Edmonton hoping for transit money after Calgary funding announcement
Alberta announced Thursday it will commit $1.5 billion towards Calgary’s Green Line LRT and that has Edmonton politicians anticipating a similar boost for local transit.
Premier Rachel Notley confirmed a portion of the province’s carbon tax will go towards the largest public infrastructure project in Calgary’s history.
“Every cent of it, in terms of the provincial government’s contribution, is coming from the climate leadership fund, which is funded from the carbon levy,” Notley said. “It absolutely would not have been possible without it.”
The north to southeast LRT line will be 46 kilometres long and is expected to create 12,000 jobs. The LRT line is also expected to reduce greenhouse gases by 30,000 tonnes — equal to taking about 6,000 vehicles off the road.
The Calgary news has Edmonton’s mayor optimistic of something similar for Alberta’s capital.
“I know that Edmonton is going to get something comparable,” Don Iveson said. “I know that anything less is not going to be politically acceptable.”
The first priority would be the west expansion of the Valley Line LRT out to West Edmonton Mall and Lewis Estates. If Edmonton also receives $1.5 billion, the west LRT would take up about $550 million of that, leaving money for other legs.
“We have another, close to $1 billion that would allow us to go to Blatchford, which is sort of priority 1B and potentially doing some of the bus-rapid transit to other parts of town,” Coun. Andrew Knack said.