News Releases
Saskatoon Fire - News Releases
City named best diversity employer for ninth year
March 6, 2020 - 2:38am
- City Council’s priority on reconciliation, inclusion and diversity and developing new partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities. The City introduced mandatory Indigenous Awareness training for employees and offers a Truth and Reconciliation Resource Kit to enable ongoing learning.
- Improving employee understanding of diversity and inclusion through a number of training initiatives covering a variety of topics, such as cultural bridging, understanding invisible disabilities and inclusive practices for LGBTQ2S identities.
- Participation in the launch of the Immigration Partnership Saskatoon office, an inter-sectional committee that works to help improve the lives of newcomers in the region.
The City of Saskatoon has been announced as one of Canada’s Best Diversity Employers for the ninth year in a row. This competition recognizes employers across Canada that have exceptional workplace diversity and inclusiveness programs.
“By using our refreshed corporate values as a lens for how we work together, we’re creating a smart, healthy and safe workplace where everyone has an opportunity to shine,” says Sarah Cameron, Chief Human Resources Officer. “Over the past year, we’ve provided ongoing opportunities for employee feedback and have taken action by addressing barriers and promoting equality, dignity and respect.”
This competition looks at successful diversity initiatives in a variety of areas, including programs for employees from five groups: (a) Women; (b) Members of visible minorities; (c) Persons with disabilities; (d) Indigenous peoples; and (e) Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender/Transsexual (LGBT) peoples. Employers are compared with other organizations in their field to determine which ones offer noteworthy and unique diversity initiatives.
Highlights of City initiatives include:
“Through our employee training and community education opportunities, we’re raising awareness and educating our employees in areas they might never have had the opportunity to do so. These initiatives, like our mandatory Indigenous Awareness Training, are helping us create a welcoming and inclusive environment in which all employees can contribute and achieve their full potential,” says Cameron.
Canada’s Best Diversity Employers for 2020 are outlined in the March 6, 2020 edition of The Globe and Mail, as well as on Canada's Best Diversity Employers website.
The City has a long-standing commitment to diversity and inclusion, and as Saskatoon’s population continues to grow and diversify it is imperative that we recruit and retain a workforce that represents and understands the Saskatoon community.
Farmers’ Market Building initiatives moving forward
March 5, 2020 - 3:50am
Work to renovate, re-animate and revitalize the Farmers’ Market Building in River Landing continues to move forward. Here’s an update:
Building Tenant
In 2019, City Council directed the Administration to find a tenant who will fully use and attract people to the Farmers’ Market Building at least six days a week. This site animation includes having a market focused on locally produced food and goods for sale.
A Request for Proposals (RFP) was released in November and it closed late December 2019. A team of City staff from departments relevant to the project evaluated the submissions. An independent fairness monitor oversaw the evaluation process. The team made its evaluation based on criteria outlined in the RFP and how closely a proposal met those criteria. The City is in negotiations with the highest ranked proponent, but is not yet in a position to speak publicly about any details; business discussions are ongoing and confidential.
City Council and the community will be informed once our discussions conclude; we anticipate this to happen later this spring.
Outdoor Market on Market Square
During discussions at Committee and Council in 2019, the Administration committed to City Council that we would ensure that Market Square is animated with an outdoor farmers’ market in 2020. The City has received an application through its regular booking process for Market Square, to be used for a farmers’ market as an extension of the adjacent annual Street Stall Saturdays. As there is no building tenant at this time, the City has approved this application, as an interim initiative, in order to meet our commitment to City Council. It is anticipated to run May to September.
Roof
Last year the City discovered significant repairs were needed to the roof of the Farmers’ Market Building. The City hired a roofing consultant to determine the best type of roof system to be installed on the building. A Request for Quotes for a roofing contractor was issued and closed last month. The City aims to have the roofing contractor in place within the next few weeks. Dependent on weather and the contractor’s own schedule, the work is expected to happen between May and June.
For more information on the Farmers’ Market Building at River Landing, visit saskatoon.ca/farmersmarket.
Statement on Cree Place fatality
March 4, 2020 - 8:57am
The City is saddened to learn about a fatal incident this morning (Wednesday, March 4) involving a pedestrian and a private contractor recycling collection truck. Our thoughts are certainly with this person’s friends and family at this difficult time. The collection work was being done by a private contractor for a non-City organization’s recycling contract. City workers or vehicles were not involved. Of course and if required, the City would cooperate with any police investigation.
Again, we offer our deepest condolences to everyone touched by this sad event.
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Angela Gardiner
General Manager, Utilities & Environment Department
Cultural Diversity and Race Relations Month Opening Ceremony Friday, February 28
February 26, 2020 - 6:31am
The public is invited to the opening ceremony for Cultural Diversity and Race Relations Month on Friday, February 28 at 1:30 p.m. in Council Chambers, City Hall. The ceremony will include greetings from His Worship Mayor Charlie Clark; Judge David Arnot, Chief Commissioner of the Human Rights Commission; Students of Aden Bowman’s Collective Voice Program; and, Dr. Fatima Coovadia from the Islamic Association of Saskatchewan (Saskatoon). A flag raising in Civic Square (outdoors at City Hall - 23rd Street) will follow the ceremony.
Cultural Diversity and Race Relations Month Opening Ceremony
Friday, February 28, 2020
1:30 p.m.
Council Chambers, City Hall
The public is reminded that the deadline for nominations for the annual Living in Harmony Recognition Awards, which recognizes local organizations or individuals for their efforts in eliminating racism in our community, is Friday, February 28, 2020. Nomination forms are available at saskatoon.ca/livinginharmony.
Since 1994, the City’s Cultural Diversity and Race Relations Committee has presented the Living in Harmony Recognition Awards at a special ceremony on March 21, the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. This year, the awards will be presented in partnership with Saskatoon Public School Board, Greater Catholic School Board and the University of Saskatchewan Students’ Union at the Broadway Theatre on Friday, March 20, 2020 starting at 1:15pm.
A listing of community events taking place during Cultural Diversity and Race Relations Month can be found on saskatoon.ca.
USask research projects with the City of Saskatoon awarded nearly $150,000 to target urban issues
February 19, 2020 - 11:11am
- Preventing food from going to waste. USask community health and epidemiology researcher Rachel Engler-Stringer will work with the City’s community leadership and program development manager Katie Burns to find ways to prevent surplus food from food-based businesses from ending up in the landfill by studying and providing information to these businesses on how to donate. The Saskatoon Food Council will coordinate the project. The aim is to reduce the environmental impact of edible food ending up in the landfill. If all surplus food was reclaimed, it could divert 13,000 tonnes of food city-wide and save up to $138,000 worth of space per year at the City’s landfill.
- Improving municipal appeals. USask law professor Heather Heavin will collaborate with Alan Rankine a lawyer with the City Solicitor’s Office to examine three high-volume, City-appointed tribunals (Board of Revision, Development Appeals Board, and License Appeal Board). The goal is to promote efficient and reliable City-appointed tribunals.
- Increasing demand for downtown living. USask urban planner Ryan Walker and city centre planner Brent McAdam will work with other USask researchers, the City’s urban design manager, and the executive director of the Saskatoon Downtown Business Improvement District to examine how downtown Saskatoon can be made a more attractive location in which to live.The team will study other cities and survey Saskatoon’s current, new and long-term downtown residents. The results will provide evidenced-based data to inform decisions on key proposals for the City’s future downtown development.
- Exploring municipal voting rights for permanent residents. USask political scientist Joe Garcea will collaborate with the City’s diversity and inclusion consultant (immigration) April Sora to examine extending the right to vote in Saskatoon’s municipal elections to non-citizens who are Canadian permanent residents. Permanent residents already hold voting rights in New Zealand, Australia, and some countries in Europe. In recent years this issue has been explored by a few major cities in Canada.
- Measuring pharmaceuticals in Saskatoon’s wastewater. USask toxicology researcher Markus Brinkmann, in collaboration with other researchers from USask’s Toxicology Centre and the College of Engineering, will work with City’s wastewater treatment plant operations manager Mike Sadowski to conduct comprehensive measurements of pharmaceuticals—antibiotics, pain killers, beta-blockers, hormone-like substances and others. The treated wastewater is discharged after an extensive treatment process from Saskatoon’s wastewater treatment plant into the South Saskatchewan River.
Pharmaceuticals, while not officially regulated in wastewaters, have become an important class of wastewater elements that many treatment plants across Canada have worked to measure. By sampling water in the wastewater treatment plant and downstream in the river, the researchers will work to better understand and stay current with technology and new solutions to treat wastewater. - Improving quality of life and reducing poverty through oral health. USask dental public health specialist Dr. Keith Da Silva and the Community-University Institute for Social Research (CUISR) led by co-directors USask professor emerita Isobel Findlay and the City’s senior planner Bill Holden, will examine access to dental care and how it may enhance quality of life for Saskatoon’s homeless population and those living in poverty. The ultimate goal is to reduce poverty by alleviating some social symptoms of poor oral health: lowered self-esteem, limited social interaction, and reduced employability.
- Reducing 2SLGBTQ Youth Homelessness. USask women and gender studies researcher Marie Lovrod will work with City housing analyst Michael Kowalchuk and OUTSaskatoon executive director Rachel Loewen Walker, a queer and sexuality studies specialist. This team will study the success of OUTSaskatoon’s Pride Home, a five-bed home for 2SLGBTQ youth. 2SLGBTQ youth are at high risk for housing insecurity and consequently have increased physical and mental health challenges. The aim of the project is to create an evidence-based model for reducing queer youth homelessness to be shared across Canada.
Measuring pharmaceuticals in Saskatoon’s wastewater, diverting food from the landfill to save money and the planet, and improving property assessment appeals are some of the first research projects of the new Research Junction collaboration between the City of Saskatoon (City) and University of Saskatchewan (USask) researchers.
“It is incredible to see City employees and university researchers come together to solve problems and address such a wide variety of issues facing Saskatoon,” said Mayor Charlie Clark. “This helps us move forward as a community and shows how we can lead the country through collaboration to create the best results for our community and residents. As we work together on these projects, we can create real benefits and build a healthy, strong and sustainable future.”
Five projects have been awarded a total of $100,000 through the Research Junction Development Grant program, a jointly funded university-municipal research partnership announced in September of 2019.
“Through the power of research, these collaborative projects will address some tough challenges in our community,” said USask President Peter Stoicheff. “It is exciting to see from this list of approved projects the first concrete ways in which this strategic partnership will help build a better Saskatoon.”
The grants provide researchers with access to the City’s resources, data and expertise, and provide City staff with access to analyses and data resulting from the projects to inform decision-making. Projects funded through the initiative also create hands-on learning and research opportunities for USask students and post-doctoral fellows, helping them prepare for future careers.
The first Research Junction projects funded are:
Two additional collaborative projects have also been awarded nearly $50,000 for research relating to homelessness in Saskatoon through a related program, “Pathways to Equity,” funded by an anonymous donor.
The Pathways to Equity projects are:
Applications are now open for the 2020 Research Junction Development Grant to support research projects carried out by USask researchers in partnership with City of Saskatoon staff. The deadline is May 15, 2020.
For more information, visit research.usask.ca.