Three municipalities finalize departure from Edmonton Global
Devon, Sturgeon County, and Strathcona County will leave Edmonton Global in 2026, voting recently to follow through on their 2023 announcements that they would depart as the window to reverse those decisions was set to close.
The decisions are part of a growing conversation about how regional economic cooperation and planning will work in the future. In 2023, member municipalities abandoned the Edmonton Metropolitan Region Transit Commission. In January, the provincial government pulled funding for the Edmonton Metropolitan Region Board, which subsequently folded. Across 2023 and 2024, six municipalities announced intentions to leave Edmonton Global. In October, the organization's newly-hired CEO, Daryn Edgar, said she planned to refresh municipal relationships. And in November, newly elected Edmonton Mayor Andrew Knack said figuring out regional cooperation was high on his agenda. "As a region, we stand far more to gain if we're actually working together," Knack said on an episode of Speaking Municipally.
Edmonton and 14 surrounding municipalities launched Edmonton Global in 2018. The stated aim was to attract foreign investment by selling a region rather than an individual municipality. (The town of Bon Accord left shortly after Edmonton Global started operations.) "This is the most important thing we need to do — pull the region together," then Edmonton mayor Don Iveson said at the time. "But that would not be possible without all of you agreeing that that was what we needed to do."
In late 2023, councils in Devon, Strathcona County, Sturgeon County, Parkland County, and Fort Saskatchewan all voted to end their Edmonton Global membership. In December 2024, Leduc County did the same. Each had a two-year window to change course, with an optional three-month extension. Fort Saskatchewan, Parkland County, and Leduc County have not yet voted on their final course, though two will make that decision before the end of 2025. Once departed, municipalities must wait five years to reapply for membership.
Taproot reached out to the six municipalities to learn what's next. Each provided their sense of how regional cooperation could work in the future.
Devon
Devon's town council voted to proceed with an exit on Nov. 10. Town administration noted in a report that Devon was paying $29,000 per year for membership. Edmonton Global had offered a deadline extension until March 31, at a cost of $7,300 in dues. The town declined.
"Devon is not reconsidering its decision," Justin Janke, a spokesperson for Devon's council, told Taproot. "Council made this choice after a detailed review of all municipal expenses and priorities. Like many municipalities in Alberta, Devon is facing significant fiscal pressures, and council wanted to ensure every dollar provides strong value to residents and taxpayers."
Janke said Devon will continue to pursue international and domestic investment by attending industry events. He added that the town will continue to work with Invest Alberta, a provincial Crown corporation, to attract foreign investment. "This organization offers very similar tailored assistance in investment attraction that Edmonton Global does, but without the shareholder fees."
Sturgeon County
Sturgeon County council voted to confirm its stated intention to leave Edmonton Global at a meeting on Nov. 25. Edmonton Global made a presentation at that same meeting, but did not change council's mind.
"Sturgeon County and other shareholders have expressed concerns about the organization's return on investment, as well as matters related to governance, strategic alignment, and reporting," Mayor Alanna Hnatiw told Taproot in a statement. "Shareholders also have no meaningful role in key decision-making, despite funding the organization; the county has advocated for a greater role and line-of-sight in board decisions and direction, but we do not feel at this time that enough meaningful change has occurred."