The Pulse: Feb. 25, 2026

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

Want this in your inbox? Sign up to get The Pulse by email. It's free!


Essentials

  • 4°C: Cloudy. Wind up to 15 km/h. High plus 4. Wind chill minus 9 in the morning. UV index 1 or low. (forecast)
  • Pink: The High Level Bridge will be lit Pink for Pink Shirt Day - Anti-Bullying Day. (details)
  • 6-10: The Edmonton Oil Kings lost to the Medicine Hat Tigers on Feb. 24. (details)
  • 8:30pm: The Edmonton Oilers (28-22-8) play the Anaheim Ducks (30-23-3) at Honda Center. (details)

Four people gathered around a table with food and beverage.

Feed the Soul pivots from dining week to year-round guide


By Colin Gallant

Feed the Soul YEG is releasing a year-round dining guide to Black-owned food businesses rather than holding a February dining week, expanding the ways it supports businesses despite funding challenges.

"It was a very competitive funding landscape this year," Feed the Soul founder Rochelle Ignacio told Taproot. "Doing a dining guide instead of doing our dining week takes less human resources of our volunteer team, but also creates this tangible, sustainable way to continue supporting Black restaurants and food producers."

The Black Futures Dining Guide 2026 features 25 Black-owned food businesses, grouped by segments of the city and online businesses, as well as editorial profiles on a few people who personify Black food culture in Edmonton. Feed the Soul has printed 500 copies to distribute at events and at featured restaurants, and Taproot viewed a digital version, which Ignacio said won't be accessible to the public just yet.

The emphasis on physical media is tied to the in-person connections inherent to Feed the Soul's value proposition.

"We believe that food is a bridge — one that can unite communities and reconnect us to culture and identity that may have been disrupted or lost through displacement," a welcome message in the guide reads. "May this guide find its way into the hands of those ready to fill their bellies and nourish their souls."

The guide will first be available at the new O-Day'min Park on March 3, where Cafe Caribbean will be handing out free Trinidadian doubles. The next occasion is at Lochi Afro Nija on March 10, where customers can get a free Nigerian pastry with any purchase.

"It's a way to support the businesses economically," Ignacio said. "(We are bringing) some Trini street food and Cafe Caribbean into the downtown core over lunchtime, while also having a fun way to promote the dining guide and each of the businesses that are featured in the guide."

Feed the Soul will next distribute the guide on March 15 at Behind the Apron: Creative Sustenance Cooking Workshop with Titilope Sonuga at the Stanley A. Milner branch of the Edmonton Public Library. Attendees will prepare a Nigerian meal while hearing from poet laureate emeritus Sonuga about how cultural traditions, flavours, and rituals in cooking can feed creative expression and community connectedness, Ignacio said. The event is aimed at Black creatives.

These in-person events maintain the spirit of Feed the Soul, which also pivoted from its usual dining week in February 2025, organizing a Trinidadian-Chinese pop-up at Fu's Repair Shop instead. The 2025 shift was an opportunity to reset to focus on Black futures, Ignacio said at the time. "Having a futurist mindset and celebrating Black futures allows us to look at Black History Month in just a little bit more of a positive way," she said. "What's the ancestral and the cultural knowledge that we're leaving behind for a future generation?"

Continue reading

Headlines: Feb. 25, 2026


By Mariam Ibrahim

  • Edmonton city council approved rezoning for a vacant lot at 99 Avenue and 112 Street in the Wîhkwêntôwin area on Feb. 24. Councillors voted 9-3 to change the property's zoning to mixed-use, overriding city administration's recommendation for direct control zoning. The rezoning application, submitted by EINS Development Consulting Ltd., will allow a larger Stopgap Coffee shop to be built on the site, while ensuring heritage protection and preventing four-storey development. Mayor Andrew Knack noted that the mixed-use zone offers more heritage guarantees and height restrictions than the previous residential zoning, which allowed four-storey apartment buildings.
  • The City of Edmonton renewed its Social Objectives Agreement with Capital Power, securing $75 million in direct payments and continued annual community funding. The agreement requires the company to keep its head office in Edmonton for at least 10 years, supporting local employment and economic activity. It also grants Capital Power greater corporate governance flexibility through a special limited voting share from EPCOR.
  • The Edmonton Police Service charged three teen boys with theft under $5,000 in connection with a series of 15 online marketplace robberies reported in the city over the past month. Police said that in each case the suspects posed as buyers of high-priced items on Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace, then, with accomplices, robbed sellers. Police advised Edmontonians to meet in safe public locations for online marketplace transactions, such as police Buy and Sell Exchange Zones. More safety tips are available on the police website.
  • As the spring sitting of the legislature convened on Feb. 24, the Alberta government outlined its legislative agenda. The government is planning to introduce 18 bills, including legislation on immigration, medical assistance in dying (MAID), and major projects. House Leader Joseph Schow said the immigration bill will give the province greater control, while proposed MAID changes would prohibit access for "mature minors," people with mental health as their sole condition, advanced requests, and adults lacking decision-making capacity. Budget 2026, set to be tabled on Feb. 26, is projected to be in deficit. NDP Opposition Leader Naheed Nenshi criticized the UCP for not addressing cost of living, health care, or education.
  • The Alberta government plans to move all sheriffs to the new Alberta Sheriffs Police Service (ASPS). Public Safety and Emergency Services Minister Mike Ellis tabled legislation on Feb. 24 to transfer 1,200 sheriff employees and their budget to the ASPS, training about 600 as police officers with six weeks of additional instruction. The ASPS will work alongside existing police and will continue the Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods program. Concerns remain regarding startup costs and adequate training.
  • The Edmonton Oilers remained uncertain whether Connor McDavid would play in the team's Feb. 25 game against the Anaheim Ducks. Head coach Kris Knoblauch said the decision depends on McDavid's health, energy, and the gruelling travel back from the Olympics, with Feb. 26 being a more likely return given the back-to-back games. Leon Draisaitl, who skated with the Oilers Feb. 24 in Anaheim, is ready to play and reiterated his previous comments that the team needs to "be better" from top to bottom.
Permalink
A graphic representing Edmonton Opera's next season with The Magic Flute and The Barber of Seville

Edmonton Opera opens the vault for its 2026-27 season

Sponsored

A message from Edmonton Opera:

Edmonton Opera is shaping its 2026-27 season around rediscovery. Both mainstage productions return operas to the Jubilee Auditorium that haven't been staged in Edmonton in over a decade.

"It's a privilege to be able to provide opera to the city of Edmonton," said artistic director Joel Ivany. New audiences will encounter these works for the first time, he said, while longtime opera-goers will enjoy "hearing music that they know and love."

The season opens in early November with Rossini's The Barber of Seville. "If you can imagine joy and comedy and incredible singing, this is probably at the top of the list for what that opera is," Ivany said. Based on the first of three plays by Beaumarchais, the opera introduces the characters audiences may recognize from Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro.

Also returning in November is the Rumbold Vocal Prize, which culminates in a grand finale concert at the Myer Horowitz Theatre. Established in 2022, the program offers exposure, training, and prize money to young Canadian singers. Past participants have gone on to perform at international opera houses.

In early 2027, a brand-new production of Mozart's The Magic Flute takes the Jubilee stage. Ivany described it as a story about "a quest for love and hope and unity," adding, "I think those are all great messages that we need right now in the world."

Beyond the mainstage, the season reaches into the community. Opera al Fresco at the University of Alberta Botanic Garden brings music outdoors in late summer. The Diane Kipnes Valentine's Day Gala at the Fairmont Hotel Macdonald serves as Edmonton Opera's major fundraising event. And Opera Pub, a monthly series held at Blue Chair, offers audiences a chance to experience the art form in a more casual setting.

"We really want to make this your season of opera," Ivany said. "If you've thought about it, this is the time to … hop on board and see what opera's all about."

Learn more and get your tickets for Edmonton Opera's 2026-27 season.

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

Happenings: Feb. 25, 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.

Permalink