The Pulse: March 6, 2025

Here's what you need to know about Edmonton today.

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Essentials

  • 7°C: Sunny. Wind becoming west 20 km/h near noon. High 7. Wind chill minus 11 in the morning. UV index 2 or low. (forecast)
  • Light Blue/Dark Blue: The High Level Bridge will be lit light blue and dark blue for World Lymphedema Day. (details)
  • 7pm: The Edmonton Oilers (35-22-4) host the Montréal Canadiens (30-26-5) at Rogers Place. (details)

A ground-source heat pump.

Council urged to accelerate adoption of heat pumps


By Stephanie Swensrude

A city committee is urging council to partner with EPCOR to accelerate the adoption of ground-source heat pumps.

The Energy Transition Climate Resilience Committee, the board that advises Edmonton city council on transitioning toward renewable energy, recently wrote an open letter proposing that the city partner with EPCOR to fund and deploy heat pumps in new residential construction and retrofits of existing homes.

"This is the single most important upgrade we can make available for new homes and retrofits to reduce emissions from Edmonton's buildings," the letter said.

While a natural gas furnace burns gas to heat air and then forces that heated air through vents, a ground-source heat pump uses the earth as a source of thermal energy to heat a home, Dave Turnbull, president of Enerspec Energy Consulting, told Taproot.

"It's an air conditioner that goes forwards and backwards," Turnbull said. "There's always heat (in the ground and air), and what (a heat pump) does is it just transports heat from one place to another through a medium, which is the refrigerant that's in the units."

Financing programs like the committee has proposed exist in British Columbia with BC Hydro and Ontario with Hydro One. The committee has proposed that EPCOR would pay the upfront cost of installing a heat pump and the homeowner would repay that over a term of about 25 years through a monthly utility fee that is less than the typical cost of heating a home with natural gas.

Mattamy Homes, an Ontario-based homebuilder that has several developments in the Edmonton region, has used the Ontario program to achieve an 80% reduction in emissions and about 65% reduction in energy use across multiple developments in that province, the committee's letter said. Mattamy has achieved net-zero design on entire developments with a cost premium of less than $20,000, and the premium is paid by the utility, keeping the upgrade out of the price of the house, the letter said.

Buildings are responsible for more than one-third of greenhouse gas emissions in Edmonton. For the city to reach its emissions reduction goals, all new buildings will have to be net-zero by 2030 and all existing buildings will have to be retrofitted by 2050, the committee's letter said. "Our current progress shows we are not moving fast enough, especially considering that every new home that isn't built to be net-zero is adding to the long list of homes Edmontonians will need to retrofit and renovate," the letter said.

Coun. Michael Janz told Taproot he plans to introduce a motion at a future council meeting to direct administration to work with EPCOR to develop the program.

Some doubt the efficacy of ground-source heat pumps in cold climates like Edmonton. The first three weeks of February were colder than average. How did heat pumps fare? Taproot caught up with a homeowner who has used a heat pump for a few winters to find out.

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Headlines: March 6, 2025


By Kevin Holowack

  • Edmonton Public School Board trustees are facing heavier workloads after Ward C trustee Marcia Hole resigned on Feb. 28, citing a difficult political environment. Hole's departure follows Ward D trustee Trisha Estabrooks's resignation in January to join the support worker strike, while Ward H has been vacant since Nathan Ip was elected MLA in 2023. While higher education funding in the provincial budget is welcome, more is needed to keep up with high enrolment growth, board chair Julie Kusiek said. The division is also dealing with a ministerial order to make efforts to provide in-person learning options to all students during the support worker strike.
  • Edmonton city council's executive committee discussed the option to extend the Downtown Community Revitalization Levy by 10 years, which would allow millions of dollars to go toward a deal with Oilers Entertainment Group and the Alberta government for several large-scale downtown projects, plus open up funding for downtown housing, Jasper Avenue upgrades, and other "catalyst" projects. Coun. Aaron Paquette questioned the pressure on council to give public money to private projects, while Coun. Jo-Anne Wright questioned the public benefit of OEG's event park and whether OEG would provide affordable housing. Business interest groups BILD Edmonton Metro, NAIOP, the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce, and the Edmonton Downtown Business Association generally supported expanding the downtown CRL, Postmedia reported.
  • The Theatre Network, which owns the Roxy Theatre in Edmonton, lost a court application to access a neighbouring building for the purpose of finishing the theatre's south wall. The theatre, which reopened in 2022 after a 2015 fire, has an unfinished wall, which the Theatre Network said "poses significant hazards." A judge dismissed the application for an easement, saying he doesn't believe the wall poses serious safety concerns and that there is no legal basis to compel CSIC Services, which owns the neighbouring building, to provide access.
  • The Edmonton Arts Council is selling limited-edition merchandise featuring Edmonton Transit Service and other Edmonton-themed designs, including T-shirts, socks, mugs, and tote bags. Stock is limited, with about 100 T-shirts left as of March 5. The merchandise is for sale at Edmonton Arts Council Shop & Services.
  • Shum Shabat Yousouf, former director of Contentment Social Services, was charged with one count each of fraud and theft for using her position to access peoples' bank accounts and take money without consent, police said in a release. Contentment Social Services, which made headlines last year for moving vulnerable clients into hotel rooms, is also being sued by the province for $140,000 in losses and damages. Police say allegations against Yousouf date back to December 2023, and there may be more victims.
  • An RCMP officer with the Fort Saskatchewan detachment was charged with assault causing bodily harm after allegedly punching a woman he arrested during a mental health call on March 14, 2024. In a statement, the RCMP said the officer arrested a suicidal person under the Mental Health Act and "delivered a strike," sending the individual to the hospital for treatment. Const. Justin Forster is scheduled to appear in court April 3, the RCMP said. He is currently assigned to administrative duties.
  • Richard S. Sutton, a University of Alberta professor and scientific advisor at Amii, and his collaborator Andrew Barto received the prestigious A.M. Turing Award from the Association of Computing Machinery, which is known as the "Nobel Prize in computing." Sutton and Barto were recognized for their foundational research on reinforcement learning, an approach that is somewhat "at odds" with the theories behind large language models (LLMs) being built by big tech companies, The Logic reported.
  • Edmonton Global said its Regional Tariff Ad Hoc Working Group, created last month, is planning to launch a Regional Tariff Impact Hub to help businesses navigate challenges in real time. The online portal will provide updates, resources, and a way for companies to report how they are being affected, Edmonton Global said.
  • The University of Alberta Pandas hockey team has secured a spot in the 2025 Canada West Final, happening March 6-8 at the University of British Columbia. The Pandas and the UBC Thunderbirds are facing off in the finals for the third time in the past five seasons. The team's latest overtime win over Mount Royal also earned it a spot in the 2025 U SPORTS Championship, happening March 20-23 in Waterloo.
  • The Edmonton Oilers announced rookie forward Matthew Savoie was sent back to the Bakersfield Condors following a 6-2 loss to the Anaheim Ducks, although head coach Kris Knoblauch said the decision isn't related to Savoie's performance.
  • In response to U.S. tariffs, Premier Danielle Smith said the Alberta government and municipalities will avoid buying U.S. goods and services, but it's unclear if provincial entities will be banned from buying such goods, CBC reported. Smith also said she would direct Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis to stop buying American alcohol and VLTs, ask grocers and retailers to stock from countries other than the U.S., run a "substantial advertising campaign" encouraging consumers to buy local, and work to increase interprovincial trade. However, Smith said she will not reduce or add tariffs to oil and gas exports, but instead double oil production and look to export it elsewhere.
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Rendering of proposed development in the Rossdale area, along the North Saskatchewan River

Calls for public engagement: Rossdale rezoning, renewal, green economy


By Kevin Holowack

Here are opportunities to inform municipal decisions about rezoning applications, renewals, economic growth, and more. Please only answer surveys from the municipality where you live.

  • Rossdale Centre Rezoning — The City of Edmonton is considering an application to rezone the Rossdale Brewery area, along 100 Street NW between 98 Avenue NW and Rossdale Road NW. If approved, the application would preserve the Rossdale Brewery while allowing development around it, including up to 17-storey buildings and up to 490 dwellings. Residents can attend an open house at the ArtsHub Ortona on March 12 or contribute to a discussion board until March 16.
  • Rossdale Neighbourhood Renewal — The City of Edmonton is planning a renewal of Rossdale, including roads, sidewalks, and lights. Residents can let planners know how they move around and experience Rossdale by completing an online survey until March 23
  • Green Industries Questionnaire — The City of Edmonton seeks feedback from businesses that contribute to the local green economy, which will be used to understand the state of that economy and how the City can support growth. A survey will be open until April 30.

More input opportunities

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

Happenings: March 6, 2025


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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