occidentalcapital
Senior Member
A few pages back someone with inside knowledge said this was moving forward. I don't know if you all should be so negative about it.
Inside in the premiers office or a cabinet ministers office is different than inside knowledge in Alberta Infrastructure short of maybe a Deputy ministers office. There are still a lot of issues with the site itself that won't be solved overnight.A few pages back someone with inside knowledge said this was moving forward. I don't know if you all should be so negative about it.
As I've said elsewhere on this board in relation to other projects, I go based on past performance. I'm not the only one who fears that this government--which feels that it "owes" Edmonton nothing given that the capital voted entirely NDP--will find a way to delay or postpone this project indefinitely, attributing it to the state of the economy, to increases in material and labour costs, to competing needs elsewhere in the province, to the war in Gaza, to the fact that the Frasier reboot is so terrible, to the fact that even if the hospital were built we wouldn't have enough doctors and nurses to staff it, etc. etc.A few pages back someone with inside knowledge said this was moving forward. I don't know if you all should be so negative about it.
Probably because UCP made a big dog and pony show about doing earthworks on the site in 2021, and since then have done virtually zero aside from assign some vague budget figures for it that they'll slash the second all the juicy resource royalty revenue dries up.A few pages back someone with inside knowledge said this was moving forward. I don't know if you all should be so negative about it.
It never bothered the Klein Conservatives when patients were jammed in the hallways in hospitals during the worst of the cuts in the 1990s. People were dying in corridors and it didn't seem to make any difference...nor did it to the public, who continued to vote Conservative solidly until 2015.I get that there are delays and other competing political priorities, but at some point further delay becomes negligence and neglect. Enough with the excuses now.
It really needs to start to move ahead quickly now, the city isn't going to stop growing while the Alberta government gets its s*it together and the over capacity problems are only going to get worse.
If the politicians and bureaucrats can't grasp that, headlines of death in the future will be blamed on them. I hope at least they do not want that.
As I've said elsewhere on this board in relation to other projects, I go based on past performance. I'm not the only one who fears that this government--which feels that it "owes" Edmonton nothing given that the capital voted entirely NDP--will find a way to delay or postpone this project indefinitely, attributing it to the state of the economy, to increases in material and labour costs, to competing needs elsewhere in the province, to the war in Gaza, to the fact that the Frasier reboot is so terrible, to the fact that even if the hospital were built we wouldn't have enough doctors and nurses to staff it, etc. etc.
I'll believe it's moving forward when I see contracts signed, a definitive timeline issued and actual, significant activity on the project site.