Might not be the place for this, move it if you want...
Mayor Jyoti Gondek has concerns about impending changes to the city charter, with proposed revisions from the province to be reviewed.
calgaryherald.com
The first change is a huge issue! Can't say I'm too against the other two:
- second change is to repeal a section for inclusionary housing, which allows Calgary and Edmonton to require a developer to provide money (or other resources) to the municipality to go toward affordable housing.
- third changes building code bylaw authority, a provision that allows the cities to pass bylaws legislating energy consumption and heat retention. The province intends to remove this authority “to ensure there is one uniform building code standard across Alberta,” according to the news release.
Back to the first change though... Changing whether the city can compel a developer to pay the costs of city infrastructure servicing their development:
The first is regarding off-site levies, which are fees that municipalities charge developers to service a new development and connect it to the city’s infrastructure. The province intends to add a clause that cities cannot compel a development permit applicant to pay the cost of construction or transportation infrastructure by an off-site levy “beyond the applicant’s proportional benefit.”
The province claims the adjusted language “will still allow Calgary and Edmonton flexibility, but will also make sure off-site levies don’t unnecessarily drive up the costs of building new homes.”
The bottom of the article states that the city wants to increase the off-site levy by 8%, which is not an insignificant increase but we well know that the city has likely been losing money servicing newer/developing communities.
IMO this speaks to the fact that the city (I say city as an adjective not a noun) needs to significantly intensify its core and surrounding communities and take advantage of its existing service infrastructure to have much more efficient services. I do see the city (noun) trying with its proposal for blanket zoning and conversions.
(I say the below knowing (perhaps just my perception): The City of Calgary is well known as a great place to be employed and could operate much more efficiently. Some would say "it should be operated like a business"; one, I've worked for very inefficient businesses that are nothing to emulate, and two, it isn't a business and can't be because a city (noun) is naturally inefficient (more money will always go out than comes in).)
I think the City of Calgary realizes that it is operating on a tight rope, I see it trying to do better, unfortunately that meant increased property taxes. Some will say that's because of council's pet projects but I respect their effort to city (adjective) build. To me the problem is inefficient city services (see above). They're trying to fix some inefficient services; I'm hoping the Primary Transit Network comes to fruition.
They're also trying to catch up with inefficient sprawl using the increased off-site levy but while they pull on that thread you can't dismiss the need for housing people can afford (something the suburbs do offer). In the article BILD says the increased off-site levy hurts that, which I'm sure it does because it makes new homes more expensive because developers are just going to pass on the cost. So should they just keep the inefficient status quo and concentrate on affordable housing grants (which to change two I guess they don't collect) and let developers build housing people can afford?
The Mayor and Council approvals are already bad so what do you do? I see two choices:
What people (vocal minority) want.
- Continue to operate an inefficient city (no blanket zoning and PTN)
What's good for the city (noun) and the future of the city (adjective).
- Change how you operate (blanket zoning and PTN)
All this to say can we please do something about the homeless and open drug use downtown! The province has a huge surplus time to do something about the zombies.