logo
Court Ruling Exposes Canmore's Lack of Leadership, Creates $10 Million Budget Shortfall For the Town

Court Ruling Exposes Canmore's Lack of Leadership, Creates $10 Million Budget Shortfall For the Town

CANMORE, Alberta, April 30, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In a significant ruling yesterday, The Alberta Court of King's Bench determined that Canmore's implementation of a vacancy tax for the 2025 tax year was improper, forcing a one-year postponement of the controversial measure.
This decisive ruling eliminates $10.3 million from Canmore's municipal budget – a staggering 21.8% of the town's 2025 tax revenue – impacting planned housing affordability initiatives.
The financial implications of the Town's reckless drive to punish secondary homeowners means:
'Fair Future Canmore has consistently warned for over a year that the vacancy tax represented an unjust burden on select property owners while failing to address housing affordability through collaborative solutions,' said Stephen Ross, one of the appellants that appealed the vacancy tax. 'Unfortunately, Town Council pushed forward with this divisive measure and now finds itself without resources to address housing in 2025.'
While the Court ruled it is reasonable to interpret the
Municipal Government Act
as permissive of vacancy taxes, Fair Future Canmore calls on the Town to use this postponement to scrap the vacancy tax and develop a truly collaborative housing strategy that includes residents, all homeowners, developers, and both the federal and provincial governments.
'The lack of leadership shown by Town Council and their willingness to pit residents against each other demonstrates a real need for change – either through Council's approach or through a new Council after the next election,' added Ross. 'Canmore deserves leadership that addresses pressing issues through collaboration, not division.'
Fair Future Canmore will continue advocating for effective housing policies while intensifying efforts ahead of the fall municipal elections to ensure Canmore's future leadership brings neighbors together rather than driving them apart.
Contact:
Fair Future Canmore
info@fairfuturecanmore.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Business of Beauty Global Forum: Tracee Ellis Ross on Community and the Power of Celebrating Differences
The Business of Beauty Global Forum: Tracee Ellis Ross on Community and the Power of Celebrating Differences

Business of Fashion

time8 hours ago

  • Business of Fashion

The Business of Beauty Global Forum: Tracee Ellis Ross on Community and the Power of Celebrating Differences

NAPA, CALIFORNIA — When actress and Pattern Beauty founder and CEO Tracee Ellis Ross was growing up, she often wondered if one day her counter could be lined by products that actually worked for her natural, textured hair. 'Little did I know,' she said on stage at The Business of Beauty Global Forum in Napa Valley, California, 'I was beginning my entrepreneurial, business-building, experiential [journey] to put together what became my brand Bible before I even met my partners.' Ross sat down with The Business of Fashion founder and editor-in-chief Imran Amed Tuesday to discuss the meaning of community, and how to create a brand that is rooted in celebrating its customers' differences rather than shared aspirations dictated by culture. The story of Ross' business began in her childhood, when it was rare to see Black women's natural hair on television. Back then, beauty products geared for natural hair framed curly, textured hair as a problem to be fixed, rather than a style to be emphasised or celebrated. It was this lack in representation of Black hair that drove Ross to dream of building Pattern Beauty. It was not an easy start. Ross drew initial scepticism when she eschewed the traditional route of partnering with hair stylists. 'Mostly, stylists had actually gotten my hair in trouble,' she said. 'They were not the people that taught me how to wear my hair naturally. The history of my family, the legacy of my life and others … and my own trial and error is how I discovered what worked for my hair.' Even so, Ross, who does not have a business background — she said that initially she didn't even know what a C suite was, joking, 'Don't you want to be in the 'A suite'?' — has scaled her six-year-old brand by focussing on the message that everyone's hair is unique. 'I don't want anybody to have my hair. I want people to have their hair. And the point is that they need to find the right products to support their hair, and that's what [didn't] exist,' Ross said. Pattern is now stocked at the likes of Ulta Beauty, Sephora and Boots. When it came to actually creating Pattern's product formulations, Ross selected manufacturers based in Los Angeles with whom she would work in close, face-to-face proximity, and personally tested 75 samples for the company's first seven SKUs. Ross remains heavily involved in product testing and recently learned there isn't just an absence in products for textured hair, but a glaring gap in the methodology for these products altogether in the testing phase. Last year, Ross learned that the lab Pattern used had eliminated testing for what's known as 'type-four hair,' or the most tightly coiled of hair textures, because the testing instruments were not effective. In response, Ross and Pattern Beauty VP of product development Ni'Kita Wilson worked with the lab to create workarounds, such as using silicon fingers that imitated consumers' fingers as they run through their hair and wide-tooth combs in lieu of the fine-tooth ones used before. The testing laboratory now implements the solutions Pattern Beauty helped to engineer as the standard method for testing curly hair. To Ross, a business that is centred on customers of colour, even amid broad rollbacks in DEI, is not only possible, but profitable. Calling on people to remember their humanity in whatever role they assume, she said, 'To me, the diversity of our humanity is what makes our world great. And in all honesty, it's also really good business.' The Business of Beauty Global Forum 2025 is made possible in part by our partners Front Row, Unilever Prestige, Citi, McKinsey & Company, Getty Images, Grown Alchemist and Stanly Ranch and our awards partners L'Oréal Groupe and Sephora. If you are interested in learning about partnership opportunities, please contact us here.

Push to expand discounted transit fares to low income families
Push to expand discounted transit fares to low income families

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Push to expand discounted transit fares to low income families

NEW YORK (PIX11) — A city program benefitting working-class families is considered a lifeline for 360,000 low-income New Yorkers who qualify for 50% discounts on subway and bus fares. These are people living at 145% of the federal poverty level, which means a family of four making $46,000 or less a year is eligible for the program. More Local News At a City Hall rally, advocates called for the federal poverty level to be increased to 200%, which would give 415,000 more New Yorkers access to the Fair Fares Council member Rita Joseph maintains, 'This is not just a matter of public transportation. It's a matter of justice. Making sure a mother can get to work without skipping a meal, a student can get to class without worrying, a senior on a fixed income can make it to a doctor's appointment.'Fair Fares has become an indispensable program for thousands of working-class New Yorkers since its launch six years ago, providing eligible riders with discounted subway and bus the federal poverty guidelines in difficult economic times would uplift the lives of people struggling to make ends member Selvena Brooks-Powers says, 'That's over 400,000 people who finally have a chance to move across the city affordably with dignity.' More: Latest News from Around the Tri-State Council Speaker Adrienne Adams claims New Yorkers are facing an affordability crisis that is pushing them to the brink, and that is why she's pushing to make more low-income families eligible for Fair Fare discounts. She explains, 'Being able to afford the fare means you can pursue opportunities and go to school and see friends and meet your everyday obligations. Yet too many New Yorkers are still struggling to access public transportation, which prevents them from moving in their own city.' The arguments have been made, now the heat is on the mayor, the budget committee, and the city council to approve an additional 34 million dollars to the annual budget that will give additional low-income families discounted access to transportation in the city. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Maui vacation rental bill draws support, opposition at heated hearing
Maui vacation rental bill draws support, opposition at heated hearing

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Maui vacation rental bill draws support, opposition at heated hearing

Owners and managers of some Maui vacation rentals predicted that Mayor Richard Bissen's proposal to convert 6, 100 units into long-term housing will not work and could have unintended consequences. Some argued at Monday's hearing of the Maui County Council's Housing and Land Use Committee that most Valley Isle residents cannot afford the $4, 000 and more they need in monthly rent to keep up with mortgages, taxes, association fees and other expenses. Several said the value on their units ever since Bissen proposed Bill 9 last year has plummeted and they have received no offers—either from local residents or out-of-state investors frightened away because they might not be able to use them as short-term rentals. As a result, they said, renters and buyers who can afford the rent or sales costs might move in from the mainland, meaning Bill 9 would not attain its goal of affordable housing for residents. One woman said she listed one of her two Kihei rental units for sale for $900, 000 last year, then dropped the price to $600, 000 and still received no offers, which she said proves the cost of her unit remains out of reach for local residents. At Monday's hearing, 176 people signed up to testify but only 52 had the chance to speak. The meeting adjourned until June 18 when Council members are prepared to hear a full day of additional testimony. They also earmarked June 23 for a possible third day of hearings. All nine Council members serve on the Housing and Land Use Committee and their votes will provide a preview of what could happen when Bill 9 goes before the Council. The proposal has drawn 'passionate discussion ' that has included bullying and threats, Committee Chair Tasha Kama said. People on both sides of Bill 9 told the committee they have been harassed, and one said he was threatened in person that his house should be burned. Kama regularly admonished people in the audience to refrain from cheering for comments both for and against Bill 9. The hearing began with Bissen and members of his administration arguing the need to reign in housing costs and create more affordable housing for residents, which was exacerbated by the Aug. 8, 2023, wildfires that destroyed 3, 500 homes and killed 102 people. Bissen amended Bill 9 to give owners three years to transition out of the short-term rental industry, either by renting long term or selling to local residents. Proponents and opponents for the bill repeatedly cited a University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization study in April that predicted losses of jobs, property taxes and visitors among other negative economic impacts of Bill 9. But Bissen said the UHERO report does not tell the 'full story ' of the ongoing departures of Maui families, kupuna, local knowledge and critical workers such as teachers and firefighters, in addition to forcing children to grow up somewhere other than Maui. He argued that short-term rentals have helped exacerbate Maui's housing shortage and have been banned in places like London, Los Angeles and New York. At the same time, Bissen said, 'we cannot build fast enough.' Bill 9, by contrast, will 'make immediate progress, not years down the line, ' he said. Currently, only 4 % of homes are affordable for local residents, Bissen's executive assistant Matt Jachowski said. He cited the UHERO report that the price of condos would drop 25 % in 2027, which would make them affordable to 11, 600 more Maui households. Bill 9 also has been forecast to lead to a 33 % drop in tourists, which would give Maui a ratio of 1 visitor for every 3.3 residents, putting it more in line with other island counties. Before the wildfires, Maui had a ratio of one tourist for every 2.3 residents, Jachowski said. The need for clean water also hurts construction development and Jachowski said vacation rentals use 60 % to 120 % more water than permanent housing. 'We have a moral obligation to act, ' Bissen said. 'The status quo is failing our people.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store