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Is this Calgary's future transit network?

Capital-Map-all-projects

On September 17, the team behind RouteAhead (Calgary Transit's 30-year plan) presented a public update to City Council and it included this draft map of our future rapid transit network. This map is based on citizen ideas, plans for future growth, and best practices from around the world. 

Is this the shape of Calgary Transit to come? RouteAhead wants you to tell them what you think, and they will be hosting public engagement sessions throughout the fall (check into RouteAhead.ca for the latest).

The presentation to Council included more than just a draft rapid transit map. It also covered a snapshot of RouteAhead's public engagement, the core principles for the development of the final RouteAhead plan, and draft evaluation criteria for rapid transit capital projects. The evaluation criteria will assist in prioritizing future projects as funding becomes available.

If you have 3.5 hours available, you can even watch the whole presentation (including Council debate) online.

- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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Drawn off topic: Mayor Nenshi and the death of cash


Globe and Mail illustrator and journalist Anthony Jenkins interviewed Mayor Nenshi earlier in 2012 on the non-municipal issue of "the death of cash". The result is some amusing musing about the disappearance of the penny and the predominance of plastic and electronic payment options. What follows is an excerpt, but I recommend reading the full interview here.

The penny has recently been abolished. Will you miss it?

I don’t think I’m going to miss the penny. I think people will get used to it, but I don’t know how I will ask people for their thoughts any more.

What are your thoughts worth now?

At least two pennies. I guess we’ll have to go to a nickel.

How much cash do you have on you right now – change and bills?

I don’t have any change in my pocket. I usually throw it into the cupholder in my car. In my wallet, I have 700 pesos from a recent conference in Mexico, $50 U.S. from a recent trip to Houston – and absolutely no Canadian cash.

Remind me not to ask you to lunch!

I have always been like this. I’m a guy who never has any cash in his wallet. I’m a debit and credit kind of guy and, if I suddenly have to use cash only, I find myself scrambling in my cupholder.

Is change a bother?

The problem is I tend to jingle it in my pockets. When I’m in public or making speeches, the people I work with have made it very clear that I am not to have anything that jingles in my pockets. They take away my keys and any change and they usually take my wallet, too.

Sounds like robbery without a gun.

They are usually pretty good about giving it back, but I do notice one staff member is wearing pretty nice ties these days.

In other countries, Japan and Australia to name two, cash is less prominent. Debit and credit and digital transactions are more the norm.

I have always been a gadget guy. I’m interested to read about some of the stuff that is under way right now. Ebay and PayPal were doing a pilot project where it is Bluetoothed to your phone, but your phone never leaves your pocket. Your photo shows up on the till and they determine if it is really you and it just gets charged to your phone. Interesting. I don’t know how well it would work, but I’m willing to try new technology...

Read the complete interview (including the surprise ending!)

- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
- Illustration by Anthony Jenkins
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Mayor Nenshi on what makes Calgary awesome

"stalkers take cool shots"In early September, Mayor Nenshi sat down with Calgary is Awesome to chat about, well, why Calgary is awesome. In a just a short time, the interview covered a wide range of topics from the importance of citizen participation, 3 Things for Calgary, chicken wings, The Avengers, and the year ahead in Council.

You can read the full article here, but here's an excerpt:

Q: You’ve lived in a variety of different cities. What do you find unique about Calgary and Calgarians among the places you’ve lived?

A: One of the things that’s really great about Calgary is that we’re at a really interesting size and a really interesting point in our evolution. You can do anything in the city. The arts scene is amazing, the cultural scene is amazing, but you can still kind of get your head around it – get a sense of what’s the great stuff going on, which I think is particularly exciting.

I was at the Betty Mitchell awards recently, the theatre awards, and I said something I really believe – which is that the quality of the work we put on stage in this city is as good as anywhere in the English-speaking world. It’s something that we can be very, very proud of. So, that’s just part of the great things that are going on in this city.

You know, a survey was done recently that said something like 91 per cent of Calgarians thought the city was on the rise. That sort of optimism is actually pretty unique to Calgary. Those of us who live here don’t always see it, and don’t always see how incredibly welcoming the city is, how easy it is for people to succeed as something unique, but it’s very unique and something we should celebrate.

Q: Speaking of that survey, you guys have done a number of public-input surveys recently – the Route Ahead survey, the food trucks survey, the parks and recreation questionnaire, to name a few. That kind of interaction is very new to Calgary – what has public feedback been like?

A: Really, really, really good. We just won a big international award for the work we’re doing with the budget feedback stuff. To me it’s really important. I always say, “Look. The 13 or 14 people sitting around city council table don’t have all the answers. The 15,000 people working for the city don’t have all the answers. But the 1.1 million people who live here really are the experts.” Everyone’s an expert in their own life, an expert in living in a great city. So I think reaching out to those people, asking “How can we make the city work for you?” is really important.

...

Q: Do you have any advice for the average citizen who wants to improve the city or their community?

A: We have to stop relying on government, or business, or non-profits, or somebody else to make our communities better. Every single one of us has the power in our own hands, our own hearts, our own souls to make the community better. That was really one of my first principles when I started here.

During the 2010 election, people got really engaged in politics, a lot of people for the first time. One of the things I was trying to figure out was “How do we keep that going? How do we keep that positive energy moving?” So I pulled together a group of volunteers and they called themselves the “Mayors Committee on Civic Engagement” – terrible name. They came up with this great idea. I always wear this number three for Three Things for Calgary.

The whole idea behind Three Things for Calgary is that every Calgarian has the power to make the community better. This is the year for every single person to do three things for the community. Maybe big things – you might take on a new volunteer role, join a non-profit, join a board of directors. Or they could be small things. My favourite example is the guy who said “I’m gonna have a barbecue. But I’m going to have it in my front yard instead of my back yard. And I’m going to invite my neighbours who I don’t really know.”

Kids across schools have adopted three things. “I’m going to pick up litter in my school yard, I’m going to be nice to my little brother.” It really matters. If we get this right – these three things by the way, there’s actually a fourth thing. And the fourth thing is that when you finish your three things, you talk about it. Tell people about it. Encourage three other people to do the same. If we do this right, that means there will be three million acts of city building – big ones and small ones – over the course of this year in Calgary. Things that change the city forever. And I think people have the opportunity to say, “Look, if you see something wrong, don’t expect anyone else to fix it. Just fix it. Use your own skills and your own resources and your own past to make things better.”

...

Q: One question that people wanted to know was what is your favourite movie, or if you ever get the chance to go out to the theatre?

A: I’m actually a huge film buff! One of the real problems in this job is that I haven’t had as much time to see as many movies as I normally do. When I was a professor, one year I saw 30 plus movies at the Calgary International Film Festival. So it’s been hard for me.

But this year’s been a little lacklustre! I sort of liked the Avengers. There haven’t been a lot of huge, intellectually stimulating stuff yet. We’re getting into Oscar season now, so it might be a bit better.

I will say, though, that I’ve seen a lot of superhero movies lately and there’s one thing I want to know – what is with all the destruction of urban infrastructure?! I feel like the evil aliens, or warlords, or demigods just don’t think! You have to deliver clean water. How are you gonna do that when you’re blowing up the water mains? When you’re blowing up the streets? How is that subway going to keep going?!

...

Q: Anyway, the question we always like to end off on is – what makes Calgary awesome?

A: So many things make Calgary awesome! The physical environment, the built environment, the public space… but of course, the thing that makes Calgary the most awesome is the people. The attitude of Calgarians about being welcoming, about being open, about helping other people succeed, and just about building a great place together.

Check out the full interview (including a peak at Mayor Nenshi's bobblehead) here.

- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
- Photo by Angie Hung (included because it's also awesome)
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Sadness at the passing of Peter Lougheed

I, like every Albertan of my generation, am a Lougheed baby. I was born the year after he was first elected, and I have never known an Alberta or a Canada that did not benefit from his legacy. We owe him so much: our strong industries; our magnetic cities; our sense of identity within Canada.

He represented the Alberta that drew so many (my parents included) to live and work and thrive here. With him, we became greater as Albertans and as Canadians. On behalf of all the people of Calgary, I express my heartfelt sorrow to Jeanne and the entire Lougheed family. He will be dearly missed by all. 

Remember the line from Christopher Wren's epitaph: “If you seek his monument - look around you.”

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Mayor Nenshi on the Canadian Infrastructure Report Card


Today, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FMC) released the Canadian Infrastructure Report Card. The report can be found here.

Below is a statement from Mayor Nenshi about that report and what it means for Calgarians.
This report shows that infrastructure across the country is a major issue for all cities. In some cities, infrastructure needs to be upgraded and maintained, and, in other cities such as Calgary, it must be built for a growing population.

Calgary in a better position than much of the country when it comes to drinking water and wastewater collection and treatment because of major investments over the past decade. However, those investments created enormous debt for The City of Calgary which we are currently addressing. And, in a growing city like Calgary, transportation and public transit continue to be major priorities.

Cities are responsible for 60 per cent of the infrastructure in Canada, yet we lack the long-term, sustainable funding they need to build and maintain this infrastructure. In 2014, $2 billion in federal funding for municipal infrastructure will run out and a new federal plan must be designed to help communities like Calgary meet infrastructure challenges while creating jobs, building a strong economy, and maintaining a high quality of life for all Canadians. 
This is not about asking for a hand-out from the federal government. The true fiscal imbalance in our country is between the cities and the other levels of government. Calgarians send $10 billion more in tax dollars to the federal government than we receive back in all federal services and investment. It’s time we received a fairer share so we can build the infrastructure our great city needs to become even better. A new, long-term federal infrastructure plan will help do just that.
- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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Tackling big issues during an amazing year

Naheed Nenshi - formalAfter a brief summer hiatus, I've returned to the Calgary Herald with my monthly column. Here is the full text of my September column:

What a summer it has been. I remember standing on a stage in Olympic Plaza on New Year’s Eve, talking about how 2012 would be the year of Calgary. Has this ever proven to be true — especially over the past few months.

The centennial Calgary Stampede brought the city together as an amazing celebration of community. And we continue to celebrate the 100th birthdays of institutions like City of Calgary Recreation and the Calgary Public Library. Festivals like the Calgary Folk Music Festival and Globalfest had their best year ever.

And everywhere, Calgarians are feeling great about their city. According to a recent Angus Reid survey, Calgarians feel they have the highest quality of life of any major city, and an astonishing 90 per cent of us think this is a city on the rise. Heck, we’re even happy with our city government — the number of satisfied people is 20 percentage points higher than in Vancouver and almost triple that of Montreal.

I was reminded of all of this when I took a brief vacation with some old friends to the London Olympics (just a holiday for me, minimal official duties, no taxpayer funding). It was wonderful to see that great city at its absolute best and to feel a real unity of purpose among the people.

Interestingly, one rarely heard the word “volunteer” during the Games. The 70,000 plus people who gave freely of their time (more than 240,000 applied) were called Games Makers, because it was truly them who made the Games and who made, and continue to make, their community.

Even more interesting, 40 per cent of the Games Makers had never volunteered for anything before. I know that, having caught the bug, they will continue to work for the betterment of their community, just as all the Team ’88 volunteers did here in Calgary.

Now, London was starting from a different point. They needed the Games, in some ways, to bring their community together, and to provide a sense of optimism in difficult times.

Thankfully, our times are not as difficult here, and we are very lucky to have such a rich history of volunteerism and community-building on which to build.

So, while big events like the Olympics can be galvanizing (and certainly many Calgarians have been suggesting it may be time for another Games bid — something worth a broader discussion), we can still be working together every day to continue to make our city better and better.

That’s the impetus behind the 3 Things for Calgary program. A group of dedicated volunteers is encouraging all Calgarians to do three things for the community this year. Have you thought about yours yet? Remember, they could be big — like joining the board of your local community association or taking on a new volunteer role — or small, like raking your neighbour’s leaves or inviting people on your street over for some hot cider.

The important thing is to share; don’t be shy about how you’re making the city better. Talk about it, and encourage others to do the same. Thousands of Calgarians have committed to their three things, and I hope you will as well.

That same spirit of improvement will also inform the upcoming legislative session at City Hall. This fall will be about putting the pieces in place for significant long-term change. Over the next months, you’ll be hearing a lot about a new city charter — a negotiation with the province to recognize the importance of Calgary and give the municipal government the powers we need to provide essential services. If it goes well, cities will see a streamlined and more responsive government, with a minimum of inter-government bickering and buck passing.

You’ll also hear a lot about fundamental reform in two of our most important departments — Calgary Transit and planning. Transit is currently in the middle of a major program — RouteAhead — to create, for the first time, an integrated 30-year capital, operational and customer service plan. We welcome your ideas, and I encourage you to visit routeahead.ca, where you can be the director of transit and tell us how you would spend the budget. Or look for the colourful RouteAhead bus around town and on your route.

You’ll also have the chance to give us your ideas on how to make our planning process work better and make it easier to build great stuff. More to come on that later.

2012 has certainly been the year of Calgary. But we’re not done yet. Have a great autumn!

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Interview: Mayor Nenshi and the coming year

Mayor Nenshi and David Grey 

As the autumn 2012 legislative season fires up, Mayor Nenshi visited CBC Radio to speak with David Grey about the Mayor's priorities for the final year of his current term. Here's the full interview:



- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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I want you... to volunteer for a City committee!



Being a volunteer for one of The City of Calgary's many committees, boards, or commissions can be a great way to share your talents and give back to Calgary. By being on a committee, you can have important input into the decision-making process while also networking with other great community-builders. And, as I say in the video, it might just be one of your 3 Things for Calgary.

We are looking for Calgarians right now (deadline is September 21st at 4:30 p.m.) to apply to serve on one of these committees. Every fall, positions open up that need to be filled. This year, some of the committees with vacancies include:
  • Public Art Board
  • Audit Committee
  • Calgary Parking Authority
  • Saddledome Foundation
  • eGovernment Strategy Advisory Committee
  • Calgary Airport Authority
  • and 10 others!
Please visit City's website and volunteer to put your skills and expertise to work for Calgary. My City Council colleagues and I truly value the input from citizens who volunteer on these committees. I look forward to working with you!

- Mayor Naheed Nenshi
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Airport Tunnel on time and on budget and turned over to Airport Authority


During the summer, Mayor Nenshi met with the many people building the Airport Trail Tunnel over burgers at an on-site barbecue. His message to them: "You're doing great work to keep Calgary moving. But I still only want to ever hear four words about this project: On. Time. On. Budget." Today, The City of Calgary released great news about the on time and on budget progress of this major piece of much-needed infrastructure...

Tunnel under new runway turned over to Airport Authority


[click here to see visual update]

The City of Calgary officially “turned over” the first piece of the Airport Trail tunnel—the runway section—to the Calgary Airport Authority.

The City agreed to hand over this section to the Airport Authority by August 31 so work can begin on constructing the runway over top of the tunnel.

The 620-metre long tunnel structure is being constructed to accommodate six lanes of traffic, with the provision for a future transitway, and will extend Airport Trail from Barlow Trial to 36 Street N.E.

“This is a major milestone as we move toward the completion of the tunnel,” said Gordon Stewart, Director of Transportation Infrastructure. “Project managers and work crews have done an outstanding job in meeting the tight construction schedule requirements and maintaining budget.”

The walls and roof of the tunnel are being poured in sections—50 in total. Each tunnel section requires 850 cubic metres of concrete which takes 80 trucks to deliver in a 12-hour period. As of September 4, 41 sections of the tunnel shell have been formed, meaning that nearly 35,000 cubic metres of concrete has been poured since the first tunnel section was completed early this year.

All sections of the concrete walls and roof will be poured by this fall.

Prior to the turn over date the other work that needed to be completed was waterproofing and backfilling the concrete sides of the tunnel walls up to a level where the runway can be built over top the tunnel.

Along with backfilling the concrete sides of the tunnel walls, the other elements that need to be done prior to full completion include electrical and mechanical work, installation of lighting and road construction inside the tunnel.

Most of the work on the roadways will take place in 2013. The entire project is expected to be completed by May 2014.

City Council approved a budget of $294.8 million for the entire project.

- 30 -

Onward/The City is strategically building up its road network to make travelling easier while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. I 2012-14 Council’s Fiscal Plan: Focus road investments on chokepoints in the existing road network.

Media Backgrounder – Airport Trail Tunnel project
September 5, 2012

Overall scope of project
  • The Airport Trail tunnel is a 620-metre tunnel that will run under the new Calgary International Airport runway, taxiway and service roads.
  • The tunnel structure is being constructed to accommodate six lanes of traffic, with the provision for a future transitway.
  • The project includes extending Airport Trail from Barlow Trial to 36 Street N.E. as a six-lane roadway, and widening Airport Trail between Deerfoot Trail and Barlow Trail from four to six lanes.

Current status of project
  • The City has met its obligations to the Calgary Airport Authority to “turn over” the tunnel portion under the new runway by August 31, 2012.
  • More than 80 percent of the tunnel concrete infrastructure has now been poured, resulting in nearly 35,000 cubic metres of concrete being poured since the beginning of the year (first pour was Feb. 24).
  • The pouring of concrete will continue into the fall.
  • Besides the pouring of the tunnel walls and roof, The City also has to make sure that waterproofing and backfilling of the tunnel walls is also completed so the Airport Authority can build the new runway over the tunnel.

Timeline schedule of project
February 2011 – City Council approved construction of the Airport Trail tunnel
July 2011 – excavation began
February 2012 – concrete pour of the first of 50 tunnel walls and roof sections
August 31, 2012 – hand over to Calgary Airport Authority (CAA) of tunnel under the future runway
Fall 2012 – anticipated completion of tunnel concrete work
Oct. 31, 2012 – anticipated hand over to CAA of tunnel under taxiways
2013 – majority of roadwork construction will take place
June 30, 2013 – hand over to CAA of entire tunnel
May 2014 – project completion.

Project budget
City Council approved a budget of $294.8 million for the entire project.

Other construction highlights/interesting facts relating to this project
  • The length of the tunnel (620 metres) is approximately the length of four-and-a-half CFL football fields.
  • The tunnel will be 36 metres wide and the depth from the runway to the road surface will be 12 metres.
  • Over 600,000 cubic metres of earth material and rock has been excavated.
  • The excavation was approximately 15 metres deep by approximately 50 metres wide.
  • The project includes the installation of underground utilities. Over 2.5 kilometres of water and storm water deep utilities have been installed.
  • Approximately 45 kilometres of electrical conduit will be installed.
  • 12,000 Tonnes of reinforcing steel will be installed. This is equivalent to about 30 747 airplanes.
  • Concrete work on the structure itself began with the installation of footings followed by forming and casting of the tunnel walls and roof. The first concrete pour for the tunnel walls and roof took place on February 24, 2012. A total of 50 concrete sections will be poured.
  • Each tunnel section requires 850 cubic metres of concrete which takes 80 trucks to deliver in a 12-hour period.
Current Calgary Transit service to/from airport
Calgary Transit provides bus service (route 300) to/from the downtown core to the airport terminal, route 100 to/from the McKnight-Westwinds Ctrain station, as well as route 430.

- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team
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Mayor Nenshi's meetings: August 2012

Office sign photo

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

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

August meetings included:
  • Lachlin McKinnon, Attainable Homes Calgary - August 1, 2012
  • Y.K. Ju, SKEC - August 2, 2012
  • J.D Choe, Sunlake Co. Ltd - August 2, 2012
  • George Brookman, Transformation Calgary - August 2, 2012
  • Mohamud Zaver, Ismaili Council - August 2, 2012
  • Malik Talub, Ismaili Council - August 2, 2012
- Posted by Daorcey from Mayor Nenshi's team