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Municipal amalgamation is one of five forms of municipal restructuring in the Province of Alberta.[1] Under current legislation, the authority to amalgamate two or more municipalities is provided under Division 5 of the Municipal Government Act.[2]
The first amalgamation in Alberta involving one or more urban municipalities occurred on February 1, 1912, when the cities of Strathcona and Edmonton merged to form a single municipal government under the name of the City of Edmonton.[3] The most recent amalgamation occurred on January 1, 2023, when the towns of Turner Valley and Black Diamond merged into the newly created town of Diamond Valley.[4]
The following is a chronological list of historic municipal amalgamations in Alberta involving at least one or more urban municipalities.
Amalgamating municipalities | Previous statuses | Effective date | Formed municipality | Status of formed municipality |
Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Edmonton Strathcona | City City | February 1, 1912[3] | Edmonton | City | |
Edmonton North Edmonton | City Village | July 18, 1912[3] | Edmonton | City | |
Edmonton West Edmonton | City Village | April 17, 1917[3] | Edmonton | City | |
Lloydminster (AB) Lloydminster (SK) | Village (AB) Town (SK) | May 22, 1930[5] | Lloydminster (AB/SK) | Town | Lloydminster subsequently changed to city status on January 1, 1958.[5] |
Drinnan Hinton | Village New town | April 1, 1957[6][7] | Hinton | New town | Hinton subsequently changed to town status on December 29, 1958.[8] |
Calgary Forest Lawn | City Town | December 30, 1961[9][10] | Calgary | City | |
Beverly Edmonton | Town City | December 31, 1961[3] | Edmonton | City | |
Calgary Montgomery | City Village | August 15, 1963[11][12] | Calgary | City | |
Bowness Calgary | Town City | August 15, 1964[13][14] | Calgary | City | |
Edmonton Jasper Place | City Town | December 17, 1964[3] | Edmonton | City | |
Bellevue Blairmore Coleman Frank Improvement District No. 5 | Village Town Town Village Improvement district | January 1, 1979[15] | Crowsnest Pass | Town | Official legal name of the formed municipality became Municipality of Crowsnest Pass. The town subsequently changed to specialized municipality status on January 16, 2008.[15] |
Fort McMurray Improvement District No. 143 | City Improvement district | April 1, 1995[16] | Wood Buffalo | Specialized municipality | Official legal name of the formed municipality became Municipality of Wood Buffalo, which changed its official legal name to Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo on August 14, 1996.[16] |
Crowsnest Pass Improvement District No. 6 | Town Improvement district | January 1, 1996[15] | Crowsnest Pass | Town | The town subsequently changed to specialized municipality status on January 16, 2008.[15] |
Cold Lake Grand Centre | Town Town | October 1, 1996[17] | Cold Lake | Town | Amalgamation included the simultaneous annexation of Medley (CFB Cold Lake/4 Wing) from the Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87.[17] The amalgamated town subsequently changed to city status on October 1, 2000.[17] |
Drumheller Municipal District of Badlands No. 7 | City Municipal district | January 1, 1998[18] | Drumheller | Town | |
Lac La Biche Lakeland County | Town Municipal district | August 1, 2007[19] | Lac La Biche County | Municipal district | The municipal district subsequently changed to specialized municipality status on January 1, 2018.[20] |
Black Diamond Turner Valley |
Town
Town |
January 1, 2023[4] | Diamond Valley | Town |
The City of Edmonton applied for a significant annexation in early 1979 that included large portions of Parkland County and Sturgeon County as well as the entireties of City of St. Albert and Strathcona County, which included the unincorporated hamlet of Sherwood Park.[21] The annexation would have effectively amalgamated St. Albert and Strathcona County with Edmonton. Alberta's Local Authorities Board (LAB), a predecessor to the Municipal Government Board, granted the annexation in 1980 but excluded St. Albert, Sherwood Park and lands in Strathcona County to the east of Sherwood Park, thereby preventing any form of amalgamation.[21] The lesser annexation granted by the LAB was subsequently tossed out by Alberta's provincial cabinet.[21]
The former villages of Entwistle and Evansburg investigated amalgamation in 1986.[21] The two villages subsequently dissolved into hamlets under the jurisdictions of Parkland County and Yellowhead County respectively.
The amalgamation of the Town of Redcliff with the neighbouring City of Medicine Hat was investigated or considered to various degrees in 1962, 1968, 1972, 1979, 1980, and 1985.[21]
Amalgamation of the towns of Spruce Grove and Stony Plain was investigated in the mid-1980s after Stony Plain had incurred a high debt. Despite a recommendation in favour of amalgamation from Alberta Municipal Affairs, residents of Spruce Grove were not supportive of the amalgamation as it would have resulted in a significant increase in their property taxes.[21]
The City of Spruce Grove initiated a growth study in 2014 in which expansion via amalgamation was to be explored as an alternative to annexation.[22] Potential partners for the amalgamation included the Town of Stony Plain, Parkland County or both.[22]
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