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In depth: City Centre Airport debate
- Airport group endorses pro-plebiscite candidate
- Sept 16. 2010
- No plebiscite on airport future, council decides
- Sept 15, 2010
- Stelmach wades into airport debate
- Sept. 7, 2010
- Group delivers airport petition to city hall
- Aug. 26, 2010
- Airport petition verification to cost city $100K
- Aug. 25, 2010
- Airport closure likely to be a financial boon
- Aug. 19, 2010
- Airport group withdraws cash for names plan
- Aug. 17, 2010
- Airport petition hits turbulence
- Aug. 4, 2010
- Edmonton airport clips runway
- Aug. 3, 2010
- Doomed Edmonton airport seen as transit hub
- July 29, 2010
- Edmonton group opposes airport closure
- July 2, 2010
- Edmonton airport battle headed to court
- Mar. 21, 2010
- Downtown airport design contest set to start
- Mar. 8, 2010
- Downtown airport's staged closure approved
- July 8, 2009
- 'Never-ending debate' on Edmonton airport resumes
- June 25, 2009
- Future of Edmonton City Centre Airport up for debate
- Apr. 5, 2009
- Report suggests closing Edmonton City Centre Airport
- June 19, 2008
Envision Edmonton chairman Chuck Allard, right, walks out of Premier Ed Stelmach's office at the Alberta legislature Tuesday morning. (CBC)Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach has waded into the debate over the closure of Edmonton's City Centre Airport, saying he supports Envision Edmonton's recommendation that a provincial health council should review the possible impact on medevac services.
Members of the pro-airport group met with Stelmach on Tuesday to deliver 20,000 signatures from Albertans living outside Edmonton who support keeping the City Centre Airport open.
"I made it very clear to Envision [Edmonton] and…to Albertans that nothing moves until I'm assured that the medevac services, all options are discussed, and make sure that there is no compromise of the medevac services we have in the province of Alberta, and I'm serious on that point," Stelmach said after the meeting at the legislature.
The signatures are in addition to more than 92,000 collected during the group's summer petition drive targeting Edmonton voters.
Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach says 'nothing moves' on the City Centre Airport closure until he is assured there will be no negative impact on medevac services. (CBC)Envision Edmonton is trying to force the city to hold a plebiscite on the future of the airport during the municipal election in October. The group says closing City Centre will compromise medevac services and could cost lives.
Mayor Stephen Mandel said the premier’s support for a review of medevac services isn’t different from what the city is concerned about.
“We don’t disagree with that," he said. "We’ve always been of the same position. It shows very clearly that medevac isn’t a real concern because medevac seems to be operating very well.
“So there is a dual message. And I’m not sure what the premier’s intention was. He’s always been very clear that it’s a municipal issue.”
Medevac will run at City Centre Airport until it is moved to the Edmonton International Airport, Mandel said.
He said he hasn’t talked to Stelmach about the airport’s closure.
Group pleased with meeting
Chuck Allard, chairman of Envision Edmonton, said he was happy Stelmach met with his group — something he had been trying to organize for some time.
"[Stelmach] is going to consider some of our things that we brought and he's going to come back and maybe adopt some of our recommendations — hopefully," Allard said.
Allard's group maintains the closure is a provincial issue, not just a municipal one.
"This matter affects all Albertans and is a provincial matter. When Mayor Mandel and city councillors were asked about medevac they responded by quoting Alberta Health Services: 'no patient risk will be associated with use of the International.' That makes it a provincial matter. And we disagree profoundly with that conclusion," Allard said in a statement before the meeting.
Review could take 4 months
Dr. John Cowell, CEO of the Health Quality Council of Alberta, says the review would likely take two to four months.
Cowell expects the number of flights will be examined to see how many are carrying critically ill or injured patients who need medical treatment as soon as possible, compared with flights bringing in patients for diagnostic procedures.
Even though the group is wading into a politically charged issue, Cowell says the analysis would be performed without preconceived notions.
"We come in always from a completely objective point of view," he said.
Mixed reaction
Edmonton city councillors were mixed in reaction to Stelmach's support of the review.
"I don't know what we're going to hear back that's any different from what we've been hearing so far," Coun. Ben Henderson said.
Coun. Kim Krushell said she has no problem with the idea of a study, but said Alberta Health Services didn't raise the medevac issue at public hearings on the closure last year.
"They've been given the opportunity and were given the opportunity to wade in and say whether they needed it when they had the three days of public hearings," she said. "And they said they didn't."
If the province decides it needs the airport open for medevac flights, then the city should be properly compensated for the land, Krushell added.
"There are costs associated with that land and there's potential for us to develop it and make money for our taxpayers."
Coun. Linda Sloan, who voted against the airport closure, welcomed the idea of the province's involvement, calling it "overdue."
"I welcome the province's engagement and their investigation — not just on the medevac issue but on whether or not we really had jurisdiction as council to make that decision in the first place," she said.
City staff is verifying signatures on the petition. A plebiscite will be held if at least 78,000 signatures are found to be valid.
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