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Wooster
06-10-2009, 02:38 AM
Thought I'd start a new thread about the Calgary Metro Plan - a regional plan under the new Alberta Land Use Framework:
Came across this article on people in Okotoks not very happy about it. It's unclear exactly what they have a problem with.
Protestors to call for Calgary Metro plan changes
By Eva Ferguson Calgary Herald, Calgary HeraldJune 9, 2009 5:13 PM
Protestors, including oil patch veteran J.C. Anderson, will be in Okotoks Wednesday morning drawing attention to what they see as serious shortfalls in the Calgary Metropolitan Plan.
Rural community leaders, and chairs of grassroots rural community development groups will give speeches asking for major revisions to the CMP before it goes to ratification June 19.
“This is a serious infringement on the rights of landowners in the MD,” said Anderson, founder of Anderson Exploration who owns a ranch just south of Calgary.
“We’ll end up with just more crappy suburbs like you already have all over Calgary right now.”
Under the guise of the new Provincial Land Use Framework, the Calgary Regional Partnership has created the Calgary Metropolitan Plan, a draft vision for development as Calgary expands beyond its existing borders. It looks at 70-years of future growth, encouraging higher densities in existing communities and limiting excessive development of greenspace and agricultural land.
Also, decisions at the regional partnership will require a “supermajority” comprised of half the region’s population and 12 of 17 members. That means all votes can only pass with Calgary’s approval, but also that Calgary must get at least 11 other local councils onside to win on any issue.
Decisions under the new plan will be made by consensus or that supermajority. The partnership explains that Calgary cannot impose its will on the region, but neither can regional decisions be made without Calgary’s support.
The Citizen Groups United for Sustainable Development, representing Priddis, Millarville, Bearspaw and Springbank, argue the plan has a number of shortfalls.
They say it advocates regional population growth that exceeds water availability, it facilitates further urban sprawl outside city limits without protecting agricultural lands, and it fails to incorporate public input in a meaningful way.
The protest will take place just before a scheduled meeting of the MD of Foothills on the issue at the Okotoks Centennial Centre.
Anderson adds that the supermajority vote will “place the destiny of the MD landowners and residents completely in the hands of Calgary City Council forever.
“It’s simply madness.”
eferguson@theherald.canwest.com
© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald
http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/fp/Protestors+call+Calgary+Metro+plan+changes/1679079/story.html
Wooster
06-10-2009, 02:51 AM
Links:
Presentation to Councils:
http://calgaryregion.ca/crp/media/56339/rlup%20presentation%20to%20councils%20may%202009-reduced%20file.pdf
Calgary Regional Partnership:
http://calgaryregion.ca/crp/
The proposed Plan:
http://calgaryregion.ca/crp/media/54502/crp%20proposed%20calgary%20metropolitan%20plan%20(may%202009).pdf
Alberta Land Use Framework:
http://www.landuse.alberta.ca/
Wentworth
06-10-2009, 02:06 PM
If the Provincial government capitulates, isn't Plan-It's vision of Calgary doomed? The developers will just build their own super-communities outside of city limits and the sprawl will continue.
mersar
06-10-2009, 07:48 PM
Rocky View pushes for changes to new regional plan
By Sarah Junkin
The Eagle
The M.D. of Rocky View is urging the Calgary Regional Partnership (CRP) to make last-minute changes to its land use plan before it’s presented to 17 municipalities for approval.
The first ever such plan designed for the Calgary area is intended to manage the growth of urban sprawl while at the same time protecting the environment and allocating water over the next 60 years.
Through direction from council, Rocky View administration put together a formal response, outlining five main points it believes are serious problems with the so-called Calgary Metropolitan Plan (CMP).
The letter states that if these points remain unresolved, “We will be unable to ratify the CMP at the upcoming June 19 general assembly meeting.”
“We simply won’t be signing it unless these issues are addressed,” said Reeve Lois Habberfield at a May 26 council meeting.
One of the more contentious issues is councillors don’t believe municipalities will have the necessary access to water to accommodate future growth that’s predicted by the CMP, and they’d like to see it included in the servicing portion of the plan.
As well, the M.D. claims the CRP hasn’t provided enough time for public consultation and feedback, and has recommended that ratification of the plan be postponed.
Though the letter was sent out less than a month before the general assembly, councillors say it wasn’t written carelessly.
“This is not out of haste,” said Coun. Paul McLean. “For two years we’ve been talking about regional partnerships. The reality is we do it every day.”
Councillors also expressed concern about a possible loss of autonomy in the M.D. because under the CRP’s decision-making system, all motions require the support of Calgary as well as 12 of the 17 member municipalities.
Cochrane town council officially endorsed the CRP on May 25.
Source (http://www.cochraneeagle.com/index.php?action=fullnews&id=6117)
Riise
06-14-2009, 01:01 AM
Rural Calgary Communities Demand 'Voice' In City's Growth
Districts, County Threaten To Kill Metropolitan Plan
June 12, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
CALGARY - The rural communities that occupy the vast majority of the 12,000 square kilometres in the Calgary area are demanding make-or-break changes to a proposed plan that would chart population growth and water servicing across the region.
Politicians from cities, towns, villages and rural districts around Calgary will meet today in Cochrane to address or at least ease concerns before a pivotal final vote next Friday on the legally binding Calgary Metropolitan Plan.
Calgary council and others from Strathmore to Canmore and Nanton to Crossfield have come out in favour of the plan as is or with small tweaks.
But the Municipal Districts of Foothills and Rocky View, along with Wheatland County, have sharp oppositions, including to the plan's decision to hinge regional waterline access to the construction of urbanized, high-density neighbourhoods.
But the more emotion-provoking issue is a regional decision-making system that requires the City of Calgary's approval for all votes to succeed.
The vote requires approval of members who host at least half the population of the Calgary area, but also 12 of 17 municipal members --which also means the region's towns and cities can make decisions without the OK of any of the three rural governments.
"We have the land mass, but we don't have the voice," Rocky View Reeve Lois Habberfield said Thursday.
She said the voting structure is one of the council's "hills to die on" --if the Calgary Regional Partnership doesn't agree to changes, Rocky View won't sign on.
The same goes for Wheatland and Foothills.
Hundreds of residents attended a meeting about Foothills reaction to the plan Wednesday in Okotoks.
"Every single person that stood at the mike was opposed," said resident Jody McPherson, who organized a "No Calgary Veto!" tailgate protest before the meeting.
She and others have suggested the plan's call for urban-style growth in the next 60 years south on Calgary's south boundary amounts to endorsing more urban sprawl.
The plan's advocates, including Airdrie mayor and alliance chairwoman Linda Bruce, say it's designed to concentrate future growth in certain areas and corridors that will let the region co-operate on straightforward regional mass-transit lines, sewage and water systems.
© Copyright The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/calgary/Rural+communities+demand+voice/1688832/story.html)
Riise
06-14-2009, 01:04 AM
No Agreement Over Growth Plan
Regional Alliance Sparring Over Density Rules
June 13, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
Calgary's regional alliance met Friday without resolving the major problems Calgary's biggest rural neighbours have with the region's growth plan, an impasse that may ultimately force the Stelmach government to step in.
Fifteen of the 17 member municipalities of the Calgary Regional Partnerships voted against making no fundamental changes on water sharing and land use--but several lesser, conciliatory ones--before the vote Friday on the 70-year plan.
The holdouts are the Municipal Districts of Foothills and Rocky View, whose councillors said the disagreements are relatively minor and a resolution is still possible.
Urban leaders in the group disagree, saying the rural districts' demands to scrap density rules, alter planned growth areas and conditions for water sharing would render meaningless the long-awaited plan to concentrate future growth without building over too much farmland.
"The very principles of sustain-ability could not be met if we make those changes," said Airdrie Mayor Linda Bruce, the group's chairwoman.
Foothills council must follow the wishes of residents, Deputy Reeve Terry Waddock said. Hundreds of them voiced opposition to the plan this week, particularly to a voting structure that would give Calgary an effective veto on regional decisions, as well to a growth map that proposes more urban-style growth in the rural land just south of Calgary.
Although Rocky View and Foothills occupy much of the land in the alliance, the partnership has enough supportive voters to ratify the long-range plan without them.
The blueprint, dubbed the Calgary Metropolitan Plan, is mandated under Alberta's new land-use framework.
Municipal Affairs Minister Ray Danyluk said he's confident Calgary's neighbours can agree among themselves, and that he doesn't want to run interference if he doesn't have to.
"This government cannot afford the duplication in regional planning."
Cochrane Mayor Truper McBride said the urban-rural split doesn't really exist anymore, since Friday's "yes" vote included Wheatland County, the rural district surrounding Strathmore.
But the county's Shirley Reinhardt said Wheatland still needs time to consider whether it will ultimately sign on--whether or not it can iron out its serious concerns afterwards.
Wheatland abruptly exited the regional group last fall, but came back to the table after a meeting with Ted Morton, the Sustainable Resource Development minister.
© Copyright The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/agreement+over+growth+plan/1692476/story.html)
Riise
06-14-2009, 01:18 AM
"We have the land mass, but we don't have the voice," Rocky View Reeve Lois Habberfield said Thursday.
When I go back to visit my old workmates I should explain the concept of democracy to Reeve Habberfield. Democracy stems from the Greek word Demokratia which means rule of (kratos) the people (demos). It does not mean rule of the land owners, that might be an aristocracy or plutocracy.
O-tacular
06-14-2009, 01:19 AM
I watched this documentary the other day called Who killed the electric car. The situation the city is facing with its growth plan now makes me think of California's emissions regulation that was the impetus to start making electric cars again back in the 80's / 90's. What happened according to this documentary was that California ended up watering down their plan and as a result the car companies had no more reason to pursue the more efficient albeit less profitable electric volt cars. GM basically cannibalized their own cars after repossessing their leased vehicles. Anyway, I'm concerned if the city waters down this roadmap for our future, the end result will be a city that continues to sprawl and homebuilders that continue to hold too much clout.
End of rambling speech.
Vascilli
06-14-2009, 01:51 AM
Electric vehicles are still illegal to drive on roads, right?
Sir.Humphrey.Appleby
06-14-2009, 02:14 AM
No. As long as electric vehicles meet federal safety standards they can be driven on any roads. That none of the current crop that Zenn and others produce meet that standard is not the government's fault. Tesla's are fine and there are many conversion companies, if your willing to spend the big bucks.
Vascilli
06-14-2009, 02:19 AM
No. As long as electric vehicles meet federal safety standards they can be driven on any roads. That none of the current crop that Zenn and others produce meet that standard is not the government's fault. Tesla's are fine and there are many conversion companies, if your willing to spend the big bucks.
Excellent. :crazy: Kind of makes me wonder why I've yet to see any electric cars.
frinkprof
06-14-2009, 02:47 AM
Nm
Riise
09-10-2009, 06:42 PM
M.D. Foothills Withdraws From Calgary Regional Partnership
September 9, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
CALGARY- The rural municipality south of Calgary has withdrawn from the Calgary Regional Partnership, delivering a solid blow to the alliance’s hopes to ratify a sustainable growth blueprint without the provincial government having to interfere.
The Municipal District of Foothills was one of three Calgary-area rural councils that voted again the long-range Calgary Metropolitan Plan in June.
The plan to concentrate population growth in certain lands and highway corridors was endorsed by Calgary and all nearby towns or cities, while Foothills and other groups were given 90 days to pull out or conform to the plan.
The rural district’s councillors decided Tuesday to exit the six-year-old partnership, expressing fear its growth plan would "erode and... take away the rightful municipal autonomy of Foothills, its land-use authority and the rights of its residents," Coun. Barbara Castell said.
Officials with the partnership strongly disagree, noting that the plan explicitly acknowledges it doesn’t dictate local land-use decisions can’t be changed.
The alliance may suffer another setback next week, when Rocky View County and Wheatland County both hold a special meeting to decide their future within the regional group.
Those rural councils, along with Foothills, denounced the metropolitan plan’s method of voting on major issues. Calgary, with its massive population, effectively veto on such matters, but the city must find at least 11 of the 17-member group’s other municipalities to vote alongside it for any motion to pass.
Wheatland quit the partnership last fall, only to return months later after meeting with Ted Morton, the cabinet minister responsible for the land-use framework that requires urban regions to pass sustainable growth blueprints.
Provincial ministers have hinted they will force the Calgary regional players to cooperate, just as they did with the formerly squabbling councils around Edmonton.
But the Stelmach government has repeatedly expressed hopes the partnership would be able to resolve its own disagreements.
"I’m pleading with them to do that. We don’t want to make decisions on behalf of people living in this area from the capital," Premier Ed Stelmach said in June, according to the Okotoks Western Wheel.
© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Foothills+withdraws+from+Calgary+Regional+Partnership/1976508/story.html)
Riise
09-10-2009, 06:45 PM
Rural Partners To Pull Out Of Calgary Regional Plan
Foothills Council Votes To Abandon Municipal Alliance
September 10, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
CALGARY - The rural municipality south of Calgary has withdrawn from the Calgary Regional Partnership, delivering a solid blow to the alliance's hopes to ratify a sustainable growth blueprint without the provincial government having to intervene.
The Municipal District of Foothills' decision this week will likely be matched next week by Rocky View County and possibly Wheatland County, nearly three months after the rural districts all rejected the partnership's Calgary Metropolitan Plan.
A regional alliance without three of the area's vastest municipalities appears unworkable, and provincial ministers have suggested they may have to step in. Already, Rocky View Reeve Lois Habberfield is calling for the province to assign a mediator to break the impasse.
The plan to concentrate population growth in certain lands and highway corridors -- and provide them with water and sewer services --was endorsed by Calgary and all nearby towns or cities in June, while the counties were given 90 days to pull out or conform to the plan.
"I think we'd all like to stay, but we can't stay with a plan that undermines our autonomy and doesn't give our residents any effective voice in the partnership," Habberfield said.
Her language echoes the motion passed Tuesday by Foothills councillors, which will abandon a six-year-old alliance whose plan they say would "erode and. . . take away the rightful municipal autonomy of Foothills, its land-use authority and the rights of its residents," Coun. Barbara Castell said.
"We have been pounding away at this for two years, and no one's listening."
Partnership officials have disagreed with the allegations, noting the plan explicitly acknowledges it doesn't dictate local land-use decisions.
The counties also denounce the metropolitan plan's voting system, which effectively gives Calgary a veto. However, the city must get at least 11 of the other 17 members to vote with it to approve any vote.
Calgary, which holds most of the water-scarce region's water allocation licences, says it is willing to share water and extend sewer lines if its neighbours minimize the footprint of development and allow corridors for possible future city growth or annexations.
But Rocky View said the growth plan makes regional servicing conditional on urban densities that even most Calgary suburbs don't have, while Foothills derides the plan's map suggesting growth along its boundary with Calgary as "blue blobs" of unwanted development.
The partnership's chairman and executive director could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Calgary Mayor Dave Bronconnier declined comment, since he had not yet received a letter about Foothills' withdrawal.
Wheatland County will also decide its fate next week. It quit the partnership last fall, only to re-enter after meeting with Ted Morton, the minister responsible for the land-use framework that requires Calgary to complete a sustainable growth plan.
Municipal Affairs Minister Ray Danyluk said he'll soon release his comments on the metropolitan plan that Calgary, Airdrie, Okotoks and other "urban" partnership members endorsed in June. In an interview Wednesday, he said the urban and rural sides need to co-operate, but wouldn't say whether he'll force it, as the government did with Edmonton and its squabbling neighbours.
"When you have a regional plan, I feel it's in the best interests of the region of the whole, for all participating municipalities to have a voice," the minister said.
© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Rural+partners+pull+Calgary+regional+plan/1977730/story.html)
Riise
09-10-2009, 06:51 PM
Frustrated? Yes.
Surprised? Hell no!
Wooster
09-10-2009, 06:52 PM
This is where the province needs to use a bit of heavy hand and ensure an effective solution that's to the greater benefit of the region, not individula municipalities.
para transit fellow
09-11-2009, 03:59 AM
I don't think the province can institute a heavy-handed solution that will be effective. I understand the Capital region board still has some in-fighting.
shogged
09-11-2009, 11:09 AM
i vote annex :haha:
para transit fellow
09-11-2009, 10:42 PM
Annex?
Are you suggesting that the MD of Foothills or Rocky View County should annex Calgary?
I admit that it would be an unusual solution to the problem.
Riise
09-12-2009, 06:53 AM
Are you suggesting that the MD of Foothills or Rocky View County should annex Calgary?
I admit that it would be an unusual solution to the problem.
Another unusual solution that could potentially be seen is the one that was rumored to be threatened against the M.D. of Rocky View during their last round of annexation talks with the City; dissolution and forced annexation by the City.
Boris2k7
09-12-2009, 08:14 AM
The MD's withdrawal from the CRP is less an indictment of the plan and more a swipe at the CRP itself. They were going to be unhappy with any plan that comes up, because any plan would require a supermajority of members representing 50% of the population (meaning the City of Calgary has an effective veto). They never had any autonomy to begin with. They are just children who are taking their ball and going home.
Next step? Well, it depends on what you think the lesser of two evils is. Either the city could force them to come to their senses by cutting off services, or we could go with annexation.
para transit fellow
09-16-2009, 05:28 AM
Another unusual solution that could potentially be seen is the one that was rumored to be threatened against the M.D. of Rocky View during their last round of annexation talks with the City; dissolution and forced annexation by the City.
i didn't hear that one but it is kinda humorous to think that the city would want to annex 4000 square kilometres of area (Calgary is about 800 sq kms) If the entire area was part of Calgary, I can't imagine the taxpayers out there tollerating a 2 tier level of municipal services.
All of these senarios presume that the newly annexed residents will demand equal access to calgary services:
Can you imagine the cost of providing an 8 minute fire response to Bottrel? that would entail at least one fully-staffed fire station who will spend their days cleaning and recleaning their gear (there are only seven houses out that way). Same problems with police -- going to need several cars outfitted with reading lamps. The cost of extending Access Calgary services (6 am to midnight / seven days a week) through the annexed region would be amusing. It takes an hour just to drive to the far corners of the County for a service that costs $55/hour to provide.
Truth is that Calgary cannot force a dissolution of another municipality. Creation and distruction of municipalities is the role of Alberta Municpal Affairs.
BTW I hear that both Rocky View and Wheatland held meetings today and both have chosen to opt out of the Calgary Municipal Pla as it is currently written.
para transit fellow
09-16-2009, 05:37 AM
[QUOTE=Boris2k7;4452329]The MD's withdrawal from the CRP is less an indictment of the plan and more a swipe at the CRP itself. They were going to be unhappy with any plan that comes up, because any plan would require a supermajority of members representing 50% of the population (meaning the City of Calgary has an effective veto). They never had any autonomy to begin with. They are just children who are taking their ball and going home.
[QUOTE]
Actually, you are incorrect. The rural municipalities were very active in the development of the CRP. They felt that they had participation in a meaningful dialog. Then one day, the tone of the discussions changed with Calgary deciding it wanted a different voting structure.
On the CRP's website, look for the minutes of the Nov. 28, 2009 meeting:
http://www.calgaryregion.ca/crp/media/46668/pre-adopted%20%20minutes%20%20-%20nov%2028%20%20special%20executive%20committee.pdf
You can find other CRP minutes at: http://www.calgaryregion.ca/crp/members/executivecommittee/minutes.aspx?year=2008
Riise
09-16-2009, 02:09 PM
i didn't hear that one but it is kinda humorous to think that the city would want to annex 4000 square kilometres of area...
Truth is that Calgary cannot force a dissolution of another municipality. Creation and distruction of municipalities is the role of Alberta Municpal Affairs.
The forced annexation was a threat rumored to be made by the Provincial Government not the City of Calgary. I'm well aware that the City cannot dissolve another Municipality.
Actually, you are incorrect. The rural municipalities were very active in the development of the CRP. They felt that they had participation in a meaningful dialog. Then one day, the tone of the discussions changed with Calgary deciding it wanted a different voting structure.
Did the tone actually change or was it that specifications were finally brought up?
para transit fellow
09-16-2009, 06:49 PM
Did the tone actually change or was it that specifications were finally brought up?
A bit of both. The Calgary regional partnership was supposed to be a consensus-based organization. Everyone was at the table voluntarily. they were working through various governance proposals.
In another mesage I posted a link to the minutes of that Nov 28 meeting.
As I understand the minutes. Calgary presented a particular voting system and insisted that this new system was non-negotiable for Calgary. So much for consensus-based work. Rural Councilors I have spoken with tell me that is the meeting when the CRp tone shifted. Some months later, the Chair of the CRP was later quoted as saying something along the lines of " water is the teeth that will keep everyone in line."
At issue
If the rurals must bend to the will of Calgary, an interesting situation arises. Calgary Municipal Council will have control even though the affected county residents have no vote on who comprises Calgary's Council.
One farmer pointed out how "our neighbors to the south once fought a war over taxation without representation." he felt that the CM plan gave development control to a Council he isn't able to cast a ballot for.
Riise
09-16-2009, 09:53 PM
As I understand the minutes. Calgary presented a particular voting system and insisted that this new system was non-negotiable for Calgary. So much for consensus-based work.
Not really. People will always have certain issues where they will neither bend nor give an inch. Just because one particular issues is not made by a consensus does not mean the entire process is not reached by consensus, that's just rubbish and whinning on some of the Councilor's behalf's.
At issue
If the rurals must bend to the will of Calgary, an interesting situation arises. Calgary Municipal Council will have control even though the affected county residents have no vote on who comprises Calgary's Council.
One farmer pointed out how "our neighbors to the south once fought a war over taxation without representation." he felt that the CM plan gave development control to a Council he isn't able to cast a ballot for.
The issue is democracy and how defeat can be a difficult pill to swallow. Some of the M.D. representatives are saying the voting system is unfair but this is untrue, it is proportional representation. Yeah, it will put smaller places at a disadvantage and that is a hard pill to swallow but that's the result of how things are, Calgary has a lot more people who need to be represented and therefore need more representatives and consequently get more sway. When I got defeated during the Student Council elections in Junior High it may have sucked but that was democracy taking place.
para transit fellow
09-16-2009, 11:03 PM
Calgary has a lot more people who need to be represented and therefore need more representatives and consequently get more sway. When I got defeated during the Student Council elections in Junior High it may have sucked but that was democracy taking place.
I guess the central issue is the original concept that all municpailities are supposed to be equal. if Calgary has more people... is that supposed to make it more equal than the other municipalities?
For the people living outside calgary it seems like the neighbour with the biggest family on the block gets to dictate to the rest of the block -- how you develop your yard, which yard he gets to park his boat in and which house(s) on the block can't be sold to a stranger because he wants to keep it available for when his mother-in-law and sister move to town.
The regional Partnership was not supposed to create an extra layer of government. Otherwise the whole regional partnership is just a re-creation of the old regional planning board.
Riise
09-17-2009, 12:43 PM
I guess the central issue is the original concept that all municpailities are supposed to be equal. if Calgary has more people... is that supposed to make it more equal than the other municipalities?
The Citizens of all the Municipalities are equals and it just so happens that we have more of the people that have the exact same amount of power. It is ludicrous to think that a tiny minority in a region will effectively get the same voting power as the huge majority. Honestly, how democratic and fair is that?
To be honest, the M.D. of Foothills and Rocky View are being rather selfish. I mean, the City is more than ten times larger than any of the other Municipalities in the region and it isn't even asking for ten times the amount of seats but rather just a veto vote. The City is not asking for the ability to push things through by themselves but simply to stop things they vehemently oppose.
For the people living outside calgary it seems like the neighbour with the biggest family on the block gets to dictate to the rest of the block -- how you develop your yard, which yard he gets to park his boat in and which house(s) on the block can't be sold to a stranger because he wants to keep it available for when his mother-in-law and sister move to town.
It's not the biggest family but rather the largest group of families. The alternative that the M.D. of Foothills and Rock View want is the families with the largest plots get to dictate block policies.
Riise
09-17-2009, 05:37 PM
Rocky View Snubs Calgary Regional Partnership
September 16, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
CALGARY - Rocky View County council formally decided Tuesday to withdraw from the Calgary Regional Partnership, following the move Foothills district made last week in protest of the regional growth plan.
Municipal Affairs Ray Danyluk will wade into the impasse between the alliance's urban members and its now-former rural ones Friday when he offers his views on the controversial growth blueprint.
All the group's town, village or city members--including Calgary, Strathmore, Black Diamond and Airdrie--have endorsed the 60-year plan to preserve green spaces and concentrate growth in certain land pockets and highway corridors.
It also sets density targets as conditions if rural developments get much-needed access to regional water or sewer services, one of the deal-breaking conditions for Foothills, Rocky View and Wheatland County.
They also disparage the plan for giving Calgary an effective veto over major partnership decisions, even though the province has approved similar powers for Edmonton in the capital region's growth plan.
"We don't support the plan, and therefore we have to withdraw or the plan gets imposed," said Rocky View Reeve Lois Habberfield.
Airdrie Mayor Linda Bruce, the group's chair, has said the rural members' demands for changes to the plan would undermine the entire purpose of the plan.
The partnership has asked Danyluk for ideas on how to improve the plan, after the alliance's "gargantuan" effort to strike a sustainable development plan that conforms to the wishes of the province's land-use framework, said Rick Butler, the partnership's executive director.
© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/calgary/Rocky+View+snubs+Calgary+regional+partnership/1998922/story.html)
Bassic Lab
09-18-2009, 01:02 AM
i didn't hear that one but it is kinda humorous to think that the city would want to annex 4000 square kilometres of area (Calgary is about 800 sq kms) If the entire area was part of Calgary, I can't imagine the taxpayers out there tollerating a 2 tier level of municipal services.
All of these senarios presume that the newly annexed residents will demand equal access to calgary services:
Can you imagine the cost of providing an 8 minute fire response to Bottrel? that would entail at least one fully-staffed fire station who will spend their days cleaning and recleaning their gear (there are only seven houses out that way). Same problems with police -- going to need several cars outfitted with reading lamps. The cost of extending Access Calgary services (6 am to midnight / seven days a week) through the annexed region would be amusing. It takes an hour just to drive to the far corners of the County for a service that costs $55/hour to provide.
Truth is that Calgary cannot force a dissolution of another municipality. Creation and distruction of municipalities is the role of Alberta Municpal Affairs.
BTW I hear that both Rocky View and Wheatland held meetings today and both have chosen to opt out of the Calgary Municipal Pla as it is currently written.
I can't see the entire county being handed over to Calgary either. On the other hand if the province simply cut it up into some more manageable chunks and handed them over to the closest town or city it could work pretty well. Calgary wouldn't worry about Bottrel, Cochrqane or Cremona would.
Riise
09-18-2009, 04:50 PM
I can't see the entire county being handed over to Calgary either.
When you get as angry as the Provincial government apparently did you usually just try to get rid of your problem as soon as possible. You know, the "Here! Just take it!" approach.
Riise
09-20-2009, 01:01 PM
Regional Alliance Carries On Without Rural Holdouts
September 19, 2009
Calgary Herald
Jason Markusoff
The alliance of Calgary-area towns, cities and villages will forge ahead with its growth blueprint without the region's rural municipalities.
As the provincial government launched a review Friday into the plan and rural-urban impasse, Municipal Affairs Minister Ray Danyluk said he was disappointed that Rocky View County, Foothills and Wheatland County have quit the group.
But he signalled reluctance to force them back onside.
"It's like playing in the spectator seat. I mean, I would rather see them on the field," Danyluk told reporters after meeting with the Calgary Regional Partnership.
"I could be the umpire, but right now as far as the (regional) board is concerned, they have elected not to be on the playing field."
Calgary, Okotoks, Cochrane and other area municipalities say they had already compromised their initial ambitions for a long-term, sustainable development strategy to win agreement with the rural councils.
But the rural districts pulled out of the plan--and therefore the partnership -- over protests about an effective Calgary veto for regional decisions and the density targets included as a condition for cities to share scarce water licences and sewage services with rural projects.
Ald. Linda Fox-Mellway said the regional group will keep talking with the rural holdouts.
Terry Waddock, deputy reeve of the Municipal District of Foothills, said he holds out hope the government's review will help broker a plan his council can live with.
© Copyright The Calgary Herald (http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Regional+alliance+carries+without+rural+holdouts/2010432/story.html)
para transit fellow
09-20-2009, 10:03 PM
this press release came out but i never saw it in the herald:
September 18, 2009
Government to undertake a cross-ministry review of the Calgary Metropolitan Plan
Alberta Municipal Affairs Minister Ray Danyluk released the following statement after meeting with the Calgary Regional Partnership on Friday, September 18.
“I want to acknowledge all members of the Partnership for their tremendous efforts over the last four years to bring this plan forward. The members saw that a strategic plan would help guide the region through growth and they took action.
I have informed the Partnership that the province will undertake a cross-ministry review of the plan, which will involve all relevant ministries. This will ensure the plan aligns with provincial policy. Having Alberta’s municipalities work together is essential to the success of our province, and I believe this is a better plan because of the involvement of both rural and urban municipalities.
Once the review is complete, I will advise the Partnership of the findings and any further direction with respect to the plan and its content.”
-30-
Riise
09-21-2009, 09:43 PM
I have informed the Partnership that the province will undertake a cross-ministry review of the plan, which will involve all relevant ministries.
That sounds like a lengthy review...
Thanks for posting this as I probably wouldn't have found it otherwise.
Boris2k7
09-23-2009, 08:28 AM
Para Transit Fellow: It's been a while since I last posted, forgive me on that point. However, you have essentially proven me correct. I am well aware that that the rural municipalities had been a big part of getting the CRP started. I also am well aware that they desired a consensus-based decision making board where each MD would get equal say, so that they couldn't be "bullied" by the city.
That was the point wasn't it? To avoid things like regional plans which would require municipalities to do things that they might not agree with. It was all a giant farce from the start.
Regardless, as can be seen from those meetings, the voting structure was passed 10 to 1. And the 1 left and took their ball home.
Boris2k7
09-23-2009, 08:34 AM
Airdrie Mayor Linda Bruce, the group's chair, has said the rural members' demands for changes to the plan would undermine the entire purpose of the plan.
On a side note: It's nice to see Linda Bruce standing tall through all of this. She's one of the few who's been acting in good faith through the whole process, while the rural members show their undersides. I had a chance to ask her some questions a little while back in a sort of Q&A, and you can tell from talking to her that she's one of the few politicians you find who "get it."
para transit fellow
09-25-2009, 04:02 PM
Slightly different point of view from the rurl muni that previously tried to leave the regional partnership effort:
And now they step in
Strathmore Standard - Strathmore,Alberta,Canada
The lack of concern for the rural members, Wheatland County, Rocky View
County and the Municipal District of Foothills, seems to have stopped now
that all ...
http://www.strathmorestandard.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1766299
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