Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

'So crazy': Nenshi critical of Alberta bill giving extra powers over municipalities

Darpan News Desk, 29 Apr, 2024 12:07 PM
  • 'So crazy': Nenshi critical of Alberta bill giving extra powers over municipalities

The proposed law would also allow political parties to run on municipal ballots in Edmonton and Calgary as soon as next year. 

"It's so crazy. It's very clear that this government is now operated on spite and arrogance," Nenshi told reporters in Lethbridge on Thursday evening.

"They're clearly doing this out of revenge on the voters of Calgary and Edmonton who didn't vote the way they wanted them to."

Nenshi, 52, was elected mayor of Calgary in 2010 and won three terms before deciding to bow out before the 2021 municipal election. 

He and MLAs Kathleen Ganley, Sarah Hoffman and Jodi Calahoo Stonehouse, as well as Alberta Federation of Labour president Gil McGowan, took part in the NDP's first leadership debate.

Alberta Municipal Affairs Minister Ric McIver says the new powers are justified to ensure fair elections and accountability from municipal leaders, and they would only be used as a last resort. 

"My most fervent wish is that this authority is never ever used. We don't want to intervene in municipal matters," McIver told reporters before the bill was introduced in the legislature Thursday. 

Nenshi said councils are democratically elected. He said current Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek probably received more votes than every United Conservative Party MLA in Calgary.

"To me, that is no way to run a government. This really highlights that this government is fundamentally disinterested in governing as a government, but actually only working on their whims and their needs, their self-indulgence."

The board of directors of Alberta Municipalities said political parties in local elections is a bad idea and something most Albertans don't want.

"Alberta’s local governments have no interest in fighting with the province. Nor do they want to be caught in the middle of an Alberta-Ottawa 'forever war,'" the association said in a statement.

Ganley, a former justice minister, said the move is ridiculous.

"Basically, they want to be in control of everything. Municipal politics is an incredibly important place. It shouldn't be the little league to provincial politics the way the UCP wants to make it," she said.

Hoffman said municipal governments have been clear on their opposition to the idea.

"The local councillors don't want it. We don't want it," she said.

"I think Danielle Smith is very keen on taking more power. This is one of the reasons she's brought in this legislation."

The bill makes other changes. It would ban the use of electronic voting tabulators, forcing municipalities to hand-count ballots, in order to better protect the integrity of the vote, said McIver. 

"If we can reduce doubt in the public's confidence about who is declared the winners, we think that rises above all other considerations." 

In the past, Smith has taken aim at the province’s two largest cities, saying in February that single-use plastic bylaws showed city councils had gone off the partisan rails. 

"Because they’re getting far more political and far more ideological, there probably needs to be more transparency about that," she said at the time. 

Two weeks ago, Smith’s government also introduced a bill that would give it the power to veto any deal between the federal government and provincial entities, including municipalities and post-secondary schools.  

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa to provide $132 million to help people fleeing civil war in Sudan

Ottawa to provide $132 million to help people fleeing civil war in Sudan
International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen is announcing $132 million in aid for people fleeing Sudan's yearlong civil war. The funding includes $100 million in humanitarian aid for Sudanese who have fled to neighbouring countries as well as those stuck in Sudan amid widescale violence.

Ottawa to provide $132 million to help people fleeing civil war in Sudan

18 communities hold tsunami preparedness events

18 communities hold tsunami preparedness events
Eighteen communities, from White Rock to Ucluelet and Sooke to Port McNeill, are holding so-called high ground hikes next week as a way to raise awareness about what to do in the event of a tsunami.  It’s tsunami preparedness week from April 14th to 20th, and many areas of coastal B-C are vulnerable to the massive waves from an earthquake, similar to the 1964 Alaska quake that damaged Port Alberni. 

18 communities hold tsunami preparedness events

Richmond crash lands driver in hospital

Richmond crash lands driver in hospital
Mounties in Richmond are seeking witnesses or dash cam footage of a single vehicle crash that sent the driver to hospital in critical condition. Police say shortly before 10:45 p.m. on April 4th a black Mercedes, was travelling southbound on No 6 Road when it left the road, struck an embankment and landed straddling the ditch.

Richmond crash lands driver in hospital

Murderer found not guilty due to mental illness

Murderer found not guilty due to mental illness
A man who stabbed 79-year-old Eric Kutzner to death in a Nanaimo coffee shop two years ago has been found not criminally responsible on account of a mental disorder.  James Turok was convicted of second-degree murder in a B-C Supreme Court but will instead stay at the provincial forensic psychiatric hospital, Associate Chief Justice Heather Homes has ruled. 

Murderer found not guilty due to mental illness

Drug trafficking arrest in Prince George

Drug trafficking arrest in Prince George
Prince George R-C-M-P say a man has been arrested following an investigation into alleged drug trafficking at a local residence.  Mounties say the man was seen leaving his home in a stolen vehicle during an investigation last week and officers later arrested the driver, who was identified as 42-year-old James Alan Webb.

Drug trafficking arrest in Prince George

Trudeau says he doesn't understand why NDP is pulling back from carbon price support

Trudeau says he doesn't understand why NDP is pulling back from carbon price support
The New Democrats are facing political headwinds when it comes to carbon pricing, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau acknowledged Friday, but he said he doesn't understand why they're pulling back their support. The NDP have long been proponents of the climate policy, and even campaigned on it in the 2019 election. 

Trudeau says he doesn't understand why NDP is pulling back from carbon price support