Oakville Images

Oakville Beaver, 5 Nov 2009, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

OAKVILLE BEAVER Thursday, November 5, 2009 · 4 Does Your Combined And Personal Income Tax Rate Exceed 16.5% Of Your Combined Business And Personal Income? The Tax Advisory Will Prepare A Corporate And Personal Income Tax Plan For You That Can Help You Attain This Goal. DO YOU OWN A BUSINESS? School board accepts ruling Continued from page 1 Why Should I Have The Tax Advisory Prepare My Business And Personal My Income Tax Return? · We have been preparing corporate and personal income tax returns for almost twenty-seven years. · We can help you achieve a 16.5% income tax rate on your combined business and personal income. · We will ensure that you pay only those income taxes you absolutely have to pay. · We ensure that you take advantage of every deduction available to you. · Once per year, we will prepare for you, a personalized income tax plan specifically designed to your personal circumstances. · Our rates are one-third to one-half that of our competition. ED FOSTER Voted First Place Diamond Award Winners In The Categories of Incorporation Services, Tax Preparation Services And Business Advisory Services 7 YEARS IN A ROW! Member of & SERVING SMALL AND HOME BASED BUSINESSES FOR ALMOST 27 YEARS 905-469-8777 ADVISORY COMMITTED TO REDUCING THE INCOME TAXES THAT YOU PAY www.thetaxadvisory.ca THE TAX INCORPORATORSTM COMMITTED TO INCORPORATING YOUR COMPANY THE RIGHT WAY THE FIRST TIME www.theincorporators.ca THE ADVISORY COMMITTED TO MAKING YOUR BUSINESS A SUCCESS www.thebusinessadvisory.ca THE BUSINESS Plan Committee, has been very vocal in his disapproval of the field lights at Loyola. He does not believe lights will go in at the school even if the HCDSB does submit a site plan application. "It is very unlikely that the lighting will be approved. I just don't see that happening," he said. Giacomo Corbacio, superintendent of facility management at HCDSB, said he accepted the OMB's decision. "We respect the decision of the OMB. It was our initiative to go the OMB to get clarification whether we required a site plan or not, since we were told by the Town in the pre-consultation process that we didn't need it and then after we started construction we were told that we did need it, so we just asked for clarification," he said. "We achieved our objective of getting that clarification." Corbacio said that it will be up to the trustees of the HCDSB to determine whether to submit a site plan application for field lights at Loyola. This will likely be decided at the next school board meeting on Nov. 17, he said. The school board already purchased the lights because it thought it had all the necessary approvals, Corbacio added. Mayor Rob Burton has spoken out against adding the field lights, which the Town reports to be 70 feet high. "This is good news for our residents," Burton said. "Site plan approval provides us with an opportunity to review detailed lighting plans in order to manage the impacts on adjacent residents." Construction on the $1.7-million new track and field at Loyola started on Aug. 17. The dispute over whether site plan approval was required was heard by the OMB in a one-day case on Oct. 16 at Town Hall, with lawyers for both the Town and HCDSB presenting their case. The HCDSB argued that it already had all the necessary approvals, as the lights were clearly marked on the drawings submitted to Town staff before site alteration permits were issued. The Town countered this, saying the existing site plan agreements for the school site are binding and must be amended if lights are to be installed, through a site plan application. The subsequent decision was released Wednesday morning in a 13-page document posted on the OMB's website. Atcheson's conclusion states that the issue of what might constitute development has already been settled when the school site was developed under the site plan approval process of the Town of Oakville in the 1980s and on this basis alone, the municipality has the authority to regulate lighting facilities on the site. He continued to write that in the OMB's finding, any changes to the approved site plans for the site are subject to a further site plan approval amending the existing approvals on the site, which would include the installation of new lighting facilities for the sports facility and track.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy