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Bell: Gondek, Calgary city council — suck it up and find the $28 million​on February 12, 2025 at 1:23 pm

You can hear the howling from Calgary city hall right across the city.  Read More

​’The province has defunded the police to the tune of $28 million,’ says Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek, lamenting the loss of photo radar ticket money   

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You can hear the howling from Calgary city hall right across the city. 

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There is a shortfall in the Calgary police budget. Millions. $28 million. 

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We want the cash cow back! Give us back the cash cow! 

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Of course, no one at city hall calls it a cash cow.  

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Mayor Jyoti Gondek is pissed off.

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“The province has defunded our police service to the tune of $28 million,” says the mayor, calling it “mind-boggling.”

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Defunding the police? The mayor is accusing someone else of defunding the police? Really?

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Four Calgary city council members want the whole matter of fewer photo radar dollars discussed as a matter of urgent business next month. 

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You see, the Calgary Police Service is short of money because the provincial government and its roads boss Devin Dreeshen went after the photo radar cash cow with a butcher’s knife. 

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City council knew this day was coming.

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They knew about it in 2023. They knew about it well before their 2024 budget gabfest last fall. 

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Headlines yelled out the news in big bold print. The provincial government was cutting back on photo radar. 

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A photo radar sign on 16th Avenue N.W. in 2022. Darren Makowichuk/Postmedia

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Not eliminating it but cutting it back, keeping photo radar in school zones, playground zones, construction sites and high-collision areas where photo radar can be justified. 

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Now Alberta will have the same amount of photo radar as Ontario and still more than other provinces. 

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Knowing photo radar was being pulled back, city council did nothing. 

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They took the easy way out. They took the ticket money and put it into the police budget. 

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But Calgary city council should have never, ever, ever depended on dough from tickets to help pay for the Calgary Police Service. 

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For years, widespread photo radar has had its critics precisely because, in many cases, it is seen as a cash cow, a way to make some extra bucks. 

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FACT. If you use ticket money for the police budget, people will say photo radar is a cash cow.

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The provincial government, both under the NDP and UCP, talked about reining in the widespread use of photo radar. 

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Every time photo radar has been discussed the amount of money it rakes in can’t help but worm its way into the conversation. 

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If it looks like a cash cow and moos like a cash cow, it probably is a cash cow. 

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The money was so easy.

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It was so much easier on budgeting at city hall where there is a terrible fear of using scissors on the bottom line. 

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I know, I know. Some of you will insist photo radar is all about public safety, nothing but about public safety. 

 

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