RAJESH ANGRAL

Categories
Uncategorized

New Energy for Downtown Calgary

Calgary’s downtown has long served as a fundamental part of Alberta’s economy. Activity within it has generated tremendous wealth.

But today, roughly 30 per cent of downtown office space sits empty. Calgary’s unemployment rate is the highest of any major Canadian city.

This is despite the UCP’s promise that their corporate handout would fill the office towers.

It will take support from all three orders of government, in concert with the private sector, to support a thriving modern economy in Calgary.

Our plan for Downtown Calgary includes:

  • Partnering with the City on its own plan by matching their investment for office conversion and capital improvements to attract people downtown.
  • Building the Green Line
  • Making economic diversification a priority with targeted grants for small business to set up shop downtown, reinstating the Alberta Investor Tax Credit and the Interactive Digital Media Tax Credit.
  • Supporting the creation of a world-class innovation district by working with post-secondary institutions to relocate or expand campuses downtown.
Categories
#ableg #abndp #abelxn23

MOUNTAIN VIEW TODAY: “The Alberta NDP’s candidate felt compelled to run for politics directly as a result of what he described as UCP chaos that is selling short the province’s future through corporate welfare.”

Self-described social democrat and Nordegg resident Vance Buchwald represents the first time Alberta NDP fields candidate from the within riding

MOUNTAIN VIEW COUNTY – An animal biologist from Nordegg who last week was officially named the Alberta NDP’s candidate for the Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre riding felt compelled to run for politics directly as a result of what he described as UCP chaos that is selling short the province’s future through corporate welfare.

“I’ve always followed politics; it’s really important. But it was never a goal of mine to be an MLA or anything,” Vance Buchwald said during a phone interview. “And then the coal issue came up a couple of years ago.”   

Buchwald was among a group of people who formed the West Country Sustainability Coalition, which lobbied not only against proposed expansions to coal mines or new projects but also the provincial government’s abrupt approach in changing the 1976 Coal Policy without public fanfare.

“There was extensive consultation throughout the province,” said Buchwald about the policy ushered in by the Conservative Peter Lougheed government of the day, adding he was about 18 at the time and had attended the hearings because of an innate interest in the Eastern Slopes.

“The Lougheed government had gone through all this extensive consultation, and then the Kenney government – with one stroke of the pen because it was only policy – cancelled it,” he said.

“It’s been reinstated, but the issue is, they reinstated it after they had issued a bunch of new coal leases” that have caused concern in the region due to “some bizarre locations of coal leases that surround some public recreation areas,” he said.

“And it wasn’t just the coal; it was the chaos created within this province with the UCP on a number of issues,” he said, citing examples such as health care, education and corporate tax cuts that didn’t create jobs.  

“Jobs were created during that time, but at a slower rate than what the population of Alberta grow by,” he said. “Largely, it was due to automation. It’s people with joysticks now driving the trucks (used at  sites).”

He also challenges depictions of the Alberta NDP as a party that frivolously spends money like a drunken sailor.

“The NDP is always painted as big spenders. And the biggest spend being done right now and proposed, is all this money that they’re going to give to the oil patch for clean up,” he said, referring to the controversial R-Star program.

“We talk about not having any money for health care, and then we turn around and give all this money away,” he said.

“That’s our royalty money – our tax money – and to me, it just reeks of corporate welfare,” he said, adding companies are required to clean up the sites.

“They have record profits right now, and I just don’t see why we’re giving them money for doing cleanup when they’re obligated,” he said. “I’d sooner see that money spent on schools, health care, save some for the future.”

Buchwald emphasized he is not opposed to oil companies and disclosed his own personal portfolio includes investments in the patch.

“But there’s a point where you just go, why are we doing this? It just seems to me that we’re giving away our future. Instead of spending dollars on citizens, we’re giving it away to the oil companies,” he said. “And I just have a hard time with that.”

Following the riding’s NDP constituency association’s Feb. 15 nomination meeting, Buchwald officially became the first candidate fielded from within the region.

“It was pretty smooth sailing since I was the only candidate,” he said. “People are pretty excited that I’m not a parachuted candidate.”

The riding also did not previously have an NDP constituency association, he added.

“That was one of the reasons they were parachuting candidates in,” he said.

Running for office might not have been part of a longstanding plan or life goal, but it’s nevertheless an endeavour Buchwald said he takes “very seriously.”

“I’m not a token candidate,” he said. “I realize I might lose, but I never play the game to lose.”

Born in Edmonton, Buchwald’s earlier life involved moving to Camrose and Stettler before eventually relocating to Red Deer where he graduated from high school.

Eventually earning a degree in animal biology from the University of Calgary in 1980, he spent more than two years working for an Edmonton-based environmental consultant and later went on to build a lengthy career as a fisheries management biologist that spanned three decades. In 2017, he moved to Nordegg, where back in the mid to late 1970s he had worked as a summer student for Fish and Wildlife.

A self-described social democrat who believes in a regulated form of capitalism that more equitably benefits the population, Buchwald is also a family man with two daughters and four grandsons.

Categories
#ableg #abndp #abelxn23

All Canadians pay into the Canada Pension Plan, and all Canadians deserve a safe retirement. Sign if you want Danielle Smith to keep her hands off your savings, and your future.

All Canadians pay into the Canada Pension Plan, and all Canadians deserve a safe retirement.

But if Danielle Smith gets her way, you’ll be robbed of your future. She wants to scrap your hard-earned CPP savings and start a new Alberta pension.

She’ll do it without a solid plan to replace lost earnings and bolster Alberta’s economy. Rachel Notley and your NDP are fighting back, but we need your help.

Sign if you want Smith to keep her hands off your savings, and your future.

https://www.albertandp.ca/pensions

Categories
#ableg #abhealth

ST ALBERT GAZETTE: The NDP have committed to bringing back X-ray services to Morinville if elected this spring. In February 2022, the town lost its lab services and the X-ray machine broke in February 2020 but was never repaired.

In February 2022, the town lost its lab services and the X-ray machine broke in February 2020 but was never repaired.

The NDP have committed to bringing back X-ray services to Morinville if elected this spring.

In February 2022, the town lost its lab services and the X-ray machine broke in February 2020 but was never repaired.

The time the Gazette reported AHS said they had low patient numbers, difficulties in retaining staff, and a lack of working X-ray equipment which drove the decision to close the lab.

On Tuesday the NDP announced they would restore the X-ray services to Morinville.

“The government has claimed the cancellation of X-ray services was due to challenges recruiting staff, a lack of functioning equipment and low patient volume, but I do not believe the last one to be true because I have heard from so many about how vital those services are,” Karen Shaw, the Alberta NDP candidate for Morinville-St. Albert, said in a press release.

“So I’m here to say that an Alberta NDP government will fund the X-ray equipment and do everything in our power to recruit the necessary staff. 

The election is slated for May 29 of this year.

UCP MLA Dale Nally currently represents the Morinville- St. Albert riding.

Categories
#ableg #abpoli #abelxn23 Uncategorized

We all need to roll up our sleeves and pitch in every way we can to beat the UCP’s big donors once-and-for-all this spring. The stakes are high—higher than they’ve ever been.

Chip in to bring change to Alberta

We’re less than three months away from a spring election, and change is in the air. That means one thing: it’s time to clean up Danielle Smith’s chaos. Albertans deserve better: healthcare, affordability, and good jobs.

We have the tools to bring new life to our provincial government: a dedicated team, passionate supporters, and countless volunteers.

But we need resources to power the campaign. Will you help us grow a better Alberta?

Chip in now to help clean out the UCP.

https://act.albertandp.ca/donate/spring-action-a

Categories
Uncategorized

NDP labour critic Christina Gray said she planned to propose amendments to the bill that would mean those protections would be offered retroactively

Bill 9 amended the Workers’ Compensation Act to expand presumptive cancer coverage to all firefighters who served during the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire.

Alberta’s governing UCP is rejecting calls from Opposition New Democrats to amend a bill before MLAs that expands presumptive cancer coverage to all firefighters who served during the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfires.

The government’s Bill 9 — the Red Tape Reduction Statutes Amendment Act, 2023 — was tabled in the legislature last week and could be debated in second reading sometime this week.

The bill removes the current latency periods, or the number of years that a firefighter has been on the job.

That change will only take effect on the date of royal assent, should the bill be passed.

On Monday, NDP labour critic Christina Gray said she planned to propose amendments to the bill that would mean those protections would be offered retroactively.

“What the UCP have brought forward fails to meet the needs of firefighters on a number of fronts,” Gray said at a Monday news conference.

“The last thing that (firefighters) need or that their families need is to have to worry about whether they will have Workers’ Compensation Board coverage or not.”

Gray said she also wanted to expand the number of cancers covered by the legislation and to also add respiratory illnesses to the list of conditions.

Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction Minister Dale Nally indicated his party would reject those amendments, and called on the NDP to support the legislation as it stands.

“The issue of retroactivity is that it opens up a host of other issues,” he told reporters.

“It won’t just be for Fort McMurray, it could then be applied to everything. So it comes with some challenges.”

He said retroactivity is currently an issue in only two cases, although that number could increase in the years to come,

“We are confident that those two can be dealt with through a fairness process review.”

Alberta Professional Fire Fighters and Paramedics Association president Matt Osborne spoke in favour of the bill when it was announced last Wednesday but on Monday he joined the NDP to back the call for retroactivity.

“We need to make sure that firefighters who are already battling cancer and these issues are looked after equally,” he said, adding that Bill 9 represents “a big step forward.”

“It is difficult enough when you’re battling cancer, and then at the same time you also need to prove a WCB claim to look after you and your family.”

Categories
#ableg

Simply restarting indexing does not undo the harm done to thousands of Albertans pushed deeper into poverty, during the worst inflation we have seen in generations.

Simply restarting indexing does not undo the harm done to thousands of Albertans pushed deeper into poverty, during the worst inflation we have seen in generations.

All Albertans should be able to live in security and dignity.

When we were in government, vital benefits were indexed to inflation. In 2019, one of the first things the UCP did was to cut benefits for seniors and vulnerable Albertans; the Seniors Benefit, Income Supports and AISH payments were no longer increased to keep in line with the cost of living.

This cruel decision pushed already financially vulnerable Albertans further into poverty.

Simply restarting indexing does not undo the harm done to thousands of Albertans pushed deeper into poverty, during the worst inflation we have seen in generations.

An Alberta NDP government will immediately increase the value of these benefits to where they should be if they had kept pace with the cost of living, and then index to inflation from there.

Categories
Uncategorized

“Public schools just beyond the city limits are bursting at the seams with student growth, but no new construction funding in this year’s budget means further space crunches and crowding, officials say.”

Public schools just beyond the city limits are bursting at the seams with student growth, but no new construction funding in this year’s budget means further space crunches and crowding, officials say.

Public schools just beyond the city limits are bursting at the seams with student growth, but no new construction funding in this year’s budget means further space crunches and crowding, officials say.

“Our expectation was that we would get construction funding for at least a couple of the projects we’ve been advocating for . . . but we are very disappointed,” said Norma Lang, board chair at Rocky View Schools.

“We have not been able to keep up with enrolment, which has been triggered by huge population growth in our communities — some are among the fastest-growing municipalities in Canada.”

Lang said that in the past two decades, Chestermere’s population has gone up by 429 per cent, Airdrie by 256 per cent, and Cochrane by 171 per cent.

Rocky View requested construction funding for a new K-8 school in Airdrie, as well as a list of other priorities in Cochrane and Chestermere, but only received design funding for Airdrie.

Alberta Education did approve full construction funding for an independent francophone school in Airdrie.

Lang said she is especially frustrated after Rocky View’s strong advocacy and meetings with UCP government officials, noting that it takes about four years to build a school even after construction approval, and design funding offers no guarantee of building funds the following year.

“By 2026, we will have more students than spaces,” Lang said.

“That’s hard on students and their learning,” she added, noting more schools are using common spaces such as gyms, libraries and cafeterias for classrooms.

Rocky View requested construction funding for a new K-8 school in Airdrie, as well as a list of other priorities in Cochrane and Chestermere, but only received design funding for Airdrie.

Alberta Education did approve full construction funding for an independent francophone school in Airdrie.

Lang said she is especially frustrated after Rocky View’s strong advocacy and meetings with UCP government officials, noting that it takes about four years to build a school even after construction approval, and design funding offers no guarantee of building funds the following year.

“By 2026, we will have more students than spaces,” Lang said.

“That’s hard on students and their learning,” she added, noting more schools are using common spaces such as gyms, libraries and cafeterias for classrooms.

“From FSD’s perspective, we are in an untenable position. Our class sizes are the largest they have been,” Letendre said.

“Today, we are not only looking at a school that is bursting at the seams for at least the next four years, but also our students will continue to come into a high school that is overcrowded, negatively impacting the rich, meaningful learning experiences they all deserve.”

Last week, Alberta Education announced as much as $1.6 billion in capital funding for 58 school projects across the province over the next three years. Of that, up to $372 million will go toward 13 projects that received full construction funding for new schools or modernizations this year.

Education Minister Adriana LaGrange has said the UCP government is funding education at record levels and considers each application for capital funding through a detailed 10-step process.

“We are committed to building schools to help address enrolment growth, classroom complexity and modernizing schools to support 21st-century learning,” LaGrange said at last week’s announcement.

Categories
Uncategorized

We will reinvigorate Alberta’s investment climate. There are massive job creation opportunities – which the UCP is not seizing.

We must build on the past and look towards the future with ambition.
Alberta has among the slowest wage growth in Canada. Under the UCP, capital investment stalled.

We will reinvigorate Alberta’s investment climate. There are massive job creation opportunities – which the UCP is not seizing.

Our proposals will create over 47,000 good-paying jobs and attract an estimated $20 Billion in private sector investment.

Our strategy:

  1. Create an Alberta’s Future Tax Credit targeting growth in emerging industrial sectors
  2. Supercharge the Alberta Petrochemical Incentive Program we created when in government
  3. Use Performance Fast Pass to speed up the approvals of projects for responsible companies
  4. Consult with Indigenous communities on expansion of the Alberta Indigenous Opportunity Corporation
  5. Repeal Danielle Smith’s job-killing, anti-Canadian Sovereignty Act

The historic incentives in the United States’ Inflation Reduction Act is pulling billions of dollars of investment south.

Alberta must compete. Decisions we make this year will have long-lasting implications for Alberta’s future.

Categories
Uncategorized

Universal access to free prescription contraception in Alberta will ensure that women are more in control of their lives, and more in control of their own economic future.

“Universal access to free prescription contraception in Alberta will ensure that women are more in control of their lives, and more in control of their own economic future,” said Notley, marking International Women’s Day

Alberta’s Opposition NDP is promising universal access to free prescription birth control if elected to government in May.

Leader Rachel Notley made the pledge Wednesday at a news conference in Edmonton, saying the program would be modelled after British Columbia’s recent move to cover contraceptives beginning April 1 — a first in the country.

“Universal access to free prescription contraception in Alberta will ensure that women are more in control of their lives, and more in control of their own economic future,” Notley said while recognizing International Women’s Day.

The program will cover oral hormone pills, commonly known as the pill, injections, under-the-skin implants, copper and hormonal intrauterine devices, also known as IUDs, and Plan B — the morning after pill.

Notley estimated that for those who don’t have prescription plans, the proposed program for women could save individuals up to $500 a year.