Earlier this month, I posted about proposed changes to enable certain development applications to be processed through Langley City staff without going through the Council approval process. Property subdivision proposals are currently being delegated to City staff, and on Monday, Council gave first, second, and third reading to approve in principle the delegation to staff for small residential projects (with 6 units or fewer), small commercial projects outside the Downtown, and development variance permits. Most townhouse projects, all apartment projects, and most commercial and industrial projects will still follow the Council approval process for a development permit. If a rezoning is required, all projects must go through the Council approval process. This change will speed up smaller projects, such as allowing someone to build a coach home, a garden suite, a triplex, or a small expansion to a strip mall along the Langley Bypass.
Council adopted a modernized fire safety bylaw in alignment with the updated provincial Fire Safety Act.
Our Fees & Charges Bylaw and Municipal Ticket Information System Bylaw are being updated to reflect both the delegated development permits and the updated fire safety bylaw.
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| Map of Regional Urban Containment Boundary. Select the map to enlarge. |
In June 2025, the Mayors of Delta, Surrey, and the Township of Langley wrote to the Metro Vancouver Regional District Board asking for changes to the Regional Growth Strategy. One of the key objectives of our Regional Growth Strategy is to preserve rural and agricultural lands through an urban containment boundary. With certain exceptions, expanding the urban containment boundary requires a 2/3 weighted vote of the Metro Vancouver Regional District Board, a high threshold. The high voting threshold reflects the fact that preserving green space and preventing urban sprawl has been a key tenet of successive regional growth strategies for a generation. The Metro Vancouver Regional District is seeking feedback from member jurisdictions about this request. Langley City Council approved sending a letter to the Metro Vancouver Regional District Board suggesting that “the decisions on these proposed changes to Metro 2050 be postponed and instead advanced forward and considered as a part of the process to develop the next RGS,” given that they are such significant changes to the Regional Growth Strategy.

