No one is asking the city to solve homelessness, fix addiction, or overhaul the judicial system.
I never said they were asking for that, and I did
not say the province has to "solve homelessness" or addictions before transit will be safe or clean. Nor did I say that the city shouldn't hire more peace officers or janitors (which I am on record here as advocating for more, and contacting councilors saying as much). What I
am saying is that no matter how many peace or police officers we have, they will still just be kicking people out to move to the next station - at best with a few hours delay for booking them first.
The city controls staffing levels, peace officer presence, cleaning frequency, station design, fare enforcement, and how rules are actually applied on the system. Those are not theoretical powers, they’re basic municipal functions.
The city has grown the TPO compliment
from ~80 in 2022 to 130 by this fall. They made the Covid-era enhanced transit cleaning permanent, and onboarded dedicated LRV cleaners. They're allocating some CRL funding to renovate downtown LRT entrances (long overdue). Fare checks and warnings/tickets have spiked, and some of the new TPOs are on dedicated teams whose sole purpose is literally to ride the LRT, fare check people, and monitor for incidents. The city has even pumped tens of millions into temporary shelter space and supportive/affordable housing.
There’s a wide middle ground of practical steps that fall squarely within the city’s control.
My whole point was that those practical steps, while important, are band-aids that we need to manage our expectations for. I'm
not saying that the city bears no responsibility here, I'm saying that it's time people
only fixate on what the municipality can do and not discuss the provincial aspect at play. Otherwise, accept that vandalism will continue to outpace the maintenance budget, stations and trains will continue to be used as shelters no matter how many times people are kicked out, and downtown stops/stations in particular will continue to be in a similar state to how they are now - unless you're willing to pay much more in taxes to hire the hundreds of TPOs we need to have 24/7 coverage at each and every LRT station/stop.
Also, pointing at the province as a kind of catch-all explanation doesn’t really answer the frustration people are expressing.
Respectfully, feelings don't fund solutions. The whole point of this forum is that we can take the time to dig beyond the surface. This isn't a conversation taking place at the actual stop, this is a conversation happening well after the fact when we have the time and ability to actually think things through.
Deflecting that upward might be politically convenient, but it doesn’t resolve the underlying issue. To be clear, yes, municipalities are overburdened. Yes, resources are finite. And yes, the province could and probably should be doing more on housing, shelters, and addiction supports.
Deflecting it downward doesn't solve anything either. Again, my whole point is that people should be emailing their MLAs about this just as much as they email their councilors, because all have a role to play here. People can excuse provincial inaction all they want because "UCP hate city so why try?" but that's not going to magically give Edmonton the money it needs to fund all of the resources needed to address the disorder and cleanliness issues. One councilor described the situation to me as "whack-a-mole." People get removed from one station, they have nowhere to go so they just move to another. And if they're doing drugs or broke some glass? That's a minor offence and the jails are full so best the court can do is give them a summons.
But none of that negates the city’s responsibility to maintain a basic standard on its own transit system. “Stay in your lane” cuts both ways, and transit operations are very much in the city’s lane.
At the end of the day, no one is expecting the city to solve every upstream problem. But expecting visible enforcement, consistent cleaning, and a baseline sense of safety for paying, law-abiding riders is not some unreasonable ask. It’s the minimum.
Sure, but let me be clear: the homeless population nearly tripled after Covid, and never went back down. We continue to be a dumping ground for regional communities and police forces. I've supported, and will continue to support, increased municipal investment in transit safety and cleanliness. But I'm just tired of these conversations only focusing on what the city should do in response to these issues, and not what the province should do to stop them from continuing to occur at the rate they are. Not completely. Just less than they are now.