Edmonton city council rejects motion to cut the mayor's salary
How much Edmonton city councillors and the mayor should get paid was up for discussion on Thursday.
The Independent Council Compensation Committee presented its final 2024 report – recommending there be no change to the base salaries of the mayor or councillors.
Their salaries are automatically adjusted each year based on the average weekly earnings of Albertans from Statistics Canada.
Each city councillor will make $122,363 this year, not including benefits.
"Our salaries have gone up and they have gone down," said Councillor Andrew Knack.
"Because they are tied to the average weekly earnings of Albertans, and I really do like that that’s the point the independent committee uses because we benefit or lose just like the average Albertan does," he added.
The city's top job comes with an even bigger salary. The mayor's salary is listed at $216,585 for 2024.
"I think the salaries of all public officials are scrutinized and rightfully so, they should be," said Mayor Amarjeet Sohi.
"I think that scrutiny is absolutely important but we also need to make sure that salaries are not politicized, that we have an independent process in place that allows that decision to be non-political, impartial and based on the data and analysis the citizens group have conducted," he added.
But the mayor did try to interfere in that process by putting forward a motion to cut his salary by about $3,000.
"My understanding is that prior to 2018 both Edmonton mayor and Calgary mayor were paid the same then over the years Edmonton froze salaries for two years, Calgary did for three years so that created a discrepancy," said Sohi.
Sohi said the role of the mayors of Alberta's two largest cities are similar and their salaries should reflect that.
"What I was trying to do is close the gap in the discrepancy," he said.
His motion for a pay-cut was rejected by council.
"His heart was in the right place. I get why he’s asking that question," said Knack.
"That motion, if passed, would have been setting his own salary. We have purposely designed a process to not set our own salaries," he added.
The Independent Council Compensation Committee was established in 1999 designed to give the public confidence their pay is determined fairly.
"We’re not going to start getting involved in a process depending on which way the political winds are blowing because the minute you do that you open yourself up to what happens provincially, what happens federally over and over and over again which is people constantly finding ways to try to score points using salaries instead of saying it’s based off good evidence, good data, good research," said Knack.
The mayor said he understands why his colleagues didn't support his motion.
"I felt it was important for me to articulate that the responsibilities of both mayors are the same, we work in the same context with the relationship with the provincial government, federal government, complexities of both cities are the same so I felt that the gap that it is should have been dealt with," Sohi said.
Knack said the proper way to address the issue is to direct the independent commission to look into it.
"That's how you handle a process where you have those concerns about inconsistencies or you have those concerns that are being raised by the public," he said.
With files from CTV News Edmonton's Evan Kenny
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'Shameful': Monument honouring fallen soldiers included names of living veterans
Veterans are asking for answers after discovering that two sculptures in Ontario honouring fallen soldiers include the names of many people who are very much alive.
'If it ain't broke don't fix it': U.S. ambassador warns Canada against cutting Mexico out of trilateral trade deal
Cutting Mexico out of the current North American free trade deal 'may not be the best path to take,' says U.S. Ambassador to Canada David Cohen.
South Korean President Yoon's impeachment vote fails after ruling party boycotts it
A South Korean legislative push to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol over his short-lived imposition of martial law fell through on Saturday after most lawmakers from his conservative governing party boycotted the vote.
Days after gunman killed UnitedHealthcare's CEO, police push to ID him and FBI offers reward
The gunman who killed the CEO of the largest U.S. health insurer likely left New York City on a bus soon after the brazen ambush that has shaken corporate America, police officials said. But he left something behind: a backpack that was discovered in Central Park.
At dueling Mideast forums, officials ask what will happen when Donald Trump takes office
At glittering ballrooms in the Mideast this weekend, discussions of the wars and chaos gripping the region gave way to one central question: What's going to happen when U.S. president-elect Donald Trump takes office next month?
Canada's air force took video of object shot down over Yukon, updated image released
The Canadian military has released more details and an updated image of the unidentified object shot down over Canada's Yukon territory in February 2023.
Cookie inflation: How much more is your holiday baking costing you this year?
Estimate how much more your Christmas cookies will cost to bake this year compared to the past five years using Statistics Canada's monthly average retail price data.
LGBTQ2S+ refugees languish as Kenyan government blocks Canadians from resettling them
In a low-income neighbourhood on the outskirts of Nairobi, seven people gather in an air-conditioned home around a dinner table for a Ugandan stew of matoke bananas with peanut sauce.
An explosion has caused several injuries and damaged apartments in a Dutch city
An explosion and fire rocked a neighborhood in the Dutch city of The Hague early Saturday, destroying several apartments and injuring multiple people, according to authorities.