haltcatchfire
Senior Member
lolBeing budget day, maybe the province steps up with Field house funding today?
lolBeing budget day, maybe the province steps up with Field house funding today?
I mean tightening doesn't mean you don't spend any money... you know, jobs. I'd argue this fieldhouse would pay for itself in the economic impact it would have.I think the province is going to tighten the purse strings in the face of tariffs, and that seems like the right call to me. The city should be considering the same.
Almost like the costs associated with funding a province shouldn't just be covered by resource extraction revenue... In the good times it is easy to get by but in the tough times, which typically coincides with lower resource revenue, would be nice to have money to pay for the basics let alone a fieldhouse.I just think they (the province) should be more cautious given the revenue hit they may have to take with tariffs on oil. Not saying whether or not that should factor into the fieldhouse or any project specifically, just that it's likely a good time for financial prudence...
Can't find the link where this is from, but the city has released a map showing the neighborhoods that have seen the most multi-family proposals approved that would have normally gone through a land use application before blanket zoning. I thought Mt Pleasant and Capitol Hill were busy, but Bowness even busier.
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Impact of Calgary’s citywide rezoning
Calgarians are getting a first look at the impacts of city-wide rezoning. Jillian Code reports.calgary.citynews.ca
I think that would shift property taxes onto the regressive side of tax spectrum, from their currently mildly progressive position.People shouldn't be penalized because their inner-city homes have higher values per square foot.
That works for me. By square footage, I should have mentioned I meant for the lot size, which ties into more of a frontage tax.I think that would shift property taxes onto the regressive side of tax spectrum, from their currently mildly progressive position.
That being said, I think certain services could be shifted to a different form of taxation, like snow clearing, some fire and police coverage, shifting towards a frontage tax—where there is a logical connection between frontage and service costs.
It wouldn’t shift to a regressive side if we are taxing based on street frontage, etc, only shifting to a more fair tax.I think that would shift property taxes onto the regressive side of tax spectrum, from their currently mildly progressive position.
That being said, I think certain services could be shifted to a different form of taxation, like snow clearing, some fire and police coverage, shifting towards a frontage tax—where there is a logical connection between frontage and service costs.




