logo

Coun. Sonya Sharp joins race to be Calgary's next mayor

CBC01-04-2025

Ward 1 rep says she's focused on costs, safety and infrastructure
Coun. Sonya Sharp is joining the race to be Calgary's next mayor.
Sharp, a fiscal conservative, has long been considering a mayoral run. She made her plans official on Monday evening, during an event hosted by the Communities First political party at downtown restaurant The Rooftop.
"I have spent almost my whole career here and I care about Calgary. And last year, when I started to see decisions being made by the majority — and including the mayor — that I was just like, this is not OK anymore, and we need a leader. We need leaders to lead and listen," Sharp said Monday.
Sharp has been the Ward 1 councillor since 2021. She is the chair of the city's infrastructure and planning committee and council's event centre committee, the team dedicated to managing Calgary's arena deal.
She will run under the Communities First party banner. The upcoming civic election in Calgary will be the first to allow political parties.
On council, Sharp has found herself at loggerheads with Mayor Jyoti Gondek at various times, including amid debate over the Green Line LRT revisions and during the city's contentious rezoning saga.
The Communities First party formed in December. Alongside Sharp, the party also includes current councillors Andre Chabot, Dan McLean and Terry Wong.
Should a majority of its candidates be elected, it has promised an "expedited repeal of blanket rezoning."
"It's a bad policy. It needs to go, and, if re-elected, I intend to introduce a motion to repeal it at our first regular meeting of council," Chabot said in a release.
Sharp said if she is elected mayor, she'll focus on affordability, public safety and critical infrastructure.
"We have missed countless opportunities to plan for the future," she said.
Sharp becomes the fifth person to join the race for mayor.
Gondek, former city councillors Jeff Davison and Jeromy Farkas, and Brian Thiessen, former chair of the Calgary Police Commission, have all already launched bids.
Election nominations are open until Sept. 22, and Calgarians will go to the polls on Oct. 20.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Opinion: Calgarians shouldn't have to choose between growth and community
Opinion: Calgarians shouldn't have to choose between growth and community

Calgary Herald

time2 days ago

  • Calgary Herald

Opinion: Calgarians shouldn't have to choose between growth and community

Article content When your rent's going up or your kids can't afford to live nearby, the last thing you need from city hall is more political infighting. Article content Yet, that's what we're getting from the mayor and some members of council: a false choice between reckless development and no development at all. Article content Article content That's not leadership. It's division — and we deserve better. Article content Most Calgarians aren't asking for the impossible. We want a city where hard work earns us a real shot. A place where we can raise a family, live near aging parents and count on our rent staying within reach. But instead of stability, we get uncertainty. Instead of proper planning, our local politicians are more focused on internal power struggles within their political parties. Article content Article content Meanwhile, Calgarians are focused on the questions that matter: Will our rent go up again? Will our kids be able to live in the kind of homes they grew up in, or better? Can our aging parents stay close? What's happening on our street? Why does it feel like no one's listening? Article content Article content To solve our housing crisis, we need a mayor who will restore certainty — for renters, homeowners, builders, non-profits, city administration and everyone else trying to make a life here. That means acknowledging that change will happen, but that it will be planned, supported and shaped with community. Article content This week, I released my housing platform to build more homes, faster and more affordably, with community support. And it starts by ending blanket rezoning, which has created more division than it has delivered homes. Article content Zoning alone doesn't build housing. Partnership does. Infrastructure does. Leadership does. Article content Council's approach to growth has encouraged a discussion grounded in fear, but it doesn't have to be that way. Currently, many Calgarians are struggling to find a place to live or afford basic needs such as shelter. Others don't know what's coming next or don't feel heard. Article content My plan fixes that by restoring certainty and bringing together the key players to solve our housing crisis: Article content Homeowners, who want their voices respected as communities grow. I'll ban the sale of public parks, repeal and replace blanket rezoning with a community-driven approach and tie growth to needed infrastructure. Renters, who need more than promises. I'll launch a renters' support office and fight for rent-geared housing and protections against sudden evictions. Builders, who are stuck in a maze of delays and red tape. I'll guarantee faster approvals for family-friendly, affordable homes — and work with you, not against you. Non-profits, which house our most vulnerable neighbours. I'll provide pre-zoned land, stable funding and reduce red tape so they can build at scale. City staff, who are doing their best inside a system that lacks direction. I'll bring real-time planning tools, clearer priorities and a renewed culture of innovation.

Calgary community explores restrictive covenants as citywide rezoning hits campaign trail
Calgary community explores restrictive covenants as citywide rezoning hits campaign trail

Global News

time3 days ago

  • Global News

Calgary community explores restrictive covenants as citywide rezoning hits campaign trail

The majority of candidates vying to be Calgary's next mayor are vowing to repeal citywide rezoning, as another neighbourhood explores restrictive covenants as an option to block development spurred by the policy. A restrictive covenant is a legally binding agreement on a property title that limits how a property is used or developed, even after it is sold to a new owner. Restrictive covenants are frequently used by municipalities, developers, and landowners to ensure land is developed in a manner that maintains or enhances the value of neighbouring properties, according to Alberta Municipalities. 1:54 Glenora restrictive covenant creates headache for Edmonton homeowner Former city councillor Jeromy Farkas, running for mayor a second time, unveiled his housing platform Wednesday. Story continues below advertisement The 25-point plan includes the creation of a renter support office, the streamlined approval for family-oriented housing, protection for park space and prioritizes transit-oriented development. The first policy point is to 'repeal and replace blanket rezoning,' with a more targeted community strategy that 'supports gentle density' while building a more affordable homes. 'It's very clear that this blanket rezoning, all-size-fits-all approach hasn't worked. It hasn't been able to build the homes at the scale or the speed or the price point that's needed,' Farkas told Global News. 'We think that we can get more homes built more cost effectively and faster with that targeted approach.' Farkas becomes the latest mayoral candidate to promise scrapping the citywide rezoning policy along with Communities First candidate and Ward 1 Coun. Sonya Sharp and former city councillor Jeff Davison. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'We have to rebuild trust with the public and we've got to repeal that bylaw,' Davison told Global News. 'We've got to work with all stakeholders to say, 'What's the plan? What do we want as a housing initiative going forward for Calgary and what works for Calgarians?'' Farkas' promise to repeal citywide rezoning prompted a response from Ward 8 Coun. Courtney Walcott, who is not running for re-election. 'Seeing prominent candidates and parties retreat to policies of exclusionary zoning, discrimination, and economic segregation under the guise of 'progress' and 'compassion' is painful,' Walcott wrote on social media. Story continues below advertisement 'Have some courage, it might just inspire people.' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "Have some courage, it might just inspire people." Calgary city council voted in favour of a bylaw to change the city's default residential zoning last year, which amended the land-use bylaw to allow a variety of housing types including single-detached, semi-detached, duplexes and rowhouses on a single property. The move followed a record public hearing at city hall in which the majority of speakers opposed the policy change. 1:50 Fight over Calgary zoning changes heads to court Experts suggest it's those frustrated Calgarians that candidates against citywide rezoning are trying to tap into. 'Those folks are motivated, they're going to donate, they're going to volunteer, they are going to come out and vote, and it may be that in some places, this is an issue that really gets voters out,' said Lori Williams, an associate professor of policy studies at Mount-Royal University. Story continues below advertisement 'It's also tricky when you're a mayoral candidate, because you've got to appeal to people throughout the city.' That frustration is coming to a head in the southwest community of Lakeview, where a group of residents is pushing to have neighbours sign restrictive covenants on their properties. According to Keith Marlowe with the Lakeview Restrictive Covenant Initiative, the effort was spurred by city council's decision and three recent developments in the area. 'I think that's what is getting people's backs up. The community was very strong that they didn't want upzoning and that was seemingly ignored for whatever reason by city council,' Marlowe said. Marlowe said the restrictive covenant would remain on a property's title for 75 years. 'We're all voluntarily agreeing to put certain restrictions on our own ability to develop our property in the hopes that it helps our neighbours as well,' he said. When asked about Lakeview's push for restrictive covenants on Tuesday, Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek said property owners can do what they want with their own properties. 'Anytime there's an individual that's interested in doing something with their private property, it's something that's up to that individual,' Gondek said. 'Individuals are able to do what they choose with their properties as long as it abides with any given bylaw and within the rules of the law.' Tweet This Click to share quote on Twitter: "Individuals are able to do what they choose with their properties as long as it abides with any given bylaw and within the rules of the law." Story continues below advertisement 2:22 Calgary's city-wide rezoning proposal: what does RC-G look like? According to the city, citywide rezoning has 'significantly increased the diversity and supply of housing options in Calgary.' City data shows 271 applications were submitted for new homes in established communities in the first quarter of 2025, a 59-per cent increase over the same time period last year. Thirty-one per cent of those applications were rowhouses and townhomes, a 163-per cent increase from the same quarter in 2024. A city briefing note into the matter also suggests citywide rezoning enabled nearly half or 45 per cent of all new low-density housing development permits in established neighbourhoods. Calgary's next municipal election is on Oct. 20.

Some Calgary councillors want to 'rein in city hall overreach'
Some Calgary councillors want to 'rein in city hall overreach'

Calgary Herald

time13-06-2025

  • Calgary Herald

Some Calgary councillors want to 'rein in city hall overreach'

A cohort of Calgary city councillors say they want to clamp down on city hall's tendency to fund programs and services that fall outside of the municipality's jurisdiction. Article content Councillors representing the Communities First political party — a caucus that includes Sonya Sharp, Andre Chabot, Dan McLean and Terry Wong — are bringing a notice of motion to Tuesday's executive committee meeting that asks the city to develop a comprehensive chart of government responsibilities for key policy and service areas, and to clearly show which functions are municipal, provincial, federal or a shared responsibility. Article content Article content Article content Calgary's mayor criticized the proposal, which calls for the chart to be published on the city's website and social media channels by July 4, as 'electioneering.' Article content Article content Sharp said the notice of motion stems from council decisions she argued shouldn't have been made. She cited last year's single-use items bylaw — which council voted to scrap two weeks after it was implemented, following public backlash — and a councillor's proposal to advocate allowing non-citizens with permanent residency status to vote in Calgary's municipal elections. Article content 'Reports like the bag bylaw, cancelling fireworks, non-(citizen) voting . . . all that is distraction from focusing on the things that matter to Calgarians,' she said. Article content Sharp said she's wanted to bring this motion forward since council's approval of the 2025 budget last November, which resulted in an average 5.5 per cent property tax hike for households. She argued that part of the reason property taxes keep going up is because city hall spends $135 million a year on tax-funded services that fall outside its jurisdiction, as outlined in the Municipal Government Act. Article content Article content Article content 'This notice of motion isn't saying we're going to go and cut any of that funding,' she said. 'What we're saying in general is, when administration brings a report back to council, it needs to identify if we're playing the lead role. Is it a core city service? Are we advocating to the province, or are we supporting the province in advocating to the federal government?' Article content The motion would also require all council and committee reports to include a 'clear jurisdictional label' indicating whether the item is a core municipal responsibility, a shared responsibility with other orders of government or if it falls outside the city's responsibility. Article content Chabot, who often points out during council debates when something is or isn't under municipal purview, said the motion would put those conversations in 'black and white.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store