Should cities compensate businesses for construction? Edmonton may, but only for major projects
CBC
Edmonton businesses affected by major municipal construction projects could be compensated for financial losses if city council approves a draft mitigation policy.
Executive committee members voted unanimously on Wednesday to recommend that council approve a draft policy on compensating businesses hard-hit by construction.
Under the draft policy, the city would create a grant program to help businesses that demonstrate financial losses due to multi-year construction projects.
Front-facing businesses would have to show a gross profit loss of more than 10 per cent to qualify for the subsidy, which would be capped at $20,000 per establishment per year.
"I'm just looking to see if we can have one more piece to the puzzle to help our business community when they're dealing with significant construction in and around their area," Coun. Andrew Knack said in the committee meeting.
Knack said Edmonton can learn from the city of Montreal, which set aside more than $25 million for financial assistance but did not end up spending it all.
"It turned out it was not this massive impact financially to the city, but it allowed them to help deal with some very local issues on some very specific construction projects," he said.
Andrew Sennyah, a senior policy analyst at the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, told the committee 40 per cent of small Alberta businesses surveyed before the municipal election said they would like to see a construction mitigation plan implemented.
"Businesses have been through unprecedented challenges over the last three to four years," said Marnie Suitor, co-owner of The Nook Cafe on 97th Street, which has been affected by LRT construction.
"When you layer on the impacts of major construction, it's really like pulling the intravenous tube out of a patient that's in the middle of an operation," she said.
Todd Janes, executive director of the Stony Plain Road Business Association, told the committee a grant program would be beneficial but it should not be a burden for business owners.
He said businesses would prefer compensation and other supports come before construction starts and remain in place until work ends.
Jehnny Padilla, owner of Kabayan Filipino Store on 66th in Mill Woods, told CBC News on Friday that LRT construction has limited access to the store and complicated deliveries, but her business is resilient.
"We want the best for everyone and this LRT is a good thing for the whole city, so we're OK with it," she said.
Debbie Sinclair may not be ready yet to talk at length about what it will feel like to be able to walk through the front door of her home in Cranberry Portage, Man., but one thing she's sure of: "They're heroes," Sinclair said of the fire crews, volunteers, emergency and Manitoba Hydro workers who for more than a week have been toiling to protect the wildfire-threatened community, which was deemed safe for residents to return to starting at 10 a.m. Sunday.