The Pulse: Dec. 9, 2025

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

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Essentials

  • -12°C: Mainly cloudy with 30% chance of flurries. Wind northwest 20 km/h gusting to 40 becoming light in the afternoon. Temperature falling to minus 15 in the afternoon. Wind chill near minus 21. (forecast)
  • 7pm: The Edmonton Oilers (13-11-5) host the Buffalo Sabres (11-14-4) at Rogers Place. (details)

Snow covered trees and vehicles along a street.

Edmonton nearly halfway to tree goal, with slight extension


By Colin Gallant

The City of Edmonton says it is on track to add two million trees by 2031, lengthening its deadline by one year after condensing a 30-year plan to a decade-long one.

The city has planted 810,546 net new trees and shrubs since 2021, including 484,091 of them in 2025 alone. Net means the number of trees planted minus those removed for reasons such as age and disease, which amounts to 3,000 to 4,000 per year, said Mark Beare, the director of parks and urban forestry.

City council first called for two million net new trees by 2050 when it approved the City Plan in 2020. It later moved that deadline to 2030 to help meet a goal for 20% canopy coverage by 2071 as set out in the Urban Forest Asset Management Plan. Now, halfway between the passage of the City Plan and the revised deadline, the city should hit the two million mark by 2031, Beare told Taproot in a statement.

The most accurate estimate for total trees in Edmonton is still the 12.8 million the city calculated in the City Plan, Beare said. Of those, the city maintains an inventory of around 400,000 on boulevards, streets, and parks. The numbers get fuzzier when it comes to the 3,000 hectares of natural areas (dominated by native vegetation in naturally occurring patterns) and more than 1,000 hectares of naturalized areas (which the city has intervened to return to a natural state), as the city doesn't count individual trees in such spaces.

The city has estimated the new trees will cost about $114 million, $48 million of which will come from the 2 Billion Trees program as the city achieves certain benchmarks, Beare confirmed. The federal government is expected to honour existing agreements, but 2 Billion Trees is winding down early and shy of its goal.

The remaining $66 million comes from the municipal budget and supports a healthier city, Beare said. "Having a healthy urban forest improves our city's air quality, reduces energy consumption, preserves soils, maintains ecological connectivity, promotes biodiversity, keeps the streetscape cool, and conserves water resources," he said.

The city calculates a monetary value for its trees to quantify public benefit and fees or penalties for tree removal. Open space and boulevard trees alone are worth just shy of $2 billion, a spokesperson said. The city also encourages volunteer planting through Root for Trees, which planted more than 45,000 trees and shrubs this year.

On a longer time scale, The Secret Longtree Society has planted a few hundred trees in its quest to plant 1,000 that each live for 1,000 years. The Art Gallery of Alberta is exhibiting a mural inspired by the effort, exploring why trees are an avenue for city-building and storytelling. It's on display until March 15.

Update: This file has been updated to include newer figures for trees and shrubs planted by the City of Edmonton.

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Headlines: Dec. 9, 2025


By Mariam Ibrahim

  • The City of Edmonton activated its extreme weather response on Dec. 8 to help vulnerable residents during cold weather as temperatures of -20°C or lower with wind chill are expected. The response makes city facilities like recreation centres and libraries available as warming spots. Al Rashid Mosque will offer an overnight shelter for up to 50 individuals, supplementing existing day and 24/7 shelters. Nightly winter shelter shuttles, including a 24/7 Hope Mission shuttle, will operate until March 31 to transport people between shelters, support services, and healthcare providers.
  • Edmonton Transit Service riders can now use debit, credit, and digital wallets to pay fares on an Arc validator. The expansion permits tapping Mastercard, Visa, Interac Debit, American Express, Google Wallet, Apple Pay, and Samsung Wallet directly. The system is available in Edmonton, Beaumont, Fort Saskatchewan, Spruce Grove, St. Albert, and Strathcona County, and eliminates the need for an Arc or exact change. Arc cards and cash fares are still accepted. Paper tickets will no longer be accepted beginning in 2026.
  • The Edmonton Police Service rollout of AI-powered facial recognition body cameras is drawing international attention as experts warn of ethical and privacy risks. The Axon-developed technology, which scans footage for roughly 7,000 people on a "high-risk" watch list, has raised alarms among global civil liberties advocates who say the system is being deployed without sufficient public debate or independent testing. Barry Friedman, former chair of Axon's own AI ethics board, noted that similar concerns over accuracy and bias prompted the company to halt facial-recognition efforts in 2019. Critics argue the Edmonton pilot underscores a broader tension over police use of AI tools and the potential for misuse. The pilot project continues through December.
  • An Edmonton Police Service officer was reprimanded for inappropriate texts to a sexual assault complainant earlier this year. Det. Troy Forester sent messages to the woman, who said it reactivated trauma and made her fearful, City News reported. The police service's Professional Standards Branch responded by recommending counselling for Forester, an option available under Alberta's Police Regulations. Police Chief Warren Driechel acknowledged the behaviour was inappropriate. Forester remains on active duty in an investigative role.
  • Alberta Health Services issued a public alert after confirming a measles case at the Edmonton International Airport. The exposure occurred during a flight from Toronto Pearson Airport that arrived in Edmonton on Dec. 2, and subsequently in the airport's baggage claim area from 7:10pm to 9:45pm. The health authority advises individuals present during these times to self-monitor for symptoms, review immunization records, and stay home if symptoms like fever or rash develop.
  • A massive 427,170-kilogram acetylene hydrogenation reactor, measuring 6.4 metres wide, 8.3 metres high, and 60.4 metres long, will travel from Lloydminster to Fort Saskatchewan on Dec. 9 and Dec. 10. This super-heavy load will move at a maximum speed of 60 km/h. Drivers can expect significant traffic delays between Lloydminster and Fort Saskatchewan and near Lamont as the convoy will use the entire width of the highway.
  • First Nations applauded a court decision that ruled a proposed referendum question on provincial separation is unconstitutional. Court of King's Bench Justice Colin Feasby's decision affirms that the question, put forth by the Alberta Prosperity Project, would violate Treaty Rights, Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Confederacy of Treaty 6 First Nations, alongside Treaty No. 7 and No. 8 First Nations, said the ruling is a victory for Treaty Rights.
  • The Edmonton Elks have signed kicker Vincent Blanchard to a contract extension through the 2027 season. Blanchard, one of the CFL's youngest kickers in 2025, hit 78.8% of his field goals and nearly all his extra points last season.
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A title card that reads Taproot Edmonton Calendar: edmonton.taproot.events

Happenings: Dec. 9, 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 Taproot Edmonton Calendar for many more events in the Edmonton region.

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