On the agenda: Ellerslie Road LRT crossing, cuts to reduce tax levy, Integrity Office
This week, council returns to meetings to discuss how Ellerslie Road will cross the future Capital Line LRT extension, potential ways to reduce the property tax levy, and the Integrity Office's annual report.
There is a public hearing scheduled on Oct. 21 and a city council meeting scheduled on Oct. 22 with a continuation on Oct. 23, if required. There is a private special city council meeting on Oct. 22.
Here are key items on this week's agenda:
- Council will discuss whether the city should build a tunnel or bridge along Ellerslie Road to allow drivers to travel over or under the future Capital Line LRT extension at a meeting on Oct. 22. The extension's former design included an elevated station just north of Ellerslie Road. In May 2023, due to budget constraints, council voted to change that to an at-grade station with an option to separate the intersection of the track and roadway in the future. A city report said building an overpass for Ellerslie Road at this intersection, which is currently four lanes but will be widened to six, would cost about $64 million, while an underpass would cost about $99 million. Both estimates exclude engineering costs, use a four-lane road in the analysis, and are in 2023 dollars, meaning eventual costs would likely be higher, the report said. Administration conducted an analysis using the traffic volumes it projects for 2050. It found that leaving the intersection with a grade conflict and the current four-lane configuration would delay drivers from 20 to 30 seconds, and would delay them from 10 to 25 seconds once the road is widened to six lanes. There is no funding for construction of this phase of the extension, meaning council is not required to make a decision.
- City administration said there are limited options to reduce the property tax levy due to a significant lack of money for renewal projects. A report set to be presented at a city council meeting on Oct. 22 details that only 58% of renewal projects are funded. That number drops to 35% after accounting for priority bridge renewal and the Neighbourhood Renewal Program. Administration said growth projects funded in the 2023-2026 budget were mandated by legislation, had high safety impacts, or were eligible for funding from other levels of governments. Administration did not recommend reducing the budgets of those projects. Not all projects that council has added to the budget meet the same criteria, however, and administration said these are the first it recommends be cut to reduce tax pressure. These projects include additions to the active transportation network, improvements to Chinatown infrastructure, and designing a new library in Riverbend. The budget for these projects totals $216 million. Funding for projects that council has chosen to add to the budget has been at least partially committed or spent, except for the planning phase of two mass transit routes. Administration said it will provide council with a report in November that outlines ways to reduce neighbourhood renewal spending. It will also include a list of all projects in the planning or design phases where capital funds have not been committed for project delivery.
- Jamie Pytel, the city integrity commissioner, and Brent Rathgeber, the city ethics advisor, said most bugs have been worked out of the Integrity Office now that it's five years old. According to its 2023 annual report, scheduled to be presented to council on Oct. 22, the office is working to add policies to the Council Code of Conduct, including those involving social media and respect in the workplace. The report said event attendance is the section of the code of conduct that generates the most inquiries. The office received 17 complaints in 2023, eight of which it investigated. The integrity commissioner found the code was breached after they investigated allegations that Coun. Jennifer Rice discriminated against and harassed an employee. Rice obtained court orders in August to stop a sanctioned hearing on the matter after a judicial review, which is scheduled for May 2026, after the next municipal election in October 2025.