11-2014 Special Levy Bylaw
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2015 Municipal Codes
2015 Municipal Codes Updated December 11, 2015 Municipal Services Branch 17th Floor Commerce Place 10155 - 102 Street Edmonton, Alberta T5J 4L4 Phone: 780-427-2225 Fax: 780-420-1016 E-mail: [email protected] 2015 MUNICIPAL CHANGES STATUS CHANGES: 0356 - The Town of Chestermere became the City of Chestermere (effective January 1, 2015). NAME CHANGES: 0356 - The City of Chestermere (effective January 1, 2015) from Town of Chestermere. 0506 - Big Lakes County (effective March 6, 2015) from Municipal District of Big Lakes. AMALGAMATED: FORMATIONS: DISSOLVED: 0221 – The Village of Minburn dissolved and became part the County of Minburn (effective July 1, 2015). CODE NUMBERS RESERVED: 4737 Capital Region Board 0522 Metis Settlements General Council 0524 R.M. of Brittania (Sask.) 0462 Townsite of Redwood Meadows 5284 Calgary Regional Partnership STATUS CODES: 01 Cities (18)* 15 Hamlet & Urban Services Areas (391) 09 Specialized Municipalities (5) 20 Services Commissions (71) 06 Municipal Districts (64) 25 First Nations (52) 02 Towns (107) 26 Indian Reserves (138) 03 Villages (92) 50 Local Government Associations (21) 04 Summer Villages (51) 60 Emergency Districts (12) 07 Improvement Districts (8) 98 Reserved Codes (5) 08 Special Areas (3) 11 Metis Settlements (8) * (Includes Lloydminster) December 11, 2015 Page 1 of 13 CITIES CODE CITIES CODE NO. NO. Airdrie 0003 Brooks 0043 Calgary 0046 Camrose 0048 Chestermere 0356 Cold Lake 0525 Edmonton 0098 Fort Saskatchewan 0117 Grande Prairie 0132 Lacombe 0194 Leduc 0200 Lethbridge 0203 Lloydminster* 0206 Medicine Hat 0217 Red Deer 0262 Spruce Grove 0291 St. Albert 0292 Wetaskiwin 0347 *Alberta only SPECIALIZED MUNICIPALITY CODE SPECIALIZED MUNICIPALITY CODE NO. -
The United Farmer 1981 November-December
The United Farmer NOVEMBER — DECEMBER 1981 VOLUME 19 — NO. 6 Published by United Farmers of Alberta Co-operative Limited. Head Office: The purpose of The United Farmer is to share information, 1016 - 68th Avenue S.W. familiarize readers with the many aspects of United Farmers Calgary, Alberta T2V 4J2 of Alberta Co-operative Limited and recognize some of the many people who have contributed to UFA and agriculture in Editor — Alice Switzer Alberta. In 1981 there were features on the Canadian Farm Writers Federation Awards, Agents of the Month, Women of oDDBCE Unifarm, the Kodak microfilming in the Credit Department, New Agents, Farm Supply Division Appointments, Member — International Association Delegates Advisory Nomination Committees, the Goldeye Foundation Elec- of Business Communicators, Society, the UFA 1981 Annual Meeting, Canada; Alberta Farm tions, Retiring Delegates, New Delegates, Annual Meeting Writers' Association; Committees, Petroleum Awards, Career Men in UFA, Service Canadian Farm Writers' Federation Awards, the Farm and Ranch Show in Edmonton, the Alberta Farm Buildings Show in Red Deer, Lethbridge Ag-Expo, Appointments, Young Canadian Farmers, New Member Pro- gram, Pro Rodeo Canada, Chuck Wagan Racing, etc. It's a diversified list but everything and everyone men- tioned in The United Farmer has common bonds — UFA and the business of Agriculture. I am grateful to the hospitality that has been extended to me throughout Alberta. I appreciate the opportunity to meet and write about interesting and sincere people like Neal and Elsie Jones of Dewberry; the Martin Regehr Family of Strathmore; Chuck and Lorraine Groeneveld of High River, the Jim Rouse Family of Stettler and the terrific group at Pembina. -
YEAR in REVIEW 2016–2017 Alberta Milk Year in Review 2016–17 5555 on the ROAD DAY EVERY Worth of Milk
YEAR IN REVIEW 2016–2017 2016-17 At a Glance 99% of our Farmers 520 MET OR EXCEEDED DAIRY FARMS milk quality standards of Canadian 8.46% milk p oduction A record of 740,710,762 LITRES PRODUCED Up to ON THE ROAD 63 MILK TRUCKS EVERY DAY 103,000+ $77,175 in Review 2016–17 Alberta Milk Year milk samples worth of milk WERE TESTED 22 schools DONATED TO celebrated 30 years those in need in Alberta ON CLUB MOO 5 Table of Contents 8 CHAIRMAN’S MESSAGE Our Mission 10 GENERAL MANAGER’S REPORT PRODUCER GOVERNANCE Alberta Milk leads Alberta's 12 Review and Appeals ...................................... /12 Board of Directors ......................................... /13 dairy industry. We support Producer governance chart ........................... /13 Committees ................................................... /14 the effective operation and Human Resources .......................................... /15 advocacy of the supply MILK PRODUCTION management system in a 16 Production overview ...................................... /16 Total Production Quota and Underproduction vibrant, sustainable and Credits ........................................................... /16 Incentive Days ............................................... /17 market-focused industry. Equalization Statistics by Class ...................... /17 New Entrant Assistance Program .................. /18 Milk Production and Payment Statistics/ Our Vision Information .................................................... /18 19 CANADIAN MILK SUPPLY ............ /21 Growing a vital, -
Final-Alberta-Loss-Factors-For-2009
2009 Loss Factors TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 PURPOSE ................................................................................................. 3 2.0 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................... 3 3.0 2009 LOSS FACTORS.............................................................................. 3 4.0 2009 AND 2008 LOSS FACTORS CALCULATION ................................. 6 5.0 2009 OVERALL LOSS FACTOR RESULTS ............................................ 8 6.0 LOSS FACTOR MAP ................................................................................ 9 7.0 CONCLUSION........................................................................................... 9 APPENDIX I. CASE COMPARISON .................................................................... 10 ii Alberta Electric System Operator 2009 Loss Factors 1.0 Purpose The purpose of this document is to present the 2009 loss factors complete with a brief explanation of changes. A loss factor map is included. The loss factors published in this document will be effective from January 01, 2009 to December 31, 2009. 2.0 Introduction The AESO has completed the final analysis of 2009 loss factors and the results are attached. The analysis includes the application of the 2009 Generic Stacking Order (GSO) results published earlier this summer and the 2009 Base Cases published in October on the AESO web site. Both the GSO and the Base Cases have been updated during the course of the final calculations and reposted. The requirements -
Large Scale WAN Emulation
Large Scale WAN Emulation Martin Arlitt Rob Simmonds Carey Williamson - University of Calgary Calgary Alberta March 18, 2002 Outline • Overview of WAN Simulation & Emulation • Introduction to IP-TNE • Discussion of Related Projects • Validation of IP-TNE • Current Projects Involving IP-TNE • Future Work 1 Performance Evaluation Approaches 1. Experimental + offers the most realistic environment - requires significant financial investment - can be difficult to repeat results - restricted to existing technologies 2 Performance Evaluation Approaches 2. Simulation + low-cost, flexible, controllable, reproducible environment - abstractions can compromise usefulness of results 3. Analytical + provides quick answers - often requires the greatest degrees of abstraction 3 Performance Evaluation Approaches 4. Emulation * a hybrid performance evaluation methodology * combines aspects of other three approaches + enables controlled experimentation with existing applications - still suffers from drawbacks of other approaches 4 Wide-Area Network Simulation • provides a virtual Wide-Area Network (WAN) environment • allows all network conditions to be controlled – packet loss – packet reordering/duplication – link bandwidths – propogation delays – asymetric links – bounded queue sizes – multipath • allows alternative networking technologies to be evaluated 5 Wide-Area Network Emulation • extends capabilities of WAN simulation • enables controlled testing with unmodified applications • both simulation and emulation are important tools 6 Challenges • scaling to large, -
Roadside Management Classification
I.R. I.R. 196A I.R. 196G 196D I.R. 225 I.R. I.R. I.R. 196B 196 196C I.R. 196F I.R. 196E I.R. 223 WOOD BUFFALO NATIONAL PARK I.R. Colin-Cornwall Lakes I.R. 224 Wildland 196H Provincial Park I.R. 196I La Butte Creek Wildland P. Park Ca ribou Mountains Wildland Provincial Park Fidler-Greywillow Wildland P. Park I.R. 222 I.R. 221 I.R. I.R. 219 Fidler-Greywillow 220 Wildland P. Park Fort Chipewyan I.R. 218 58 I.R. 5 I.R. I.R. 207 8 163B 201A I.R . I.R. I.R. 201B 164A I.R. 215 163A I.R. WOOD BU I.R. 164 FFALO NATIONAL PARK 201 I.R Fo . I.R. 162 rt Vermilion 163 I.R. 173B I.R. 201C I.R. I.R. 201D 217 I.R. 201E 697 La Crete Maybelle Wildland P. Park Richardson River 697 Dunes Wildland I.R. P. Park 173A I.R. 201F 88 I.R. 173 87 I.R. 201G I.R. 173C Marguerite River Wildland Provincial Park Birch Mountains Wildland Provincial Park I.R. 174A I.R. I.R. 174B 174C Marguerite River Wildland I.R. Provincial Park 174D Fort MacKay I.R. 174 88 63 I.R. 237 686 Whitemud Falls Wildland FORT Provincial Park McMURRAY 686 Saprae Creek I.R. 226 686 I.R. I.R 686 I.R. 227 I.R. 228 235 Red Earth 175 Cre Grand Rapids ek Wildland Provincial Park Gipsy Lake I.R. Wildland 986 238 986 Cadotte Grand Rapids Provincial Park Lake Wildland Gregoire Lake Little Buffalo Provincial Park P. -
Published Local Histories
ALBERTA HISTORIES Published Local Histories assembled by the Friends of Geographical Names Society as part of a Local History Mapping Project (in 1995) May 1999 ALBERTA LOCAL HISTORIES Alphabetical Listing of Local Histories by Book Title 100 Years Between the Rivers: A History of Glenwood, includes: Acme, Ardlebank, Bancroft, Berkeley, Hartley & Standoff — May Archibald, Helen Bircham, Davis, Delft, Gobert, Greenacres, Kia Ora, Leavitt, and Brenda Ferris, e , published by: Lilydale, Lorne, Selkirk, Simcoe, Sterlingville, Glenwood Historical Society [1984] FGN#587, Acres and Empires: A History of the Municipal District of CPL-F, PAA-T Rocky View No. 44 — Tracey Read , published by: includes: Glenwood, Hartley, Hillspring, Lone Municipal District of Rocky View No. 44 [1989] Rock, Mountain View, Wood, FGN#394, CPL-T, PAA-T 49ers [The], Stories of the Early Settlers — Margaret V. includes: Airdrie, Balzac, Beiseker, Bottrell, Bragg Green , published by: Thomasville Community Club Creek, Chestermere Lake, Cochrane, Conrich, [1967] FGN#225, CPL-F, PAA-T Crossfield, Dalemead, Dalroy, Delacour, Glenbow, includes: Kinella, Kinnaird, Thomasville, Indus, Irricana, Kathyrn, Keoma, Langdon, Madden, 50 Golden Years— Bonnyville, Alta — Bonnyville Mitford, Sampsontown, Shepard, Tribune , published by: Bonnyville Tribune [1957] Across the Smoky — Winnie Moore & Fran Moore, ed. , FGN#102, CPL-F, PAA-T published by: Debolt & District Pioneer Museum includes: Bonnyville, Moose Lake, Onion Lake, Society [1978] FGN#10, CPL-T, PAA-T 60 Years: Hilda’s Heritage, -
2017 Municipal Codes
2017 Municipal Codes Updated December 22, 2017 Municipal Services Branch 17th Floor Commerce Place 10155 - 102 Street Edmonton, Alberta T5J 4L4 Phone: 780-427-2225 Fax: 780-420-1016 E-mail: [email protected] 2017 MUNICIPAL CHANGES STATUS CHANGES: 0315 - The Village of Thorsby became the Town of Thorsby (effective January 1, 2017). NAME CHANGES: 0315- The Town of Thorsby (effective January 1, 2017) from Village of Thorsby. AMALGAMATED: FORMATIONS: DISSOLVED: 0038 –The Village of Botha dissolved and became part of the County of Stettler (effective September 1, 2017). 0352 –The Village of Willingdon dissolved and became part of the County of Two Hills (effective September 1, 2017). CODE NUMBERS RESERVED: 4737 Capital Region Board 0522 Metis Settlements General Council 0524 R.M. of Brittania (Sask.) 0462 Townsite of Redwood Meadows 5284 Calgary Regional Partnership STATUS CODES: 01 Cities (18)* 15 Hamlet & Urban Services Areas (396) 09 Specialized Municipalities (5) 20 Services Commissions (71) 06 Municipal Districts (64) 25 First Nations (52) 02 Towns (108) 26 Indian Reserves (138) 03 Villages (87) 50 Local Government Associations (22) 04 Summer Villages (51) 60 Emergency Districts (12) 07 Improvement Districts (8) 98 Reserved Codes (5) 08 Special Areas (3) 11 Metis Settlements (8) * (Includes Lloydminster) December 22, 2017 Page 1 of 13 CITIES CODE CITIES CODE NO. NO. Airdrie 0003 Brooks 0043 Calgary 0046 Camrose 0048 Chestermere 0356 Cold Lake 0525 Edmonton 0098 Fort Saskatchewan 0117 Grande Prairie 0132 Lacombe 0194 Leduc 0200 Lethbridge 0203 Lloydminster* 0206 Medicine Hat 0217 Red Deer 0262 Spruce Grove 0291 St. Albert 0292 Wetaskiwin 0347 *Alberta only SPECIALIZED MUNICIPALITY CODE SPECIALIZED MUNICIPALITY CODE NO. -
AREA Housing Statistics by Economic Region AREA Housing Statistics by Economic Region
AREA Housing Statistics by Economic Region AREA Housing Statistics by Economic Region AREA Chief Economist https://albertare.configio.com/page/ann-marie-lurie-bioAnn-Marie Lurie analyzes Alberta’s resale housing statistics both provincially and regionally. In order to allow for better analysis of housing sales data, we have aligned our reporting regions to the census divisions used by Statistics Canada. Economic Region AB-NW: Athabasca – Grande Prairie – Peace River 17 16 Economic Region AB-NE: Wood Buffalo – Cold Lake Economic Region AB-W: 19 Banff – Jasper – Rocky Mountain House 18 12 Economic Region AB-Edmonton 13 14 Economic Region AB-Red Deer 11 10 Economic Region AB-E: 9 8 7 Camrose – Drumheller 15 6 4 5 Economic Region AB-Calgary Economic Region AB-S: 2 1 3 Lethbridge – Medicine Hat New reports are released on the sixth of each month, except on weekends or holidays when it is released on the following business day. AREA Housing Statistics by Economic Region 1 Alberta Economic Region North West Grande Prairie – Athabasca – Peace River Division 17 Municipal District Towns Hamlets, villages, Other Big Lakes County - 0506 High Prairie - 0147 Enilda (0694), Faust (0702), Grouard Swan Hills - 0309 (0719), Joussard (0742), Kinuso (0189), Rural Big Lakes County (9506) Clear Hills – 0504 Cleardale (0664), Worsley (0884), Hines Creek (0150), Rural Big Lakes county (9504) Lesser Slave River no 124 - Slave Lake - 0284 Canyon Creek (0898), Chisholm (0661), 0507 Flatbush (0705), Marten Beach (0780), Smith (0839), Wagner (0649), Widewater (0899), Slave Lake (0284), Rural Slave River (9507) Northern Lights County - Manning – 0212 Deadwood (0679), Dixonville (0684), 0511 North Star (0892), Notikewin (0893), Rural Northern Lights County (9511) Northern Sunrise County - Cadotte Lake (0645), Little Buffalo 0496 (0762), Marie Reine (0777), Reno (0814), St. -
Cemetery Open House Information Sharing
Agenda Item: 7.7 Request for Decision Regular Council - 26 Feb 2019 Subject: Cemetery Open House Information Sharing PREPARED BY: DEPARTMENT: Al Scott Agricultural Services Director of Infrastructure APPROVALS: Leo Ludwig, CAO Approved - 20 Feb 2019 Al Scott, Director of Infrastructure Approved - 20 Feb 2019 Background: Westlock County hosted an information gathering session for all local cemeteries on January 10, 2019. The intent of the meeting was for cemetery groups to share information with each other and provide feedback to the Westlock County Cemetery Committee to bring back to Council. 40 people attended the open house representing 18 different cemetery groups. Representatives for the 4 cemeteries owned by the County were in attendance. All members of the Cemetery committee along with Administration staff circulated through the groups of people to discuss cemetery operations, things that are working well, things that are challenges, and where the cemetery groups see themselves in the future. Feedback on the event itself was positive and there were requests to hold a similar event in successive years. The individuals that attended spoke passionately about their cemeteries and provided a wealth of information, history, and experience. Feedback information that was provided has been summarized and attached to this RFD for Council as a draft summary report. Also attached are a blank copy of the agenda, a blank copy of the information gathering sheets, and a summary of known cemeteries within the County. Now that there has been an open house and information from the public has been provided, it is worth the discussion regarding direction of the cemetery committee and what to do with the feedback provided. -
Westlock North Task Force Report
Westlock North Task Force Report STRESSED? Look at the following picture of two dolphins jumping out of the water in tandem. The research has shown that the more differences you notice in the two dolphins, the more stressed you are. This is attributed to the concentration and recognition influences intensifying when stressed. The two are VERY similar, so if you can tell the difference without looking hard, you should monitor your stress. Overview of the Presentation Summary of Task Force Report Questions and Comments Next Steps Task Force Report Task Force established by a May 9, 2012 Board of Trustees motion as a “next step” in the Westlock North community consultation process. 5737/05/12 - Moved by Trustee Watson that the Board establish a Task Force for the purpose of providing advice to the Board regarding a long range plan (3-5 year) for educating students in the communities served by Dapp, Jarvie and W.R. Frose Schools. Carried7-0 Decision Filters Will the recommendation maximize educational opportunities for our children? Will it be sustainable? Does it utilize our limited resources in the best possible way for our children? Is it realistic? Parent Engagement The establishment of such a Task Force is a unique circumstance in Alberta. Few, if any, Alberta school boards have gone to this length to engage parents and community members in planning for the future education of their children. Opportunity and Responsibility Task Force Composition The Westlock North Task Force was established in June 2012 and included the following members: Lisa Gehring/ Darcie Eamor, principal(s) of W.R. -
Spring 2010 Alberta Plantwatch Newsletter (PDF)
Alberta Plantwatch Annual Newsletter - Spring 2010 Greetings to Alberta Plantwatchers! This spring may unfold to be one of our most interesting yet due to the very unusual weather we experienced in 2009…read on! The Weather in 2009 Winter 2009- 2010 in Canada was 4 °C above normal, the warmest and driest since records began in 1948. According to Dave Phillips of Environment Canada, the main reasons were an El Nino, which caused warming of the Pacific Ocean, and shrinking Arctic ice. Precipitation was down 60% in parts of Alberta. Phillips said ‘This may be a dress rehearsal of what we’ll see as normal in years to come’. The El Nino is now strengthening again: see http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=43105&src=eoa-iotd , and http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.html. It seems likely that central and northern Alberta will have extreme drought this coming season. This could result in water shortages, insect infestations, and wildfires this summer. Out of the top ten weather stories in Canada in 2009, four of them featured our fair province. You probably recall the winter of 2008-2009 that never ended, the spring that never came, the rains that fell too late, and the heat wave that was September. Spring was one of the toughest on record for Alberta farmers, as they experienced persistent cold and frost combined with a strong drought. In Edmonton, the total precipitation in the year ending June 2009 was the lowest since records began in 1880. Just before the official start of summer, several districts in Alberta had declared a drought emergency or disaster.