Edmonton Minute: Issue 265

Edmonton Minute: Issue 265

 

 

Edmonton Minute - Your weekly one-minute summary of Edmonton politics

 

📅 This Week In Edmonton: 📅

  • City Council will meet several times this week to discuss the 2025-2028 budget, starting today at 9:30 am. Councillors are set to review the proposed 2026 budget, which includes a 6.4% property tax increase, matching the previous Council’s spring approval. Administration cites a fiscal gap caused by declining provincial grants, a shrinking share of non-residential taxes, debt limits, inflation, and population growth, making it challenging to maintain service levels.

  • Despite the tax increase being debated, concerns remain that critical arterial roads may not be repaired due to insufficient funding. Councillor Keren Tang proposed adding $5 million - the lowest funding option - to extend the service life of the worst-condition roads, emphasizing that maintaining existing infrastructure is a core service and cheaper than letting deterioration worsen. Residents have expressed frustration with patchwork repairs, urging the city to address long-term road quality. Mayor Andrew Knack acknowledged the importance of roadwork but indicated that additional funding may have to wait until the next four-year budget cycle.

  • Municipal Affairs Minister Dan Williams told the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce that municipalities must focus on core services and avoid spending on extras, stressing that the province is not a “shining knight” for City finances. Edmonton receives about $250 million from the provincial government, which fluctuates with revenues, so Williams urged Councils to deliver essential services like road maintenance, water systems, and garbage collection efficiently. He encouraged innovative solutions to help municipalities manage budgets without raising property taxes, emphasizing long-term infrastructure planning and asset use. Williams also stressed that addiction and social disorder are primarily provincial responsibilities, with the Alberta Recovery Model guiding compassionate intervention for those struggling with addiction. While municipalities should cooperate with provincial strategies, they must respect the mandated approach and avoid duplicating services. Overall, Williams called for fiscal responsibility at the municipal level while supporting coordinated provincial-municipal efforts on social challenges.

  • Edmonton is moving ahead with 10 new affordable-housing developments after selling surplus school sites to builders for a symbolic one dollar each. The projects are funded through a $99-million federal Housing Acceleration Fund grant and will add more than 1,300 units across the city, including 925 below-market homes capped at 80% of average rents. Sites in neighbourhoods such as Belmont, Blue Quill, Dunluce, Miller, and Summerlea will host a range of purpose-built housing, from multi-generational units to second- and third-stage housing for women and families leaving violence. Several projects include partnerships with community groups, Indigenous organizations, and newcomer-serving agencies. City officials say the initiative will make a meaningful contribution to Edmonton’s affordable-housing shortage, while the province has opened a new $200-million funding round through its Affordable Housing Partnership Program. The remaining surplus school lands continue to be evaluated for future housing opportunities.
  • The Province has selected a location on the University of Alberta’s south campus for a new standalone Stollery Children’s Hospital, marking the first major step toward expanding pediatric care in the capital region. The site, currently a green space near 122 Street and 51 Avenue, was chosen for its room to grow and its proximity to the university’s clinical and research hub. Detailed planning for space, services, and infrastructure will continue until 2026, with costs and timelines to be determined afterward. Construction of a full hospital is expected to take at least five to eight years once it begins. The Stollery Children’s Hospital Foundation has launched a $1-billion fundraising campaign to support the project. Once complete, the facility is expected to free up space at the existing Stollery within the University of Alberta Hospital, helping meet growing acute care demands in a city that has added more than 300,000 residents since the original Stollery opened in 2001.

 


 

🚨 This Week’s Action Item: 🚨

The City’s proposed 2026 budget raises property taxes and shifts costs to homeowners while overall spending keeps climbing.

Council will begin debating the budget today. 

If you haven't done so already, sign the petition to tell Council to stop new tax increases, fund only essential services, and cut non-essential projects:

 

 


 

🪙 This Week’s Sponsor: 🪙

This week's sponsor is you! We don't have big corporate backers, so if you like what you're reading, please consider making a donation or signing up as a monthly member.

Having said that, if you are a local business and are interested in being a sponsor, send us an email and we'll talk!

 

 


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  • Common Sense Edmonton
    published this page in News 2025-11-30 07:11:50 -0700