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Airport Trail Tunnel update

February 2012 Concrete forms - tunnel structure and footings

Today, the Airport Trail Tunnel is passing a significant milestone with the first concrete pour of this important project. Here's an update on this piece of critical Calgary infrastructure that is on time and on budget:

Major progress has been made at the Airport Trail Tunnel site. The excavation of approximately 390,000 cubic metres of rock for the tunnel is now complete and crews started the first concrete pour of the tunnel walls and roof at 6 a.m. Friday, February 24. This 12-hour process is the first of 50 to come over the next few months, with the last one scheduled for early fall 2012.

February 2012 - Steel enforcement for walls and roof
Steel enforcement for walls and roof of tunnel (Feb. 2012)
Since construction began in 2011 crews have been busy working 24 hours a day and seven days a week on several key construction aspects to get ready for the series of concrete pours. These include excavating the tunnel site, forming and pouring concrete footings, installing 500-metres of underground utilities and installing 450 tonnes of steel enforcement. While pouring takes place on the tunnel structure, excavation and utility work continues on site in other areas.

December 13 2011 Aerials 021
Photo of excavation taken in December 2012
Coordinating and executing simultaneous construction activities can be challenging, but with all of the ongoing activities the project remains on time and within budget. This is thanks to excellent coordination with the Calgary Airport Authority and our engineering and contractor team.

For more information on this project please visit www.calgary.ca/airporttunnel

- Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team (with photos and help from the good people of City of Calgary Transportation Department)
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Modern cities, modern partnerships

Mayors Nenshi and Robertson

In February 2012, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and I found ourselves speaking a lot about the future of modern Canadian cities and the relationships between our cities and the other levels of government. I've written one column on this topic in the Calgary Herald and spoke about the powers of cities on The Current. Mayor Robertson and I even discussed this in a live online chat with the Globe and Mail while I was briefly in Vancouver for the Cities Summit (where this photo was taken). The below article, jointly written by Mayor Robertson and myself, elaborates on the new realities facing our modern cities. The next century belongs to cities like Calgary--but it will not be without its challenges. The article appeared in the Globe and Mail on February 17, 2012.

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If you’re one of the 80 per cent of Canadians who lives in a city, chances are you’re fiercely proud of it. Our cities can match any in the world for vibrancy, quality of life, entrepreneurial spirit and creative and civic culture.

But there’s no guarantee this will last. Canada’s cities face big challenges in the next few decades: managing growth, improving livability, becoming more sustainable and making city living far more affordable.

Just to avoid slipping backward, the infrastructure requirements are sobering: a $5-billion annual drag on our economy from traffic gridlock; a $123-billion deficit for fixing worn-out infrastructure.

Add the much larger challenges of rapid growth, carbon pollution and an aging population, and the hard truth is that Canada isn’t ready for 21st-century urban reality.

The Canadian city’s relationship with provincial and federal governments has been virtually static since 1867. In one of the most urbanized countries in the world, cities receive a lower share of tax revenues than those in nearly any other developed country.

Let’s stop trying to fuel a nation’s economic engine by the teaspoon. We need a smart shift in resources, tools and authority – a modern partnership with provincial and federal governments.

Canada can only prosper when our cities thrive. That speaks to a federal responsibility. We’re realistic, of course. We can’t and don’t expect Ottawa to simply cut a cheque. But there are smart solutions that don’t impose a large burden on taxpayers.

Consider housing. In many cities, finding an affordable home can be nearly impossible. In 2010, a young family looking for a two-bedroom apartment in Toronto faced an average rent of $1,050; in Calgary, $1,084; in Vancouver, $1,400.

The most immediate problem is supply. Vacancy rates under 3 per cent push up rents – Calgary’s is 1.9 per cent and, in Vancouver and Greater Toronto, it’s 1.4 per cent. When rentals and real estate are too expensive, fewer people buy homes, construction slows and jobs dry up. Cities are reshaped in profound, harmful ways.

That’s why we’re proposing that Ottawa consider low-cost, high-leverage steps to catalyze private investment to support rental housing and create jobs in an uncertain economic climate. These include:
  • Having the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. underwrite low-interest loans to finance new rental construction, injecting recoverable funds into the construction sector.
  • Reforming the tax system to encourage owners to renovate and renew rental properties. A building owner should have a stronger incentive to sell to someone who wants to preserve affordable housing than to demolish it.
  • Providing support for landlords to retrofit homes to make them energy-efficient – reducing costs and easing pressure on rents.
Best practices from around the world can offer sound approaches to affordable housing tax incentives. Whether that’s deferred tax credits or reduced capital gains depending on how long a property is kept as rental – let’s put those ideas on the table.

Each of these measures is geared to leveraging private investment where it’s needed the most. And while there are fiscal implications for each, they generate enough direct economic activity and indirect longer-term economic growth to more than make up for that impact.

It’s time to change the way we look at housing, especially rental housing: not just as a social good, but as one of the foundations for sustainable economic growth and healthy, vibrant cities.

With the world’s urban population doubling by 2050, this will be the century of the city. Canada’s cities are ready to embrace that future, but we need our provincial and federal partners at our side.

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Video: My thoughts on what it means to be Canadian


Recently, I spoke with the CBC about my reflections on being (like so many Calgarians) a first generation Canadian. As Canadians, we have such a wealth of opportunity and we must continue to share that opportunity with others--this is what makes Calgary, and Canada, so great.

The above video is my brief interview on this topic, and it includes one of my favourite "Canadian memories" that happened just last year during a special visit over Stampede.

Perhaps you will find the rest of this series as interesting as I find it. Enjoy!

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Our cities are subject to the vagaries of other governments

Naheed Nenshi - formalI write a monthly column in the Calgary Herald. Here is my February story:

Indulge with me in some crystal ball gazing. When the Flames next win the Stanley Cup (this spring, of course!), it will be great for the city. Visitors will pack our hotels, restaurants and bars will be full, and people will be buying hockey sweaters and souvenirs. However, the City of Calgary — the municipality — will not receive one penny from any of this activity while incurring significant cost.

Even well-mannered Calgary crowds need policing and security — and then there’s street cleaning, infrastructure repair and even porta-potties. Not to mention the cost of the victory rally.

This is just one example (hopefully not that far-fetched) of how cities in this country work. We have limited resources and decision-making power, our budgets are stretched to the limit (and we don’t or can’t run deficits), yet we are expected to provide the services that keep people alive, healthy, safe and happy every day.

I was thinking about this not only because the mayor of Vancouver made the terrible mistake of trash-talking me during the Flames/Canucks game on Saturday night, but also because of the recent provincial budget and the upcoming election.

While this provincial budget won’t have an enormous impact on the city’s operations, it is a bit ridiculous that the duly elected government of over a million people (a larger population than five provinces), having passed its own budget months ago, and well into its own fiscal year, was huddled around the radio waiting to see if the decisions of another level of government would force us to change our plans.

Remember last year, when a footnote to a footnote in the provincial budget announced a $15 surcharge to traffic tickets that would have blown a multimillion-dollar hole in our own budget?

This year, the Alberta government’s budget was significantly more benign. While nothing in the budget should hurt Calgary too much (although we have not yet reviewed all the footnotes to the footnotes), it also misses some opportunities to make a positive difference to our city.

Take policing, for example. While there is a very large increase to the Solicitor-General’s budget, none of it appears to be coming to the large cities for our policing needs — it’s going to RCMP officers for rural Alberta and provincial sheriffs. This is despite the well-documented need to keep up policing resources and maintain Calgary’s status as one of the safest cities anywhere.

Similarly, while poverty and income support are not de facto the responsibility of cities, we end up dealing with their impacts on our streets and in our neighbourhoods. Increases to support programs such as AISH are, therefore, truly welcome.

However, the province chose not to make a modest increase to the program they cost share with the city: Family and Community Support Services. A small increase here would have gone directly to the scores of non-profit organizations doing hard work every day with people at risk, and it’s a shame the province chose not to help them more, despite the city unilaterally increasing its funding to the initiative.

(I voted against both of these increases in the fall budget debates, not because I thought they were bad investments, but precisely because I thought that the city taking unilateral action would let the province off the hook. It’s not clear if that was their motivation, but here we are again with the city left holding the bag.)

Even more perplexing, the province seems to be stepping back from its commitment to fund affordable housing in favour of funding shelter beds. We are still awaiting details on this, but, if it’s true, it would be a terrible mistake. Just last week, we announced that the number of homeless people in Calgary is down for the first time in 20 years, because of our new commitment to housing people, and because the province came to the table in a really meaningful way with significant funding.

All of this underlies the key point: Why can’t Calgarians make decisions and set priorities for ourselves? Why should we be subject to the vagaries of other governments? After all, it’s Calgary taxpayers who give the province the money in the first place — several billion dollars more each year than we get back in all provincial benefits.

In the upcoming election, therefore, I encourage you to ask tough questions: How can our cities have the tools to build the community and provide the services we all need? I know I will be asking these questions, and I will share the answers I get with you.

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Radio: Mayor Nenshi talks about "hobbled cities"


On February 13, 2012, Mayor Nenshi joined guest-host Jim Brown on CBC's The Current for a half-hour discussion about the powers of cities and city councils. The discussion included talk of the idea of the "strong mayor" (which Mayor Nenshi dislikes) and the challenging relationship between municipalities (especially large cities) and other levels of government. This was also the topic of Mayor Nenshi's recent column in the Calgary Herald.

- Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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Media release: Funding solution for 4 new recreation centres

family at Village Square Leisure Centre

City Council agrees on funding solution for four new recreation centres

Solution allows for immediate development of Northwest, Great Plains, Quarry Park, and Seton recreation facilities

Today, Calgary City Council approved a new financing strategy that ensures four new recreation facilities in Calgary’s southeast and northwest will be built—without any impact to property taxes. This follows the withdrawal of $100 million by the federal government through PPP Canada.

“I am so happy that we will soon be able to build these critically-needed facilities,” said Mayor Naheed Nenshi. “I also want to thank my Council colleagues and City Administration for this creative solution.”

The recreation centres will be funded through a reallocation of existing money in the Community and Recreation Levy as well as a portion of the City’s GST rebate. No existing funded projects will be affected.

“City Council is committed to building these facilities for Calgarians within the original scope, wherever feasible,” said Alderman Gord Lowe.

Work is underway to determine design details, construction start and completion dates, method of delivery (P3 or traditional), and refined costing for the recreation facilities. Administration will report to Council about its progress in June 2012. Details regarding facility costing cannot be shared at this time due to confidentiality required for the procurement process.

“These new facilities will be amazing—and much-needed—spaces to play, learn, grow and connect for all Calgarians,” said Alderman Shane Keating. “Each facility is a critical component in developing healthy, vibrant and complete communities.”

- Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team

(photo above: a family plays in the wave pool at the Village Square Leisure Centre)
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Mayor Nenshi Reads: Interrupting Chicken

nenshi reads shot

On January 27, Mayor Naheed Nenshi joined Calgary Reads to celebrate Family Literacy Day at his old school Marlborough School. Thanks to Calgary Reads and Hidden Story, we've captured Mayor Nenshi reading the children's story Interrupting Chicken to students in grades one and two.


For those who aren't familiar with the original joke on which this story is based, allow me to reproduce it here for your enjoyment:

Knock-knock.
Who's there?
Interrupting chicken.
Interrupting chicken wh--
Bwak! Bwak!

Classic. I'm still laughing.

- Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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Mayor Nenshi's meetings: January 2012

Office sign photo

Below is a list of external meetings hosted by the Mayor during the month of January 2012.

For an explanation of why this list exists and who's on it, please visit our post about highlighting accountability in the Mayor's Office.

December's meetings included:
  • Johann Zietsman, Epcor Centre for the Performing Arts - January 17, 2012
  • Lisa Walli, Epcor Centre for the Performing Arts - January 17, 2012
  • Mohamud Zaver, Ismaili Council - January 18, 2012
  • Tim Hamilton, Odgers Berndtson - January 20, 2012
  • Michael Brown, Calgary Municipal Land Corporation - January 20, 2012
  • Goldy Hyder, Hill and Knowlton - January 25, 2012
  • Simon Vincent, Knightsbridge Human Capital Solutions - January 25, 2012
  • Jamie Niessen, Volunteer Calgary - January 31, 2012
- Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team