Connect with us

Alberta

This is what wasting taxpayer dollars sounds like

Published

2 minute read

From the Canadian Taxpayers Federation

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on the City of Calgary to scrap the Calgary Arts Development Authority after it spent $65,000 on a telephone line to the Bow River.

ā€œIf someone wants to listen to a river, they can go sit next to one, but the City of Calgary should not force taxpayers to pay for this,ā€ said Kris Sims, CTF Alberta Director. ā€œIf phoning a river floats your boat, you do you, but don’t force your neighbour to pay for your art choices.ā€

The City of Calgary spent $65,194 of taxpayers’ money for anĀ art projectĀ dubbed ā€œReconnecting to the Bowā€ to set up a telephone line so people could call the Bow River and listen to the sound of water.

The project is running between September 2024 and December 2025,Ā according to documentsĀ obtained by the CTF.

The art installation is a rerun of a previous version set up back in 2014.

EmailsĀ obtainedĀ by the CTF show the bureaucrats responsible for the newest version of the project wanted a new local 403 area code phone number instead of an 1-855 number to ā€œgive the authority back to the Bow,ā€ because ā€œthe original number highlighted a proprietary and commercial relationship with the river.ā€

Further correspondence obtained by the CTF shows the city did not want its logo included in the displays, stating the ā€œCity of Calgary (does NOT want to have its logo on the artworks or advertisements).ā€

Taxpayers pay aboutĀ $19 millionĀ per year for the Calgary Arts Development Authority. That’s equivalent to the total property tax bill for about 7,000 households.

Calgary bureaucrats also expressed concern the project ā€œmay not be received well, perceived as a waste of money or simply foolish.ā€

ā€œThat city hall employee was pointing out the obvious: ThisĀ isĀ a foolish waste of taxpayers’ money and this slush fund should be scrapped,ā€ said Sims. ā€œArtists should work with willing donors for their projects instead of mooching off city hall and forcing taxpayers to pay for it.ā€

Todayville is a digital media and technology company. We profile unique stories and events in our community. Register and promote your community event for free.

Follow Author

Alberta

Alberta’s E3 Lithium delivers first battery-grade lithium carbonate

Published on

E3 Lithium employees walk through the company’s lithium pilot plant near Olds

From the Canadian Energy Centre

E3 Lithium milestone advances critical mineral for batteries and electrification

A new Alberta facility has produced its first battery-grade lithium carbonate, showcasing a technology that could unlock Canada’s largest resources of a critical mineral powering the evolving energy landscape.

In an unassuming quonset hut in a field near Olds, Calgary-based E3 Lithium’s demonstration plant uses technology to extract lithium from an ocean of ā€œbrine waterā€ that has sat under Alberta’s landscape along with oil and gas for millions of years.

Lithium is one of six critical minerals the Government of Canada hasĀ prioritizedĀ for their potential to spur economic growth and their necessity as inputs for important products.

ā€œThe use for lithium is now mainly in batteries,ā€ said E3 Lithium CEO Chris Doornbos.

ā€œEverything we use in our daily lives that has a battery is now lithium ion: computers, phones, scooters, cars, battery storage, power walls in your house.ā€

A vial of lithium at the E3 Lithium demonstration plant near Olds, Alta. CP Images photo

Doornbos sees E3 as a new frontier in energy and mineral exploration in Alberta, using a resource that has long been there, sharing the geologic space with oil and gas.

ā€œ[Historically], oil and water came out together, and they separated the oil from the water,ā€ he said.

ā€œWe don’t have oil. We take the lithium out of the water and put the water back.ā€

Lithium adds to Canada’s natural resource strength — the country’s reserves rank sixth in the world,Ā according toĀ Natural Resources Canada.

About 40 per cent of these reserves are in Alberta’s Bashaw District, home to the historic Leduc oilfield, where E3 built its new demonstration facility.

ā€œIt’s all in our Devonian rocks,ā€ Doonbos said. ā€œThe Devonian Stack is a carbonate reef complex that would have looked like the Great Barrier Reef 400 million years ago. That’s where the lithium is.ā€

Funded in part by theĀ Government of CanadaĀ and the Government of Alberta viaĀ Alberta InnovatesĀ andĀ Emissions Reduction AlbertaĀ (ERA), the project aims to demonstrate that the Alberta reserve of lithium can be extracted and commercialized for battery production around the world.

E3 announced it had produced battery-grade lithium carbonate just over two weeks afterĀ commissioning beganĀ in early September.

Inside E3 Lithium’s demonstration facility near Olds, Alta. Photo for the Canadian Energy Centre

In a statement, ERA celebrated the milestone of the opening of the facility as Alberta and Canada seek to find their place in the global race for more lithium as demand for the mineral increases.

ā€œBy supporting the first extraction facility in Olds, we’re helping reduce innovation risk, generate critical data, and pave the way for a commercial-scale lithium production right here in Alberta,ā€ ERA said.

ā€œThe success from this significant project helps position Alberta as a global player in the critical minerals supply chain, driving the global electrification revolution with locally sourced lithium.ā€

With the first phase of the demonstration facility up and running, E3 hasĀ received regulatory permitsĀ to proceed with a second phase that involves drilling a production and injection well to confirm brine flow rates and reservoir characteristics. This will support designs for a full-scale commercial facility.

Lithium has been highlighted by theĀ Alberta Energy RegulatorĀ (AER) as an emerging resource in the province.

The AERĀ projectsĀ Alberta’s lithium output will grow from zero in 2024 to 12,300 tonnes by 2030 and nearly 15,000 tonnes by 2034. E3 believes it will beat these timeframes with the right access to project financing.

E3 has been able to leverage Alberta’s regulatory framework around the drilling of wells to expand into extraction of lithium brine.

ā€œThe regulator understands intimately what we are doing,ā€ Doornbos said.

ā€œThey permit these types of wells and this type of operation every day. That’s a huge advantage to Alberta.ā€

Continue Reading

Alberta

In Federal vs Provincial Battles, Ontario In No Longer A Great Ally For Alberta

Published on

Alberta Could Make A Deal With Bill Davis’ Ontario. Just One Problem.

Last month my friend Steve Paikin and I did a public appearance at the lovely Oshawa Town Square, recalling the highlights of our careers and the stories behind the stories. One of Steve’s stories was the subject of one of his 847 books, Bill Davis, the former premier of Ontario from 1971-1985.

He came to power the year our family moved to Ontario, so we watched his arc in power, from centrist Conservative to key figure in the interminable constitutional wrangles of the time. He typified a no-drama approach long before Barack Obama adopted it. His most controversial move was granting equal funding to Catholic schools. And smoking a pipe.

Which led me to ask Steve, the Most Ontario Man In The World, if it was still the same ā€œplace to stand, place to growā€ province that Davis ruled. If anyone should know, the former TV Ontario stalwart was likely that person. Steve said that, generally, he felt that it was similar to what existed in the 70s and 80s. Obviously there were changes, but the mood was similar. After all, they’d elected Conservative Doug Ford three times.

My response? That would make Alberta very happy. Alberta could make a deal with Bill Davis’ Ontario. Why? A Bill Davis Ontario would never tell another province to keep its oil in the ground, to hobble its economy to suit climate obsessions in his own province. A Bill Davis Ontario would support nation-building projects like trans-Canada pipelines not forcing Alberta to sell their oil at a discount to the U.S. A Bill Davis Ontario would never support gun seizures from law-abiding owners.

With respect, Steve, the Bill Davis Ontario is no more. There is no deal to be made at the moment. It is a place captured by the globalist fevers of Great Thunberg climate. It is a province in the thrall of liberal indigenous guilt marinated by its teachers and media. It is a province whose real-estate bubble is poisoning the national economy.

It is a province where politicians and leaders struggle to define a woman. Worst of all, Ontario returned an incompetent trust fund flibberty-gibbet not once, but three times as prime minister. The damage to the nation has been incalculable. Now they’ve elected his economic advisor.

And yet many of our Eastern friends believe that we are the ones who’ve have changed. They tell us we have drunk the cowboy Kool-aid and are now irredeemable. What they mean is, you’re become a traitor to your class. ā€œDown the rabbit holeā€. Cast out for being a Bill Davis centrist.

But we have not changed. Much of Alberta’s culture has not changed significantly, despite an NDP episode in government from 2012-15. Bill Davis, who died in 2021, would not find much change outside of the immigrants dropped on it by Justin Trudeau were he to visit today.

But eastern Canada? The whiplash changes might best be summed up by Vince Gasparro, the Liberal MP for a midtown Toronto riding, claiming that Canada’s economy is swell compared to other nations. To which the interim parliamentary budget officer Jason Jacques said just because someone else is 450 pounds and sick doesn’t mean an obese 350-pound person is healthy.

Forecasting a conservative $68.5 billion deficit, Jacques called the economy ā€œunsustainableā€ and said the nation is at the precipice. ā€œWe’re at a point where, based upon our numbers, things cannot continue as they are, and I think everybody knows that,ā€ Jacques said, He was immediately attacked by Liberal bot-world claiming he’s angling for a job with the Conservatives.

The closing of the Laurentian mind reflects what happened to the NDP, the party of Tommy Douglas. Once a national lean-left collection of union workers, farmers, culture figures and academics, it took its lead from the avuncular Ed Broadbent, Audrey McLaughlin and even Jack Layton. Socialist with a friendly face. The leaders calmed the Marxist fevers of their radical fringe.

Then, in the aftermath of Layton’s death, the party convulsed. The union workersĀ  and farmers were pushed out by radicals drunk on virtue. Under the DEI hire Jagmeet Singh they purged common sense, leaving Liberals to scoop up their less unhinged members. The survivors of Jagmeet wore keffiyehs in Parliament and predicted environmental doom. The party became irrelevant in 95 percent of the nation.

Their reward was a descent from 103 seats in the 2011 election to non-party status with just seven seats and six percent of the vote this year. While they make noises of relevance, they are now like the Monty Python ā€œBring out yer’ deadā€ skit in Search For The Holy Grail.

Which is gravy for the Carney Liberals who can now talk centre but govern as far left as it wishes. Which the Toronto Star says may soon include criminalizing residential school ā€œdenialism.ā€ The author Michelle Good says that questioning the unsupported tales of murdered babies is just like ā€œholocaust denialā€.

The NDP collapse mirrors what is happening to the Democratic Party in the U.S. By design or by accident Donald Trump has bludgeoned them into assuming most of the policies that are now putting a torpedo into the NDP. Defending crime, endorsing unfettered illegal immigration, patronizing Hamas and other bad actors on the world stage, Balkan economics. Hollywood preening.

While the reviled Trump remains unrepentant, Democrats continue to sink in the polls. Married to California values they’re at 28 percent approval in the polls, and none of their potential 2028 presidential hopefuls is adding anyone to the base.

So the DEMs leadership intimidates its followers with this fatal equation, claiming to be the party of the future. There are a scarce few who remind their colleagues of what’s been lost. Pennsylvania senator John Fetterman who won his crucial seat despite enduring a stroke during the election run-up, is sounding warnings, however.

ā€œUnchecked extreme rhetoric, like labels as Hitler or fascist, will foment more extreme outcomes,ā€ Fetterman wrote. ā€œPolitical violence is always wrong — no exceptions. We must all turn the temperature down.ā€

ā€œAbsolutely, it’s a reward for Hamas,ā€ he said after Canada and other nations recognized a Palestinian state. ā€œThat’s going to be their narrative. They’re going to claim ‘That’s why we did 10/7. That birthed our nation,’ and I can’t ever give that to them.ā€

But his fellow party members are too engrossed in Jimmy Kimmel’s veneration at BlueSky, the Woke site, to notice that their base has deserted them. Canada’s liberals looking over the edge still get their reinforcement from like-minded people and a bribed media. But as Jacques says, the end is nigh, and everyone knows it.

Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public BroadcasterĀ  A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada’s top television sports broadcaster, his new book Deal With It: The Trades That Stunned The NHL And Changed hockey is now available on Amazon. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft Years In NHL History, his previous book with his son Evan, was voted the seventh-best professional hockey book of all time by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted sixth best on the same list, and is available via brucedowbigginbooks.ca.

Continue Reading

Trending

X