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Your councillors went dark. What did they discuss?

Your Council Met in Private, Then Public

Edmonton City Hall had a fairly quiet week on the public record, at least in terms of major policy shifts. On April 14, 2026, the Agenda Review Committee met, moving, voting, and carrying several items all by a consistent 2-0 margin, with Councillors A. Stevenson and J. Wright consistently voting "Yes."

What's noteworthy, perhaps, is the brief dip into private discussion.

* **April 14, 2026 Motion:** Councillor A. Stevenson moved that the Agenda Review Committee "meet in private pursuant to section 29 (advice from officials) of the *Access to Information Act* for the discussion of item 2.1." This motion carried 2-0.

* **Back to Public:** Immediately following, Councillor A. Stevenson moved that the committee "meet in public," which also carried 2-0.

Honestly though, it’s not unusual for committees to go in camera for certain discussions, particularly when legal advice or sensitive personnel matters are involved. It’s part of the process, a bit like watching the Oilers go into the dressing room between periods – you know things are being discussed, and then they come back out.

We also saw some council expenses coming in from the 2025 Alberta Municipalities Convention in Calgary. Councillor Clarke expensed $825.88 for accommodation and $685.00 for registration. Councillor Elliott had the same accommodation expense at $825.88, plus $348.00 for food and incidentals. These are fairly standard conference costs.

The 311 service request data continues to show "General Information" leading the pack with 160,623 requests, followed by "Routes and Schedules" at 112,470. These numbers speak to the consistent public demand for basic city services and information. It's a reminder that even when the big policy debates aren't happening, the city is still humming along. Edmonton doesn't need your approval. Never did.

Keep an eye on what item 2.1 was, if it ever surfaces publicly.

Darren Fedoruk

Catch Liam and the crew breaking down what *actually* matters in our city every morning at mornings.live.

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