Hamilton, Ontario — week of 2026-06-29 · all Hamilton meetings

Data centre bylaw tops Hamilton council agenda; heritage designations advance

Hamilton city council had before it a proposed interim control bylaw that could freeze new data centre developments city-wide, as several committees tackled zoning, heritage and public health matters in late June. Minutes for all recent meetings had not yet been published, leaving actual decisions unconfirmed.

Council

Council’s June 24 agenda featured the interim control bylaw for data centres, recommended by the planning committee and accompanied by extensive public correspondence. The meeting also listed a 2025 Economic Development Action Plan update, reaccreditation of the city’s economic development division, ceremonial recognition of Olympian Sarah Nurse, and integrity commissioner reports on two complaints. No vote outcome was available by press time.

Heritage

On June 26, the Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee was scheduled to vote on recommending designation of 265 Wilson Street East (Ryerson United Church) in Ancaster and 650-672 Sanatorium Road (San House and Patterson Building) under the Ontario Heritage Act. A heritage permit application for demolition and new construction at 7 John Street East, Flamborough, was also received. Final designation requires council approval.

Board of Health

The Board of Health on June 22 set a motion to reaffirm opposition to provincial contaminant permit extensions, alongside reviews of a black soot sampling feasibility study, a semi-annual opioid information update, and the 2025 annual public health report. A confidential litigation discussion was part of the agenda.

Zoning

The Committee of Adjustment met June 22 and July 2, reviewing more than 20 variance and rezoning applications. Items included 120 Park Street North (tabled), 1565 Barton Street East, and multiple rezoning requests along McNeilly Road and Beach Boulevard. Decisions were not released.

Other business

Coming up

No public meetings are scheduled in the next two weeks, according to the city’s official calendar.

Generated from official meeting agendas and minutes — every underlying document is linked from the city page. Read the primary source before you rely on a detail.