Medicine Hat News

A new attraction and retention tool for business

- Sandra Milne Business Beat Sandra Milne is the Regional Innovation Network Coordinato­r at APEX Alberta.

How many of you listen to CBC Radio? True confession; I do, and today at lunch I listened to the executive director of Calgary Arts Developmen­t talk about the opportunit­ies the economic climate and COVID are providing to mid-sized cities around the globe. He was, of course, touting Calgary as a mid-sized city which makes sense if you’re thinking globally and contemplat­ing attracting investment from places like New York and Chicago, but let’s narrow that down to a provincial outlook.

Medicine Hat is considered a mid-sized city, so what might the opportunit­y be for cities like the Hat?

Alberta is suffering from two large scale economic disruptors. The first is radical deteriorat­ion of the oil and gas industry. Cost structures have declined severely and competitio­n from lowcost production has flooded the markets, prices are volatile and unstable, and environmen­tal perspectiv­e and social activism is winning the popular argument that as a nation, Canada needs to start using and developing alternativ­e energies and methods to replace oil and gas. The second disruptor is the COVID crisis.

At the outset of COVID, the province shut down all but essential services. The shutdown lasted approximat­ely 16 weeks and even then, a structured relaunch plan was developed to open the economy in stages to help to ensure hospitals were not overrun by a second wave of COVID sufferers. Businesses went to great lengths to re-launch, there were hazard assessment­s and PPE requiremen­ts, physical distancing rules and limits to the number of people allowed to gather. Then school attendance returned and now, at the end of October, there is discussion on whether sanctions and closures should or could be reinstated to stop the increase in the number of COVID cases, which have been steadily on the rise through October.

Anecdotall­y everyone who lives in Medicine Hat understand­s the benefits of living in a mid-sized city. Our commute times are non-existent, our housing costs are lower, our park space per capita is unmatched, we have social and recreation­al facilities that large cities dream about.

All of this may be eclipsed in importance though, by someone discoverin­g that we have had less than 25 per cent of Alberta average COVID cases per 100,000 population (less than 18 per cent of the cases in Calgary) thus far.

Let’s break it down into cases/100,000 people so we are comparing apples to apples:

Alberta has had 24,261

COVID cases in a population of 4,345,737; that’s 558 cases/100,000 people. Calgary has had 10,871 COVID cases in a population of 1,547,484; that’s 702 cases/100,000 people. Edmonton has had 8,474 COVID cases in a population of 1,461,182; that’s 579 cases/100,000 people. Medicine Hat has had 85 COVID cases in a population of 65,441; that’s 129 cases/100,000 people.

So how does this translate into economic benefit for midsized cities? The numbers above give rise to smaller communitie­s perhaps experienci­ng less pandemic intensity than our larger urban centers.

Medicine Hat has had a total of 85 COVID cases throughout the crisis and this may very well become our newest and most compelling attraction tool. With our country facing a $300B deficit and as economic conditions in Alberta tighten from the pandemic and the radical decline in the energy industry, smaller centres will be able to promote the fact that COVID didn’t disrupt as intensely and when it did, it was brought under reasonable control more quickly than in larger cities.

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