BASE
Active Member
Such a sad state of affairs. I never see police around.
The western half of the dead mall desperately needs to go to make the area around this station feel like less of a black hole for vibrancy. My girlfriend and I were boarding the train here and she said she’d love to see it razed and converted to a new park (that should be fenced off for private access to prevent encampments) because there needs to be more green space downtown.Such a sad state of affairs. I never see police around.
What action is the city supposed to take? Homelessness, addiction, and social services are a provincial responsibility. The judicial system is a provincial responsibility. Housing is a provincial responsibility. Every time the city tries to do anything about any of that, the province tells it to stay in its lane. So what could a "Mark Carney-type mayor" do in reality? Why don't we need a "Mark Carney-type premier"? The province has the fiscal capacity, the resources, and most importantly, the actual mandate. How about they stay in their lane and spend more time addressing judicial backlogs, shelter gaps and overcrowding, and addictions issues, and spend less time policing where cities build bike lanes and where public libraries put books?God, the Valley line DT is such a mess.
'Take transit' City Hall says.
I say, 'You first, Mayor and Councillors' - daily, with no entourage. Let's see what would happen then.
The truth is, nothing is going to change. The city will blame the province, the province will sit on its hands and the city, under the constant pressure of social justice warriors (and many on council sit in that category) will continue to enable the situation. No tough love, no telling other northern communities to take on some responsibility etc etc. No zero tolerance because of 'feelings' or whatever other BS. And the great circle of nothing changes continues.
(And please spare me your holier-than-thouness. I have suffered and continue to deal with trauma in my own personal life, setback after setback. But I do my best each day to be a productive member of society. In fact, I would argue that seeing our city turn into one big homeless shelter with open-air drug use is 'triggering' for people like me!!)
The reality is, the drugs out there are brutal. Compelled treatment is the only course of action here.
As for the cleanliness, that is all on City Hall. Since Donny boy's days, there's been this constant talk of the urban realm etc etc. But, they sure don't know how to follow through; and always default to the need to raise taxes to get 'er done.
No: reallocate resources. How many programs and services does the city provide that's NOT part of the core responsibility of a municipal government? Start there. But being 'progressives', there is no way this council will make the necessary cuts.
What this city needs is a Mark Carney type mayor; someone to cut through the platitudes and take action.
I am sad what Edmonton has become.
Because there's no room in the jails to hold all of them, so after their initial processing they get released until a judge can finally hear their case. That's a provincial thing. As for calling out other communities, Edmonton has been but that doesn't mean they'll listen. And again, that's just talk and not the action you want to see.How about a zero-tolerance approach. This is not about 'targeting' the vulnerable. There are plenty who are living rough who are not bothering anyone. But why, for gods sake, are we as a society allowing open air drug use? How about calling out the communities outside Edmonton who are quietly sending their vulnerable to the city, so they don't have to deal with it?
Sure, I'd love to see more cleaning. But we also need to acknowledge that it's a glorified game of whack-a-mole so long as there's no place for those people to go - be it shelters or jails. Again, that's a provincial thing. All the city can do is hire enough janitors to follow every homeless person with a broom and mop.As for the cleanliness and grime, yes, the city can and should do more. I don't have to explain that.
Well, let's focus on Alberta. Where is our promised "compassionate intervention centre" to treat addicts who don't want to be treated? Where's our recovery community for those who do want treatment? Why don't we have enough shelter or jail space for those who need them? Why are we getting so mad at the city for not mopping up the water fast enough while giving the province a pass for leaving the floodgates open?As for the province, yes, you're 100% right. They are terrible. But it should be noted that in B.C. at one time, they had a left-leaning council, an NDP provincial government and Trudeau in Ottawa. That was all three levels of government going ALL IN on the academia perspective to deal with drug use etc. And - last I checked - it didn't work at all.
If we don't want mobile shelters, we need more permanent shelters. That is a provincial responsibility. They love preaching about staying in one's lane, and it is well past time that they practice what they preach.Well, all of that will be for nothing, if the Valley line turns into a mobile homeless shelter with open air drug use. The same goes for the stations/ stops and pedway connections.
You do realize if it brings social disorder et al along with it, that will be the 'transformation' that people will talk about.Bottom line... VLW is going to make a big transformative improvement to Edmonton vis-a-vis transportation modes.