Halifax Mayor asks for report on waiving sidewalk encroachment fees - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Halifax Mayor asks for report on waiving sidewalk encroachment fees

The mayor of Halifax has asked staff to look at waiving encroachment fees for businesses trying to make their buildings more accessible.

Mayor Mike Savage wants to see fees waived to encourage 'barrier-free' business access

Woozles Children's Bookstore pays an annual fee because its ramp encroaches on the sidewalk. (CBC)

The mayor of Halifax has asked city staff to look atwaiving encroachment fees for businesses trying to make theirbuildings more accessible.

Business owners are charged annual fees if part of theirbuildingaffect municipal property,such as a sidewalk.That can includesigns, awnings and even ramps for people with mobility issues.

"This comes under 'no good deed goes unpunished,'"Mayor Mike Savage said Thursday.

"I'm asking staff to look at the waywe would waive fees for encroachments designed to facilitatebarrier-free access."

Mayor Savage has asked staff to look at waiving encroachment fees to help make buildings more accessible. (CBC)

Bureaucracy 'ridiculous'

The mayor said he learned ofthe issue from theowner of WoozlesChildren'sBookstore on Birmingham Street in downtown Halifax.

The store has a ramp and is charged an annual encroachmentfee of $168, owner Liz Crocker said.

"It's not the amount, but the ramp doesnot impede pedestrians," Crocker said."The bureaucracy involved in this chargeis just ridiculous."

Crocker said she is happy to hear about the mayor's call for a report.

"It shows he is listening,"she said."Maybe this willspark a broader conversation about all the fees imposed onsmall businesses."