LaSalle looks into policy limiting frivolous bylaw complaints, some residents feel 'harassed' by neighbours
Mayor Crystal Meloche introduced the motion at Tuesday night's council meeting.
"We've seen an uptick in neighbourly disputes," Meloche told CBC. "And they find the best way, I guess, to anger their neighbours – or I don't know what it is – is to call the bylaw department, and they put in complaints."
LaSalle's bylaw department received 325 complaints in 2024, according to a report provided to council in April.
That's a 21 per cent increase over 2023, when there were 268 complaints.
Town takes complaints seriously
Staff estimate that the town's population has only grown around 10 per cent since 2021, said Director of Finance Dale Langlois.
The overwhelming majority of the complaints, 191 in total, were related to the town's clean yard bylaw, representing a 59 per cent increase over 2023 numbers, according to the report.
"The main offences included tall grass/weeds and exterior property debris, which resulted in the completion of 16 properties being remediated/cut by the town's employed third-party contractors," the report read.
The town takes complaints seriously, Meloche said, so bylaw officers will visit properties, make sure residents are complying with bylaws, educate them on how to comply if not, and follow up to make sure they've addressed any problems.
"But what we're seeing is neighbours who are calling for reasons that are not against municipal bylaws," she said. "We will go out there, and we will confirm that the neighbour's compliant, and nothing needs to be done.
"And the neighbour will call again, and they will put in another complaint ... So what we're finding is, we're getting people in our town who feel that they're being harassed."
The town only has one bylaw officer to serve the population of around 35,000, and that person is wasting a lot of time on "neighbourly disputes," she said.
The fire department is also getting complaints about people having legal outdoor fires, she added.
Complaints about backyard fires
LaSalle Fire Chief Ed Thiessen confirmed to CBC that the department gets occasional calls about outdoor fires, though said id it doesn't happen frequently enough to cause a problem for the service.
"As long as they're … the proper distance away from structures and that they're burning clean materials … they are allowed," he said.
Meloche said other complaints she's heard about involve loud dogs and loud cars.
Her goal with the motion, she said, is to find a way to continue treating all complaints seriously, while shutting down repeated complaints on matters that have already been investigated — and potentially even fining residents whose repeated, unfounded complaints cost the town money.
The motion passed unanimously.
Coun. Jeff Renaud was the only person to speak to it during Tuesday night's meeting.
"One thing I learned in the last 11 years with being on council is I have very good neighbours," he said.
"And there's probably twice as many people out there that don't have very good neighbours, and I see a lot of resources being wanted on frivolous complaints."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
18 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Live updates: Most higher tariff rates to take effect in a week, Trump administration says
Most of President Donald Trump's long-awaited and much-delayed 'reciprocal' tariffs, which were scheduled to kick in Friday, won't take effect for another week to give Customs and Border Protection officials time to prepare, the administration said late Thursday. Trump has rolled out frameworks for deals with 11 of the United States' top 15 trading partners. Temporary trade truces with China and Mexico will remain in effect as negotiators continue talks. But tariffs on other countries will soon escalate, barring late-hour deals. Trump has no public events scheduled Friday. He is heading to his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, for the weekend. After a rough start, President Donald Trump's campaign to reshape global trade suddenly seems to be advancing from strength to strength. Former vice president Kamala Harris expressed deep concern about U.S. democracy, describing it as a broken system on CBS's 'The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' on Thursday evening, in her first interview since the 2024 presidential election. President Donald Trump on Thursday finalized his long-awaited and much-delayed 'reciprocal' tariffs in a move designed to rebalance a global trading system that he argues has been tilted against the world's largest economy. In a pair of executive orders, the president increased tariffs on merchandise from about 70 countries and raised the rate on products made in Canada, one of the United States' largest trading partners, to a punitive 35 percent. The Trump administration on Thursday said it will send senior U.S. officials into war-ravaged Gaza to inspect food distribution sites and develop a plan to ensure more aid gets to civilians amid growing international anger over mass starvation there. Special envoy Steve Witkoff and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will travel inside the Palestinian enclave on Friday to hear 'firsthand about this dire situation,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Trump is remaking the global trade system even as some see trouble ahead
After a rough start, President Donald Trump's campaign to reshape global trade suddenly seems to be advancing from strength to strength. Little more than six months into his unlikely second term, Trump has rewritten the rules governing more than $3 trillion in cross-border commerce. Against all mainstream economic advice, he has scrapped decades of American leadership in lowering trade barriers and raised the average tariff confronting U.S. importers to their highest point since Messrs. Smoot and Hawley ran U.S. trade policy in the 1930s.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
The Nimbleness of Corporate America Is on Full Display
The nimbleness of corporate America is on full display this earnings season, with a little assist from fiscal policy. US manufacturers for the most part have tweaked their doom-and-gloom scenarios from late April, when they had just been shell-shocked by the Liberation Day tariffs announced by President Donald Trump. Outlooks in their second-quarter earnings conference calls have been along the lines of: 'It's not quite as bad as we thought.'