On the agenda: Police funding formula, Heritage River designation, and more
By
Mack Male
City council returns from its summer break next week, just as Taproot Edmonton is starting ours.
A public hearing will take place on Aug. 21, and city council will meet on Aug. 22 and 23. Committee meetings resume the following week, with community and public services committee on Aug. 28, urban planning committee on Aug. 29, and executive committee on Aug. 30.
Here are some of the key items on the agenda for the next two weeks:
- Administration recommends approval of a tweaked funding formula for the Edmonton Police Service, which includes a cap of 30% of civic department expenses, intended to keep police funding from growing more quickly than other expenses. Salary settlements would remain outside the formula, however, something Mayor Amarjeet Sohi has been critical of in the past. Based on an independent review conducted by PwC, the Edmonton Police Commission supports administration's recommendation. In its analysis, PwC noted that the recommended approach for salary settlements presents "a risk that policing budgets would outpace those of civic budgets" and that there is risk associated with "the unpredictability of forecasted settlements." Under the proposed formula, EPS could request additional funding through service packages.
- Across the entire Edmonton Transit Service there is a gap of 260,000 service hours per year, based on an analysis completed by administration. Despite a 15% increase in population between 2015 and 2022 and the expansion of the city's roadway network, transit service hours per capita decreased. Several options are being considered to address the gap, including repurposing Valley Line Southeast LRT precursor buses, which would add approximately 70,000 service hours per year at a cost of $7.2 million.
- The effort to designate the North Saskatchewan River as a Canadian Heritage River could take another step forward if urban planning committee agrees to support and advocate for the designation by writing letters to the provincial and federal governments. City council voted in 2021 to conditionally support the initiative led by Smoky Lake County. Since then, the provincial and federal governments have both endorsed the nomination.