Vaughan Bylaw Guide: Speed Humps & Roundabouts

Transportation Ontario 4 Minutes Read · published May 24, 2026 Flag of Ontario

In Vaughan, Ontario the city evaluates requests for speed humps and roundabouts through a formal traffic-calming and capital works process that balances neighbourhood safety, traffic flow and emergency access. This guide explains who decides, how residents can apply, typical technical and consultation steps, enforcement and appeal pathways. For official process details and the city’s policy overview, consult the City of Vaughan traffic-calming page[1] and the Municipal Act that provides municipal bylaw authority[2].

Overview of the Approval Process

The approval pathway typically involves these elements: survey and data collection, evaluation against traffic-calming criteria, community consultation, detailed design, budget approval as part of capital or operational works, and installation by the City’s Transportation or Public Works division. Implementation timelines depend on prioritization and available capital funding; specific timelines are not specified on the cited page[1].

Traffic-calming measures must balance vehicle speed reduction with emergency vehicle access.

Typical Steps and Criteria

  • Data collection: counts, speeds and collision history.
  • Evaluation against city criteria and prioritization.
  • Public consultation and notice to affected residents and stakeholders.
  • Detailed engineering design and coordination with utilities and emergency services.
  • Capital approval and budgeting by council or delegated authority.
  • Installation and follow-up monitoring post-installation.
Not all candidate streets will qualify; each request is screened against technical standards.

Stakeholders and Roles

  • City of Vaughan Transportation Services or Public Works: leads evaluation, design and installation.
  • City Council: approves capital spending and may approve specific projects during budget processes.
  • By-law Enforcement: enforces signage, parking and any unauthorized alterations post-installation.
  • Emergency services: consulted to ensure measures do not impede response times.

Penalties & Enforcement

Enforcement for issues related to traffic-calming installations or unauthorized modifications is handled by the City of Vaughan By-law Enforcement and related departments; official contact and reporting pages are available from the city[3]. Specific fine amounts for offences directly tied to traffic-calming installations are not specified on the cited city pages and are governed by applicable bylaws and municipal enforcement schedules[3] and provincial statutes[2]. Where the city publishes schedules or bylaw amounts, those figures must be relied on as authoritative.

  • Monetary fines: not specified on the cited page; see applicable bylaw schedules or contact By-law Enforcement for current amounts.
  • Escalation: first offences, repeat or continuing offences and ranges are not specified on the cited page.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: compliance orders, removal orders for unauthorized works, and court action are available remedies under municipal authority.
  • Enforcer and inspection: By-law Enforcement and Transportation Services perform inspections and respond to complaints; report through the official contact page[3].
  • Appeals and review: decisions about installation and bylaw enforcement can be reviewed through municipal complaint and appeal routes or judicial review where permitted; specific time limits are not specified on the cited pages.
If you alter street infrastructure without authorization you may face orders to restore the road and possible fines.

Applications & Forms

The city accepts traffic-calming requests and supporting documentation through an official traffic-calming request process; the named "Traffic Calming Request" form or online request mechanism is described on the City of Vaughan traffic-calming page[1]. The cited page does not list a mandatory fee amount for submitting a request; where forms or fees are published they are authoritative[1].

Action Steps for Residents

  • Submit a traffic-calming request or form as described on the City of Vaughan traffic-calming page[1].
  • Collect supporting data: photo, dates/times of issues, neighbour signatures where required.
  • Engage in public consultation steps when notified by the city.
  • Monitor council agendas for capital approvals if funding is required.
  • If dissatisfied with a decision, follow city appeal steps or request a review; consult By-law Enforcement or municipal clerk for procedure.

FAQ

How do I request a speed hump in my neighbourhood?
Submit a traffic-calming request via the City of Vaughan traffic-calming page and provide supporting data; the city will evaluate the street against policy criteria[1].
Who pays for installation?
Installation is typically funded through the city’s capital program or operating budget; specific funding sources and cost-sharing details are handled during project approval and are not specified on the cited page[1].
Can neighbours block a speed hump installation?
Public consultation is required, but final authority rests with the city and council; formal appeals routes exist for administrative decisions as provided under municipal processes and provincial law[2].

How-To

  1. Check the City of Vaughan traffic-calming webpage for criteria and the current request form[1].
  2. Gather evidence: traffic counts, photos, and a summary of concerns.
  3. Complete and submit the traffic-calming request form as instructed.
  4. Participate in any public consultation organized by the city.
  5. Await evaluation, prioritization and council or administrative approval; follow up with Transportation Services if timelines are unclear.
  6. If the outcome is unfavourable, request a review through the municipal complaint process or seek clarification on appeal routes.

Key Takeaways

  • Vaughan evaluates speed humps and roundabouts through a formal traffic-calming and capital-works process.
  • Contact Transportation Services and By-law Enforcement for technical questions and to report issues[3].

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Vaughan - Traffic Calming
  2. [2] Ontario - Municipal Act, 2001
  3. [3] City of Vaughan - By-law Enforcement