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CBC Calgary | The Road Ahead

CBC Calgary | The Road Ahead

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Opinion

Hot desks, beer halls, foosball and more: How 5 old downtown towers transformed to entice smaller startups

Five of Calgary's earliest skyscrapers quietly have been transformed from stuffy corporate headquarters to more contemporary, fun places to work and play. Opinion writer Richard White strolls by to see how they've done in the conversions to lure smaller, startup tenants.
Opinion

The unvaccinated 'deserve what they get'? Not in my Calgary

Anila Lee Yuen, head of Calgary's Centre for Newcomers, pleads for understanding as Alberta debates how to deal with those who refuse to get vaccinated against COVID-19.
Opinion

I'm a pastor; in the face of genocide, the soul of my church is threatened

Lutheran pastor Ryan Andersen gives his view on the journey required for Canadian churches as newly identified graves put the trauma of residential schools in sharp relief.
Opinion

Despite recent failures in the oil sector, not all government investment is bad

The recent string of issues with Alberta government investments calls public investments into question, but each case holds key lessons on how to ensure future public investments benefit the public, says macro energy systems researcher and assistant professor Sara Hastings-Simon.
Opinion

Why Canada needs universal public housing

To deal with the systemic discrimination that LGBTQ2S+ and other marginalized Canadians face, universal public housing, just like universal health care, is necessary, says law student Charlotte Dalwood.
Opinion

To solve the climate crisis, let's have a race first to net zero wins

No one does innovation and improvement like Canadas energy industry, that's why I'm placing my bet on the oil and gas sector to win the race to net zero, says Michael Binnion, the executive director of the Modern Miracle Network.
Opinion

Why the Jasons Kenney of the past would thunder over Alberta's 'Bitumen Boondoggle'

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has done many things in government that would come as a great surprise to the Jasons Kenney of the past, but perhaps none so much as the decision to purchase a 50 per cent interest in the Sturgeon Refinery, writes Andrew Leach, an energy and environmental economist at the University of Alberta.
Opinion

Downtown Calgary's biggest issue is safety, not empty office buildings

The city can add all the murals, banners, hanging baskets, street furniture, public art and public spaces it wants in the downtown, but first they are going to have to deal with the safety and comfort issue, says urban affairs writer Richard White.
Opinion

High oil prices a potential boon for beleaguered Alberta

High oil prices means more than a smaller deficit, says economist Trevor Tombe. Higher oil prices may generate higher rates of economic growth which means higher incomes and more jobs for Albertans.
Opinion

Here's why 'BIPOC' doesn't do it for me

My issue with the term people of colour wasnt just that it was lumping all non-white people together, its with the term itself, which is why BIPOC doesnt do it for me, says Calgary writer Tomi Ajele.
Opinion

For Canadians with disabilities, supports are often too little, too late

The passage and rollout of pandemic benefits acknowledging the extraordinary costs and unique hardships facing individuals with disabilities and their families has been inadequate and slow, says Amelia M. Kiddle.
Analysis

The dollars and sense behind Calgary's plan to save downtown

The city hopes that it can create new investments and lure cash from other orders of government in a $1 billion effort to transform downtown from a hollowed out core of office towers to a more vibrant community.
First Person

Looking back on a year of COVID for high schoolers

It feels like no one can settle into a routine or get comfortable, because we are always looking over our shoulder waiting for new restrictions to be announced or a classroom exposure that will put us into isolation, says Calgary Grade 11 student Priya Migneault.
Opinion

Supervised drug consumption site seemed too good to be true. It turned out it was

Decision makers preach a single road to wellness; one that is known only to them. They will share it impose it actually because they hold the power and make the rules, says addictions medicine practitioner Dr. Bonnie Larson.
Opinion

Net zero by 2050: So easy to say, so hard to do

Net zero by 2050 is the most ambitious, expensive and complex restructuring of an essential component of human existence in history, says Calgary writer and oil service executive David Yager.
Opinion

Alberta's economic recovery lags behind the rest of Canada, but there is room for optimism

Oil and gas is a key reason for Alberta's lagging recovery, according to economist Trevor Tombe. Total compensation in the mining and oil and gas extraction sector is over $85 million lower in March 2021 than it was that same month a year earlier.
Opinion

How the inspiration for Jason Kenney's inquiry into un-Albertan activities came to be so (mis)understood

Vivian Krause, the erstwhile detective who inspired Premier Jason Kenney's beleaguered inquiry into un-Albertan activities, is back in the news insisting she never said U.S. commercial interests were behind a campaign against the oilsands. The confusion lies in that what she's said isn't what people heard, writes economist Andrew Leach.
Analysis

Why Calgary's betting $450M it can convince owners of empty towers to change

The City of Calgary is making a complex gamble that its financial carrot will spur owners and developers of vacant downtown office towers to take a leap that almost none of them have taken on their own.
Opinion

Crunching the numbers: A test case for converting a Calgary office tower into apartments

It will be interesting to see if the private sector can make the numbers work with the help of the citys new subsidy program to convert old office buildings into new market housing, says Richard White, who writes about Calgary's urban development.
Opinion

Why Canada needs to recognize a charter right to the city

Opportunities are concentrated in large urban centres, but with rising housing costs, the ability of those without financial means to pursue these opportunities is increasingly limited. The solution is to read a right to the city into the charter, says law student Charlotte Dalwood.
Opinion

Alberta's Jason Kenney put down a caucus revolt. But he got hurt in the process

Until the COVID-19 pandemic has been brought under control and Jason Kenney improves his polling and mitigates the internal fissures within the United Conservative Party, the Alberta premier will remain susceptible to further caucus revolts, says political scientist Duane Bratt.
Opinion

CBC poll: Results give us an idea of who the vaccine hesitant in Alberta really are

The most-important factor when it comes to vaccine hesitancy is populism, according to a new poll commissioned by CBC News. The most-populist respondents have a 50/50 chance of being vaccine hesitant whereas the least populist have only an eight per cent chance, says data scientist John Santos.
Opinion

CBC poll: Looking beyond the stereotypes of rural Albertans and pandemic restrictions

It is too easy to exaggerate regional differences and make sweeping narratives about people based solely on where they live, says political scientist Melanee Thomas.
Opinion

Moving Red Deer's shelter out of downtown core will not solve problems of homelessness

Red Deer city council believes relocating its shelter to the suburbs will make the downtown safer. It won't, says Dr. S. Monty Ghosh.
Opinion

Exodus of Vancouver developers should be red flag for Calgary

The west coast contingent was so dominant, I heard Calgarys downtown referred to as Vancouver East a few years ago. However, some Vancouver developers have quietly begun to leave, says Richard White, who writes about Calgary's urban development.
Opinion

CBC poll: Some heartening data about vaccines in Alberta, but intransigence remains

Polling data shows that Albertans who say they will refuse to take a vaccine are more likely to be conservative, less educated, and pessimistic about the financial future.
Opinion

U.S. climate summit: Canada needs new and better policies, not another round of target bingo

The fundamental problem with agreeing to reduce our emissions by the same percentage as the U.S. is that wed require more stringent policies to reach that outcome, says economist Andrew Leach.
Opinion

CBC poll results underline how much at stake in upcoming municipal elections

It remains to be seen what impact the UCP strategy of putting an equalization referendum on the ballot will have on conservative voter turnout. The future of the big city councils, and their relationship to the provincial government, may hinge on that question, says political scientist Duane Bratt.

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