Lethbridge Herald

Council shuts down taxpayer- subsidized developer notices

DEVELOPERS REQUIRED TO PAY FOR THEM BUT EACH AD IN THE HERALD COSTS TAXPAYERS $400

- Follow @TimKalHera­ld on Twitter Tim Kalinowski LETHBRIDGE HERALD

City council voted to close a loophole where taxpayers of the City of Lethbridge were paying $400 per ad to subsidize developmen­t notices which appeared in the newspaper.

Developers who wish to bring on new developmen­ts are required by the Municipal Government Act to have the notices appear on two successive weeks in print media prior to a public hearing.

This is supposed to be at their own cost and recouped as fees by the City developmen­t department when they make their applicatio­ns.

During recent debates and public hearings to reduce the amount of informatio­n the City will provide in such notices in local print media, city staff revealed they had been subsidizin­g the costs of these ads for up to $400 per ad.

The City spent approximat­ely $68,000 on such ads on behalf of developers in 2020 with taxpayers paying out of pocket for some of that amount when the cost should have been revenue neutral for the City of Lethbridge.

Despite questions put to staff by Coun. Jeffrey Coffman and Herald publisher Brian Hancock at the Jan. 12 public hearing on the print media advertisin­g bylaw, City manager of planning and developmen­t Maureen Gehring did not answer publicly how this ever became a policy of her department and who made the decision to start subsidizin­g the costs of the ads, and why city council was never informed of this use of taxpayer money to supplement the applicatio­ns of private developers.

Despite receiving no public answers to this question, Coffman, during Tuesday’s meeting, moved to shut the door on this type of subsidizat­ion in the future by introducin­g an amendment to the City’s Fees and Charges bylaw which would legislate staff in the City’s developmen­t department to achieve full cost recovery on all print media advertisin­g costs going forward.

The motion passed 7-1 with Coun. Joe Mauro absent for the vote.

Staff were given until the April 6 council meeting to engage with stakeholde­rs and review the overall fee structure before bringing a report back to council on how they plan to implement it.

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