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I'll leave you all on a couple of windy Calgary notes with this, this, and this.
Enjoy.
Hey Everyone,GOOD LUCK, DAN!
This Sunday, April 29th, Churchill Square, 5-7pm!
Help stop a Genocide!
Rally for the people of Darfur!
Walking from Calgary to Edmonton, 20 people have marched, to raise awareness and demand that action be taken to bring an end to the slaughter of innocent people in Darfur.
Speaking in schools, universities, on radio and television and arriving at Churchill Square at 5pm this Sunday to call on Governments to take swift action to halt the Genocide.
Let your voice be heard!
Join us, for the people of Darfur.
For more info, go to www.walkfordarfur.ca
From the shoulder of Highway 2 northbound,
Daniel Eggert
“This budget may sustain the PC party up until the next election, but it won’t sustain this province in the long-term,” says Taft. “It’s a fire alarm budget. This government is racing around putting out political fires but not making the province safer in the long term.”Calgary Mayor Dave Bronconnier:
""For the past four to five months, I have certainly been singing the praises of the new premier and his government," Bronconnier said. "I took the man at his word, privately and publicly, that this is what would take place. "This budget constitutes a half-kept promise."NDP MLA David Eggen:
"“Teachers across the province will see this as a provocation,” said Eggen. “This government has neglected the unfunded liability in the Alberta Teachers’ Pension Plan, for years. Now they’re trying to leverage that neglect to get teachers and school boards to give up their right to collective bargaining.”Alliance MLA Paul Hinman:
"We need a true conservative budget, not a phoney conservative budget."And finally, thank goodness Graham Thomson is back. Thomson put it well in his Friday column:
"What many agree on is, this is a budget trying to right the wrongs inherited from the Ralph Klein years. In that sense, it is a budget that talks of the future but is a victim of the past.
O.C. 197/2007Also, I'll be posting my thoughts on today's Alberta budget tomorrow.
April 18, 2007
The Lieutenant Governor in Council appoints the following persons as returning officers for their respective electoral divisions for the purposes of or in connection with elections, enumerations and plebiscites under the Election Act:
(a) Jean Minchin of Calgary as the returning officer for Calgary Elbow;
(b) Doreen E. Nixon of Byernoore as the returning officer for Drumheller Stettler.
Convincing Albertans to sweep out the Conservatives after 10 majority governments, in the midst of heady economic times, may sound excessively ambitious. But talking to Mr. Taft, now marking his third anniversary as leader,
the possibility seems less remote.
Ralph Klein counted on strong support from two of either Calgary, Edmonton or rural Alberta for a safe re-election. But the Liberals' Edmonton stronghold is being bolstered by gains in Calgary and rising support in the rural south.
"When I became leader three years ago, the Alberta Liberal Party was a train wreck," admits Mr. Taft. "It was financially bankrupt, and there was almost no functioning organization. It's always an uphill climb for the opposition in Alberta, but I have no doubt we're climbing and we'll continue to climb. It's quite exhilarating."
It should be noted that Mr. Taft is several logs short of great oratorical fire, but he's got Mr. Stelmach beat in articulately synthesizing ideas, and his policy perspectives sound more visionary and cosmopolitan.
"We are at a crossroads. If we get it right, it's unbelievable what we could do for Alberta and this country and in some ways the world. We need to build a place where people want to come here for more than a job but a quality of life," he says.
"But look at the ghost towns from the silver rush in B.C. or those from Saskatchewan in 1926 when that province had the highest per capita income on the planet because of the wheat boom.
That's our future if we get it wrong.
"And there's a real risk we'll get it wrong if we don't change government."
Such talk doesn't seem to preoccupy Ed Stelmach, who is still finding it hard to believe he landed the best job in Canadian politics.
"To be the CEO of the province of Alberta at a time with so much potential ..." he pauses to search for words "... sometimes when I put my head on my pillow at night I want to pinch myself."
Well, he'd best not fall asleep on the job. That Albertans are waking up and warming to the possibility of electing a non-Conservative government is perhaps the most jarring consequence in the transition from King Ralph to Honest Ed.
"This week's favourite Liberal target is a contract awarded to Bob Maskell just days after he was defeated as a Tory MLA in the 2004 election.- I'll be attending Public Interest Alberta's annual conference this weekend. Changing Alberta: Pursuing the Public Interest will feature speakers such as Tony Clarke form the Polaris Institute, Annie Kidder - Executive Director of People for Education, Tyson Slocum - Director of the Public Citizen's Energy Program in Washington DC, and Monica Lysack - Executive Director of the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada. I will also be participating as a member of the panel during the Post-Secondary Education sessions.
Maskell has supplied invoices, and it's evident that he has done serious work on an Aboriginal Education Showcase planned for May.
But a defeated politician still got a government job almost instantly. The casual assumption that there's no problem with this is exactly what the Liberals are talking about.
As the days wear on, it's hard not to suspect a connection between the Liberal assaults and the government's mysterious disappearing conflict of interest legislation.
This was supposed to be bill 2. Weeks ago, a Tory MLA told me with absolute certainty that it would be introduced March 26.
It hasn't appeared yet, even though bills 3 through 30 are on the table. bill 2 remains nothing but a gaping hole in the list.
Why?
Well, you can imagine what would happen if the bill outlawed behaviour the Liberals have already revealed, but the government has defended."
Justin Trudeau's yet to be born child is set to become the Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and Prime Minister according to party insiders. "It's a 2040 track to 24 Sussex," a source close to the womb was quoted as saying.Congrats to Justin and Sophie. But seriously, am I the only one who's getting a little tired of all the Trudeau-hype?
CASH CROP
- Ray Danyluk - $47,132
Youth Secretariat
Advanced Education Comm.
N. Alberta Dev. Council
Court Workers Program Review
- Doug Griffiths - $46,998
Standing Committees of the Legislature
Agenda and Priorities Comm.
Adv. Education Comm.
MLA Task Force to launch Rural Development
- Carol Haley - $47,496
Standing Policy Comm.
Treasury Board
- Denis Herard - $47,106
Comm. on Workers Compensation
Alberta Mental Health Advisory Comm.
Standing Policy Comm.
- Ron Liepert - $40,381
Standing Policy Comm.
Trade and Transp. Comm.
Local Authorities Election Act Review
Regulatory Review Steering Comm.
Public Affairs Bureau Review
Alberta Film Commission
- Rob Lougheed - $48,872
Standing Policy Comm.
Council of Status of Persons with Disabilities
MLA AISH Review Comm.
Treasury Board
- Richard Magnus - $42,666
Standing Policy Comm.
Alberta Economic Development Authority
Treasury Board
- Ivan Strang - $42,407
Standing Policy Committees
Endangered Species Conservation Comm.
Treasury Board
- Len Webber - $40,500
P.I. and Security Guard Review
Healthy Aging and Continuing Care Comm.
Task Force on Continuing Care Standards
Alaska-Alberta Bilateral Council
Mr. Agnihotri: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The Premier, Minister of Finance, Minister of Health, Minister of Sustainable Resource Development all have secret donors to their leadership campaign. Can this minister assure this House that groups receiving this special treatment are not secret friends of top Tories?Agnihotri probably could have asked a less loaded question, but I shudder to think what Albertans outrage would feel like had this happened to a Conservative MP in Ottawa asking a similar question to a Federal Liberal Minister. Here’s how Kowalski justified his decision:
Speaker: The question from the hon. Member for Edmonton-Ellerslie, the first one, which wasn’t dealt with, basically says, “If a group cannot raise matching funds up to $10,000, it will be considered on a nonmatching basis. However, documents tabled in this Assembly show that this government is breaking its own rules.” Well, that wasn’t even contested. There were no rules that were broken.It seems to me that two main forces collided during this moment: a poorly worded and loaded question, and a harsh ruling by the Speaker (who is also one of the most partisan Tory MLA’s in the Assembly). I think it's quite fair to say that the Speaker went way too far in this ruling. The simplist way to defuse this question would have been for Minister Goudreau to utter one word in response to Agnihotri's question: no.
…political party matters are not the subject of the question period. Then the question: “Can this minister assure this House that groups receiving this special treatment” – now, the question is: what special treatment? – “are not secret friends of top Tories?” Boy, if that isn’t innuendo, you know, I must have just arrived. I’ve been here 28 years, and this is blatant innuendo.
The list of companies donating to the Tories dwarfed that of any other party in Alberta.Though we are able to see contributions to political parties - and see how incredibly large these donations are - Albertans do not have the transparency and accountability in seeing the political contributions in the races that choose their leaders. This leaves Albertans with no transparency or accountability in the races that will decide who will potentially be Alberta's Premier.
Energy and power giants listed include: EnCana ($10,775), TransCanada PipeLines ($12,650), Imperial Oil ($10,000), Nexen ($11,400), Atco Group ($10,650), Talisman Energy ($10,000), Suncor ($7,650), Enmax ($7,925), and Syncrude ($4,250).
Federal legislation passed last year bans contributions from corporations and unions, and caps individual donations at $1,000 to each political party. Ethics watchdogs argued the same should be introduced in Alberta.
"Donations are a means of influence," said Duff Conacher, the co-ordinator of Ottawa-based Democracy Watch, arguing donations should be disclosed as they're made to parties, rather than once a year.
"If you want to prevent corruption and waste, then you want to have a system of very restricted donations and full disclosure."
The NDP received many large union donations totaling several thousands of dollars, which helped generate party revenues of about $625,000. The Alberta Liberals, who received several donations from the oilpatch, last week reported revenues of more than $1 million in 2006.