City's next budget an opportunity to put a 'stamp' on Edmonton, Robar says
Eddie Robar, the now-permanent city manager for the City of Edmonton, said on Episode 291 of Speaking Municipally that working on the next four-year budget after the October election is a test he's excited to take.
"What is a new council looking for? Does it change significantly the direction we're looking to (go in)?" Robar told co-hosts Mack Male and Stephanie Swensrude. "(The budget) is an opportunity to put a stamp on what we're trying to do as a city moving forward, and really showing Edmontonians what's important."
In 2022, council approved the 2023-2026 capital budget at $7.91 billion. A significant portion of that goes towards previously approved projects like LRT expansion, Blatchford redevelopment, new recreation centres, and the Yellowhead Trail freeway conversion.
Council's latest fall adjustment came with a 6.1% increase to property taxes, whittled down from the 8.1% increase that administration had proposed.
Coun. Andrew Knack's successful motion for the city to use zero-based budgeting (budgets that start at zero and require departments to advocate for their next round of funding, rather than building on the status quo) for the next cycle was discussed in Episode 289 of Speaking Municipally.
Robar said how zero-based budgeting will work has yet to be determined. Still, he said the approach will be a chance to "retool" and demonstrate "budget accountability" to achieve outcomes like lower taxes and economic development.
"I think we've heard that loud and clear in the past, we've put ourselves in positions that have not necessarily helped us to achieve those outcomes," Robar, a past Speaking Municipally guest, said. "What we have to do in this next four-year cycle is to try and drive that in a different direction."
The Jan. 17 episode of Taproot's civic affairs podcast includes more from Robar about changes coming to Edmonton Transit Service, opportunities for the city to generate revenue, and more. Plus, Taproot's managing editor, Tim Querengesser, provides an update from the Taproot newsroom. Speaking Municipally comes out on Fridays. Listening and subscription options are all right here.