You won't believe what our city council is doing
Imagine showing up to work one day and finding out your entire department, which has been doing good work for 80 years, is simply… gone. That’s what’s happening with the Edmonton Historical Board, among other civic advisory committees, as our city council moves to dissolve them this Tuesday. Honestly though, it’s a curious way to treat the institutional memory of a city, like tossing out old photo albums because they take up too much shelf space. We’re talking about a board that has diligently chronicled everything from the development of our River Valley park system (which, for the record, is forty times the size of Central Park) to the architectural shifts along Whyte Avenue. They’ve been the quiet guardians of our collective past, ensuring that when new developments spring up in, say, Mill Woods, someone remembers the stories behind the land.
The concern, and it's a legitimate one, isn't just about the board itself. It’s about what comes next. There's no clear plan for how the city will continue to engage with its own history. This isn't just about dusty archives; it's about how we understand ourselves as a city. The stories of Edmonton, from the early fur trading posts to the boom times of the oil patch, from the vibrant Fringe Festival scene to the stoicism required to survive a -40°C snap, are what make this place, well, *this place*. Without a dedicated voice, a structured way to keep these narratives alive and accessible, we risk losing parts of our identity. It’s like watching an Oilers game without an announcer – you see what’s happening, but you lose the context, the passion, the shared understanding.
### What This Means for Edmonton
* **Loss of institutional memory:** Years of expertise and knowledge about Edmonton's heritage could be dispersed without a clear succession plan.
* **Uncertainty for heritage sites:** Who will advocate for the preservation of significant landmarks, from the High Level Bridge to specific heritage homes in Strathcona?
* **Diminished public engagement:** The board provided a structured way for citizens to contribute to and learn about local history.
* **A silence where stories used to be:** Our city’s narrative, rich with the tales of settlers, entrepreneurs, and artists, needs active champions.
Edmonton doesn't need your approval. Never did. But it does need to remember where it came from. When you walk through the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village east of the city, or admire the murals in Old Strathcona, those stories are there. We need to ensure they continue to be told, and that someone is listening.
Darren Fedoruk, MiTL Sports Desk, Edmonton.
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