All I'm saying is that Ministerial Zoning Orders are extremely rare and it is highly unlikely the province would get involved in a local political issue, especially given the fact that the city is very disorganized in terms of missing appeal dates, and not being involved at the front end of the process (rather then commenting on the original application it is my understanding the city just let the 180 day period to respond the the application go by, allowing the developers to appeal to the OMB on the basis of a non-decision by the city).
Edit:
I'd rather have local democracy trump unaccountable planning regimes whom typically favour developers over everyone else that do not exist anywhere else, especially in this case, when it went agains local planning.
There was no decision made by the city, the appeal was based on a non-decision and the city presented a poor case to the OMB. Furthermore one of Active 18's own witnesses acknowledged the tallest tower would have no shadow impact north of Queen and there was a lack of consensus between residents and the city on the proposal.
The OMB is accountable to the PPS, the growth plan and all other provincial plans as well as the city's O.P. - it is accountable to all the planning rules and regulations (rather than the local political climate that councillors are accountable to vs good planning). The OMB doesn't typically favour developers, you only hear cases in the media when local groups kick up a storm about applications being approved that were submitted by developers. Each of the last couple of years there have been 2,000+ files received by the OMB, and you hear about just a handful when some community groups disagree with the decision.
The OMB rejected the city's planning evidence as it was mostly vague and inconsistent. From what I've heard from some of those in attendance at the hearing was that the city did a very poor job in presenting its case.
You claim that the OMB went against local planning, yet there was no secondary plan in place for the site and its my understanding that the 180 day appeal period went by with the city not commenting on the application - the developers appealed to the OMB on a non-decision. The OMB didn't go against local planning, it made a decision where the city had made none.
Ted Tyndorf recently stated at a CUI breakfast that it the city spent $100,000 four years ago developing a secondary plan the outcome would have been entirely different... so does the fault lay with the OMB on the decision? Or the fact that rather than setting a vision and planning for it, the city did nothing and only reacted to the proposal once the community started making noise.
Also the OMB didn't just approve everything the developers wanted. A number of changes the city and community favoured were made, including height reductions and setbacks. Also there were a number of issues where the city and Active 18 disagreed - so it's not like there was consensus between those two groups at the hearings. For the 48 Abell structure, residents appeared at the hearing both in support and in opposition to the development proposal (once again a lack of community consensus). With a number of changes and compromises the board found the proposals to be appropriate and represent good planning.
The city meanwhile seems to be incapable of getting its act together either before the OMB hearings, during the hearings or now with its appeals. The OMB made a decision where the city was unprepared to make one.
I see the solution to this in the future being that the city makes more substantial investments into the planning department so that it can adequately plan for the future rather than just reacting to proposals.