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[SU & GSA] Fairness & Safety in Sport Policy: What it Means, What You Need to Know, and Where to Find Help

[SU & GSA] Fairness & Safety in Sport Policy: What it Means, What You Need to Know, and Where to Find Help 150 150 admin

You may have seen headlines lately around the Government of Alberta’s recent introduction of Bill 9 and its use of the notwithstanding clause. This clause protects legislation that may violate Albertans’ Charter rights from being invalidated by Alberta’s courts. Laws that Bill 9 would protect include the Fairness and Safety in Sport Act and its associated Regulation, which came into force September 1, 2025.

These rules compelled certain organizations—including post-secondaries—to introduce eligibility rules on who can compete in women's sporting leagues. In order to compete, athletes must confirm in writing that their sex was recorded as female on their birth registration document (or get their parents to write in if they are aged 12-18). A birth registration document is not the same thing as a birth certificate: registrations are completed at the time of a person's birth and cannot be changed, unlike a certificate. Learn more about these documents here.

On the day the Act came into force, so did the University of Calgary’s Fairness and Safety in Sport Policy (FFSP). The university consulted the Students' Union (SU) and Graduate Students' Association (GSA) for feedback on a draft version, and while we’re pleased to share that the university adopted some of our amendments (incorporating stronger protections for all students), it did not adopt all of them. You’ll find more on which SU amendments were adopted in the FAQ below—though we know this work only continues, and we'll have more updates for you soon.

We’re bringing you this post to help you understand what the policy means, what it does, and what you can do if you need help navigating the policy. We will also help you identify where you can find appropriate sources of support.

Statement by the SU and GSA: The Policy, Fairness, and Safety

The stated aim of the FSSP is to enhance fairness and safety in women's sports. The SU and GSA, as the representatives of students from every background and demographic, have not seen evidence to suggest that exclusionary policies achieve this aim. Rather, there is evidence to suggest they achieve the opposite.

Trans-exclusionary policies don’t make sports fairer or safer for athletes recorded female at birth. Fewer women and girls participate in sports at all when trans-exclusionary guidelines are introduced, and guidelines that rely upon gender stereotypes discourage women and girls from playing. Trans-exclusionary policies can be abused by sore losers, or expose women who do not conform to stereotypical gender norms to harassment. As one peer-reviewed review identified, the most significant barriers to women and girls' participation in sports include insufficient funding and a lack of institutional support. These policies also introduce an additional barrier to participation for female athletes that male athletes do not face.

Trans-exclusionary policies don’t make sports fairer or safer for gender-diverse students. Trans and gender-diverse Canadians are more likely to experience violence or harassment, while also being likelier to experience poverty, homelessness and increased mental health challenges compared to cisgender individuals. Transphobia and systemic discrimination is the root cause of these barriers and negative impacts. Community-led supports including gender-affirming care and inclusive housing are among those that contribute to improved outcomes, highlighting the need to challenge systemic barriers so gender-diverse people receive adequate support.

The SU and GSA therefore condemn this Policy on the basis that there is ample evidence it will harm students of all backgrounds. To students who may be worried or impacted by the policy: remember that you are a member of our campus community. No policy can change that. There is a space for you, and we're glad you're here. We urge any students who need support to take advantage of the SU, GSA and campus services listed below, or to contact your elected student representatives for further assistance (see your SU Executives if you are an undergraduate, or your GSA executives if you are a graduate student). These services and resources are available for a reason, so please don't hesitate to use them.

We also encourage students with any questions or concerns that this post has not addressed to contact their students' association to set up a meeting. Your student leaders stand ready to help you.

What does the Policy mean in practice?

Students hoping to participate in Dinos Women's Varsity Sports and/or Competitive Club Sports must attest in writing that their birth registration record states they were recorded female at birth. Athletes can later be challenged by certain classes of people who believe they do not satisfy the FSSP's criteria. This is effectively an accusation that the athlete's attestation wasn't true. An athlete who faces a challenge may be asked by the University to provide their birth registration document, in a process outlined by the below map:

The FSSP does not apply to any SU or GSA sporting events or clubs. Students of all demographics can compete in these events.

Fairness & Safety in Sport Policy - Process Map @ UCalgary
An athlete's eligibility can be challenged by another athlete, head coach, or assistant coach from their team. They can also be challenged by participants or head coaches from a competitor team, or by an employee, contractor or volunteer whose duties concern the challenged athlete's league.

This challenge, and the rationale for raising the challenge, must be submitted in writing to the Director of Dinos Athletics or someone to whom the Director has delegated authority.
The Director, Dinos Athletics or their designate will have 10 days to decide whether they want to dismiss the challenge (on the basis there are no "reasonable grounds" to believe it is credible) or uphold it. A dismissal at this point ends the challenge, unless the person making the challenge requests a reconsideration by the Dean of Kinesiology.
Where a challenge is upheld, the athlete will be asked to provide their birth registration record. If their record says they were registered female at birth, they will be permanently eligible to compete in Women's Varsity Sports and Competitive Club Sports.
If a challenged athlete refuses to provide their record when asked, they will be ineligible to play until they comply. If their record says they were not registered female at birth, they will permanently ineligible.
Students and the FSSP: Anticipated Questions

On following the policy

If I'm challenged under the FSSP, how long will it take for a decision to be made?

When a challenge is submitted to the Director of Dinos Athletics, the Director or a delegate will have 10 business days to decide whether the challenge is credible or whether it should be dismissed. If they feel the challenge is credible, you will be asked to provide your birth registration record. It's at this point that you'll become aware a challenge was made.

If you choose to comply with the investigation, you will be asked to retrieve your birth registration record (see below on how the University must help you acquire this document). Once the Director or their delegate receives your record, they will have to issue a decision as soon as possible.

The Government of Alberta initially recommended that these steps should take 30 business days. The SU pushed to make the process as quick as possible, to minimize how distressing the experience might be for students.

If I'm asked to provide my birth registration record, do I have to stop competing?

No. You can continue to compete in the division of an affected sport while you are

  • a) waiting for your record, and/or
  • b) waiting for a decision by the University.
If I'm asked to provide my Alberta birth registration record, where do I order it and will I be expected to pay for it?

You can order your document from the Government of Alberta's registry services portal. You don't have to pay for it. At most institutions, you'd be expected to pay for it upfront and receive reimbursement from the Government of Alberta at a later date. The SU secured the right for students to request that the University covers their expenses in advance (paragraph 4.11 of the FSSP), but you can still choose to be reimbursed later if you prefer.

How do I acquire birth records if I wasn't born in Alberta, but elsewhere in Canada?

Ask the University to identify the most appropriate equivalent records kept by your province and territory of birth. If there is a charge for retrieving the record, the SU secured the right for students in this position to request that the University covers their expenses in advance (see how at paragraph 4.11 of the FSSP). You can still choose to be reimbursed later if you prefer.

How do I acquire birth records if I wasn't born in Alberta or Canada?

The SU ensured that you can ask the University to cover "reasonable fees" incurred by retrieving documents required "from jurisdictions outside of Canada" (FSSP paragraph 4.11). The University reserves the right to do so "at its sole discretion," but your GSA and SU both stand ready to assist you if the University declines. Don't hesitate to contact us if you need our help in arguing that the University should cover your expenses.

On what grounds can my eligibility be challenged?

The FSSP doesn't say. Although the SU suggested that challenges based only on subjective characteristics (such as personal appearance or behaviour deemed to be gender-nonconforming) should be dismissed outright, the University did not adopt these recommendations. The Policy provides that anyone raising a formal challenge can only do so on "reasonable grounds," but it will be up to the University to decide what grounds are reasonable and what evidence justifies a formal challenge. If you find yourself facing a challenge you believe to be unfair or in bad faith, don't hesitate to contact the SU or GSA, and see the question below as well.

If a challenge against me is dismissed, on what grounds can it be reconsidered?

If a challenge is dismissed by the Director of Dinos Athletics, the person who made the challenge can submit a written request to the Dean of Kinesiology, asking for the dismissal to be reconsidered. They would need to have new information that they believe justifies the challenge being looked at again. The Dean, or a delegate of the Dean, will have ten business days to decide if the challenge should indeed be reconsidered. If the Dean agrees, the process lain out by the policy (see the process map above) will be followed.

On accessing support related to the policy

What if someone submits a challenge against me for bad-faith reasons?

The FSSP provides that a challenge (or reconsideration request where a challenge is dismissed) made in bad faith can attract disciplinary measures under the University's policies and procedures. You can also enlist the help of the Director of Dinos Athletics or the Dean of Kinesiology and their offices (see "If a challenge is made in bad faith, do I have to seek a remedy by myself?").

Athletes who are challenged in bad faith can also directly utilize the following University policies for remedies:

Although the SU asked the University to enshrine specific sanctions and criteria on what makes a challenge 'bad faith' in the FSSP itself, the University declined to do so, stating that its existing policies should be good enough. We sincerely hope this is the case.

If you find yourself affected by a bad-faith challenge and feel you need more support that you're not receiving, or you just want someone in your corner, your SU or GSA are here for you. Do not hesitate to contact your SU Executives if you are an undergraduate, or your GSA executives if you are a graduate student.

If a challenge is made in bad faith, do I have to seek a remedy by myself?

The FSSP provides that the Director of Dinos Athletics and the Dean of Kinesiology, as well as their delegates, should be vigilant for challenges submitted in bad faith (paragraphs 4.24-4.26). In the event that happens, they should make a complaint against the person who submitted the challenge and seek for action to be taken against them "under the appropriate University policies, procedures, collective agreements or law." Additionally, if a challenge is made in bad faith by a participant or a head coach of an Alberta team that competes against the affected athlete, the Director or Dean should also forward a complaint on your behalf to the coach.

If you need help finding a solution, you can therefore contact these offices to request that they act under the FSSP on your behalf. Find out how to contact the Dean of Kinesiology here, or the Dinos Director here.

Where else can I turn to for help?

If you are affected by the FSSP and you're not sure where to start, your SU and GSA will provide support, or point you to resources you may need. Please don't feel like you need to go through this alone. You can also find more resources later in this post.

On-campus resources include...
Off-campus resources include...
  • If you are unsafe and need help immediately, call 911 to reach Calgary Police Service.
  • If you are being harassed due to a protected characteristic (including without being limited to your sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or gender expression), find out how to contact the Hate Crime Prevention Team of Calgary Police Service through this link.
  • Find 2SLGBTQIA+ resources recommended by Alberta Health.
  • Find 2SLGBTQIA+ resources recommended by the Canadian Mental Health Association Alberta.
Resources
Full List: Resources On- and Off-Campus

Unless explicitly stated, the SU and GSA have no control over resources and services available outside of the SU and GSA, nor any control over third-party websites. We provide them below for the purposes of aggregation and convenience. Make sure to contact organizations to ensure information is up-to-date.

On-campus resources

Find your advocates
  • Undergraduate students can contact their SU Executives and graduate students can contact their GSA executives for help, resources, and guidance.
  • Graduate students can also contact the GSA's Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, & Accessibility (EDIA) Committee and the Gender and Sexuality Alliance Subcommittee (GSA²).
  • If you are being harassed or experiencing discrimination in the campus community, the University's Student Conduct Office can help.
  • Find the contact information for the University's Sexual and Gender Based Violence Prevention and Support Office here.
  • Low-income Calgarians can access low-cost legal advice through Student Legal Assistance.
Get help with the Policy
Find a safe space
Safety
Wellbeing resources
  • Need help with mental health or peer support services? The SU Wellness Centre is here for you, no matter whether you're a graduate or undergraduate.
  • Discover more of the mental health services that are on campus or accessible to students.
  • Reach out to the the Faith & Spirituality Centre for cultural and religious support.
  • The Writing Symbols Lodge supports the rich diversity of Indigenous learners, their communities, and cultural traditions.

Off-campus resources

Safety
  • If you are unsafe and need help immediately, call 911 to reach Calgary Police Service.
  • If you are being harassed due to a protected characteristic (including without being limited to your sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or gender expression), find out how to contact the Hate Crime Prevention Team of Calgary Police Service through this link.
Wellbeing, advocacy, and resources
Community supports
  • Get involved with 2SLGBTQIA+ support groups through the End of the Rainbow Foundation in Calgary.
  • SORCe Calgary is multi-agency hub that connects people experiencing or at risk of homelessness to relevant services, including 2SLGBTQIA+-focused housing supports.
  • Find resources and services offered through The Alex.
  • Calgary Outlink is a community-based charity that provides providing support, education, outreach, and referrals for the 2SLGBTQIA+ community in Calgary.

Calgary Student Alliance: The Student View of the City of Calgary’s 2026 Budget

Calgary Student Alliance: The Student View of the City of Calgary’s 2026 Budget 150 150 admin

The Calgary Student Alliance (CSA) is hopeful following the approval of the City’s Budget 2026. The council has committed to continued funding to programs that support students; however, some changes may represent cause for concern.

Among the attendees of Budget 2026’s public hearing on November 24 was CSA Chair, Julia Law, as well as CSA Secretary, Mariana Mejia Salazar, and a delegate from the Students’ Association of Mount Royal University, Tala Abu-Hayyenah. All three provided suggestions for stimulating student housing developments, in recognition of students’ continued struggles during the housing crisis. After the public hearings, City Council entered deliberations, and the budget passed after a series of amendments on December 3.

The approved budget includes the reallocation of $10m from the downtown office-to-residential conversion program to non-market conversions. Our Municipal Priorities Document, issued to candidates ahead of Calgary’s October election, highlighted the need for expressly affordable housing in Downtown, and we are pleased to see this reflected in the final figures. More affordable housing means more student-friendly units, which is all the more important as post-secondaries continue to expand their presence Downtown. The CSA continues to recommend that developments funded by this program should allocate some units for students.

The CSA also welcomes the increase in funding for transit base services and the primary transit network. As our priorities document highlighted, post-secondary students frequently use Calgary Transit due to the widely available UPass. Many students will appreciate this boost in funding, as it will help improve the timeliness of their commute.

However, we are concerned by the budget’s reversal of the transit fare freeze. This amendment will raise the UPass rate for Winter and Fall terms by $5 more than originally proposed, amounting to a $10 increase per year. The UPass, which currently provides affordable transit access for students city-wide, is a crucial support at a time when tuition at many of our institutions increases annually, and the cost of living for all Calgarians climbs. The CSA cautions that this budget’s UPass fare changes cannot be a green light for increases each year, as further hikes will eventually erode its affordability.

While the budget cannot provide solutions to all issues students face—including high unemployment rates, rental safety, and food insecurity—the CSA encourages City Council to give consideration to these areas going forward. We remain committed to promoting solutions that will help students across the city.

Going into 2026, the CSA looks forward to continuing to advocate on behalf of students, and we welcome conversations with officials to ensure the student voice is heard.

Tuition and Fees 2025: An Update On This Year’s Proposed Increases

Tuition and Fees 2025: An Update On This Year’s Proposed Increases 150 150 admin

In Alberta, post-secondaries must discuss the proposed costs of tuition and fees for the next academic year with their student councils. At the University of Calgary, that’s the SU for undergraduates and the GSA for graduate students. A series of public and private meetings, known as the Tuition & Fees Consultation Committee (TFCC), occurs each year between student representatives and university leadership.

The SU has fought for students in an increasingly complex fiscal environment since 2019, when the Government of Alberta began reducing post-secondary operating grants by cutting them or leaving them unadjusted for inflation. The University of Calgary lost $100 million in just four years, and tuition and fees rose annually to compensate.

Below, we compare the university’s initial to final undergraduate proposals at this year’s TFCC. The SU successfully pushed back on international tuition hikes for the third year in a row, arguing that overburdening these students will see diminishing returns. If cost isn’t enough to deter global talent, the reputational impact of federal study permit caps might: the University of Calgary recorded a $35 million international revenue shortfall this year, even though Alberta does not traditionally receive enough international students to hit quota.

Initial proposals (TFCC 2025) Final proposals (TFCC 2025)
2% domestic tuition increase 2% domestic tuition increase
4-6% program-dependent international tuition increase 4% blanket international tuition increase
4% mandatory non-instructional fee increase 4% mandatory non-instructional fee increase
Guarantee of a maximum 10% year-on-year increase for program duration, 2026-27 international enrolments Guarantee of a maximum 5% year-on-year increase for program duration, 2026-27 international enrolments

While your SU can’t restore hundreds of millions of dollars alone, we show up for you whenever we can. On campus, we worked with the university to ensure greater access to information about how it spends your money. Efforts by students’ associations, including your SU, convinced the province to put a 2% cap on annual domestic tuition hikes in 2023, and issue a blanket denial to exceptional increase applications from post-secondaries, including the University of Calgary, for 2025-26. The university declined to apply for another exceptional increase this TFCC as well.

Still, only additional action by the Government of Alberta will end the post-2019 climate, which is why your SU contributed to a sector review by the Expert Panel on Post-Secondary Institution Funding this summer. We shared your experiences and promoted restored support to the university, with some of our concerns reflected in the final report. The Panel’s suggestions, which included a new funding formula of provincial reinvestment without compromising student affordability, were received positively by the Minister of Advanced Education.

Therefore, at this year’s TFCC, we asked university leadership to take meaningful action to acknowledge that students now shoulder enough of the funding burden. Our suggestions included a public statement that student affordability is at a tipping point, to a commitment to reducing tuition if provincial funding increases. Leadership responded in November by stating that the university champions student affordability to the province, but will make no commitments, even conditional ones, regarding tuition freezes or public advocacy efforts.

That isn’t good enough. Because we know that 90% of students worry most about tuition and fees, we make our advocacy transparent and available to you. You can see exactly what we say to decision-makers on your behalf when we lobby for restored funding. We work hard to maintain our services with one of the lowest students’ association fees nationally and tell you where every dollar you pay goes.

As we await updates from Advanced Education on next steps following the Expert Panel’s findings, we will continue to elevate your concerns while decisions are made. We renew our call for the university to stand with students by publicly recognizing that plugging budgetary shortfalls should no longer be left up to you.

The University of Calgary’s Board of Governors, on which the SU sits, officially votes on the revised proposals later this month. Last night, the SU’s governing Students’ Legislative Council voted to direct your President to vote against the increases. While precedent suggests the outcome may not be the one many students are hoping for, we will not let your voice go unheard in the room.

  • If you have thoughts about your experience and these proposed increases that you’d like your SU to share directly with the Board of Governors, email your SU President before December 12.

Fifteen Years of the SU Q Centre: How the Campus’ 2SLGBTQIA+ Community Found A Place of Its Own

Fifteen Years of the SU Q Centre: How the Campus’ 2SLGBTQIA+ Community Found A Place of Its Own 150 150 admin

It’s been fifteen years since the SU Centre for Sexual & Gender Diversity, also known as the Q Centre, first opened its doors—but its story really starts in 2009, when students began exploring ways to better support the University of Calgary’s 2SLGBTQIA+ community. Stephen Rudolf, the SU’s Faculty of Nursing Representative at the time, created the idea of a dedicated space with the student club Queers for Campus. SU President Charlotte Kingston quickly agreed that Mac Hall needed a place where queer and questioning students could feel safe, supported, and understood, and the vision became a reality in November 2010.

From the very beginning, the Q Centre was built on one simple belief: the space should always be shaped by students, for students. What started as an idea shared around meeting tables, in hallways, and in conversations between students became the foundation that the Q Centre’s team of student leaders uses each year. All of this hard work has led to fifteen years of community building, joy, challenges, and constant growth.

From “The Closet” to Home

Promotional photograph of the original Q Centre (2010). Pictured outside its door is then-VP Student Life, Jennifer Abbott, and Kris Schmidt, then-Q Coordinator.

When the Q Centre first opened in November 2010, it was a tiny room in the Volunteer Services office (so small that early volunteers jokingly called it “the closet”). But regardless of how cramped it was, it was also well loved: students studied, chatted, sought peer support, and met others who understood what it was like to be a queer student on campus.

In 2014, the Q Centre moved to its current location in MacEwan Student Centre, and was able to create a space tailored to community needs with the support of Quality Money funding. This move was initiated by students’ need for visibility, sunlight, event space, and a place that could welcome newcomers more easily. With the Students’ Union and Quality Money’s support, the Q Centre’s new space was able to include a library, group seating, a peer support pod, and more programs than ever before.

Jason Morgan, the Students’ Union’s General Manager (who helped initiate building the Q Centre) described how meaningful that move was: the new space made it possible for programming to grow, and it made discussion groups, peer support sessions, queer events, panel talks, and social gatherings more accessible. The move truly helped to make the Q Centre a part of everyday campus life.

The Q Centre has changed a lot over the past fifteen years: the space now has a safe-space pod, has introduced quiet hours, expanded its 2SLGBTQIA+ library and resources, grown its social media platform, and has established itself as a place both for communities and individuals to spend time in.

Q Volunteers: Here’s To You

With all of these exciting developments, one thing remains the same: none of them could have happened without the Q Centre volunteers.

In the early years, the volunteer team was small. But as the Q grew, so did the volunteer team. It wasn’t long until the training nights hosted 20, 30, even 40 volunteers. Peer support workshops were offered through the Wellness Centre to equip volunteers with more tools to help the community. It’s thanks to the volunteers and the work they do that the Q Centre continues to serve the community in the impactful way that it does. Q Centre’s birthdays, movie nights, queer history walks, discussion nights, peer support sessions, cross-campus collaborations, art projects, resource fairs, online programming, and events all became parts of Q’s calendar throughout the years because volunteers made them happen.

Fifteen Years of Programming

Cupcake tray at the 2014 Grand Opening of the Q Centre’s permanent location.

One of the most special things about the Q Centre is that its programming changes as community needs evolve. Some projects have lasted for many years, like the discussion night series, queer mentoring, and our annual collaborative event series with the University of Calgary, Sexual and Gender Wellness Week (Sex Week), while other projects worked for a time before changing alongside our community. Each piece of programming that we develop is specifically designed for the needs of our community, and we are delighted to be continuing this journey with you all.  Over the years, programming has included:

  • Discussion groups on identities, relationships, culture, intersectionality, gender, and activism,
  • Queer art events, film nights, and documentary screenings,
  • The Diversity Panel series with Dr. Dawn Johnston,
  • Mental-health focused “Monthly Mindfulness” sessions,
  • Queer UofC partnerships and cross-Calgary collaborations,
  • The Trans Friendly Clothing Swap,
  • Career preparation events for queer students,
  • Queer history walks and educational presentations,
  • Resource fairs, tabling at Pride, and outreach both on and off campus,
  • Sex Week events,
  • The Queer Mentoring program,
  • The SU Pride Scholarship,
  • …plus so much more!

(…And That’s Not All)

While the Q Centre is the SU’s flagship 2SLGBTQIA+ initiative, it wasn’t the first project the SU undertook to support the community and its allies, nor will it be the last. Highlights from over the years include inviting notable 2SLGBTQIA+ rights activist Harold Call to deliver a talk on campus in 1969, jointly launching the University’s anti-discrimination ‘Positive Space’ campaign (with a talk from Olympian Mark Tewksbury!) in 2000, and securing the right for students to use their preferred name in their University records in 2023. Off campus, the Q Centre has also marched in Calgary Pride since 2012.

Community and Care

The Q Centre has supported so many students with coming out, identity exploration, loneliness, joy, burnout, and healing. It has been a place to make friends, meet mentors, cry in private, laugh loudly, study quietly, and feel understood. And, above all else, it’s a space where queer and questioning students can show up exactly as they are.

Lila Webb, former Q Centre Coordinator and now Students’ Union Coordinator of Volunteer Services, says: “Everybody who walks into Q should know that everything they say and do in this space matters… The people I’ve met here over the years are amazing… If you have an idea, we want to hear it. You will always find a place in Q, and we are always here to help you get where you want to go.”

Going Forward

As the Q Centre celebrates its 15th anniversary, it remains a strong example of student-led community work on campus. It has supported thousands of students, trained hundreds of volunteers, and created programming that has shaped lives in ways that cannot always be measured.

The next fifteen years may bring new challenges, but it will also bring so many new opportunities. The queer community continues to grow and change, and so will the needs of students. From the tiny first room known as “the closet” to the bright, open space it is today, the Q Centre has become a trusted resource for so many. We are a safe space made by and for students. We are there for anyone who comes through our doors, and for anyone hoping to visit us soon.

The SU Responds to Requests for Action Regarding K-12 Strikes

The SU Responds to Requests for Action Regarding K-12 Strikes 150 150 admin

On October 6, K-12 teachers represented by the Alberta Teachers’ Association (ATA) went on strike. Yesterday, the province introduced legislation to force teachers back to work. This prompted some students to contact the SU, sharing their concerns and asking us to organize a student strike. The emails we received drew a parallel between provincial funding to K-12 education, controlled by the Ministry of Education and Childcare, and post-secondary funding, controlled by the Ministry of Advanced Education (AE).

We recognize that these events have been distressing for many students, so we wanted to take the time to clarify our role as your campus advocate and our abilities regarding strike action.

To paraphrase the Canada Labour Code, a labour strike is when employees stop work, or refuse to work, with the aim of forcing employers to address a grievance that workers have in common. Strikes must be organized by a labour union to be lawful.

Despite the name, the Students’ Union is not a labour union. Our name is a holdover from when we were established in our current incarnation in 1945, but we are actually a students association. This is a distinct class of organization that exists to ‘promote the general welfare’ of undergraduates at the University of Calgary. Our status means, among other things, that we cannot legally organize strikes. If we tried to in this case, it would be classified as a partisan protest, which would still violate our mandate.

Furthermore, the ATA has asked students not to organize their own protests or demonstrations. In a September email to the Education Students’ Association, the ATA asked for students to attend existing events organized by the ATA. More information on those can be found on the ATA’s website.

We appreciate that post-secondary education funding is a pressing affordability concern for the students we represent. However, change may already be on the horizon. AE recently received recommendations from a panel of experts who reviewed how our campuses are funded. This panel, which received and addressed input by your SU, concluded that our post-secondaries require additional provincial funding. We remain in communication with AE as next steps are decided.

While the SU cannot organize action in this case without violating our mandate, we can help students to meet mandates of their own. We recognize that standing up for what you believe in takes genuine nerve and integrity. We will fully support and protect your right to exercise free expression, or advocate in ways that align with your concerns.

Your SU Executive team can provide advice on organizing grassroots action and other advocacy measures you can take to effect change. We invite students who want to take advantage of this resource to contact your student leaders to set up a meeting. We can also provide the following information to support you.

  • Your right to protest and enjoy free expression at the University of Calgary is protected by its Statement on Free Expression.
  • The SU also stands ready to protect your rights as outlined in the Student Charter of Rights and Responsibilities. We encourage you to read the document to know what those are.
  • If anyone limits your freedom of expression on-campus, the Student Ombuds Office can help.
  • Off-campus, the SU partly funds Student Legal Assistance, a clinic that can give advice to students and low-income Calgarians on matters including student disciplinary procedures.
  • The University of Calgary has two labour union offices right here on campus that students may wish to contact for specialist advice. The Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE) Local 052 chapter represents the University’s non-academic staff, and the University of Calgary Faculty Association (TUCFA) represents academic staff.

We urge students to take advantage of these links, or to get advice from your SU Executives by requesting a meeting. If you have outstanding questions or concerns you would like us to address, please email your Executives and we will get back to you as soon as we can.

The Students’ Union, University of Calgary Welcomes the Findings of the Expert Panel

The Students’ Union, University of Calgary Welcomes the Findings of the Expert Panel 150 150 admin

The SU finds reasons to be cautiously optimistic as a major review of Albertan post-secondary funding concludes

CALGARY, ALBERTA — The Students’ Union, University of Calgary (SU) welcomes the recommendations of the Expert Panel on Post-Secondary Institution Funding and Alberta’s Competitiveness, believing it has the potential to bring welcome change to the post-secondary landscape in the province.

The government-authorized Panel reviewed how our campuses are currently funded. Its report comes six years after the province initiated a series of budget cuts to our post-secondaries, which burdened students with yearly tuition hikes and falling educational standards. This is something that the SU has sounded the alarm over for quite some time, so the Panel’s findings were of extreme importance.

The SU is appreciative to see meaningful responses to the fiscal difficulties our institutions face. The Panel’s recommendations include greater provincial funding to post-secondaries and more non-repayable aid for students.

“At a time when students are struggling most in justifying the cost of post-secondary education, this is a welcome reprieve,” said SU President Naomie Bakana. “It wouldn’t be unfair to say that we were worried this would be another blow to Alberta’s post-secondary network, but for current students as well as prospective students, there seems to be light at the end of the tunnel.”

The SU also thanks the Expert Panel for its inclusion of student perspectives. Earlier this year, the SU and Graduate Students’ Association (GSA) were the only independent students’ associations to provide both in-person and written representations to the Panel, allowing us to spotlight concerns from the University of Calgary’s students.

The report appears to directly address many of the SU’s remarks, something that reinforces how vital it was for the Panel to not only assess the challenges ahead, but truly be open to hearing alternative opinions.

“This could have easily been something that was completed and wrapped up behind closed doors, and been another curveball that students just had thrown at them,” said Julia Law, the SU’s Vice-President External.

“We have always advocated for meaningful consultation, and the difference between having those making these decisions talk with us rather than just at us. This process was a tough and comprehensive one, but it’s the kind of thing that needs to happen to ensure Alberta maintains lofty standards.”

This is not to say the SU fully endorses all the recommendations. The report proposes replacing the 2% cap on annual domestic tuition increases with a guarantee for students that tuition will rise by no more than 2% yearly for their program’s duration, while the starting rate for new students can go up unrestricted. This has the potential to give relief to current students, and increase the burden on the next generation of students at U of C and other institutions.

Additionally, the report’s focus on equality, diversity and inclusion initiatives may distract from the most immediate threat to student success, as described by the report itself: Alberta’s post-secondaries “receive the third lowest funding per student headcount from the provincial government” among Canada’s provinces.

In any case, this report arrives at a time when higher education spending has been declining nationally for over a decade. Reading that our post-secondaries are “more important than ever” to the success of Alberta and Albertans is a step in the right direction.

The Panel’s recommendations now lie with the Honourable Myles McDougall, Minister of Advanced Education. The SU urges their adoption in full and offers any additional support we can provide as next steps are decided.


Media inquiries may be directed to:

  • Nathan Ross– Manager of Communications and Government Relations, University of Calgary Students’ Union | 403-835-1836 or Nathan.ross@ucalgary.ca

[A Student’s Guide] The Recommendations of the Expert Panel on Albertan Post-Secondary Funding

[A Student’s Guide] The Recommendations of the Expert Panel on Albertan Post-Secondary Funding 150 150 admin

On October 9, 2025, the Expert Panel on Post-Secondary Institution Funding and Alberta’s Competitiveness released its final report, containing recommendations now under review by the Ministry of Advanced Education.

Convened in late 2024, this panel of independent experts reviewed whether the Government of Alberta currently funds our post-secondaries in a way that promotes academic excellence. To inform their work, the Panel consulted various organizations, including your very own Students' Union (SU).

Now that its work has wrapped up, you might have questions. We're here to answer them. In this post, we'll break down the following for the discerning student reader:

Click to skip to a section


What does Alberta's current post-secondary funding environment look like?

The last time Advanced Education underwent an external review was in 2019, when the Blue Ribbon Panel on Alberta's Finances concluded that our campuses should find “more funding from tuition and alternative revenue sources” and rely less on "government grants." The province subsequently began reducing the base operating grants of public post-secondaries.

Institutions increasingly turned to student dollars by raising tuition. As a share of the University of Calgary's finances, student revenue surpassed the provincial base grant in 2023. Albertan learners haven’t shouldered this burden comfortably: Alberta receives fewer students than, for example, British Columbia, yet student dollars make up roughly the same share of the budgets of their post-secondaries.

As a result, the average Albertan undergraduate now shoulders more expensive tuition and fees than the national average and accrues more debt, too. Alberta's post-secondaries also renewed efforts to recruit international students, who could expect to pay more than double for the same program.

Why was the Expert Panel created, and who was part of it?

Last year, the federal government introduced international study permit caps. Given the revenue these students represent to post-secondaries, this posed an impending fiscal problem. In November 2024, then-Minister of Advanced Education, Rajan Sawhney, convened a panel of experts to review Alberta’s post-secondary funding model and how well our institutions compete nationally and globally.

This Expert Panel was chaired by Dr. Jack Mintz, President’s Fellow of UCalgary's own School of Public Policy. (You may see this panel referred to as the "Mintz panel.") Also on the Panel was Charlene Butler (board executive); Dr Ray Block (post-secondary administrator); Joan Hertz (director and lawyer); and Peter MacKinnon (former USask President).

What did the SU present to the Panel?

Your SU was one of many organizations consulted by the panel, but we were one of only two independent students' associations to provide in-person and written submissions. We never miss a chance to put a spotlight on the needs of UCalgary students, and the other students' association to do so was none other than UCalgary's Graduate Students’ Association (GSA).

In May 2025, SU President Naomie Bakana and Vice-President External Julia Law attended a student leader consultation with the Panel; the SU followed up with a written submission in June. You can read that submission in full or summarized here. The questions we were asked to consider are as follows (paraphrased for brevity):

  • What is and isn't working well in the current funding model?
  • Do any regulatory constraints limit post-secondary institutions?
  • What could improve the current tuition structure?
  • What impact have budget cuts had on student experiences and teaching quality?
  • How can we focus on key performance indicators, merit-based hiring, and qualitative outcomes?
  • How will study permit caps affect Alberta's campuses and student experiences?
What do the Panel's findings mean for undergraduates? (+Bonus SU analysis)

Below, we review the recommendations in the Panel's report that stand to impact undergraduates in particular. You can access the full report, including the rest of its recommendations for Albertan higher education, at this link. We'll also compare these recommendations to the SU's own suggestions to the Panel, with page numbers referring to the written submission we provided in June.

RECOMMENDATION ONE: POST-SECONDARY FUNDING FORMULA.


As the Panel observed, Albertan post-secondaries have traditionally received operating funding based on "provincial budgets, institutional costs and historical funding," with "no specific funding formula" underpinning the amount our institutions receive.

However, the Panel recognized that post-secondaries are a "public good": they prepare new workers at a time when employers are under-investing in training, and campuses benefit their surrounding communities. Canadian higher education is roughly 53% public-funded, in stark contrast to the OECD average of 68%. Furthermore, although administrative spending is often blamed for post-secondaries being strapped for cash, the Panel recognized this is not the case for Alberta: "spending on central administration has declined or stayed basically flat" across the sector.

The Panel therefore recommended that the province should replace its current approach with a new funding framework, one that "will require additional funding from the provincial government." This is what the Panel's formula looks like in essence:

Enrolment-based Performance-based Operational-based
Post-secondaries should receive per-student funding, based on the cost of that student's program (some courses are cheaper to teach than others) and market demand for their program (e.g. nurses during a shortage). Post-secondaries should be rewarded for meeting performance targets around graduate outcomes, research excellence and community impact, but should not be punished for falling short. Funding should be provided for post-secondaries that will cover their administrative and structural costs (e.g. IT, student services, facilities and staffing).
The SU's analysis
Did the SU suggest a funding formula of its own?

The SU acknowledged we're not as well-equipped as UCalgary to suggest an appropriate funding formula. However, the Panel seems to have agreed with several of the SU's views on public funding. Our submission emphasized that post-secondaries can be a "public good" (pp. 21-22), that they offer impressive returns on investment in commerce and our communities (p. 37), and that they are administratively leaner than popular belief suggests (pp. 54-56). We also cautioned against punishing institutions for failing to meet certain targets, such as graduates employed within a certain timeframe, given that failure to meet these targets may have more to do with Canadian employers growing increasingly reluctant to invest in new hires (pp. 21, 49).

How would the SU rate this recommendation for students?

★★★★⯪ We couldn't agree more with the Expert Panel that post-secondaries deserve more provincial funding, not least of all because they represent an incredible return on investment. That said, we're wary of funding formulas that involve the province predicting the labour market needs of tomorrow. This is not an exact science, as our submission explores (p. 41). Overall, we welcome this recommendation, and look forward to working with the province to ensure all disciplines are given fair consideration.

RECOMMENDATION FOUR: CAPITAL FUNDING.


Identifying that many campuses are in desperate need of major IT system upgrades, the Panel has recommended that the province should treat these as distinct, long-term investments, rather than leaving post-secondary institutions to pay for these upgrades through general funding. The Panel also suggests that post-secondaries should receive deferred maintenance funding on a three-year cycle, allowing institutions to be more efficient at planning and managing their repair or maintenance projects.

The SU's analysis
Did the SU suggest an IT or deferred maintenance fund?

The SU did not directly suggest an IT or deferred maintenance funding model. However, we noted that outstanding maintenance at our campuses is more than just an inconvenience to students who must check multiple washrooms to find one in working order. When our post-secondaries can't afford to maintain themselves, their research capacity is threatened (pp. 14-15). We also highlighted the province's current Infrastructure Maintenance Program as unpredictable in how and when it disburses funding (pp. 57-58).

How would the SU rate this recommendation for students?

★★★★★ If the University of Calgary wanted to pay for all of the maintenance work that needs to be done on campus right now, it would need to part with nearly $1 billion. That is unsustainable, so we're delighted that the Expert Panel explicitly recognized this as a pressing issue. We're also excited about the Expert Panel's recommendations around IT upgrades. (If those come to pass, maybe students will stop asking the SU to fix the Wi-Fi. We'd love to, but that's a little beyond our jurisdiction!)

RECOMMENDATIONS FIVE AND SIX: A NEW TUITION MODEL.


Since 2023, annual domestic tuition increases have been capped at 2% (with some exceptions). The Expert Panel recommends replacing that cap with a guarantee for new students that their tuition will not go up by more than 2% each year for the duration of their program. New students, however, may be quoted a very different 'starting price.'

Although the Expert Panel stressed that "affordability should not be compromised," this will rely on the Ministry of Advanced Education setting reasonable limits on starting tuition prices depending on the cost of a program. (A medical program, for example, would cost more than one requiring less expensive instructional equipment.) To further balance these changes, the Panel emphasizes that the province should focus on offering more non-repayable financial aid (bursaries and grants) rather than loans through Alberta Student Aid.

The SU's analysis
Did the SU suggest a tuition pricing model?

The SU advocated for the 2% cap on annual increases to remain in place (p. 8), owing to students consistently telling us that affordability is their highest priority. However, we recognized this was a band-aid rather than a long-term solution: our section on tuition and fees (pp. 24 -38) emphasized that Alberta offers much less non-repayable aid than comparator provinces, and that student debts have been climbing commensurately with public funding cuts. In short, we focused on more public funding and grants as a solution to student affordability struggles.

How would the SU rate this recommendation for students?

(Tentative) ★★★⯪☆ Taken independently of the other recommendations in the Expert Panel's paper, this model could still present an affordability challenge for students. It's always a gamble when one body (in this case, the Ministry) sets the upper limit of how much an institution can charge for certain programs.

On the other hand, the current model treats all programs as though they were equally expensive to run, with equal returns on investment for graduates. We'll have to wait and see if this model is implemented alongside other recommendations by the Panel (i.e. more public operating funding and more non-repayable aid), as these should theoretically relieve the tuition burden.

RECOMMENDATION SEVEN: SUPPORT FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS.


The federal government introduced caps on study permits for international students in 2024. This was in response to a rising number of international students in provinces other than Alberta—particularly Ontario, which receives more than half of all international students that come to Canada every year. Caps for Alberta were subsequently punitive to our institutions and their ability to attract global talent, affecting graduate students even more than undergraduates.

The Expert Panel recommended that the provincial government should work with other provinces and the federal government to "ensure qualified international students continue to be welcomed at Alberta’s post-secondary institutions," while exploring ways to promote Alberta's post-secondaries so that we "continue to attract top talent."

The SU's analysis
Did the SU suggest supporting international students in this way?

Given that immigration is a federal issue, the SU's submissions regarding international students focused on emphasizing the vast benefits and talent that Alberta's international student community brings, including contributions to research (pp. 60-62). We noted that federal caps are overly punitive to Alberta, and that Alberta should work to avoid exploitation of these students as seen in other jurisdictions (pp. 8-9).

How would the SU rate this recommendation for students?

★★★★★ We recognize that the provincial government is restricted on what it can do regarding federal study permit caps. Nonetheless, the Panel's recognition of these students' contributions to Alberta is a meaningful component of the final report.

RECOMMENDATIONS EIGHT, NINE AND TEN: CUTTING INSTITUTIONAL RED TAPE.


The Expert Panel recommended that the Government of Alberta should review the regulations that post-secondary institutions currently work under. For example, post-secondaries are currently restricted from accessing reserve funds; they must submit 62 reports annually on how they spend certain funds or execute certain policies. The Panel also recommended that the provincial government should "streamline and speed up the process for approving new programs" of instruction.

The SU's analysis
Did the SU make recommendations on reducing red tape?

Our representations to the Panel focused on how these restrictions impact students: namely, by reducing support for administrative services or student programming (pp. 39-52). Resources like study spaces, residences and libraries can all contribute to, but the University of Calgary's largest reinvestment since 2019 has come in the form of something called Targeted Enrolment Expansion. This sees the provincial government provide funding that can only be spent on instruction in programs the province deems to be "key" for economic aims.

How would the SU rate this recommendation for students?

★★★★☆ We believe these are strong, practical proposals that should allow post-secondaries to play to their strengths and address student demands. Of course, these recommendations will require careful execution to ensure our institutions have adequate financial oversight when spending taxpayer funds, and that programs are adequately ready before they are approved. However, the SU acknowledges that the current model is too restrictive, and change is overdue.

RECOMMENDATION ELEVEN: INSTITUTIONAL NEUTRALITY & EQUITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION (EDI).


You might see these recommendations discussed a lot in reports about the Panel's work. The Panel recommended that post-secondaries should practice "institutional neutrality" by upholding freedom of expression and thought and taking no public political stances. The Panel also urged post-secondaries to avoid 'discriminatory' policies or practices, referring to EDI principles in student and staff recruitment. At UCalgary, this means things like the Student Access Process, which lets students make the case that their grades on paper should be considered alongside personal mitigating circumstances.

These recommendations have caused some concern, which the SU understands. Our submission's section on free speech highlighted evidence that most students enjoy instructors who challenge their views, and that free speech incidents are rare in Alberta (pp. 72-78). In our section on EDI in higher education, we noted that EDI programming costs a fraction of the University's budget; there is no evidence that they undermine merit-based access (pp. 63-71). In fact, UCalgary is one of Canada's most selective institutions.

However, it's useful to look at what the Panel wrote. Their recommendation that our post-secondaries should adhere to the University of Chicago's Principles of Free Expression merely affirms something our post-secondaries already committed to in 2019. The Panel also acknowledged there is value to recognizing that students who have overcome "disadvantages [like] discrimination" may be just as capable as their peers, despite what their paper grades may imply. Overall, the Panel cautioned against post-secondaries deviating from neutrality or favouring characteristics over merit.

While the SU disagrees that this is an issue in Albertan higher education at all (pp. 63-78), we also appreciate the Panel's nuanced analysis of a topic that takes up an outsized and often emotive amount of room in debate around post-secondary operations. We sincerely hope this aspect of the Panel's report does not distract from the real issue facing our campuses, which is that "Alberta’s post-secondary institutions receive the third lowest funding per student... from the provincial government" among Canada's provinces.

Where do we go from here?

The Panel's recommendations now lie with the Ministry of Advanced Education, which will decide upon next steps. The Panel suggests its recommendations could be implemented over the next five years, so the SU finds a recent quote from Minister Myles McDougall encouraging: "Frankly, I am interested in faster than that."

2025 By-Election Results Announced!

2025 By-Election Results Announced! 1080 1080 admin

CALGARY, AB – Results of the University of Calgary Students’ Union (SU) By-Election were announced on October 9th, 2025. There was only one seat being contested, which was in the Faculty of Social Work.

The race was uncontested and saw Jenna Perna as the only candidate in the by-election. have secured a majority yes vote from students within those faculties. Perna received a majority approval from the faculty, and has been elected as the new representative receiving a 91% YES vote.

There is still one open position on the Students’ Legislative Council, as a vacancy recently opened up in the Schulich Faculty of Engineering. There will be an appointment to fill it soon.

“I would like to officially welcome Jenna to the Students’ Legislative Council, and she had been filling in since the spring given the vacancy. Clearly, Social Work students feel they are being well represented by her, as we strive to ensure that faculty representatives do their best to be the voice of the students. I look forward to continuing our good work,” said Naomie Bakana, SU President.

This year’s By-Election saw 11 students cast a vote. As this was a by-election, the faculty race votes were limited to students who are currently enrolled in the applicable faculties, and the general referendum was open to all eligible students. By-Election results become official on Friday, October 17th.

The SU Submits Budget 2026 Recommendations, Teams Up With GSA and Students’ Association of Bow Valley College

The SU Submits Budget 2026 Recommendations, Teams Up With GSA and Students’ Association of Bow Valley College 150 150 admin

Every fall, the Government of Alberta begins crafting a plan for the next fiscal year, detailing what it expects to spend and the revenue it expects to make. Before this budget is finalized in February, a consultation window runs between December and January to accept input from Albertans and Albertan organizations.

Your Students' Union typically shares recommendations with the province a little earlier, shortly after the fall semester starts. Last year, we made recommendations as part of a team including UCalgary's very own Graduate Students' Association (GSA), suggesting, among other things, a renewal of the Post-Secondary Mental Health Grant. When Budget 2025 launched, we were thankful to see the province continue investment in on-campus mental health support.

This year, we've teamed up with the GSA once again, as well as the Students' Association of Bow Valley College, to convey the concerns we three Calgary-based students' associations hear most often from students. After all, Albertan learners have a lot in common: whether they're completing a certificate or a master's, all will grapple with educational affordability or difficulties finding somewhere to live. That's why we're delivering your concerns straight to the decision-makers in our pre-Budget 2026 submission. Click the button below to access our recommendations in full, or read on to find them in summary form.

Recommendation 1: Restore Operating Funding to Public Post-Secondaries.

Modern economies rely upon post-secondary institutions to conduct research and produce a skilled workforce, yet Alberta's have seen their budgets steadily cut since 2019. Our campuses now self-generate 60% of their revenue, even though domestic enrolment has stagnated. With fewer students to share the burden through economies of scale, Albertans are taking on more debt than ever while post-secondaries are forced to operate like businesses. This is to the detriment of both education quality and Alberta's future productivity.

We recommend...
  • Restore unrestricted base operating grants for our post-secondaries to their 2018-19 funding levels, adjusted for inflation.
Recommendation 2: Revise Alberta Student Aid.

The province committed to more non-repayable student aid in 2021, but since then, the share of Alberta Student Aid (ASA) dollars disbursed as grants or awards has declined, while the value of some scholarships lags far behind inflation. Compounding matters is that ASA is one of the last provincial student aid bodies to charge loan interest, and diploma and bachelor's students don't qualify for its Grant for Full-Time Students. Furthermore, ASA uses federal income thresholds, without accounting for Alberta's cost of living being 5% higher than the national average for 10+ years.

We recommend...
  • Freeze interest accrual on Alberta Student Loans for students in every type of PSE program for 12 months.
  • Extend eligibility for the Grant for Full-Time Students to first-year diploma and bachelor’s students, increasing the maximum and income thresholds by 5% for the next three budget cycles.
  • Review all Scholarships and Awards to adjust them for inflation since the time of each one's introduction.
Recommendation 3: Revisit Open Educational Resources (OERs).

At a time when reading lists can cost hundreds dollars, and it's getting harder to tell falsehoods from fact online, students would benefit from free learning resources that have been vetted by experts. OERs (open-source materials that faculty can create and tailor to student needs) fit this bill, and other provinces have already created successful OER platforms. Many leaders in education estimate that with a grant of around $10,000, experts and faculty can create open-source resources that can be updated perpetually.

We recommend...
  • Institute a $1 million grant fund, disbursed as grants of $10,000 to faculty, to facilitate creating 100 OERs by educators at our public post-secondaries.
Recommendation 4: Introduce a Competitive Graduate Funding Model.

Graduate students are not only key drivers of innovation; they conduct a large amount of research and teaching activities on our campuses, too. Once they graduate, they are key players in knowledge transfer to private industry, boosting our economy. Despite this, Alberta struggles more than most provinces to attract and retain these students, at a time when other regions are heavily investing in graduate student research. Alberta has an opportunity to launch its own graduate funding model for research excellence.

We recommend...
  • Establish a merit-based, scholarship program that rewards research excellence for domestic and international thesis-based graduate students, and encourage coursework evaluation reform to reward excellence in non-thesis based programs.
Recommendation 5: Fund Purpose-Built Student Housing.

Experts agree that more purpose-built student housing would ease Canada's housing shortage. Students wouldn't have to compete with other demographics for units near their campuses; in turn, students would reap the affordability and academic benefits of living in residence. Furthermore, Alberta's existing tenant protections can't help students who face unfair rent hikes. Learners whose institutions lack residences feel this more than most, as do students with dependents. That's why we recommend funding more non-profit developers and institutions to meet a broad range of needs.

We recommend...
  • Adopt Quebec’s acceptable adjustments model and expand RTDRS staffing to hear rent hike cases.
  • Institute an affordable student housing construction fund, with provisions for students whose campuses do not have residences, and students who have dependents.

The above could change as the official consultation window draws closer, especially as we're expecting the findings of the Expert Panel on Post-Secondary Institution Funding and Alberta’s Competitiveness soon. (To read the SU's submission to this panel, see this post.) The Panel's recommendations may address or alter some of the suggestions we make in December-January, and if that happens, you'll be the first to know.

Calgary Votes 2025: Municipal Candidates Respond to Student Issues Survey

Calgary Votes 2025: Municipal Candidates Respond to Student Issues Survey 150 150 admin

The Calgary Student Alliance (CSA), which includes your SU, has been busy preparing for Calgary's upcoming municipal election. We let candidates know what matters to students by putting together a student priorities brochure and survey, informed by the most common student concerns the CSA hears.

We asked all Mayoral and Ward candidates (who were official by September 22) to weigh in on a range of issues and recommendations in five subject areas: housing, city-campus collaboration, student work opportunities, food security, and public transit. All candidates were given a chance to respond, and you'll find answers from the many who did below, sorted by ward. (Not sure what ward you're in? See the City's map.)

As you read through this post, make sure you check each candidate's comments, especially if they indicated that they disagree with a CSA proposal. The CSA is non-partisan and its recommendations are advisory only, so candidates may have provided an alternative idea that works for you.

For those of you who are still undecided, don't miss the Ward 7 Candidate Debate happening on campus October 9, 1:30pm-3:30pm in the MacEwan Ballroom. Earlier still, our friends at SAITSA will host a Mayoral Candidate Debate on October 3 between 4:30pm-7:00pm at the Aldred Centre, SAIT Campus.

If any candidate who missed the deadline would still like to participate, please return our candidate survey to the CSA's provided contact information.


Jump to answers by candidate type

Candidates for Mayor and Wards containing CSA campuses

Other Wards

Responses are presented unedited, except where indicated for clarity. All links to third-party websites were provided by candidates. The SU is not responsible for the content of any third-party websites, which are included as a convenience only. Information accurate as of October 1, 2025.


MAYORAL

Calgary will vote for its 38th Mayor, who represents the City as a whole and wields a tie-breaking vote in the municipality's governing Council. We received responses from, in alphabetical order: Jeromy Farkas (independent); Jyoti Gondek (independent, incumbent); Larry Heather (independent); Sonya Sharp (Communities First) and Brian Thiessen (Calgary Party). Candidates Jeff Davison (independent), Sarah Elder (independent), Jaeger Gustafson (independent) and Grant Prior (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question FARKAS, Jeromy GONDEK, Jyoti HEATHER, Larry SHARP, Sonya THIESSEN, Brian
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
⚪️ See comments for more
✅ Yes
FARKAS, Jeromy

We are in a housing crisis. When the average Calgarian can’t afford to rent–let alone buy–the average home, it’s clear something’s broken. Renters are even more vulnerable when rents rise faster than wages, and vacancies are few and far between. Many are one rent increase or lease expiry away from being forced out of their communities—or the city entirely. For students, this is an even more acute situation because of the extra costs of education and the need to focus on schooling.

We are the only campaign that has introduced a platform for renters and think it is important to ensure students have housing so they can worry about grades, not where they can sleep. As mayor, I will work to protect renters and ensure that we all have a path to stable and affordable housing:

  • Launch a Calgary Renters’ Support Office to provide legal information, mediation, and support.
  • Advocate to the province for improved rental protections, including clear rules around ‘renovictions’ and reasonable notice standards, and advocacy for the expansion of rent-geared-to-income housing, where rent is based on a tenant’s ability to pay.
  • Support the creation of a Non-Market Housing Acquisition Fund to preserve at-risk rental buildings.
  • Champion a Housing First strategy prioritizing permanent housing with wraparound supports.
  • Establish a Renters’ Advisory Council ensuring that tenant voices help shape municipal housing policy, for example, to begin exploration of a Maximum Heat Bylaw.

You can see more of my housing platform at jeromy.ca

GONDEK, Jyoti

Students have a right to be housed with dignity, and the City of Calgary must be an active partner in ensuring that this housing gets delivered.

HEATHER, Larry

All of these add taxes in what is a provincial domain.

SHARP, Sonya

I will commit to exploring more purpose-built student housing in Calgary. We need balanced and affordable housing options, and that includes making sure students have safe and practical places to live. Every student deserves housing that reflects their reality, and I want to reduce barriers that make it harder to deliver that kind of housing. I will advocate to ensure the City’s housing needs assessment properly accounts for students. If we want a fair and accurate picture of housing in Calgary, students’ needs must be included.

I am open to exploring a landlord licensing system with the Government of Alberta, as well, provided it improves safety and accountability for renters without creating unnecessary red tape that drives up costs.

THIESSEN, Brian

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy — including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease.

At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question FARKAS, Jeromy GONDEK, Jyoti HEATHER, Larry SHARP, Sonya THIESSEN, Brian
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
FARKAS, Jeromy

I have experienced the frustration firsthand of advocating my community and government officials being unwilling to pay attention to these concerns. This is what inspired me to run for City Council in Ward 11 in 2017.

I believe that a part of the Mayor’s role is to use their platform to bring orders of government and stakeholders together. When the Mayor of Calgary calls a meeting, the Government of Alberta has to pay attention. If we are really focused on building a city where students can get an education and build a life, we have to foster collaboration and bring everyone to the table.

I have been able to build these relationships and foster agreements during my career, including as the CEO of Glenbow Ranch Park Foundation when we worked with ranchers, environmentalists, the province and others to save the park from being flooded by finding another, better solution that worked well for every party.

My platform includes many ideas for collaboration and support for post-secondary institutions as they are both an essential part of building a vibrant and well-informed city, and drivers of economic opportunity and innovation.

You can see more at jeromy.ca/platform

GONDEK, Jyoti

Post-secondary institutions provide opportunity for students to advance their careers. It is critical to have joint advocacy in advancing the need for greater investment in post-secondaries.

HEATHER, Larry

Create more Charlie Kirks. Fire leftist professors. Delete useless degrees.

SHARP, Sonya

Post-secondary institutions are essential to Calgary’s economy and future. We want to bring people to Calgary and keep them here, and that starts and ends with great post-secondary options for everyone.

I will collaborate directly with our post-secondary institutions to strengthen opportunities for students, connect them to local jobs, internships, and ensure our city grows in alignment with their needs.

THIESSEN, Brian

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships.

When students succeed, Calgary succeeds — from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question FARKAS, Jeromy GONDEK, Jyoti HEATHER, Larry SHARP, Sonya THIESSEN, Brian
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
FARKAS, Jeromy

I am releasing my youth-focused platform in the coming days, which includes youth employment initiatives to:

  • Pilot Youth Entrepreneurship Zones—designated spaces in city-owned facilities such as libraries and recreation centres where young people can pilot pop-up businesses, tech ideas, or art studios with mentorship and small grants.
  • Commit to summer student hiring through a “First Job with the City” hiring stream for 16–24 year olds. Paid summer jobs in parks, recreation, and administration will give thousands of youth their first work experience while filling seasonal labour gaps.
  • Sponsor a Youth Fellowship in the Mayor’s Office for post-secondary students to complete a research or policy project at City Hall and gain practical civic experience while shaping real solutions for Calgary.

I understand the immense importance of building employment opportunities for young people. Youth engagement is much more than a “box to check.”

It’s a two-way conversation where young people are full partners in shaping Calgary’s future. Our city’s long-term prosperity depends on creating pathways for youth to thrive—in school, in work, in public life, and in their neighbourhoods.

GONDEK, Jyoti

Youth employment is the foundation for our economy. We need to ensure that barriers to employment are identified and removed.

In addition, initiatives like the Council-funded Opportunity Calgary Investment Fund are able to support youth in gaining employment by providing grants to organizations like The Knowledge Society.

HEATHER, Larry

There is a huge misuse of current employment especially under DEI.

SHARP, Sonya

I see Calgary’s high youth unemployment rate as an urgent concern. I will work to create the conditions for businesses to grow and hire, and I will prioritize solutions that connect students with meaningful work and skill-building opportunities.

I will explore expanding municipal work and volunteer opportunities for students. Calgary should be a city where young Calgarians can contribute, learn, and grow into community leadership.

THIESSEN, Brian

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience.

The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement.

Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help — it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question FARKAS, Jeromy GONDEK, Jyoti HEATHER, Larry SHARP, Sonya THIESSEN, Brian
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
FARKAS, Jeromy

I have experienced food insecurity at several points in my life and will champion initiatives to de-stigmatize this and highlight the huge challenges students and youth face in Calgary.

Student food insecurity spiked by 40% last year, which puts a huge strain on young Calgarians who are trying to learn and build opportunities for the future.

In my platform, I have pledged to:

  • Provide stable, multi-year funding to social sector organisations to address the acute need for many services.
  • Further drive youth employment and mentorship opportunities.
  • Ensure the voices of young Calgarians are a key part of conversations around food insecurity.
  • Champion City plans like the Food Resilience Plan.
GONDEK, Jyoti

It’s important to have confidential access to food available for students.

Projects like the free pantry allow for students and youth to access food anonymously. We must also remove the stigma by talking about the issue and stressing the need to create more food security.

HEATHER, Larry

Opposite inflationary spending. Shrinkage of currency the problem.

SHARP, Sonya

Affordability is one of the biggest challenges we face today, and practical steps are needed to ensure vulnerable residents, including students, are supported.

I will work to reduce the stigma that students and young people may feel when they seek help for food insecurity. No one should feel shame in asking for help, and I believe the City has a role in building awareness and making programs more accessible.

THIESSEN, Brian

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures — housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question FARKAS, Jeromy GONDEK, Jyoti HEATHER, Larry SHARP, Sonya THIESSEN, Brian
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
FARKAS, Jeromy

I have committed to extend the Low-Income Transit Pass program for ten years. This is an essential step to tackle poverty reduction and address the needs of many young people right now.

I have also committed to complete Phase 1 of the Green Line and advance conversations with community, industry, and province on future phases.

Additionally, I support strengthening the Bus Rapid Transit route that serves the north leg of the Green Line to get people moving now while they are waiting for light rail to get to them.

You can read my full 25-point plan on mobility here: jeromy.ca/policy-brief/moving-forward/

GONDEK, Jyoti

The U-pass system has been in place for a long time and may need an overhaul.

Ensuring that students are able to access low income transit passes in lieu of U-pass may be a better solution.

HEATHER, Larry

Use buses.

SHARP, Sonya

I support the completion of the Green Line. Calgary must deliver transit projects responsibly, on time, on budget, and with reliable service that people can count on.

I worked hard to ensure the Green Line made it from the Event Centre to the south, and will continue to work hard on the downtown and north leg.

I will commit to exploring ways to make sure our transit system reliably serves all post-secondary campuses.

Transit should work for the people who rely on it most, and students need safe and dependable access to every part of our city.

Whether the U-Pass, low-income pass, or otherwise, there are options for students to access transit.

THIESSEN, Brian

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students.

We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses.

We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities.

Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 7

Ward 7 is a post-secondary student hot spot, containing the University of Calgary, Bow Valley College, SAIT, and the Calgary campus of the University of Lethbridge. We received responses from candidates Myke Atkinson (independent); David Barrett (independent); and Heather McRae (Calgary Party). Candidates Greg Amoruso (independent), Anthony Ascue (A Better Calgary Party) and Terry Wong (Communities First, incumbent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question ATKINSON, Myke BARRETT, David McRAE, Heather
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ATKINSON, Myke

Students face unique housing challenges from affordability and lease stability to safety and proximity to school, and I strongly support more purpose-built and diverse student housing options as part of a broader mixed housing ecosystem. As someone who worked for over a decade at the University of Calgary’s CJSW and who has lived in the neighbouring community of Banff Trail for 15 years, I’ve seen firsthand the pressures students face living on and around campus.

We must stop treating students as a homogenous group of single renters and instead plan for the diverse needs of families, graduate students, and international students, as well as the varied ways students with modern lives and interests want to live while attending school. That means expanding student housing not just on campuses but in the surrounding communities that end up providing a lot of market housing due to proximity, and we should be seizing on opportunities like office-to-housing conversions that can help to meet the growing needs of Bow Valley College and the expanding downtown satellite campuses.

I will also advocate for student housing to be explicitly included in the City’s Housing Needs Assessment, and I support implementing a thoughtful landlord licensing system to improve quality standards and protect renters, especially in neighbourhoods with high student populations where the turnover can be high and we often see issues around overcrowding and other problematic conditions.

BARRETT, David

Spurring construction of more purpose-built student housing will require pulling a few different levers. Students need more market and nonmarket housing, and they need it closer to their campus. Calgary must begin by legalizing increased density and housing supply, by C-Train stations and post-secondary campuses. While there appears to be consensus on the benefits of Transit-Oriented Development (TOD), our city has failed to enact it. If elected, I will push for city-initiated rezoning of areas around post-secondary campuses and C-Train stations. It’s better for students’ quality of life, affordability, our climate, and our city’s finances.

Calgary lacks a history of student housing development. The result is difficulty finding developers who wish to take on a student housing project. If elected, I will seek to direct City Administration to create a developers’ guide on student housing, in consultation with students’ associations, post-secondary institutions, and subject matter experts. I would further use my office to advocate that new developments around C-Train stations include dedicated student housing or otherwise deeply affordable housing units that are accessible to students. This would include prioritizing mixed-model nonprofit housing organizations and Calgary Housing Company (CHC) developments during the application process, both of which would supply units suitable for student families.

CHC’s housing stock is inadequate, and many of its units have fallen into disrepair. This impedes CHC as a significant housing option to students and other vulnerable Calgarians. A cornerstone of my campaign is ending costly urban sprawl. Urban sprawl drains Calgary’s financial resources with new, inefficient infrastructure and inadequate tax bases. If elected, I will continue supporting gentle density in neighbourhoods, raising the tax base, and enabling Calgary to fund more construction of CHC housing.

Downtown student housing is a core part of Calgary’s Downtown Revitalization Strategy, and it is something I support. However, as ward councillor, I would work collaboratively with students’ associations and City Administration to put the $25 million downtown student housing funding to work, including by increasing procurement efforts. If elected, I will also direct City Administration to study the creation of a broader Student Housing Incentive Program, of similar function to the Downtown Post-Secondary Institution Incentive Program, to support and incentivize nonmarket housing construction that reserves units for students. This measure will include leveraging provincial and federal dollars to ensure the burden does not solely rest on the city and post-secondary institutions.

I endeavour to bring data-driven decision-making to my office, if elected. If elected, I will invest in Calgary’s Open Data Program and direct City Administration to supplement an improved Housing Needs Assessment with a Post-Secondary Student Housing Survey, akin to Edmonton’s, to gain a deeper understanding of students’ current needs.

I support the implementation of a landlord licensing scheme, a rental registry, anti-renoviction bylaws, and a maximum heat bylaw. In August, I spoke at a rally with ACORN Calgary, where I committed to introducing a Notice of Motion to initiate the creation of landlord licensing and a landlord registry. Council has made no movement on landlord licensing, despite its being a part of Calgary’s new Housing Strategy.

Overall, I encourage you to read my full housing platform at Davidfor7 - Housing, in which I include measures to reduce the friction between builders and residents. Not only are these measures reasonable in that they uphold existing bylaw and reduce safety concerns for current and future neighbours, but they are necessary to reduce opposition to building the new housing that we need.

McRAE, Heather

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question ATKINSON, Myke BARRETT, David McRAE, Heather
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ATKINSON, Myke

While post-secondary support is largely a provincial responsibility, cities like Calgary still need to advocate for the needs of their people. For me, that means adding post-secondary advocacy to a list that already includes related issues like the Green Line, housing affordability and rent control, and youth employment. Post-secondaries are critical drivers of Calgary’s cultural and economic vitality. Institutions like the University of Calgary, Bow Valley College, SAIT, and MRU bring research, innovation, and energy to our city. I will press the province for stronger support while ensuring the City continues to partner with campuses, whether through downtown expansion opportunities or integrating students into city projects. My own experience leading CJSW and working at the Calgary Public Library has shown me how post-secondary communities strengthen Calgary as a whole.

BARRETT, David

I proudly support increasing post-secondary students’ presence in our downtown. This is something called for by nearly every stakeholder, and it is something I hope to accelerate if elected.

As a University of Calgary sessional instructor and researcher, I have personally experienced the province’s financial and ideological attacks against post-secondary institutions. I have also experienced the lack of political support for students, faculty, and other staff when university leadership or the province fail us.

While post-secondary funding, student jobs, and provincial interference in university governance fall within provincial jurisdiction, I believe that the Ward 7 city councillor should act as an advocate to support their post-secondary constituents wherever possible.

Therefore, if elected, I will:

● Use my office as a watchdog against provincial overreach in our police force against student protesters.

● Reverse the lackluster communication between the Ward 7 councillor’s office and students’ association leadership by committing to quarterly and as-needed meetings with students’ associations.

● Collaborate with students’ associations to pressure the province into restoring the Summer Temporary Employment Program (STEP), including by utilizing my connection to Alberta Municipalities, if the newly announced Alberta Youth Employment Incentive proves inadequate.

● Explore increases to the Downtown Post-Secondary Incentive Program.

● Conduct a safety audit around the SAPL campus and future post-secondary sites.

● Invest in improved lighting, more direct transit routes, and other safety measures for the SAPL campus and future post-secondary sites.

● Encourage more research and job opportunities by streamlining the ability for community associations, city business units, and community organizations to formally partner with faculty and students to tackle local issues.

● Use my office to support and supplement public messaging from students’ associations and post-secondary institutions about the need for increased provincial funding.

McRAE, Heather

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question ATKINSON, Myke BARRETT, David McRAE, Heather
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ATKINSON, Myke

Students bring creativity, energy, and commitment to Calgary. I support reserving more spaces for them in municipal projects, from city-building initiatives to arts and cultural programming, both as paid and volunteer opportunities. At CJSW, I saw firsthand the value of youth employment programs like the Summer Temporary Employment Program (STEP) and Canada Summer Jobs (CSJ). These programs usually doubled our small non-profit staff over the summer while giving students extremely valuable opportunities to bridge their education into the workforce. Young people attending our schools are one of the biggest on-ramps of talent and vibrancy to our city, and we should be working harder to retain this talent after graduation. My platform also calls for activating vacant City buildings with youth-led programming, creating spaces for students to lead, connect, and gain experience. Addressing youth unemployment is essential not just for students but for Calgary’s long-term cultural and economic strength.

BARRETT, David

If elected, I will push for significant expansions to our city services to meet the demands of our rapidly growing inner-city communities. In doing so, I commit to directing City Administration to reserve work and volunteer opportunities in these expanded services and new facilities. Whether I am championing the Foothills Multisport Fieldhouse and Athletic Park redevelopment or directing City Administration to study an issue, I will advocate for the consideration of including student jobs.

Therefore, if elected, I will:

  • Collaborate with students’ associations to pressure the province into restoring the Summer Temporary Employment Program (STEP), including by utilizing my connection to Alberta Municipalities, if the newly announced Alberta Youth Employment Incentive is inadequate.
  • Create more co-op, apprentice, and volunteer opportunities by connecting Calgary’s Civic Partner organizations with post-secondary institutions’ co-op, apprenticeship, and volunteer offices.
  • Encourage more research and job opportunities by streamlining the ability for community associations, city business units, and community organizations to formally partner with faculty and students to tackle local issues.
  • Continue summer hiring programs and encourage City Administration to identify new youth employment opportunities when jobs are created due to increased investment in public services.
  • Provide resource guides for nonprofits, festivals, Civic Partners, and arts organizations on how best to advertise volunteer opportunities to students.
  • Explore increases to the Downtown Post-Secondary Incentive Program.
  • Conduct a safety audit around the SAPL campus and future post-secondary sites.
  • Invest in improved lighting, more direct transit routes, and other safety measures for the SAPL campus and future post-secondary sites.
McRAE, Heather

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question ATKINSON, Myke BARRETT, David McRAE, HEATHER
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ATKINSON, Myke

Food insecurity is rising across Calgary, and students are especially impacted. I will continue to support and expand the City’s Food Resilience Plan and partner with student associations to ensure students know what resources are available without shame or stigma. No student or Calgarian should have to choose between rent and groceries, which is why my platform includes strengthening nonprofit and community-led initiatives that provide essential services like food security.

Beyond immediate supports, I believe in long-term solutions such as promoting urban agriculture and low-cost improvements like community gardens and urban orchards, which provide fresh food close to where people live and study while building stronger neighbourhood connections.

BARRETT, David

Knowing that you’re not alone helps reduce stigma, particularly with food insecurity. If elected, I will work with Vibrant Communities Calgary (VCC) and to include post-secondary student demographics when surveying Calgarians about food insecurity. I would also use my office to raise awareness about major poverty indicators, including food insecurity, for students and other vulnerable populations in Ward 7. If elected, my office would seek to ease municipal permitting restrictions for community fridges and pantries. I believe we require more ‘no-questions-asked’ supports to combat stigma.

Mobility is a challenge for students, particularly those living where transit connections are few. Too many students take long walks through the dead of winter to retrieve groceries. My platform includes measures to create more corner stores to introduce a walkable option, and my office would seek increased transit frequency and direct routes between large student populations and grocery stores. I support the work being done by the city’s team behind the Food Resilience Plan and look forward to collaborating with them to establish concrete metrics for Ward 7, if elected.

McRAE, Heather

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question ATKINSON, Myke BARRETT, David McRAE, Heather
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ATKINSON, Myke

Reliable, affordable transit is critical for students, and it benefits the entire city when students can get where they need to go safely and on time. I have already committed to fare-free transit for all youth 18 and under, restoring four-car CTrains, and improving reliability and frequency system-wide so that students aren’t left waiting at overcrowded stops or missing classes and shifts. I strongly support completing the Green Line the right way, fully through downtown and into north-central Calgary, while continuing to explore expansions that connect more communities.

Just as important is ensuring post-secondary campuses like MRU and Foothills have dependable transit connections, including exploring direct or shuttle options where service is currently lacking. My priorities also include completing missing pathway connections, making active transportation safer and more accessible, and ensuring transit and mobility planning is inclusive of children, seniors, and people with disabilities. Students should never be left behind at the bus stop, and they should feel that transit is a safe, reliable, and sustainable choice during their studies and beyond.

BARRETT, David

Rather than undermining municipal negotiations with the province regarding the Green Line, as our current Ward 7 councillor has done, I will bring a more outspoken, public, and activist approach to the issue. I commit to working with stakeholder groups to increase political pressure on the province to secure a commitment for the north leg of the Green Line, as well as an underground alignment.

I will push to finally fund the Route Ahead plan to ensure 10-minute service for C-Train, MAX bus lines and BRTs. I will couple this with transit-friendly infrastructure, such as bus stop carve-outs, to keep buses from getting stuck in traffic. I will push to move beyond the Route Ahead plan and invest more heavily in additional transit connections, increased frequency, and more direct routes (including shuttles where needed). We also require 24-hour C-Train service to support night life and our night shift workers.

Improved safety on transit requires more eyes on the platform and addressing the homelessness crisis at its core. I support increased lighting, heating/cooling centres so unhoused Calgarians don’t need to use transit as refuge, restoring kiosks and small businesses to C-Train stations, and more. Fundamentally, we require a housing first approach, and I encourage you to read this part of my platform on my website.

I will work with the Ward 8 councillor to add bus service to MRU and secure a greater supply of buses to prevent overloading.

Calgary has posted a $220 million surplus. We can afford to heavily invest in transit.

As a freshwater and climate scientist, I share students’ concerns about climate change. I encourage the CSA team to consider reading my answers to the Calgary Environment Roundtable questionnaire to see my further thoughts.

McRAE, Heather

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 8

Ward 8 contains the campus of Mount Royal University and its surrounding neighbourhoods, as well as communities not far from other post-secondary campuses, such as Shaganappi. No incumbent is running in this Ward. We received responses from candidates Miguel Cortines (independent); Kent Hehr (independent); and Nathaniel Schmidt (independent). Candidates who declined to answer were Gary Bobrovitz (independent), Josie Kirkpatrick (independent), and Cornelia Wiebe (Communities First).


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question CORTINES, Miguel HEHR, Kent SCHMIDT, Nathaniel
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CORTINES, Miguel

If elected, I will advocate for a housing system that provides housing options for all diverse groups in our city. Students are an important group in our society, and you are pointing out very important challenges you are facing. We need to work with developers, city official planners, and feedback from the community to find housing solutions that provide a decent style of living, including creating regulations to provide good life conditions for renters.

One concept that I love is University District. It is a concept with an integral vision that provides similar street landscape, ordered densification, housing inventory, retail spaces, parking in streets, and underground parking, park areas, event space, and other amenities. We need to develop this type of concept around the city, so people can enjoy their neighbourhoods.

HEHR, Kent

The most direct approach to housing affordability is an increase to our housing stock - non-market, market, and student focused alike. I recall a prolonged and, eventually victorious advocacy drive by Calgary students regarding secondary suites that recognized this very issue. By increasing the availability of housing, students stand to benefit. That requires a multi-pronged approach. Our zoning system needs to be torn down and simplified, allowing for responsible densification that adds to the housing stock while meeting the diverse needs of the market. That means housing that can address the requirements of students, individuals, and family units across two or more generations. In simple terms, students are served when the entire city is served - and my plan sees to it.

As for a landlord licensing or public disclosure/review system, there are certainly examples of it that have been brought to my attention. New York, I know, provides public tools that allow tenants to search their landlord’s records on publicly-disclosed housing violations and legal actions. I’m yet to be delivered a Calgary-specific brief on a licensing system - but as I like to say, I’m not in the practice of impeding good public policy. If we explore the idea and it seems like a good policy, I’ll get behind it.

SCHMIDT, Nathaniel

On introducing more purpose-built student housing: I support exploring additional student housing options, particularly where they make sense near campuses and transit. Ward 8 has some of the city’s strongest post-secondary institutions, and students deserve to feel part of thriving neighbourhoods. My approach is to push for growth that provides a range of housing options, and this includes housing for students.

Areas around our post-secondary institutions are growing and changing. Currie Barracks adjacent to Mount Royal in Ward 8 is a perfect example. That neighbourhood is quickly adding amenities, housing, and more services. I believe there is an opportunity here to work with Mount Royal to share plans and strategies for upcoming development to ensure that student housing is included in this growth. Working together to bring in more of this type of development in this area will also justify improvements to transit service and other amenities based on population growth.

Westbrook C-Train station is another key opportunity for student housing in Ward 8. The city took possession of this land from the former developer in late 2024 and we received $7 million as a result of the arrangement. This is once again public land which gives the City more control over how it is developed. I see the opportunity for a mix of housing options - including non-market housing, purpose-built rentals, and market housing. Westbrook is a prime location for students because of its proximity to services and rapid transit routes connected to most of Calgary’s post-secondary institutions.

On meeting the diverse needs of students: I believe housing policy must reflect the diversity of our city. That includes students with families, graduate students, and international students. I will advocate for a mix of housing options that serve different needs. One important missing piece that comes to mind is rentals with three or more bedrooms that support students who have families. There is a lack of this housing type throughout Calgary and its inclusion in neighbourhoods close to post-secondary institutions would be beneficial for students, but also other families who would benefit from this form of housing. Locating it near post-secondary institutions adds additional benefits as those within Ward 8 are close to services, amenities, and public spaces which helps make life more affordable and more enriching by eliminating the cost and time of additional travel.

On the housing needs assessment: I think it’s important that students are recognized as a distinct demographic in housing discussions. Students face unique pressures: high rents, low vacancy, and often no family support. That should be part of the data Council relies on. The Housing Strategy addresses some of these needs but I think specific focus on our student population is needed because we all benefit when we enable young adults to afford to live, study, work, and remain in Calgary.

This is why I fully support the 98 actions in the Housing Strategy. Together, they create a pipeline of improved affordability that provides diverse housing options for people at all stages of life. Along with providing housing for students, we also need affordable housing options for graduates in the early stages of their careers. The average annual income required for rent or ownership in Calgary is growing beyond the means of many young adults and this must change.

I moved to Calgary in 2008 following my undergraduate degree in Lethbridge and at 22. I had limited financial resources and did not grow up in Calgary. Access to affordable rent kept me in this city, which I have called home for nearly 20 years. We must address these gaps in housing so more young adults have the same opportunity to live in and contribute to our city.

On landlord licensing: I support exploring options that ensure safe, livable rental housing for everyone. My priority is accountability and safety while avoiding unnecessary costs that risk being passed on to the renter and increasing costs that are already too high for many students. Advocating for these changes requires careful strategy and collaboration because the province controls many of the rules related to the landlord-tenant relationship. There are some approaches I think would work best.

The first and most important is finding opportunities for partnerships with other municipalities in Alberta such as Edmonton, Lethbridge, Red Deer, and Medicine Hat. A landlord licensing system would be most effective if implemented across the province because so many landlords manage properties in multiple municipalities. It also allows for the sharing of resources and systems.

This leads to the second approach, which is consultation with the province. The rules around tenancy in Alberta are in need of an update to better address new challenges being faced by renters and gaps that exist in the current rules. The City can be a leader in this process and encourage the province to work together to create a system that makes life better for renters. The third approach is identifying areas of need that are within the City’s capacity to change. This could include issues such as temperature standards for apartment units and noise control. These are both public health issues and municipalities have the ability to create bylaws in this area.

We are experiencing more extreme weather and renters are most vulnerable to its effects. Many rental units have substandard systems to provide comfortable temperatures and renters are facing increased health risks as a result. Higher standards means healthier people and we need to start exploring solutions now before the problem becomes worse. Many rental units are built in high traffic areas and Calgary is seeing more problems around vehicles modified to produce disruptive and harmful noise levels. The City is currently undertaking a pilot program to enforce noise standards but it does not have the scope to make a significant impact. I want to see this program expanded and more research done to see how other cities around the world have found solutions. There is no public benefit to allowing this to continue, and there is strong public support for this initiative.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question CORTINES, Miguel HEHR, Kent SCHMIDT, Nathaniel
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CORTINES, Miguel

We need to work in collaboration with provincial and federal partners so we can allocate more resources to educational institutions so they can create modern programs that are aligned with the current educational needs in a new digital economy. We need to support post secondary institutions to create new programs based on futuristic careers with a practical approach where students can be graduated with skills that the market is demanding.

HEHR, Kent

I won’t keep you waiting on this one. I support public education, and I support strong connections between our publicly-funded PSIs and the communities in which they educate. One of my campaign co-chairs is a former vice chair of the CSA, my personal assistant a former chair of it. I’m certain they’d not sign on if I felt differently.

SCHMIDT, Nathaniel

I believe the City should view post-secondaries as key partners. We’ve already seen success with the City’s support of UCalgary’s new downtown campus. I want to see more of these win-win partnerships that bring students, businesses, and communities together. Again, Mount Royal is a key opportunity in this process. The surrounding development in Currie Barracks will attract young families and a mix of housing types, and collaborating with Mount Royal to continue this vision with the inclusion of services that benefit students will make a stronger Calgary for everyone.

I will use my voice as a councillor to press the province on the importance of investing in Calgary’s post-secondaries. These institutions drive innovation and create jobs, and they are anchors for Calgary’s long-term success. We can be a leader through showing by example. This includes prioritizing development around post-secondary institutions that makes life more affordable for students and makes Calgary a city where people seek out their post-secondary education. Showing the provincial and federal governments that we are doing the hard work to attract students gives us credibility and creates the foundation for greater supports from both levels of government.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question CORTINES, Miguel HEHR, Kent SCHMIDT, Nathaniel
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CORTINES, Miguel

We need to provide opportunities for new generations. I will propose the creation of a mentorship program for new graduates so they can have the opportunity to be working with City of Calgary employees. New graduates can learn practical skills and gain experience. City staff can have some valuable support from youth and energetic people.

HEHR, Kent

Look, this is an urgent problem. I refer in my policies to the rise of youth unemployment from 13.8% to 17% year-over-year, and it’s a guiding light for myself and the group of young volunteers that make up my team.

Let’s talk about municipal work opportunities. To help youth enter the workforce, gain valuable experience, mentorship, training, and enter careers in public service, I want the city to fund, to start, 2500 new youth summer jobs with the City of Calgary and partner organizations providing valued services to the community. These entry level roles would be distributed across various sectors such as parks and recreation, community services, conservation, and culture.

There’s more work to be done in economic development to create jobs and a clear path from graduation to employment there, but I digress.

SCHMIDT, Nathaniel

Young people need opportunities to contribute and gain experience. While the City can’t solve everything, it can do better at opening doors for students to get involved in civic projects and seasonal employment. We must maintain funding for City programming directed towards students and recent graduates including the summer jobs, internships, co-ops, and entry-level positions.

I am committed to exploring [municipal work and volunteering opportunities]. Students bring energy, skills, and creativity. I’ve seen it in our community associations and local initiatives. We need to make it easier for them to plug into city-building work.

I believe the City also has a strong role as an enabler through partnering with community organizations that provide youth employment opportunities. By providing space, funding, and communication in collaboration with these organizations and post-secondary institutions, we can create a pipeline for students to find work without having to leave our city. This approach provides diverse options for students to find volunteering and work that match their training and skillsets while also strengthening the organizations doing important work who choose to participate.

We can also enable entrepreneurs through other programming such as pilot programs for start-up businesses on city-owned land such as C-Train stations. By removing barriers for rent and providing space for young people to pilot business ideas, we can create opportunities for young people to enter the business world.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question CORTINES, Miguel HEHR, Kent SCHMIDT, Nathaniel
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CORTINES, Miguel

Students need all the support of our society to be concentrated in their studies. I will be in favour of supporting any initiative that provides support for hard working students.

HEHR, Kent

Food security is a massive concern, and more needs to be done. I’ve always approached social supports from a place of stigma reduction and elimination - there is simply no need to feel shame or embarrassment over asking for the help you need. This is the beating heart of equity - understanding that individuals need different things and allowing us, as a society, to freely meet those needs. As the beneficiary of social supports myself, and as a longtime advocate for Canadians with disabilities, I count this as a central tenet of my worldview.

SCHMIDT, Nathaniel

I support the City’s ongoing efforts on food resilience. I will advocate for making sure students are included when we talk about food security and that the programs we fund meet the needs of those most in need of help. We must focus on the types of initiatives that produce measurable outcomes and real benefits and it must be more than awareness and education.

I will work with partners – campus groups, non-profits, and community associations – to ensure resources are accessible and stigma-free. Through my work providing legal services for low-income individuals, I see how barriers to entry create more problems than they solve. Services must be easily accessible and allow students to comfortably and confidentially receive the help they need. Partnering with post-secondary institutions to assist in providing communication, space, and points of contact if they’ve identified a need in their student body is an approach I believe would work best.

TRANSIT.
Question CORTINES, Miguel HEHR, Kent SCHMIDT, Nathaniel
Do you support the completion of the Green Line LRT?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CORTINES, Miguel

The Green Line must be completed, and also the train from the airport to downtown. I am in favour of creating more transportation lines including BRT buses from remote communities to downtown that can travel long distances with few stops. Reliable transportation with reduced waiting times is critical to be more productive in our society.

HEHR, Kent

I supported the completion of the Green Line when it was first proposed in 1841 (haha), and I support it now. I’ll keep this answer brief - transit allows for the easy movement of goods and people through a city. Anyone who wants to get in the way of that is a dolt. That’s why I want to expand the free fare zone, introduce a circle line around our inner city core, and invest in deeper and robust transit systems writ large. It wouldn’t hurt to get students in the room on UPass contract renewals, either, would it?

SCHMIDT, Nathaniel

The Green Line is vital infrastructure, and I support its full build-out to bring affordable transportation options to all areas of Calgary. The funding from both levels of government appears to be secured but more work is needed to find the best solution for the downtown alignment. In the meantime, knowing that the south leg is being constructed, we need to start working now to plan future transit routes and biking/walking corridors that connect adjacent communities to this new resource safely and efficiently.

I’ve heard from Mount Royal University students in Ward 8 that current service is often overcrowded and unreliable. I will push for service improvements so that students can rely on rapid transit bus lines to get to class, work, and community activities. As with the Green Line, connectivity within communities is a key factor to making this work. Rapid transit bus routes that service Mount Royal from other neighbourhoods in the city must be accessible by frequent service on feeder transit routes and walking/biking corridors. This also connects to our strategies for where student housing options are built and why we have identified more student housing in the vicinity of Mount Royal and Currie Barracks and Westbrook C-Train station as key opportunities within Ward 8.

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WARD 1

Ward 1 spans communities along Crowfoot Trail up to Tuscany and Calgary's outskirts, and northwest communities including Varsity and Bowness. Candidate Kim Tyers (Communities First) provided an alternative response to the CSA's survey. Candidates Matthew Fritz (independent), Cathy Jacobs (A Better Calgary), Joey Nowak (Calgary Party), Dan Olesen (independent) and Ali Oonwala (independent) declined to answer.


TYERS, Kim

Thank you for sending over the survey. I appreciate the opportunity to review the issues important to the Calgary Student Alliance.

However, I believe many of the questions fall under provincial jurisdiction and funding. Without the full context of the province's current initiatives to address these complex issues, I don't feel it would be appropriate to provide simple yes or no answers.

Should I be successful in the upcoming election, I would be pleased [to] discuss student concerns in more detail and explore how the City of Calgary can effectively contribute to addressing them.

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WARD 2

Ward 2 is in the northwest of the city, comprised of communities between and around Ranchlands and Glacier Ridge. Candidate Candy Lam (Calgary Party) responded to our survey. Candidates Trevor Cavanaugh (independent), Shaukat Chaudhry (independent), John Garden (A Better Calgary) and Jennifer Wyness (independent, incumbent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question LAM, Candy
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
LAM, Candy

I’ve heard from many students who are really feeling the pressure of Calgary’s housing market. If we want to attract students and build vibrant post-secondary communities, housing has to be part of that conversation. As councillor, I’ll listen to students’ experiences, identify the gaps, and explore how the City can support safer, purpose-built housing including options for those with families. Housing also needs to be planned alongside reliable infrastructure like transit, so students can get where they need to go. At the end of the day, students should be able to focus on their studies and research, not stress about their living situation. I’ll be an advocate for making that possible at City Hall.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question LAM, Candy
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
LAM, Candy

As a University of Calgary alum and someone who’s been involved in Calgary’s start-up community, I know how important our post-secondary institutions are to the success of the city. If elected, I want to advocate for students and highlight the valuable contributions you make to our economy and culture. I’ll also explore ways the City and our campuses can work more closely together because when students thrive, it benefits not just you, but the entire city.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question LAM, Candy
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
LAM, Candy

I share the concerns many Ward 2 residents have about youth unemployment. It’s often hard for students to find that first job where they can apply their education and build new skills. I believe the City has a role to play as a leader in career development. If elected as councillor, I would explore opportunities like volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeships, work-integrated learning programs, and job rotation within City departments — and ensure entry-level roles come with real training. That way, we’re not just supporting students in the short term, we’re helping to build a stronger workforce for Calgary’s future.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question LAM, Candy
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians? AND Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
LAM, Candy

Through my volunteer work at Elizabeth House, I’ve seen firsthand how important it is that food supports are not only available, but also accessible and dignified. Students face many of the same challenges, often compounded by housing and other cost-of-living pressures. As councillor, I want to keep listening to students, reduce the stigma around asking for help, and explore how the City’s Food Resilience Plan can better reflect real student needs. I also believe food security shouldn’t exist in isolation. It has to connect with other supports — like housing, transit, and affordability programs so students aren’t left piecing things together on their own. Coordinated supports can make the difference between struggling through school and having the stability to succeed.

TRANSIT.
Question LAM, Candy
Do you support the completion of the Green Line LRT?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
LAM, Candy

As someone who lives in Ward 2, I share one of the biggest frustrations I hear from residents, the lack of reliable transit. Too many students are forced to rely on cars, constant drop-offs, or even ride-shares like Uber just to get around. Long commutes eat into study time and research, and many students are also balancing jobs on top of school. Ward 2 is one of the most underserved areas in Calgary for transit, and that has a direct impact on students trying to get to campus or to work, and overall affordability.

As councillor, I believe we need immediate improvements in the north. This means more frequent buses on busy routes, new stops to improve accessibility, better service to growing communities, and expanded bus routes including MAX and BRT to connect students to schools, amenities, and downtown. In addition, we must complete the Green Line to the north. The delays have gone on far too long, and north Calgary students deserve the same access to efficient, reliable transit as the rest of the city.

Transit is also about safety. Students should feel comfortable riding late at night or early in the morning, which means better lighting, more peace officers, and safety features like help buttons and CCTVs.

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WARD 3

Ward 3 spans the central-north of the City, from Nose Hill Park to Calgary's bounds. No incumbent is running in this Ward. We received responses to our survey by candidates Rajesh Angral (independent), Atul Chauhan (Calgary Party), Jaspriya Johal (independent) and Andrew Yule (independent) responded to our survey. Candidates Taran Dhillon (independent), Danny Ng (independent) and Siraaj Shah (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question ANGRAL, Rajesh CHAUHAN, Atul JOHAL, Jaspriya YULE, Andrew
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
⚪️ See comments
ANGRAL, Rajesh

Students deserve safe, affordable, and accessible housing. I’ll work with developers, institutions, and community groups to ensure housing reflects the realities of student life—including family needs, affordability, and proximity to transit and campuses. Licensing landlords is a smart step toward accountability and renter protection.

CHAUHAN, Atul

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy — including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

YULE, Andrew

Regarding the landlord licensing system, I will commit to the exploration and discussion of this with City Administration and the Provincial Government, but at this current time I do not have a strong opinion on whether it should exist or the best way to regulate it.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question ANGRAL, Rajesh CHAUHAN, Atul JOHAL, Jaspriya YULE, Andrew
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ANGRAL, Rajesh

Post-secondaries are engines of innovation and inclusion. I’ll champion increased funding, mental health supports, and infrastructure investment. Collaboration with institutions will help align city planning with student needs—from housing to transit to job creation.

CHAUHAN, Atul

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds — from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

YULE, Andrew

I intend to listen to and meet with students that I represent and officials from the post-secondary institutions across Calgary as needed throughout the term. I suspect the Ward 7 Councillor will champion this role, but I intend to support from my seat as well.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question ANGRAL, Rajesh CHAUHAN, Atul JOHAL, Jaspriya YULE, Andrew
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
ANGRAL, Rajesh

Youth unemployment is not just an economic issue—it’s a community one. I’ll push for paid internships, mentorship programs, and student-friendly hiring practices within City departments. Volunteering should be a gateway to leadership, not a dead end.

CHAUHAN, Atul

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help — it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

YULE, Andrew

I am incredibly supportive of the new initiatives by Cllr Dhaliwal to bring student work opportunities to City Hall. After having several students volunteer on my campaign, I would love to continue to hear from them and increase their representation in municipal government.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question ANGRAL, Rajesh CHAUHAN, Atul JOHAL, Jaspriya YULE, Andrew
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
⚪️ Left unanswered
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
⚪️ Left unanswered
✅ Yes
ANGRAL, Rajesh

No student should have to choose between textbooks and groceries. I’ll support campus food banks, community gardens, and culturally appropriate food access. We must normalize seeking help and build systems that meet students with dignity.

CHAUHAN, Atul

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit.

We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means:

  • Reducing stigma.
  • Ensuring supports are accessible and dignified.
  • Connecting food programs to broader affordability measures — housing, transit, and other supports.

No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question ANGRAL, Rajesh CHAUHAN, Atul JOHAL, Jaspriya YULE, Andrew
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
⚪️ Left unanswered
❌ No
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
⚪️ Left unanswered
✅ Yes
ANGRAL, Rajesh

Reliable transit is essential for student success. I’ll advocate for better frequency, safety, and connectivity—especially in underserved areas like the northeast. The Green Line must be completed with students in mind, linking campuses, housing, and job hubs.

CHAUHAN, Atul

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students.

We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses.

We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities.

Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

YULE, Andrew

As the Ward 3 Councillor, my primary focus for transit would be the MAX BRT in the North. We have the highest ridership, so we need to prioritize the expansion of bus service and dedicated transit lanes in order to meet demand in the short-term.

Our seniors and students are two groups largely impacted by lack of reliable service in the North.

The Green Line is an incredible capital project that Calgary needs, but it will not be reaching the areas that need it most for many decades at this rate.

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WARD 4

Ward 4 contains post-secondary student rental hotspots including Dalhousie and Brentwood. No incumbent is running in this Ward. We received answers to our survey by candidates D.J. Kelly (Calgary Party) and Jeremy Wong (Communities First). Candidate Sheldon Yakiwchuk (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question KELLY, D.J WONG, Jeremy
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
⚪️ See comments for more
KELLY, D.J

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

WONG, Jeremy

I am a yes for all of your questions except for [landlord licensing]. To this one, I am not a yes or no, as it requires further study on the impacts on the rental market and more engagement with both renters and landlords.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question KELLY, D.J WONG, Jeremy
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
KELLY, D.J

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question KELLY, D.J WONG, Jeremy
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
KELLY, D.J

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question KELLY, D.J WONG, Jeremy
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
KELLY, D.J

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question KELLY, D.J WONG, Jeremy
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
KELLY, D.J

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 5

Ward 5 comprises mostly suburban communities in northeast Calgary. Candidate Gurpreet Dhillon (Calgary Party) responded to our survey. Candidates Raj Dhaliwal (independent, incumbent), Tariq Khan (independent), Harneet Mushiana (independent), Jigar Patel (independent), Harry Singh Purba (independent) and Aryan Sadat (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question DHILLON, Gurpreet
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
DHILLON, Gurpreet

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question DHILLON, Gurpreet
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
DHILLON, Gurpreet

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question DHILLON, Gurpreet
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
DHILLON, Gurpreet

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question DHILLON, Gurpreet
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
DHILLON, Gurpreet

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question DHILLON, Gurpreet
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
DHILLON, Gurpreet

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 6

Ward 6 reaches Calgary's west edge, nestled between the Bow River in the north and the Elbow River in the south. No incumbent is running in this Ward. Answering our survey are candidates Joanne Brice (independent) and Inam Jeja (Calgary Party). Candidates John Pantazopoulos (independent) and Jeff Watson (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question BIRCE, Joanne TEJA, Inam
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
⚪️ See comments for more
✅ Yes
BIRCE, Joanne

On landlord licensing: The City has a very limited role here.

On housing: More affordable housing is part of my platform. For example, I support:

  • Speeding up approvals and working with nonprofits, faith groups, and developers to expand the housing supply.
  • Advocating for stronger provincial and federal commitments to housing.
  • Encouraging transit-oriented, mixed-use, and mixed-income developments to create vibrant, inclusive communities.
  • Encouraging the conversion of underutilized downtown office towers into affordable student residences (aligning with Calgary’s Downtown Development Incentive Program).
  • Exploring adaptive reuse of motels, hotels, or older apartment complexes near transit corridors.
  • Working with Calgary Economic Development, post-secondary institutions, and student associations to better understand the type of current and future student housing requirements.
  • Encouraging public-private partnerships where developers and schools share the costs and benefits of new projects.
  • Integrating student housing into broader neighbourhood planning so students can easily access groceries, recreation, transit, and employment.
  • Supporting student housing options that meet the needs of international students, Indigenous students, students with families, and those with accessibility needs.
  • Promoting housing models that include community-building features (shared kitchens, study lounges, childcare options).
TEJA, Inam

As a renter and someone who was a student in the not-too-distant past, ensuring that the next generation of Calgarians has adequate housing is important to me. Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too.

We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city’s broader housing strategy — including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease.

At City Hall, I’ll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City’s Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question BIRCE, Joanne TEJA, Inam
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
BIRCE, Joanne

Post-secondary institutions are vital to Calgary. They prepare Calgary’s next generation of leaders and provide local businesses with the talent they need to grow. They also fuel innovation and entrepreneurship, create research partnerships, and bring cultural vibrancy to our city.

Most importantly, they give young people a reason to stay, so they can build their career, raise a family, and make Calgary their long-term home.

Ambrose University is right here in my ward, which creates a unique opportunity to build strong partnerships. As Councillor, I am committed to meeting with their leadership early in my term to explore meaningful ways we can work together, supporting students, strengthening our community, and contributing to a stronger Calgary.

I am one of the few candidates running in this election with established relationships across provincial and federal governments. This experience means that when issues require advocacy or collaboration beyond City Hall, I can pick up the phone, open doors, and get Calgary’s voice heard. That puts me in a unique position to deliver results for our community, including Calgary’s post-secondary students.

TEJA, Inam

Calgary’s post-secondary institutions are central to our economy, culture, and growth. As an elected leader, I’ll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also work directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships.

When students succeed, Calgary succeeds — from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES.
Question BIRCE, Joanne TEJA, Inam
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
BIRCE, Joanne

Economic growth is an important part of my platform. A strong economy means good jobs, thriving businesses, and opportunities for every Calgarian. As Calgary continues to grow, our priority is to recruit and retain the best talent, so that the next generation of leaders, today’s students, can help shape the future of our city.

The City of Calgary is one of the largest employers in our city, with over 10,000 people working in an amazing variety of roles, from frontline services to specialized technical careers. This means real opportunities to build a career right here at home for students and recent graduates.

The City could help lower youth unemployment by exploring a variety of practical, cost-efficient ways. For example:

  • Working with post-secondary institutions to advertise volunteer opportunities at the City
  • Encouraging departments to consider practicum placements, co-op programs, internships, and apprenticeships
  • Advocating with the provincial and federal government to support cost-sharing programs to incentivize hiring post-secondary students
  • Collaborating on real-life applied research projects that address city challenges (housing, transportation, art/design in public places, civic engagement, etc.)
  • Inviting student associations and faculty experts to provide input on city policies
  • Offering more summer student positions across diverse fields, not just admin roles
  • Expanding programs like Startup Calgary and connecting youth with innovation hubs, incubators, and local investors.
  • Working with Calgary Economic Development to promote programs like TalentED, Work Integrated Learning and other workforce strategies.
  • Collaborating with universities, colleges, and trade schools to align training with Calgary’s emerging industries (tech, clean energy, film, creative industries, construction).
  • Supporting Calgary’s Downtown Post-Secondary Institution Incentive Program
  • Including student voices on advisory councils or task forces
  • Hosting job fairs and networking events led by the City and industry.
TEJA, Inam

When I’m out doorknocking, I often hear from young people struggling to find good work. Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience.

The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn’t just short-term help — it’s an investment in Calgary’s long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question BIRCE, Joanne TEJA, Inam
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
⚪️ See comments for more
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
⚪️ See comments for more
✅ Yes
BIRCE, Joanne

Food security is a critical issue, but I don’t believe the City of Calgary should be the primary leader here. The provincial and federal governments have the responsibility and resources to fund school nutrition programs, support farmers, and strengthen social safety nets.

Local non-profits like the Calgary Food Bank and the Leftovers Foundation are on the front lines every day, while our farmers, grocers, and community groups are best positioned to grow, supply, and distribute food.

The City’s role should be to support these efforts—by making land available for community gardens, reducing red tape for local food initiatives, and ensuring we’re prepared in times of crisis. By letting the right partners lead, we can build a stronger, more resilient food system for everyone.

TEJA, Inam

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. I will build on the City’s Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities.

That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures — housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question BIRCE, Joanne TEJA, Inam
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
BIRCE, Joanne

Focusing on essentials, or core services is part of my platform. Taxpayer dollars must be used wisely, with priority given to the services people rely on every day: roads, transit, infrastructure, community safety, and first responders.

Access to reliable, affordable transit is essential for Calgary’s post-secondary students. I believe the City can do more to connect our campuses through express bus routes, on-demand shuttles, and stronger links between LRT stations and student neighbourhoods.

By investing in smarter, student-focused transit, we can reduce costs, cut commute times, and make Calgary a more attractive city to study, work, and stay after graduation.

I support:

  • Expanding and improving public transit, with safer roads and more frequent service through the Primary Transit Network – Route Ahead plan.
  • Supporting on-demand micro transit and ride-hailing options that link neighbourhoods to main transit routes.
  • Ensuring barrier-free sidewalks and stations so seniors, families, and people with disabilities can travel easily.
  • Advocating for key projects such as a pedestrian overpass at 17 Ave/Sirocco Station and future Blue Line expansion to 85 St. and beyond.
  • Improving traffic flow by synchronizing lights, adding smart sensors at intersections, and reducing delays at C-Train crossings (starting with 17 Ave/Sarcee Trail).
  • Keeping parking affordable for families, students, workers, and shoppers while supporting vibrant downtown and local businesses.
  • Improving lighting, shelters, and security features to make commuting safer, especially for students travelling late at night.
  • Improving the UPass program with more flexibility (e.g., opt-in summer options, semester-based passes for part-time students).
  • Introducing low-income student transit subsidies for those not covered by UPass (like continuing ed, apprenticeships, or international language students).
  • Exploring dedicated express bus routes connecting major post-secondary campuses (U of C, SAIT, MRU, Ambrose, Bow Valley College) with key residential hubs.
TEJA, Inam

In Ward 6 and across the city, a reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for many people to get around. We at the Calgary Party support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses - including an extension of the Max Teal line in Ward 6 connecting West Calgary with MRU.

We’ll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 9

Ward 9 spans historic inner-city neighbourhoods like Inglewood to newer communities such as Belvedere on Calgary's east edge. No incumbent is running in this Ward. Survey responses can be read from candidates Harrison Clark (independent) and Ariana Kippers (Calgary Party), and an alternative response can be found from candidate Shirley Brun Parungao Do (independent). Candidates who declined to answer are Tony Dinh (A Better Calgary), Gar Gar (independent), Alison McSwiney-Karim (Communities First) and Marina Ortman (independent).


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions. (One candidate chose to provide their individual platform; that's at the bottom, or jump to it now.)

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question CLARK, Harrison KIPPERS, Ariana
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CLARK, Harrison

Committing to higher education is a huge step in life. Finding a place to live safely and securely through the process should not be the problem it has become. Students have been calling out for more support in this regard for as long as I've been participating in local politics. I would be honoured to advocate for these longstanding requests and for the young, engaged voices of this city.

KIPPERS, Ariana

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARY INSTITUTIONS.
Question CLARK, Harrison KIPPERS, Ariana
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CLARK, Harrison

We need a more effective City Council. My hope, with all these seats turning over, is that we can build a more unified council that will be more capable in its dealing with the province. The quality of our post-secondary institutions plays a part in telling the world what kind of city we are. As it stands, Calgary's post secondaries have set a tone of strength and innovation against the landscape of Canada.

KIPPERS, Ariana

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question CLARK, Harrison KIPPERS, Ariana
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CLARK, Harrison

Civic participation is an important part of life in a democracy. Making sure the pathways are kept clear so new generations can make their way to chambers of civic power and influence is integral to the health of our society. Young people are often not reflected in policy at all levels of government. I believe there is an underlying belief that young people "have time to figure it out". This thinking is out of sync with the real, economic disparity young people are currently facing. While I do not have every answer regarding what I can do about it - I count on my awareness of the issue to help guide me through the process.

KIPPERS, Ariana

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question CLARK, Harrison KIPPERS, Ariana
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CLARK, Harrison

Food security is a real and often under-reported concern in Calgary. In discussions with The Alex, and the Alex Kitchen program leads, something like 25% of Calgarians struggle with food insecurity on a regular basis. We do have some wonderful urban farming programs operating in Ward 9 and I'd like to make sure to do everything we can to support them in this work.

KIPPERS, Ariana

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question CLARK, Harrison KIPPERS, Ariana
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
CLARK, Harrison

It is time for this generation's wants and needs to be coherently reflected back to them in the decision making and investments made in this city. Public transportation is an integral part of any urban centre and Calgary is behind in many ways in this regard. We must build the Green Line. We must provide service to central north Calgary. As our population grows we must review all facets of life and make sure our current strategies around road safety, transportation, pathways (everything) are reflective of the way in which we live now and want to live tomorrow. That is the difference between a reactive and proactive leadership strategy.

KIPPERS, Ariana

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

DO, Shirley Brun Parungao - Platform

Thank you for reaching out and for the work you do to represent the voices of post-secondary students in our city. As a candidate for Ward 9 councillor, I strongly believe students are a vital part of Calgary’s future, and your concerns deserve to be heard.

My priorities for supporting students include:

  • Affordable Tuition & Student Success: Tuition should be affordable, with subsidies available for those dedicated to completing their studies. This prevents students from being overburdened with debt, allowing them to graduate, begin their careers, and build their lives without the heavy weight of student loans. Graduates are the foundation of our workforce and bring skills, expertise, and innovation that benefit businesses, communities, and governance. Supporting their success is an investment in Calgary’s future.
  • Affordable Housing: Supporting more accessible housing options so students can focus on their education without being overburdened by rent.
  • Transit & Accessibility: Strengthening transit service to make it safer, more reliable, and affordable, ensuring students can access school, work, and community life with ease.
  • Jobs & Cost of Living: Encouraging local businesses and city initiatives that create fair employment opportunities for students and help ease the rising cost of living.
  • Community & Safety: Building inclusive, safe communities where young people feel welcome and supported.
  • Community Outpost: Establishing a local outpost where the needs of the community can be shared, and information on projects can be communicated in real time, ensuring Ward 9 residents students included are always informed and engaged.

Like many of you, I am seeking a better life and future for our community one where we don’t have to worry about where our city is headed. Together, we can build a stronger, more affordable, and more inclusive Calgary for students and all residents.

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WARD 10

Ward 10 covers northeast communities that are east of Deerfoot Trail, served by the Blue Line. No incumbent is running in this Ward. Responding to our survey was candidate Nickie Brockhoff (Calgary Party). Candidates Andre Chabot (Communities First, incumbent), Mahmoud Mourra (independent) and Tarlochan Singh Sidhu (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question BROCKHOFF, Nickie
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
BROCKHOFF, Nickie

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question BROCKHOFF, Nickie
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
BROCKHOFF, Nickie

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question BROCKHOFF, Nickie
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
BROCKHOFF, Nickie

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question BROCKHOFF, Nickie
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
BROCKHOFF, Nickie

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question BROCKHOFF, Nickie
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
BROCKHOFF, Nickie

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 11

Ward 11 covers southern communities and those southwest of central Calgary, from the Glenmore Reservoir to Riverbend. Our survey received responses from candidates Kourtney Penner (independent, incumbent) and Alex Williams (Calgary Party). Rob Ward (Communities First) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question PENNER, Kourtney WILLIAMS, Alex
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
PENNER, Kourtney

We also need to meet the needs of students with physical and sensory disabilities.

WILLIAMS, Alex

As a renter myself, I'm highly aware of the needs and struggles we face. Our universities are surrounded by opportunities to build housing for students - as are our transit stations that lead there. It's critical that as we explore these options and opportunities, we do so in a way that allows for more housing to be built, not simply more bureaucracy to get in the way.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question PENNER, Kourtney WILLIAMS, Alex
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial
support for our post-secondaries? AND Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
WILLIAMS, Alex

Our universities are where our future starts!

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES.
Question PENNER, Kourtney WILLIAMS, Alex
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth
unemployment as an urgent economic concern? AND Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
PENNER, Kourtney

I believe the city can explore the creation of more youth roles through recreation, parks, and other skill building roles that create long term jobs. We could explore skill building programs in conjunction with both post-secondary and primary schools.

WILLIAMS, Alex

There are many groups and individuals who cite this as one of their top concerns. I will continue to be advocate for opportunities to work and learn.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question PENNER, Kourtney WILLIAMS, Alex
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians? AND Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
WILLIAMS, Alex

I'm not very familiar with the City's Food Resilience Plan but look forward to learning and ensuring that everyone who lives here is able to afford a full, happy, and healthy life.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question PENNER, Kourtney WILLIAMS, Alex
Do you support the completion of the Green Line? AND Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
WILLIAMS, Alex

Having grown up in SE Calgary, I've long awaited for the Green Line and now I'll be able to work on getting the project done! I'm also a daily transit user - not just for commuting, but also for social events, errands, and anything else. I'll be a voice on Council ensuring that Calgarians can get from anywhere to anywhere in the city via transit.

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WARD 12

Ward 12 covers a significant amount of ground in the south and southeast of Calgary. No incumbent is running in this Ward. Candidate Sarah Ferguson (Calgary Party) answered our survey. Candidates Shane Byciuk (Communities First), Brent Curtis (independent), Mike Jamieson (A Better Calgary) and Raj-Kumar Khuttan (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question FERGUSON, Sarah
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
FERGUSON, Sarah

I have more to learn about the housing needs of our students, and am excited to hear the ideas you have to help improve the current situation.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question FERGUSON, Sarah
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries? AND Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
FERGUSON, Sarah

I believe there are a lot of ways we as a City and our post-secondary institutions can work together to build a stronger Calgary and these collaborations have been overlooked.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES.
Question FERGUSON, Sarah
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern? AND Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
FERGUSON, Sarah

I love volunteering and am excited to hear more about your ideas on how we can expand these opportunities in particular for students.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question FERGUSON, Sarah
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians? AND Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
FERGUSON, Sarah

I was unaware of the stigma young people are facing with food insecurity. I will engage in conversations about this in the future to make sure others are also aware so we can work to do better as a society.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question FERGUSON, Sarah
Do you support the completion of the Green Line? AND Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
FERGUSON, Sarah

Living and volunteering in McKenzie Towne for a decade has led me to Green Line advocacy for a very long time now. Transit to Ward 12 is not great, especially accessing our post-secondary campuses. I have had small wins throughout the years, but more work needs to be done and I’d like to be here to do it.

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WARD 13

Ward 13 marries new communities with established neighbourhoods such as Canyon Meadows, covering the west end of Fish Creek Park. Candidate Elliot Weinstein (Calgary Party) answered our survey. Candidate Dan McLean (Communities First, incumbent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs Assessment?
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries?
✅ Yes
Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS.
Question WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT
Do you support the completion of the Green Line?
✅ Yes
Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
WEINSTEIN, ELLIOT

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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WARD 14

Ward 14 is Calgary's central-southern district, following the Bow River and Fish Creek Park to the city limits. No incumbent is running in this Ward. We received survey responses from candidates Chima Akuchie (independent), Landon Johnston (independent) and Ryan Stutt (Calgary Party). Candidates Erin Averbukh (independent), Devin Elkin (independent), Keener Hachey (A Better Calgary) and Sunjiv Raval (independent) declined to answer.


Each section presents the candidates' answers to YES / NO questions posed by the survey in a table format. Click the bars below each table to read a candidate's written thoughts on each issue, where they elaborate on their positions.

STUDENT HOUSING.
Question AKUCHIE, Chima JOHNSTON, Landon STUTT, Ryan
Will you commit to exploring the introduction of more purpose-built student housing throughout Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support encouraging student housing developers to meet the diverse needs of students, including those with dependents?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Will you advocate for the housing needs of students to be adequately considered in the City's Housing Needs
Assessment?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
Do you support exploring a landlord licensing system, akin to existing short-term rental licenses, to ensure the safety and well being of all renters in Calgary?
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
AKUCHIE, Chima

Calgary needs more affordable student housing near transit and post-secondary institutions. Purpose-built student housing reduces pressure on the wider rental market and ensures students can focus on studies instead of housing insecurity.

Students with dependents often face unique challenges. Partnerships with developers should include family-friendly and accessible housing options. Student needs must be formally recognized in housing strategies. This will ensure data-driven advocacy and funding support.

Licensing ensures accountability, reduces exploitative practices, and improves rental conditions for vulnerable groups, including students.

JOHNSTON, Landon

A model I’d support (accountability without bloat): Rather than a blanket, one-size licence, I’d back a lightweight Rental Registry + Safety Standards with teeth:
Free (or nominal-fee) registration for every long-term rental; upload contact info and a self-certified safety checklist (heat, smoke/CO, egress, pests, electrical).
Risk-based inspections: priority for buildings/owners with complaint history, serious violations, or non-registration; random audits for everyone else.
Graduated penalties: fix-by dates; then fines; then licence suspension for repeat or life-safety breaches.
Good-actor incentives: faster permit/service lanes and reduced inspection frequency for clean records.
One window: integrate with 311 so renters can track a complaint, and publish an open registry showing compliance status.
Sunset & review: 2-year pilot with a public report on costs, compliance, and any rent impacts before expanding.

STUTT, Ryan

Calgary is facing a housing crisis, and students are feeling it too. We need to plan for purpose-built student housing as part of the city's broader housing strategy - including options for students with families. Housing must be tied to reliable infrastructure like transit so students can live affordably and access campuses with ease. At City Hall, we'll advocate to ensure student needs are recognized in the City's Housing Needs Assessment and explore tools like landlord licensing to protect renters. Students should be able to focus on their studies, not whether they can afford rent or find a safe place to live.

RECOGNITION FOR POST-SECONDARIES.
Question AKUCHIE, Chima JOHNSTON, Landon STUTT, Ryan
Will you use your platform to advocate for greater provincial support for our post-secondaries? AND Will you collaborate with our post-secondary institutions to the benefit of a stronger Calgary?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
AKUCHIE, Chima

Provincial funding is key for keeping tuition stable and ensuring students have access to affordable education. Strong partnerships with local post-secondary institutions improve economic development, research, and student engagement with city-building.

STUTT, Ryan

Post-secondary institutions are central to Calgary's economy, culture, and growth. As elected leaders, we'll work with the University where appropriate to support funding from the federal and provincial governments and also working directly with campuses to strengthen partnerships. When students succeed, Calgary succeeds - from innovation and research to entrepreneurship and workforce readiness.

MUNICIPAL OPPORTUNITIES.
Question AKUCHIE, Chima JOHNSTON, Landon STUTT, Ryan
Will you explore solutions for Calgary’s high rate of youth unemployment as an urgent economic concern? AND Will you commit to exploring how to introduce more municipal work and volunteering opportunities for students?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
AKUCHIE, Chima

Expanding entry-level city jobs, apprenticeships, and volunteer pathways will provide students valuable experience and improve retention in Calgary’s workforce. Volunteer and internship opportunities should be tied to City projects and community associations, giving students skills while benefiting communities.

JOHNSTON, Landon

I would look to incorporate city jobs that require specific needs for the city at that time. Government work should not be a job bank. We need government to run efficiently and to get out of the way so private companies can grow and become landing positions for students in and out of college. I run a small HVAC company in Calgary and can first hand tell you that the government has got to encourage more people to get into the trades. We have a tsunami of qualified tradespeople retiring in the next 10 years and it will be all hands on deck to just maintain the amount of work we are currently handling.

STUTT, Ryan

Youth unemployment remains a serious challenge. Too many students struggle to find that first job or meaningful career experience. The City can help lead by example — expanding municipal volunteering, mentorship, apprenticeship, and work-integrated learning opportunities. Entry-level roles should also provide training and pathways for advancement. Supporting students into the workforce isn't just short-term help - it's an investment in Calgary's long-term prosperity.

FOOD SECURITY.
Question AKUCHIE, Chima JOHNSTON, Landon STUTT, Ryan
Will you continue and expand upon the City’s Food Resilience Plan to ensure food security for all Calgarians?
✅ Yes
❌ No
✅ Yes
Will you work to reduce the stigma students and young people may face when seeking help for food insecurity?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
AKUCHIE, Chima

Food insecurity affects many students. Supporting community food banks, urban agriculture, and affordable food programs is essential. Programs must be communicated in a respectful and inclusive way so students feel comfortable accessing food supports.

JOHNSTON, Landon

The government can be there to ensure people do not go hungry or homeless. But we must look at the food insecurity as to not how many more people we can help but how many less people need help. We must get to the root of why people are seeking food banks at a higher rate and raise the lower and lower middle class out of this death circle.

STUTT, Ryan

Food security is a growing concern across Calgary, and students are among those hardest hit. We will build on the City's Food Resilience Plan, making sure it reflects student realities. That means reducing stigma, ensuring supports are accessible and dignified, and connecting food programs to broader affordability measures - housing, transit, and other supports. No student should have to choose between eating and studying.

PUBLIC TRANSIT.
Question AKUCHIE, Chima JOHNSTON, Landon STUTT, Ryan
Do you support the completion of the Green Line? AND Will you commit to exploring ways of ensuring Calgary's transit system reliably serves all our post-secondary campuses?
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
✅ Yes
AKUCHIE, Chima

The Green Line will benefit students traveling from south Calgary to downtown and post-secondary campuses. It must be delivered in a fiscally responsible way. Transit routes should be aligned with campus schedules and areas where students live. Safety on transit must also be prioritized.

JOHNSTON, Landon

This is one of my top priorities that doesn’t necessarily affect Ward 14 like it does other parts of Calgary. We need ticket barriers, more peace and police officers. Once people are safe and comfortable riding transit again we can expand the Green Line and the airport line. This should be a 4 year project and not a 20 year project. We need to eliminate the fair entry program and put that money into lowering the cost for all transit users but offering free or $1 a day transit to 18 and under, secondary school students and senior citizens. A bit of that is a pipe dream but it mirrors some of the best transit programs in the world.

STUTT, Ryan

A reliable, affordable, and safe transit system is essential for students. We support the full completion of the Green Line, with a focus on delivering the north leg, and expanding MAX and BRT routes to serve all campuses. We'll also push for immediate improvements in frequency, safety features like lighting and CCTVs, and better connections to growing communities. Students deserve transit that respects their time, safety, and budgets.

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