The Pulse: Feb. 5, 2026

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Essentials

  • 9°C: Mainly sunny. High 9. UV index 1 or low. (forecast)
  • 3-4: The Edmonton Oilers (28-22-8) lost to the Calgary Flames (23-27-6) on Feb. 4. (details)

People gathered in an event space with sunlight pouring over them.

EPIC co-founder focuses on better event bookings after food-hall closure


By Colin Gallant

After getting sick of the friction involved in booking events, the co-founder of the shuttered EPIC Market has decided to develop a new software-based venture called Better Venu.

"After this last year and a half, we've run 300-plus events, and (have dealt with) many times that amount in terms of inquiries," said Luke Butterworth, the founder of Better Venu. "A lot of the negotiation happens around the budget, the different components of it, and how we're breaking it out. That ended up being kind of the cornerstone for me — how much time we were spending going back and forth on that initial quote and how challenging and bespoke that initial quote typically is."

Better Venu aims to help business owners free up precious time for other matters, Butterworth told Taproot. He is working with some students from the University of Alberta, where he is the entrepreneur-in-residence for the Innovation, Creativity, Entrepreneurship incubator in the engineering faculty. Development is moving quickly thanks to advances in the large language models that fuel AI assistants such as Anthropic's Claude for coding.

"Some of these things that have taken me and other teams that I've worked with months to do (can now be done) in a matter of weeks, which is just crazy," he said. "The build velocity is really impressive now that there are tools like Claude."

His goal is to aggregate details on venues' pricing, capacity, amenities, availability, on-site services, proximity to hotels, and other criteria to expedite the booking process, ultimately allowing venues to generate instant quotes rather than going back and forth to tailor a rental package manually. To get there, he said, he needs venues to sign up and input their details.

"Better Venu is not like a Google search — it's much more like an OpenTable," Butterworth said. "You want to be much closer to the group to understand what they have to offer, what their preferences are, and what their willingness is to offer more or less in terms of discounting on certain days. What is their pricing stack, and how do they like to lay that out? How do they like to package with other vendors when they work with them?"

Better Venu is also meant to make life easier for consumers. Butterworth said the public-facing component is two-fold: widgets embedded on venue websites for people who know what they want to book, and quote comparisons between venues for those who are deciding.

"If you're trying to plan a last-minute wedding, that could be really difficult," he said of conventional booking processes. "You need to be able to look almost everywhere at once to find out who has availability, who can hit your budget range, and then how you can go ahead with that group. A lot of different variables come in pretty quickly, and so you end up asking that same set of questions to every single group concurrently."

Butterworth has more time to focus on developing Better Venu now that EPIC Market, which he co-founded with Jennifer Keith, has closed its food hall at Station Park on the corner of Gateway Boulevard and Whyte Avenue. The multi-level, multi-restaurant concept was open from August 2024 to the start of January this year.

"Operating at that corner was unfortunately a Herculean task without parking or foot traffic," reads a message posted to the EPIC Market website.

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Headlines: Feb. 5, 2026


By Mariam Ibrahim

  • Ward Ipiihkoohkanipiaohtsi Coun. Jon Morgan, who chairs city council's audit committee, is calling to bring back vote tabulators following an interim audit report on Edmonton's 2025 municipal election. The report found that removing the machines, a change mandated by the Alberta government in 2024 that cost municipalities $4.8 million, made it impossible to certify the election. City auditor Janine Mryglod said a proper audit was effectively impossible under the new rules. Edmonton Elections returning officer Aileen Geisbrecht noted significant feedback about longer wait times and training gaps for election workers.
  • The historic Paramount Theatre on Jasper Avenue has been listed for sale as part of insolvency proceedings for developer ONE Properties, Western Investor reported. The site at 10233 Jasper Avenue NW offers more than 335,000 square feet of buildable area in downtown Edmonton. The theatre opened in 1952 and closed in 2003.
  • Amazon has acquired a large industrial property in northwest Edmonton with plans for a new fulfilment centre, Western Investor reported. The company bought 50 acres near 170 Street and Anthony Henday Drive for $39.7 million in late 2025. Amazon Canada confirmed the purchase in the second phase of Apex Business Park, a project led by Panattoni Development and Manulife Investment Management.
  • A new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and the Parkland Institute at the University of Alberta suggests Alberta's Bill 11 could establish a two-tier healthcare system. The legislation, which came into force on Dec. 18, 2025, allows doctors to work in both public and private systems, aiming to reduce wait times. Critics argue it diverts medical professionals to private practices. The provincial government dismissed the report, saying it is committed to a stronger publicly funded system.
  • The African Canadian Civic Engagement Council (ACCEC) in Edmonton launched the Timbuktu Trailblazers, a 16-week employment and skills-building program, last year. The program helps young, Black jobseekers jump-start careers through paid eight-week internships, in-class coaching at the Timbuktu Innovation Hub on Alberta Avenue, and volunteer work at places such as Edmonton's Food Bank. Kelvin Ozorah of the ACCEC noted that 13 of 20 participants have secured employment since the program's inception.
  • Tourism Jasper, in partnership with Edmonton International Airport and Knotty Pine Cabins, launched an immersive cabin experience at the airport's Gate 16. The full-scale, cozy Jasper-inspired cabin installation features rustic furnishings, a fireplace, and historic photographs, designed to offer travellers a relaxing pre-flight experience and an introduction to Jasper National Park.
  • The Alberta government will table its provincial budget on Feb. 26, with the government warning of tough fiscal choices ahead. Finance Minister Nate Horner says falling oil prices and global trade uncertainty have strained the province's finances. Alberta is projecting a $6.4-billion deficit by the end of March, a sharp swing from an $8.3-billion surplus a year earlier.
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A title card that reads Taproot Edmonton Calendar: edmonton.taproot.events

Happenings: Feb. 5, 2026


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.

More information