Year: 2025

  • Winter Weather Update & Safety Reminder

    The next few days may bring challenging winter conditions. If the forecast is calling for severe weather, please allow extra time for travel, adjust your plans, or consider postponing travel altogether. If you don’t need to be on the roads, staying home is often the safest option.

    Check the latest official forecast here:
    🔗 https://weather.gc.ca/en/location/index.html?coords=42.867,-79.059

    Now is a good time to ensure your 72-Hour Emergency Kit is ready. Winter storms, power outages, and other emergencies can develop quickly. Ask yourself:
    👉 Could you and your family manage for 72 hours if needed?

    Prepare your kit today:
    🔗 https://bit.ly/3XATuD8

    🔌 Power Outages & Important Contacts

    • For electricity outages or updates, contact Canadian Niagara Power or visit their website:
      🔗 https://www.cnpower.com
    • For natural gas concerns, contact Enbridge Gas or visit their website:
      🔗 https://www.enbridgegas.com
    • For municipal assistance or urgent local concerns, contact the Town of Fort Erie at 905-871-1600
    • For all emergencies or critical situations, call 911 immediately

    Please stay informed, stay prepared, and look out for one another as conditions change.

  • Important Health Care Update

    This Weekend Niagara Health staff have contacted the Mayor of Fort Erie to advise of temporary changes to Urgent Care Centre hours this weekend due to a physician shortage.

    Photo Credit Niagara this Week

    • The Fort Erie (Douglas Memorial) Urgent Care Centre will close at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday

    • The Port Colborne Urgent Care Centre will close at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday

    NH have advised these closures will occur on alternating days and are related to staffing challenges being experienced across the Niagara Health system.

    Residents are encouraged to plan accordingly and seek alternative care options if needed.

    Further updates will be shared as they become available or visit Niagara Health for more detail.

  • Understanding the Point Abino Municipal Drain — A Local Infrastructure Story


    For information on the Point Abino Drain including process, reports and contact information click here


    In the Town of Fort Erie and neighbouring City of Port Colborne, the Point Abino Municipal Drain plays a quiet but essential role in how water is managed on the landscape. The drain isn’t just a ditch in the ground it’s a municipal drainage system created under provincial law and subject to formal engineering, public input, cost-sharing, and legal safeguards.

    What Is a Municipal Drain?

    A municipal drain is a system designed to move water away from land that needs drainage often agricultural fields, rural properties, roadside ditches, and other areas where water flow needs to be controlled. Unlike natural streams that simply follow the land, a municipal drain is:

    This means that although it functions on the local landscape, the Point Abino Drain’s legal authority comes from provincial legislation, not just municipal policy or local infrastructure planning.

    How the Drain Was Established

    Under the Ontario Drainage Act, municipal drains are created through a formal process administered by local municipalities but grounded in provincial law. Key steps include:

    1. Petition or Request — Landowners in an area with drainage issues submit a legally prescribed petition for drainage to the municipality. If enough owners sign (based on number or land area), the process moves forward.
    2. Engineer’s Report — An engineer is appointed to assess the problem, propose a drainage solution, and prepare a detailed report. This report includes technical plans and a cost-sharing schedule for landowners in the drain’s watershed.
    3. Council Review and By-law — The report is considered at a public “Meeting to Consider” and, if accepted, council passes a by-law adopting the report. This by-law is the formal legal instrument that brings the municipal drain into existence.

    For the Point Abino Municipal Drain specifically, a recent engineer’s report under the Drainage Act was completed and filed with the City of Port Colborne in 2025 as part of this legislated process. Port Colborne council will decide whether to adopt the report a decision that triggers the legal appeal rights set out in the Act.

    Who Pays for Drain Cleaning and Maintenance?

    Once a municipal drain exists under the Drainage Act, all properties within its watershed contribute to its upkeep. Rather than being solely a municipal expense, costs for cleaning, repair, improvements, and even extensions are apportioned to landowners who benefit from the drain based on the engineer’s assessment.

    This means:

    • If you live within the Point Abino Drain watershed, you may be assessed a share of maintenance costs; and
    • Even if the drain runs near or under your land, you have a stake in how it’s maintained — and rights in the process.

    How Residents Can Be Involved

    Being part of a municipal drain watershed doesn’t mean you’re passive. The Drainage Act includes several points of landowner consultation and appeal:

    • Meeting to Consider — When council first considers the engineer’s report, landowners can raise questions or concerns.
    • Court of Revision — After the report is adopted, the Court of Revision hears disputes about how costs are assigned.
    • Appeals — Beyond the Court of Revision, landowners can appeal certain decisions to the Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Appeal Tribunal, providing a provincial-level review process.

    This layered process helps balance individual property rights with the collective need for effective drainage infrastructure.

    Where to Get More Details

    For anyone living in Fort Erie, Crystal Beach, or around Point Abino who wants to learn more:

    • The Ontario Drainage Act is available through the Ontario government’s e-laws website — it’s the legal backbone of all municipal drains in the province.
    • Your municipality’s Drainage Superintendent or Clerk’s Office can provide copies of engineer’s reports, assessment schedules, and by-laws related to the Point Abino Drain.
    • Past and current engineer’s reports and public notices for the Point Abino Municipal Drain are often posted on the City of Port Colborne and Town of Fort Erie websites.

    Municipal drains like the Point Abino Drain may not be the most visible part of our community, but they combine engineering, law, and shared responsibility to keep our land from flooding and working for the people who live here. Understanding that it’s a provincially governed legal process, not just a local decision, helps landowners know their rights and their role in shaping how water moves across our watershed.

    Unsure if you are in a Municipal Watershed?

    If new to the area and considering purchasing rural property or unsure if this applies to you. You will want to check with your real estate agent and or municipal by-laws and confirm if you or the property you are looking at are within a municipal drain watershed.

    For information on the Point Abino Drain including process, reports and contact information click here

    Town of Fort Erie Contacts

    Troy Davidson — Drainage Superintendent
    📞 Town of Fort Erie: 905-871-1600 (ask for extension 2405)
    📧 Email: tdavidson@forterie.ca

    Or

    Town of Fort Erie Customer Service:
    📞 905-871-1600
    or use the contact form on the Town’s website to ask for the right drainage contact and get routed appropriately.

  • Public Statement – Re: Niagara Health Request for Additional $10.5M

    I would like to formally acknowledge receipt of Niagara Health’s recent letter to Fort Erie Council regarding the South Niagara Hospital and the future of the Fort Erie healthcare site.

    For the first time, Niagara Health has formally recognized that healthcare services in Fort Erie have a future. That acknowledgement matters to our community and to this Council. However, it is deeply concerning that this recognition appears to be conditional on the Town making a $10.5 million financial contribution. Can we say extortion maybe?

    Fort Erie residents should not be asked to pay for access to healthcare or to secure recognition of services in their own community. Healthcare is a public good, not a bargaining tool.

    The Town has been clear and consistent: Fort Erie requires accessible, reliable healthcare close to home. Our residents already face longer travel times, limited transit options, and reduced local services. Any request for municipal funding must come with clear, binding commitments—not uncertainty or implied pressure.

    In my opinion the Town of Fort Erie should not commit taxpayer dollars without:

    • Clear guarantees about healthcare services for Fort Erie residents
    • Transparency around the future of the Fort Erie site
    • A fair and equitable approach that recognizes Fort Erie’s unique geography and needs

    I reject the notion that planning for Fort Erie’s healthcare future is “premature.” Our community has waited long enough. Fort Erie has the right to plan for its future now, not after financial conditions are imposed.

    Myself and the rest of Council remains open to collaboration, but collaboration must be based on mutual respect, transparency, and certainty not conditional recognition or deadlines driven by external interests. Fort Erie has always wanted to collaborate by we need a partner to make it happen.

    I will continue to stand up for Fort Erie residents and will not make decisions under pressure or without clear public benefit.

  • TOFE Meeting Schedule

    TOFE Meeting Schedule

    2026 Council Committee

    Get your 2026 calendars ready as the schedule for Town of Fort Erie Council and Committee meetings is available on the Fort Erie website.

  • Seasons Greetings

    Seasons Greetings

    The 2025 – 26 Holiday Season has started. Let’s pause to reflect on its true meaning — love, kindness, and togetherness. Wishing you all a joyful holiday season and a very Merry Christmas!