The Pulse: Nov. 3, 2025

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

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Essentials

  • 8°C: Sunny. Increasing cloudiness near noon. Wind west 20 km/h becoming light in the morning. High 8. UV index 1 or low. (forecast)
  • White/Yellow/Red/Black: The High Level Bridge will be lit white, yellow, red, and black for Indigenous Disability Awareness Month. (details)
  • 3-2: The Edmonton Oilers defeated the Chicago Blackhawks in overtime on Nov. 1. (details)
  • 6:30pm: The Oilers (6-4-3) play the St. Louis Blues (3-7-2) at Enterprise Center. (details)

A bus covered in plant growth at a downtown movie shoot.

Program launches aimed at training locals to work on film and TV projects


By Colin Gallant

Edmonton Screen is mobilizing its new Greenlight Alberta program to train and accredit more professionals to work in so-called below-the-line roles in the film and television industry.

"'Below the line' really means the crew in production and post-production, and it's extremely important for us to continue to develop that in the province," Dorian Rowe, the film commissioner for Edmonton Screen, told Taproot. "A lot of programs look at talent: Writer, director, actor, producer … This program is specifically aimed at trying to develop crew."

The term comes from budget sheets for film and TV productions. The bulk of workers fall below that line, such as those who work in lighting, sound, wardrobe, and editing.

For the first round of Greenlight Alberta's below-the-line training, Edmonton Screen has streams for production assistants, production coordinators, and assistant directors. Each stream has room for roughly 20 participants, Rowe said, but the number of successful applicants ultimately depends on how many suitable candidates apply.

"We're trying to connect with people who have done some work, even if it's student films," Rowe said. "We're not going to fill the seats just to have bodies there. We're selectively going through and looking at each applicant as an individual and whether they're a good fit." Production assistant is one of the more entry-level roles on a set, he said, while an assistant director requires more familiarity with how other jobs function on a production.

While foreign productions that come to Edmonton, like HBO's The Last of Us (which generated $141 million in the province between 2021 and 2022), depend on qualified local talent, Greenlight Alberta isn't just a gambit to bring in big productions, Rowe said.

"A healthy world of film and television for the Edmonton region — or any particular place — is going to have a wide range of project types, budget levels, and crew sizes. (Whether it be) unscripted, documentary, smaller dramas, larger dramas, or massive dramas, they all sort of feed each other."

For example, Rowe said a crew member with the right experience might be a second or third in command for a crew department on a foreign production, but could be the head of a department on a national or local project. "They all kind of uplift each other," he said. "The experience that people gain on short films, on television, on guerrilla documentaries, in whatever role … all of that contributes to the capacity for the bigger shows."

Experienced crew members can also take what they've learned into writing and directing original projects. "It works on multiple levels, but one level, for sure, is the capacity to tell our own stories and to bring Alberta stories to the screen," Rowe said.

The applications for production assistant opened on Oct. 20 and close on Nov. 3. Applications for production coordinator open on Nov. 3 and close on Nov. 17, and the applications for assistant director open on Nov. 17 and close Dec. 1. The courses are delivered in person and online in partnership with Stage 32, a Los Angeles company with industry-recognized certification programs, and participants will likely get to work on a set in 2026, depending on what's shooting. There is no fee to apply for or participate in any of the programs.

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Headlines: Nov. 3, 2025


By Mariam Ibrahim

  • Edmonton Mayor Andrew Knack responded to a call from the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce for a business-focused economic task force by outlining his plan for a more inclusive, citywide approach to creating the 2026-2029 four-year budget. Knack said he wants all Edmontonians, including community and faith leaders, involved in co-creating the budget, moving beyond typical public hearings. Separately, Coun. Aaron Paquette was set to present his strategies to address the city's fiscal gap on Nov. 4, at an event hosted by the Building Owners and Managers Association in Edmonton. The Edmonton chamber is scheduled to present its State of the Economy report on Nov. 7.
  • The City of Edmonton launched its Snow and Ice Control program on Oct. 31, focusing on informing residents through updated maps and service notifications. The program maintains consistent service levels, prioritizing main freeways, downtown business districts, and hills for road clearing, and City facilities with the Winter Priority Loop for active pathways. The City will implement two phases of parking bans on major and residential roads during heavy snowfall. Edmontonians must clear adjacent sidewalks or face a $100 fine, plus cleanup costs. Last year, 1,431 tickets were issued.
  • The Edmonton Police Service is investigating four suspicious fires that targeted infill construction sites in Edmonton between Oct. 18 and 29. The fires, which police believe were intentionally set, affected properties in the King Edward and Belgravia neighbourhoods.
  • The Edmonton Public Schools board of trustees gave teachers an emotional welcome back on Oct. 31, after the United Conservative Party invoked the notwithstanding clause to end the provincewide teachers' strike. Outgoing chair Julie Kusiek expressed deep respect for educators, while Superintendent Ron Thompson thanked staff. The meeting also saw the swearing-in of a new board of trustees.
  • A massive 104-metre-long, 529,000-kilogram de-methanizer pressure vessel was set to begin a weeklong journey from Thermo Design Engineering in south Edmonton to the Fort McMurray area on Nov. 2. This oversized load, used for natural gas processing, requires 352 wheels and will occupy all highway lanes and shoulders, which will cause significant traffic disruptions. Its route starts in Edmonton, proceeding via Whitemud Drive, Highway 216, Highway 14, Highway 45, Highway 28, and finally Highway 63 to its destination.
  • More pistachio products were recalled in Ottawa and Edmonton on Nov. 1, due to potential Salmonella contamination, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. In Edmonton, Fresh Nuts, located at 12522-132 Avenue NW, sold the affected roasted pistachios in barbecue, salty, lemon, and saffron varieties between April 8 and Oct. 29. Consumers should dispose of or return these items. This ongoing Salmonella outbreak has resulted in 117 illnesses and 17 hospitalizations.
  • Edify Edmonton published its 2025 Top 40 Under 40, celebrating a new generation of leaders shaping the city's future. Now in its 17th year, the annual list recognizes professionals and community builders making a difference across sectors from business and technology to the arts and social services. While previous honourees helped lay the groundwork for Edmonton's modern identity, the magazine wrote, this year's group is tackling challenges such as poverty, the drug poisoning crisis and housing affordability.
  • More than 500 Edmontonians participated in the city's annual Pumpkin Smash outside Clareview Community Recreation Centre on Nov. 2. The event offered a fun way to dispose of Halloween pumpkins while educating attendees about composting and waste sorting.
  • CBC Edmonton journalists won four national RTDNA awards at a Toronto gala on Nov. 2. The newsroom received a Breaking News award for its digital coverage of the July 2024 Jasper wildfire evacuation and a Continuing Coverage award for its multiplatform reporting on the fire's aftermath. Emily Williams earned an Opinion award for an audio piece featuring a former Afghan MP who relocated to Edmonton. Tanara McLean also won an Excellence in Editing award for her audio work Birdsong: Edmonton's quiet soundtrack, which highlighted local bird calls.
  • Alberta Education announced that it has cancelled January provincial diploma exams for high school students and provincial achievement tests for Grade 9 students. This decision stems from three weeks of lost coursework during the provincewide teachers' strike by members of the Alberta Teachers' Association. Students not writing January diploma exams will have course marks based entirely on schoolwork, with a transcript notation not affecting university admission or graduation.
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Five smiling people, dressed for cold weather, exude a feeling of community and warmth

For struggling Edmontonians, help from their neighbours can't come soon enough

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A message from Boyle Street Community Services:

When okimaw peyesew kamik (King Thunderbird Centre) starts service delivery on Nov. 12, it will mark a historic milestone for Boyle Street Community Services and for the thousands of Edmontonians who rely on its programs every year.

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Boyle Street's work begins with relationships. Staff meet people where they are, providing wraparound supports that help them access housing, healthcare, cultural support, and connection. Each step forward, no matter how small, starts with trust and understanding.

That approach has been at the core of Boyle Street's work since 1971. And through decades of change, one thing has remained constant: the community's generosity. It was donors, volunteers, and partners who made okimaw peyesew kamik possible — and that same generosity keeps Boyle Street's programs running every day. Every meal served, every ID provided, every safe place found shows that Edmontonians care about their neighbours.

We're honoured by the trust Edmontonians have placed in us for 54 years. You donated to our Build with Boyle capital campaign because you trusted us when we said that better was possible, and now okimaw peyesew kamik opens its doors in two weeks. You donate to our Emergency Response Fund, and we use it to provide lifesaving winter clothing in the frostbite capital of the world. You have always trusted us with your support because you care about the community that we share.

With winter around the corner, that support becomes even more critical. Right now, 5,000 people in Edmonton are experiencing homelessness: 5,000 sons and daughters, fathers and mothers, grandfathers and grandmothers. Their challenges are complex — shaped by housing costs, health needs, and the ongoing effects of poverty and discrimination — and they cannot be solved by any one person or organization acting alone.

But we believe that change is possible. We see it all the time — small changes that add up to something big: how greeting someone by name lights up their face, how someone's life can change by having one person believe in them, how a warm meal can turn the worst day ever into a new day, full of new possibilities.

Our work makes change possible. This winter, Boyle Street is asking Edmontonians to help us support everyone who walks through the doors of okimaw peyesew kamik.

Because lasting change isn't built by any one person, organization, or building. It's built by all of us, one day at a time, working toward a future that is only possible together.

Learn more or donate at boylestreet.org/give.

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

Happenings: Nov. 3, 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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