TAS
Senior Member
Both Sohi and the premier on Ryan Jespersen Show today.
As is often the case politicians try to take credit for the good things such as increased housing starts in Edmonton and blame others for the bad things, such as property tax increases way above inflation rates.Both Sohi and the premier on Ryan Jespersen Show today.
City of Prisons doesn't have quite the ring to it as another slogan, but perhaps dumping ground for Alberta's social problems does.‘The city of jails’: Disproportionate number of inmates released in Edmonton, report finds
Inmates released from prison disproportionately call Edmonton home afterwards, according to a recent report to city council.
It’s partly because Edmonton is home to a large number of correctional facilities: Edmonton Institution, the Remand Centre, and various medium- or minimum-security institutions. It has one of the highest rates of correctional institutions per capita in Canada, the report outlines.
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Makes me wonder: why isn’t it a policy to automatically ship inmates back to their communities of origin as soon as their released from prison? I’m kind of a NIMBY when it comes to ex-convicts‘The city of jails’: Disproportionate number of inmates released in Edmonton, report finds
Inmates released from prison disproportionately call Edmonton home afterwards, according to a recent report to city council.
It’s partly because Edmonton is home to a large number of correctional facilities: Edmonton Institution, the Remand Centre, and various medium- or minimum-security institutions. It has one of the highest rates of correctional institutions per capita in Canada, the report outlines.
View attachment 621047
‘The city of jails’: Disproportionate number of inmates released in Edmonton, report finds
Inmates released from prison disproportionately call Edmonton home afterwards, according to a recent report to city council.
It’s partly because Edmonton is home to a large number of correctional facilities: Edmonton Institution, the Remand Centre, and various medium- or minimum-security institutions. It has one of the highest rates of correctional institutions per capita in Canada, the report outlines.
View attachment 621047
Glad this is finally getting highlighted.
Council needs to speak up including our mayoralty candidates but also our local MLAs and MPs. And the public needs to speak up to those representatives.
So far it's just City News carrying the story. Not a peep from Global, CTV, CBC, Postmedia or Taproot as of yet.
Most criminals deserve to be “stigmatized”. Violent offenders, drug dealers, pedophiles, robbers, etc etc. please do stigmatize.There is no way a politician can frame this issue without stigmatizing the former inmates or the local residents.
For real. Whenever Yegwave posts about a convicted sex offender getting released into the community that the police say is likely to reoffend for the same crime, I lose any interest in trying to go along with the “reintegration” of said offender.Most criminals deserve to be “stigmatized”. Violent offenders, drug dealers, pedophiles, robbers, etc etc. please do stigmatize.
If people choose a better path and restore their reputations, amazing. Many do. But for those who don’t, yes, they should feel social judgement for their dishonour to society and criminal behaviour. This is basic sociology and anthropology.
Those would have been some good questions. In fact given that the RAM has generated some media attention, I'm surprised he did not ask that one, in particular.My take on the Jespersen interview with the Mayor and Premier was -- much to the upset of my world political view -- that the Mayor is just marking time through his term in office with a complete lack of "big ideas" while Smith seemed to have a better grasp of the issues discussed and also had a reasonable approach to potential solutions. I particularly liked how she had a grasp of modern medicine and its differentiation into more nuanced slots and the need to address those differences in lieu of lumping everything together en masse with a one-size fits all outcome. In the Premier's case I wish Jespersen had talked about the old RAM building and the mis-fire notion to raze the building in favor of a park. For the Mayor's portion of the interview I wish he would have asked what harm would have been engendered to First Nation's sensibilities with the private sector development of an aerial tram through the river valley from Hotel Mac to Whyte Ave. From the proposal that I studied the footprint for the Tram would not have even touched any land that could be considered "sensitive", a position that was solidly reinforced by Chief Darlene Misik of the Papaschase Band and by one of the Mayor's own advisors on all things Indigenous, Lewis Cardinal.
Yes, this seems to be a fair assessment. The Mayor has no big ideas and he is very focused on implementing them, the Premier is chock full of big ideas (some questionable) but implementation is really not her thing.My take on the Jespersen interview with the Mayor and Premier was -- much to the upset of my world political view -- that the Mayor is just marking time through his term in office with a complete lack of "big ideas" while Smith seemed to have a better grasp of the issues discussed and also had a reasonable approach to potential solutions. I particularly liked how she had a grasp of modern medicine and its differentiation into more nuanced slots and the need to address those differences in lieu of lumping everything together en masse with a one-size fits all outcome. In the Premier's case I wish Jespersen had talked about the old RAM building and the mis-fire notion to raze the building in favor of a park. For the Mayor's portion of the interview I wish he would have asked what harm would have been engendered to First Nation's sensibilities with the private sector development of an aerial tram through the river valley from Hotel Mac to Whyte Ave. From the proposal that I studied the footprint for the Tram would not have even touched any land that could be considered "sensitive", a position that was solidly reinforced by Chief Darlene Misik of the Papaschase Band and by one of the Mayor's own advisors on all things Indigenous, Lewis Cardinal.




