The Pulse: July 2, 2024

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Essentials

  • 23°C: Sunny. Becoming a mix of sun and cloud near noon. Wind becoming northwest 20 km/h in the morning. High 23. UV index 6 or high. (forecast)

The Wild Earth Cafe and Bakery in 2018.

On the agenda: Residential parking program, 99 Street development, homelessness funding


By Stephanie Swensrude

This week, councillors will have their last week of meetings before the summer break. They are scheduled to discuss the residential parking program, services for those who are homeless, and a rezoning on 99 Street.

There is a public hearing scheduled on July 2 and a city council meeting scheduled on July 3 with a continuation on July 4.

Here are key items on the agenda:

  • City council is scheduled to debate hitting pause on the updated residential parking program after critical feedback from residents. City administration had planned to phase out 15 of 19 residential permit parking zones, where parking is reserved for residents who live near major attractions, such as Rogers Place and Commonwealth Stadium. In the remaining four zones, permits that were previously free would now cost $120 per year, and the zones would be smaller. At a meeting on June 18, council's urban planning committee recommended that council pause these changes so that the city can further engage with residents.
  • Pending city council approval at a meeting on July 3, administration may begin creating an exit strategy for all city-funded services, programs, and infrastructure related to housing, shelters, mental health, and addictions that are under the province's jurisdiction. Council's community and public service recommended council to provide this directive during its meeting on June 17.
  • Pangman Development Corporation has applied to rezone an empty lot in Strathcona at 8904 99 Street NW, the former site of the Wild Earth Cafe and Bakery and the Wild Earth Foods grocery store. The rezoning would allow for an eight-storey building with the option to include commercial bays at ground level. The current zoning allows for a 10-storey building with mandatory commercial bays on the ground floor. Several area residents oppose the rezoning due to the proposed shift from mandatory street-side commercial. The site has sat fallow since 2017, when the cafe, grocery store (which dated back 85 years), and other amenities were closed and eventually demolished to make way for a proposed 31-storey luxury tower from Bateman Properties. That project is now scratched.
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Headlines: July 2, 2024


By Mariam Ibrahim

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People install solar panels on a roof

Podcasters shine light on city's solar rebate


By Colin Gallant

The City of Edmonton's decision to launch a revised version of its residential solar rebate program is a surprise that offers some promise, the hosts of Episode 270 of Speaking Municipally said.

"The city has told us that this program was not coming back," co-host Troy Pavlek said about the four-year initiative that exhausted its funds in 2022.

But, well, it's back, though in a modified form. The new rebate program is now for multi-unit properties with "four or more permitted units or dwellings," the city's webpage reads. The previous version was for residential properties irrespective of units. Applications open on July 2 for the $1.3 million pot. Projects must be completed and reported on by Dec. 16.

Pavlek, who installed solar panels on his home with help from the last incarnation of the project, thinks this timeline favours those who are already prepared. "I think this is going to look a lot like the last rebate program, where only people who already have this in the pipeline are able to benefit," he said.

The City of Edmonton ostensibly replaced the last version of the program with its Clean Energy Improvement Program, which was piloted for two years and should become permanent this year. Administered by Alberta Municipalities, it's a low-interest loan option that a recipient repays through their property taxes.

Fellow host Mack Male looked at the rise of solar implementation and made reference to other fast-moving advancements in energy transition — specifically Capital Power divestment from coal that happened years ahead of schedule.

"(Solar) far surpassed each and every possible projection that had been made over the last 25 years," Male said in reference to reporting by The Economist, which made the same point. "It's really incredible how much solar has grown, both in terms of installed capacity and how much it has dropped in terms of price."

Hear more about this, how the city might be pandering to conspiracy theorists, why mountain bikers might not love a new project built just for them, if a new green space downtown can become Edmonton's approximation of Central Park, and an update from the Taproot newsroom by managing editor Tim Querengesser on the June 28 episode of Taproot's civic affairs podcast.

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A title card that reads Taproot Edmonton Calendar: edmonton.taproot.events

Happenings: July 2, 2024


By Debbi Serafinchon

Here are some events happening today in the Edmonton area.

And here are some upcoming events to keep in mind:

Visit the beta version of the Taproot Edmonton Calendar for many more events in the Edmonton region.

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