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  2. Youth Empowerment & Support Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_Empowerment_&_Support...

    An employee of Rainbow Metal Products works at YESS in 1986. In 2016, YESS introduced the tagline "YESS is more than a shelter." Although YESS provides housing for at-risk youth in the Edmonton Capital Region, the organization is also dedicated to providing individualized support that addresses both diversion out of homelessness and general prevention of homelessness.

  3. Edmonton Fire Rescue Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonton_Fire_Rescue_Services

    Edmonton Fire Rescue Services (also Edmonton Fire and Rescue Services) is the fire department for the city of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The Edmonton Fire Department began as a volunteer fire corps in 1891 and the first full department was created in 1906.

  4. Centre to Empower All Survivors of Exploitation and Trafficking

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_to_Empower_All...

    In the early 1990s, the City of Edmonton formed an organization named Communities for Controlled Prostitution, which was later renamed Communities for Changing Prostitution. [9] Because of widespread prostitution in the Edmonton neighborhoods of Boyle Street and McCauley , the police chief of the City of Edmonton declared 1992 "The Year of The ...

  5. Edmonton Police Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonton_Police_Service

    The Edmonton Police Service (EPS) is the municipal police force for the City of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The current chief of the EPS is Dale McFee. McFee is the second highest paid police chief in Canada with an annual salary of $357,000 (2023), [4] following Vancouver's police chief Adam Palmer, who in 2022 was paid $493,932. [5]

  6. EPCOR Utilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPCOR_Utilities

    EPCOR Utilities Inc., formerly known as Edmonton Power Corporation, is a utility company based in Edmonton, Alberta. EPCOR manages water, wastewater, natural gas, and electricity distribution systems in the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia , and Ontario , and the American states of Arizona , New Mexico , and Texas . [ 4 ]

  7. Government Centre station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Centre_station

    In June 2021, Edmonton City Council voted unanimously to remove the name 'Grandin' from the station, due to Bishop Vital-Justin Grandin's active involvement in Canada's Indian residential schools system and the cultural genocide of Indigenous peoples. [5] 'Government Centre' is currently used as the station's interim name.

  8. Government House (Alberta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_House_(Alberta)

    The City of Edmonton maintains the Government House Park, part of the North Saskatchewan River valley parks system, in the river valley directly below the Government House clifftop location. Government House is about a 4-kilometre (2.5 mi) walk from the Alberta Legislature Building , northwest along the banks of the North Saskatchewan River .

  9. Edmonton City Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonton_City_Hall

    The Edmonton City Hall is the home of the municipal government of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.Designed by Dub Architects, the building was completed in 1992.It was built to replace the former city hall designed by architects Kelvin Crawford Stanley and Maxwell Dewar in 1957, which had become outdated and expensive to operate.