The London Free Press

Sarnia scraps food truck spacing requiremen­ts

- TYLER KULA

Sarnia's food truck scene could be changing this summer, with spacing restrictio­ns recently dropped from the city's bylaw.

Council voted 5-2 recently to scrap clauses requiring food trucks be at least 180 metres apart, and 90 metres from restaurant­s offering similar fare. Also gone are requiremen­ts for separate licences for each business location, and six-metre separation­s from bus stops and building entrances, after public feedback on the changes turned out mostly in favour.

The changes take effect immediatel­y, the city's Steve Henschel said.

Staff also plan to examine in more detail where food trucks should go in public spaces like parks, he said.

Eight food trucks were licensed to operate in Sarnia in 2023, he has said.

Of 179 city survey responses, including four from food trucks and six from restaurant­s, 91 per cent said yes to food trucks operating closer together, and two-thirds said it's OK to operate close to restaurant­s selling similar fare, a city staff report said.

Two of the six restaurant­s weighing in viewed food trucks as competitor­s, it said.

Several survey comments cited the success of food truck clusters in other municipali­ties, something Sarnia is eyeing as part of its 15-year, $55-million waterfront master plan that includes building gathering spaces along the St. Clair riverfront.

“This change will allow for creatively employing and co-locating these mobile food and beverages (sellers) in more flexible and longer-term formats, to create strong experience­s in animating spaces,” the document from Re: public Urbanism says about allowing food truck clusters.

Don Franklin, who, with wife Dee, operates Archies fry truck under the Blue Water Bridge in

neighbouri­ng Point Edward, opposes letting food trucks set up shop beside restaurant­s that sell similar food.

“There's enough room for all of us to cohabitate,” he said. “I don't think we have to be on top of one another.”

The restaurant business is hard and expensive, he said. “I totally get both sides of the story.”

Point Edward has no food truck spacing rules, said Jim Burns, the village's chief administra­tor.

Coun. Terry Burrell, who opposed the bylaw changes, noted brick-and-mortar businesses invest more and pay commercial tax, which food trucks don't.

“I just don't think it's fair to allow the restaurant­s to have to compete with the food trucks,” he said.

Coun. Brian White said he doesn't view the business types as direct competitor­s.

“If I'm on the move and I want street food, that's what I'm going for,” he said. “I'm not choosing that over a sit-down restaurant. I've already made the decision I'm not going to a sit-down restaurant.”

The bylaw lets the market decide and gives people who want to get into the food truck business more opportunit­y, he said.

 ?? TYLER KULA ?? Dee and Don Franklin operate Archies fry truck under the Blue Water Bridge. The couple used to run Yogi's. They sold the business and retired, relaunchin­g under the new name when the cost of living spiked.
TYLER KULA Dee and Don Franklin operate Archies fry truck under the Blue Water Bridge. The couple used to run Yogi's. They sold the business and retired, relaunchin­g under the new name when the cost of living spiked.

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