By Letter to the Editor on March 31, 2026.
Dear editor, The move toward universal provincial rules for municipal councils in Alberta is a troubling expansion of power that threatens the foundation of local democracy. When I moved to Bassano in 1990, the local MLA maintained an office directly within our municipal town office. While some might have seen this as a convenience, it represented a subtle but pervasive form of political intrusion. Having a provincial representative physically embedded in the seat of local government creates a landscape where municipal decisions are constantly shadowed by provincial partisan interests. This dynamic erodes the independence of local leaders, making them feel more like subordinates to a higher government tier than representatives of their own neighbours. The proposed accountability framework further compounds this issue by introducing a provincial oversight committee. The reality is members of any such committee will likely be appointed for political loyalty rather than expertise in municipal governance or commitment to a specific community’s best interests. When a provincial government selects the individuals who hold the power to investigate or sanction local leaders, it creates a mechanism for political control rather than genuine ethics enforcement. These appointees are naturally inclined to favour the provincial agenda, potentially using their authority to silence dissent or punish councils that dare to challenge the province on critical local issues. This shift undermines the democratic rights of Albertans. We elect local councils to represent our specific community values, not to act as a regional arm of provincial cabinet. In B.C., the system generally relies on independent commissioners and the court system to resolve disputes, providing a necessary buffer against partisan meddling. Alberta’s Bill 20 and the new oversight rules strip away that buffer, replacing local autonomy with a centralized command structure. By allowing political appointees to oversee our elected officials, we risk a future where municipal decisions are made to satisfy a provincial agenda rather than the people of Bassano. It seems the politicians of our time no longer believe democratic rights should Trump political agendas. Ken Riley Bassano 16
Of course this is a blatant power grab from the UCP and Danielle Smith, and nothing more. What Bill 18, Bill 20, and Bill 21 does is turn the UCP into dictators, while passing the costs onto municipalities in Alberta, so they have to increase municipal property taxes.