- Edmonton city council voted to maintain new patio fees for bars and restaurants, rejecting a motion by Coun. Karen Principe to reconsider the charges. Business owners, including Flavius Joita of Birdog on 104 Street, expressed concern about the potential costs, which could reach $7,000 for a year-long patio licence. Joita highlighted increasing business expenses and the impact of nearby Valley Line West LRT construction on 102 Avenue. Mayor Andrew Knack said the fees are intended to offset property tax increases.
- Edmonton is launching the Attainable Housing Incentive, a 10-year tax rebate program to increase downtown residential density. Applications open later this month. The incentive is expected to help add up to 850 attainable units and 3,400 total units. The City has set a downtown population target of 24,000 by 2030.
- Lawyers for Edmonton Police Service Chief Warren Driechel are challenging a decision by the Alberta Human Rights Tribunal that found two Black men, Yousef John and Caesar Judianga, were victims of racial discrimination. In 2017, the men were pepper sprayed and arrested by Edmonton police after reporting a crime. The tribunal's 2024 ruling awarded them $80,000. During a judicial review heard in Edmonton on March 18, police lawyers argued that the tribunal's finding of "implicit bias" was based on general evidence and judged officers' actions using hindsight.
- The City of Edmonton's Coronation Eco Station will close for an expansion project starting March 31. It will be the first major upgrade since 2000, aiming to improve traffic flow, expand the existing building, increase waste drop-off bins, and install solar and energy-efficient systems. During the closure, Edmonton residents can use other Eco Stations, including Ambleside, Kennedale, and Strathcona. The Coronation location is expected to reopen in spring 2027.
- Postmedia columnist Keith Gerein argues in his latest column that Chief Warren Driechel's trip to Israel has reignited political tensions around the Edmonton Police Service after a relatively calm year, and may not have been worth the backlash. While Gerein acknowledged police leaders can benefit from international collaboration on complex public safety issues, he wrote that the chief should have more carefully weighed the trip's public value against its predictable effect on community trust, particularly among Muslim residents. Gerein called for clearer explanations from Driechel and the Edmonton Police Commission about the purpose and approval of the trip.
- The Edmonton Police Service is investigating after a family in the Secord neighbourhood found a loaded handgun near a pond on March 11. A father and daughter discovered the weapon under a blue rag. Investigators released security footage from March 8 showing a man exiting a white car with a blue rag, and are asking Secord residents to review dashcam and security footage from March 8 from 5am to 6am.
- The Alberta government introduced new legislation to restrict medical assistance in dying (MAID). Premier Danielle Smith and Justice Minister Mickey Amery said the bill would prohibit MAID for those with mental illness as their sole underlying condition and limit access to people whose natural death is expected within 12 months. This would effectively block the federal expansion of MAID to include mental illness, set for March 17, 2027. Smith said the government is prepared to defend the bill, potentially using the notwithstanding clause.
Headlines: March 19, 2026
By Mariam Ibrahim