Alberta tourism continuing to grow after strongest pandemic rebound in Canada
Recent years have seen the province's tourism sector grow, with Travel Alberta reporting visitor spending totalled $11.5 billion from January to September last year. That marked a 10 per cent increase from the same period in 2023, the most among all provinces.
The province says its on track to hit its $13.4-billion goal in visitor spending last year, with a larger vision in mind for the sector to reach $25 billion by 2035.
Tannis Gaffney, Travel Alberta's chief marketing officer, told CBC Radio's The Homestretch on Monday that more direct flights to Alberta hav helped boost international tourism, and that the wealth of outdoor tourist destinations makes it an international draw. She pointed out Alberta boasts six UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the most of any province.
"We take it for granted, and it's just outside in our backyard that we have these amazing not only cultural gems, but really beautiful experiences that people put on their bucket list for years," Gaffney said.
Representatives of the province's tourism sector are meeting across the province this month, in a Tourism Town Hall series popping up in four locations from April 3 to April 15. On Monday, they sat down at the Hangar Flight Museum in Calgary to talk industry trends and growth opportunities.
Growth boosted by Indigenous experiences, direct flights
The growth in the province's tourist options has partly worked to keep travellers visiting for longer, Tourism Industry Association of Alberta CEO Darren Reeder says, rather than making it a quick stop en route to British Columbia.
"Traditionally what's happened is a lot of long-distance visitors come to Alberta, they spend a few days and then go to British Columbia. We want them to auger their entire vacation here in Alberta," Reeder said.
While Alberta's national parks and the Rocky Mountains have long been popular destinations, tourism officials point to newer developments they believe are driving growth like Nordic spas in Canmore and Kananaskis, or converted grain silos into accommodations on farms near Pincher Creek.
The industry has also responded positively to Alberta's recent All-Seasons Resorts Act. The bill created a new regulator for all-seasons resorts on public land, of which there are currently none, to boost tourism outside of summertime.
Officials also point to high demand for Indigenous offerings for tourists, that's growing across Canada, but particularly in Alberta.
Indigenous Tourism Alberta CEO Chelsea Quirk said one-in-three international visitors want these offerings, with higher demand among Canadian travellers — especially in younger generations. She said her organization looks to ensure the offerings for tourists are culturally appropriate and coming from Indigenous-led groups and entrepreneurs.
"When we got to people, it has to be what they want to be. We can help them fine tune those things and give them the programming they need to do it, but it has to come from the community," Quirk said.
U.S. travellers still a growing market
The country that Alberta sees the most international visitors from is the U.S., which Reeder said is a still steadily growing market, even amid a trade war between the two countries.
"Americans have always travelled in the face of having a fairly strong presence, politically speaking, elsewhere in the world and that has not deterred them," Reeder said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
9 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Aurora Recovery Centre CEO Bruneau dies
Michael Bruneau, the CEO of the Aurora Recovery Centre — a drug and alcohol treatment facility north of Gimli — has died. 'Michael was not only a visionary leader, but also a compassionate advocate for those struggling with addiction and mental health challenges. His dedication to helping individuals and families reclaim their lives was the driving force behind Aurora Recovery Centre's mission and success,' Aurora said in a social-media post announcing his passing. The statement was dated Friday and posted Saturday. MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES Michael Bruneau president and CEO of Aurora Recovery Centre. The addictions treatment centre was founded in 2016. It offers residential inpatient, detox, personalized addition recovery, continuing care and outpatient services, its website states. Aurora was recently converting 23 condo units Bruneau had bought at 873 Waverley St. into the Aurora Family Reunification Village. The goal was to have children live with their parents as they underwent treatment. He later said he would relocate because of opposition from dozens of condo owners in the development. They said businesses of all types are not allowed to operate there as per condo rules agreed to by everyone who buys a unit — including Bruneau. Aurora has reunification centres in Winnipeg, Gimli and Brandon. The centre became a 'place of hope and transformation for countless people' under Bruneau's leadership, Aurora said. Wednesdays Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences. 'His vision, integrity, and relentless commitment will forever remain the foundation of our work,' the post said. Nicole BuffieMultimedia producer Nicole Buffie is a reporter for the Free Press city desk. Born and bred in Winnipeg, Nicole graduated from Red River College's Creative Communications program in 2020 and worked as a reporter throughout Manitoba before joining the Free Press newsroom as a multimedia producer in 2023. Read more about Nicole. Every piece of reporting Nicole produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Feasibility without First Nations isn't feasible
Opinion Earlier this month, the governments of Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan signed an agreement to explore the 'feasibility of a new west-east pipeline to bring western oil and gas to southern Ontario refineries and ports.' In a news release, Alberta premier Danielle Smith said: 'By advancing a Canadian energy corridor from Alberta to Ontario, we are securing long-term energy access for families and businesses, creating thousands of jobs, and opening new doors for trade and investment, while strengthening our position as a global energy leader.' There's only one problem, and it's a big one: Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew didn't sign it. So much for feasibility. Since the federal government's passing of the One Canadian Economy Act (Bill C-5), which promises to expedite approvals for projects deemed 'in the national interest,' provinces have been rushing to position themselves with Prime Minister Mark Carney's cabinet in the hopes their regional initiatives and economic dreams will come true. Ontario has even passed its own version of the federal bill, in what is surely a move to speed up approval for the Ring of Fire critical mineral project despite Indigenous opposition. The challenge for all of this — if you can call it a challenge — has been Canada's legal requirement under Section 35 of the Constitution to attain 'free, prior, and informed consent' when it comes to including and respecting Indigenous and treaty rights. Simply put, few provinces have partnership agreements with First Nations to build economic projects and, for those that do, these were made after lengthy and costly court battles, negotiations, and conflict. The federal bill, Ontario's bill and the 'feasibility' agreement between Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario has no First Nations, Métis or Inuit approval. In other words, they are not worth much and are simply a cause for conflict. To be honest, development occurred much quicker when Canada was genocidal. Until the past five decades, Canada never had a legal duty to consult Indigenous peoples on the land, water, the economy, or frankly anything really — so, it didn't. Since the country's founding in 1867 (and arguably before that), Canadian legislators took Indigenous and treaty land, moved people whenever and wherever, and made unilateral decisions on Indigenous lives and families all the time. When law got in the way, other laws were passed under the justification that Canada's national interests were paramount. This meant that swaths of Indian reserve lands were taken whenever a company, corporation, or the military wanted. Or, that masses of Indigenous leaders were imprisoned, Indigenous women were stripped of rights, and children were taken. All this happened blatantly. A few kilometres from where Winnipeggers sit was the St. Peter's Indian Band, whose lands in and around Selkirk were taken illegally in 1907 while the community was removed to what is now Peguis Indian Reserve. The tide started to change in the 1970s, when Canada's Supreme Court recognized that Indigenous title (and therefore law, government, and rights) existed and Canada had to start to act justly, humanely, and with consideration of their humanity. Things were supposed to be different — but old Canadian habits die hard. From the One Canadian Economy Act to the actions of provincial premiers, Canadian leaders continue to act as if Indigenous peoples are an afterthought, using age-old arguments that Canada's 'national interests' are paramount. That is, until Kinew — who has not shied away from interest in lucrative land and resource projects — refused to join his provincial counterparts. 'In other parts of the country with other levels of government, there's the commitment to maybe push things through with legislation first,' Kinew told media, explaining his decision. 'That puts other partners on the back foot.' Don't be confused. When Kinew says 'other partners,' he means First Nations, Inuit, and Métis rights holders. What the premier is doing isn't because he's First Nations, it's because he's trying to follow Canadian law. History has proven it's a tremendous waste of time, money, and energy to exclude Indigenous rights holders from conversations surrounding land, resources, and, frankly, the country. The first and most important 'project in the national interest' is to include Indigenous governments at the outset of every single decision this country makes. Anything else is illegal. An unprecedented step however requires an unprecedented idea. For Kinew, it's a Crown corporation (on par with entities such Manitoba Hydro and Manitoba Public Insurance) that can assemble Indigenous leadership to review and give approval of economic land and resource projects alongside provincial regulators. This 'Crown Indigenous corporation' would require buy-in and unity from Indigenous leadership — and seems to have almost immediately gained it. This week, the Southern Chiefs' Organization and the Manitoba Métis Federation came to an agreement to collectively 'advance economic reconciliation, protect Indigenous rights, and collaborate on major infrastructure and development projects across Manitoba.' That's no coincidence. That's First Nations and Métis holders on the front foot and reserving their spot at the table. Niigaan SinclairColumnist Niigaan Sinclair is Anishinaabe and is a columnist at the Winnipeg Free Press. Read full biography Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Global News
a day ago
- Global News
Brampton mayor Patrick Brown says public servants must return to office full-time
Brampton mayor Patrick Brown is following the province's lead by mandating that city employees return to in-office work full time next year. The provincial government announced Thursday that public servants will be required to be in the office four days a week beginning Oct. 20, and ramp up to five days a week by Jan. 5. Brown announced his decision on a NewsTalk 1010 radio show Friday morning, saying the choice to follow suit in Brampton was 'long overdue.' 'This is a legacy of an accommodation which was brought in during COVID and as much as there are some benefits, you don't get the same level of productivity,' Brown said on the radio show, adding that the decision was finalized Thursday evening. The City of Brampton said in a statement Friday afternoon that the decision 'aligns with evolving workplace trends across Ontario.' Story continues below advertisement 'We remain focused on supporting our workforce through this transition while continuing to advance the priorities of our city, and delivering high-quality programs and services for residents, businesses and community partners,' the city continued in a statement. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Brown also said during the radio show that he thinks the decision by the provincial government will have 'cascading effects' when it comes to other public employees. The City of Mississauga said in a statement Friday afternoon that it plans to continue with its current hybrid working arrangement, which requires workers to be in-office three days a week. The city added that it will 'continue to monitor' to make sure the arrangement works for employees. It said about four-fifths of the city's workforce are already in-office full time. The City of Toronto didn't share whether or not it plans to end its hybrid work policy, which requires employees be at their workplace in person two to three days per week. Close to one-quarter of Toronto's nearly 44,000 employees work remotely or in hybrid arrangements, while the rest have front-line roles that require them to be on site, a spokesperson for the city said in a statement. Members of Ontario's public service have flooded social media with hundreds of posts sharing their unhappiness with the new mandate. Story continues below advertisement Many workers said they do not have front-line roles, and long commutes take away from work-life balance. Some also said there had previously been an understanding that remote work was the new normal. Workers also expressed concerns about where they would sit when offices are at full capacity, as well as added costs related to transit, child care and food. Public service union AMAPCEO is encouraging workers to sign a petition it published on Friday morning asking the provincial government to reconsider the decision. 'We've shown time and time again that the public's trust in us is warranted, and that we should be treated like the capable, trustworthy professionals that we are,' the petition reads, adding that working from home is better for worker morale, accessibility and reduced traffic congestion. The Ontario Public Service Employees Union alleged in a statement Thursday that an employee relations committee representing workers was given less than an hour's notice before the government's public announcement. OPSEU called the move a 'slap in the face' for workers.