known as Intake Protection Zones (IPZ) and Wellhead Protection Areas (WHPA). Different policies apply to different parts of the IPZ or WHPA because certain areas are more vulnerable to contamination.