fbpx
Wikipedia

List of towns in Alberta

A town is an urban municipality status type used in the Canadian province of Alberta. Alberta towns are created when communities with populations of at least 1,000 people, where a majority of their buildings are on parcels of land smaller than 1,850 m2, apply to Alberta Municipal Affairs for town status under the authority of the Municipal Government Act.[1] Applications for town status are approved via orders in council made by the Lieutenant Governor in Council under recommendation from the Minister of Municipal Affairs.[1]

Distribution of Alberta's 105 towns and 13 other communities that meet the legislated population requirements for town status

Alberta has 105 towns that had a cumulative population of 455,053 and an average population of 4,293 in the 2016 Canadian Census.[2] Alberta's largest and smallest towns are Okotoks and Stavely with populations of 28,881 and 541 respectively.[2] Diamond Valley is Alberta's newest town, which incorporated on January 1, 2023 via amalgamation of the former towns of Black Diamond and Turner Valley.[3]

When a town's population exceeds 10,000 people, the council may request a change to city status, but the change in incorporated status is not mandatory.[4] Towns with populations less than 1,000, whether their populations have declined below 1,000 or they were incorporated as towns prior to the minimum 1,000 population requirement, are permitted to retain town status.

A total of 699 elected town officials (107 mayors and 592 councillors)[needs update] provide town governance throughout the province.[5]

The highest frequency of towns in Alberta is found in the Queen Elizabeth II Highway/Highway 2A corridor between Calgary and Edmonton corridor including, from south to north, Crossfield, Carstairs, Didsbury, Olds, Bowden, Innisfail, Penhold, Blackfalds, Ponoka and Millet.

Administration edit

Pursuant to Part 5, Division 1 of the Municipal Government Act (MGA), each municipality created under the authority of the MGA is governed by a council. As a requirement of the MGA, a town council consists of an odd number of councillors, one of which is the town's chief elected official (CEO) or mayor. A town council consists of seven councillors by default, but it can consist of a higher or lower odd number if council passes a bylaw altering its size (so long as it does not consist of fewer than three councillors).[1] For the 2017–2021 term, 82 towns have a council of seven, and 25 have a council of five.[6]

Town councils are governed by a mayor and an even number of councillors that are elected by popular vote, resulting in a total odd number of members to avoid tie votes on council matters.[1] All council members are elected under the provisions of the Local Authorities Election Act (LAEA).[7] Mayoral or councillor candidates are required to be residents of their municipality for a minimum of six consecutive months prior to nomination day. The last municipal election was October 16, 2017.

Alberta Municipal Affairs, a ministry of the Cabinet of Alberta, is charged with coordination of all levels of local government.

Administrative duties of towns include public safety, local transit, roads, water service, drainage and waste collection, as well as coordination of infrastructure with provincial and regional authorities (including road construction, education, and health).

List edit

The below table is a list of only those urban municipalities in Alberta that are incorporated as towns.

The municipalities of Crowsnest Pass and Jasper are not listed because they are incorporated as specialized municipalities, not towns. For more information on specialized municipalities, see Specialized municipalities of Alberta.


Name Specialized/rural
municipality[8]
Incorporation
date (town)[9]
Municipal
census

population
(year)[10]
Population
(2016)[2]
Population
(2011)[2]
Change
(%)[2]
Land
area
(km2)[2]
Population
density
(per km2)[2]
Athabasca[N 1] Athabasca County Sep 19, 1911 2,965 2,990 −0.8% 17.65 168.0
Banff Improvement District No. 9 (Banff) Jan 1, 1990 8,875
(2017)
7,851 7,584 +3.5% 4.77 1,645.9
Barrhead Barrhead No. 11, County of Nov 26, 1946 4,579 4,432 +3.3% 8.17 560.5
Bashaw Camrose County May 1, 1964 830 873 −4.9% 2.99 277.6
Bassano Newell, County of Jan 16, 1911 1,206 1,282 −5.9% 5.22 231.0
Beaverlodge Grande Prairie No. 1, County of Jan 24, 1956 2,465 2,365 +4.2% 5.73 430.2
Bentley Lacombe County Jan 1, 2001 1,078 1,073 +0.5% 2.24 481.3
Blackfalds Lacombe County Apr 1, 1980 10,125
(2018)
9,328 6,300 +48.1% 16.44 567.4
Bon Accord Sturgeon County Nov 20, 1979 1,529 1,488 +2.8% 2.13 717.8
Bonnyville Bonnyville No. 87, M.D. of Feb 3, 1948 6,422
(2017)
5,975[11] 6,216 −3.9% 14.18 421.4
Bow Island Forty Mile No. 8, County of Feb 1, 1912 2,043
(2017)
1,983 2,025 −2.1% 5.81 341.3
Bowden Red Deer County Sep 1, 1981 1,240 1,241 −0.1% 2.8 442.9
Bruderheim Lamont County Sep 17, 1980 1,395
(2018)
1,308 1,155 +13.2% 7.12 183.7
Calmar Leduc County Jan 19, 1954 2,228 1,970 +13.1% 4.68 476.1
Canmore Bighorn No. 8, M.D. of
Kananaskis Improvement District[12]
Jun 1, 1966 13,992 12,288 +13.9% 69.43 201.5
Cardston Cardston County Jul 2, 1901 3,909
(2018)
3,585 3,580 +0.1% 8.59 417.3
Carstairs Mountain View County Sep 1, 1966 4,077 3,442 +18.4% 11.92 342.0
Castor Paintearth No. 18, County of Jun 27, 1910 929 932 −0.3% 2.63 353.2
Claresholm Willow Creek No. 26, M.D. of Aug 31, 1905 3,780 3,758 +0.6% 8.11 466.1
Coaldale Lethbridge County Jan 7, 1952 8,691
(2019)[13]
8,215 7,493 +9.6% 7.99 1,028.2
Coalhurst Lethbridge County Jun 1, 1995 2,784
(2019)[14]
2,668 1,978 +34.9% 3.11 857.9
Cochrane Rocky View County Feb 15, 1971 29,277
(2019)[15]
25,853 17,580 +47.1% 29.83 866.7
Coronation Paintearth No. 18, County of Apr 29, 1912 940 947 −0.7% 3.62 259.7
Crossfield Rocky View County Aug 1, 1980 3,308
(2018)
2,983 2,853 +4.6% 11.96 249.4
Daysland Flagstaff County Apr 2, 1907 824 807 +2.1% 1.75 470.9
Devon Leduc County Feb 24, 1950 6,578 6,515 +1.0% 14.3 460.0
Diamond Valley Foothills County Jan 1, 2023[3] 5,259 4,540 +15.8% 9.63 546.1
Didsbury Mountain View County Sep 27, 1906 5,268 4,957 +6.3% 16.37 321.8
Drayton Valley Brazeau County Feb 1, 1957 7,235 7,118 +1.6% 30.72 235.5
Drumheller[N 2] Kneehill County
Special Area No. 2
Starland County
Wheatland County[16]
Mar 2, 1916
January 1, 1998
7,982 8,029 −0.6% 108.03 73.9
Eckville Lacombe County Jul 1, 1966 1,163
(2018)
1,125 1,125 0.0% 1.6 703.1
Edson Yellowhead County Sep 21, 1911 8,414 8,475 −0.7% 29.72 283.1
Elk Point St. Paul No. 19, County of Jan 1, 1962 1,452 1,412 +2.8% 4.91 295.7
Fairview Fairview No. 136, M.D. of Apr 25, 1949 2,998 3,162 −5.2% 11.36 263.9
Falher Smoky River No. 130, M.D. of Jan 1, 1955 1,047 1,075 −2.6% 2.78 376.6
Fort Macleod[N 3] Willow Creek No. 26, M.D. of Mar 29, 1912 2,967 3,117 −4.8% 23.41 126.7
Fox Creek Greenview No. 16, M.D. of Sep 1, 1983 1,971 1,969 +0.1% 12.36 159.5
Gibbons Sturgeon County Apr 1, 1977 3,159 3,030 +4.3% 7.5 421.2
Grimshaw Peace No. 135, M.D. of Feb 2, 1953 2,718 2,515 +8.1% 7.09 383.4
Hanna Special Area No. 2 Apr 14, 1914 2,559 2,673 −4.3% 8.81 290.5
Hardisty Flagstaff County Nov 9, 1910 554 639 −13.3% 5.13 108.0
High Level Mackenzie County Sep 1, 1983 3,992
(2017)
3,159 3,641 −13.2% 29.2 108.2
High Prairie Big Lakes County Jan 10, 1950 2,564 2,600 −1.4% 7.22 355.1
High River Foothills No. 31, M.D. of Feb 12, 1906 13,584 12,930 +5.1% 21.39 635.1
Hinton Yellowhead County Dec 29, 1958 9,882 9,640 +2.5% 33.52 294.8
Innisfail Red Deer County Nov 20, 1903 7,847 7,876 −0.4% 19.4 404.5
Irricana Rocky View County Jun 9, 2005 1,216 1,162 +4.6% 3.23 376.5
Killam Flagstaff County May 1, 1965 989 981 +0.8% 6.75 146.5
Lamont Lamont County May 31, 1968 1,774 1,753 +1.2% 9.2 192.8
Legal Sturgeon County Jan 1, 1998 1,345 1,225 +9.8% 3.18 423.0
Magrath Cardston County Jul 24, 1907 2,435
(2017)
2,374 2,217 +7.1% 5.99 396.3
Manning Northern Lights, County of Jan 1, 1957 1,183 1,164 +1.6% 4.05 292.1
Mayerthorpe Lac Ste. Anne County Mar 20, 1961 1,320 1,398 −5.6% 4.37 302.1
McLennan Smoky River No. 130, M.D. of Feb 11, 1948 791
(2017)
701 809 −13.3% 3.71 188.9
Milk River Warner No. 5, County of Feb 7, 1956 827 811 +2.0% 2.33 354.9
Millet Wetaskiwin No. 10, County of Sep 1, 1983 1,945 2,092 −7.0% 3.72 522.8
Morinville Sturgeon County Apr 21, 1911 9,893
(2016)
9,848 8,569 +14.9% 11.15 883.2
Mundare Lamont County Jan 4, 1951 852 855 −0.4% 4.21 202.4
Nanton Willow Creek No. 26, M.D. of Aug 9, 1907 2,181[11] 2,132 +2.3% 4.87 447.8
Nobleford Lethbridge County Feb 28, 2018 1,278 1,000 +27.8% 1.59 803.8
Okotoks Foothills No. 31, M.D. of Jun 1, 1904 29,002
(2018)
28,881 24,511 +17.8% 19.63 1,471.3
Olds Mountain View County Jul 1, 1905 9,184 8,235 +11.5% 14.93 615.1
Onoway Lac Ste. Anne County Sep 1, 2005 1,029 1,039 −1.0% 3.32 309.9
Oyen Special Area No. 3 Sep 1, 1965 1,022
(2017)
1,001 973 +2.9% 5.28 189.6
Peace River[N 4] Northern Lights, County of
Northern Sunrise County
Peace No. 135, M.D. of[17]
Dec 1, 1919 6,842 6,729 +1.7% 26.26 260.5
Penhold Red Deer County Sep 1, 1980 3,277 2,375 +38.0% 5.29 619.5
Picture Butte Lethbridge County Jan 1, 1960 1,810 1,650 +9.7% 2.85 635.1
Pincher Creek Pincher Creek No. 9, M.D. of May 12, 1906 3,642 3,685 −1.2% 10.09 361.0
Ponoka Ponoka County Oct 15, 1904 7,229 6,778 +6.7% 17.33 417.1
Provost Provost No. 52, M.D. of Dec 29, 1952 1,998 2,041 −2.1% 4.72 423.3
Rainbow Lake Mackenzie County Sep 1, 1995 795 870 −8.6% 10.76 73.9
Raymond Warner No. 5, County of Jul 1, 1903 4,252
(2018)
3,708 3,743 −0.9% 6.66 556.8
Redcliff Cypress County Aug 5, 1912 5,600 5,588 +0.2% 16.25 344.6
Redwater Sturgeon County Dec 31, 1950 2,053 1,915 +7.2% 20.03 102.5
Rimbey Ponoka County Dec 13, 1948 2,567 2,378 +7.9% 11.4 225.2
Rocky Mountain House Clearwater County Aug 31, 1939 6,635 6,933 −4.3% 12.71 522.0
Sedgewick Flagstaff County May 1, 1966 811 857 −5.4% 2.72 298.2
Sexsmith Grande Prairie No. 1, County of Oct 15, 1979 2,620 2,418 +8.4% 13.24 197.9
Slave Lake Lesser Slave River No. 124, M.D. of Aug 2, 1965 6,651 6,782 −1.9% 14.44 460.6
Smoky Lake Smoky Lake County Feb 1, 1962 964 1,022 −5.7% 4.26 226.3
Spirit River Spirit River No. 133, M.D. of Sep 18, 1951 995 1,025 −2.9% 3.14 316.9
St. Paul[N 5] St. Paul No. 19, County of Dec 15, 1936 5,963
(2017)
5,827 5,405 +7.8% 8.64 674.4
Stavely Willow Creek No. 26, M.D. of May 25, 1912 541 505 +7.1% 1.83 295.6
Stettler Stettler No. 6, County of Nov 23, 1906 5,952 5,748 +3.5% 13.14 453.0
Stony Plain Parkland County Dec 10, 1908 17,842
(2019)[18]
17,189 15,051 +14.2% 35.72 481.2
Strathmore Wheatland County Jul 6, 1911 13,528
(2018)
13,756 12,305 +11.8% 27.4 502.0
Sundre Mountain View County Jan 1, 1956 2,729 2,610 +4.6% 11.11 245.6
Swan Hills Big Lakes County Jan 1, 1967 1,301 1,465 −11.2% 26.12 49.8
Sylvan Lake Red Deer County May 20, 1946 14,816 12,362 +19.9% 23.36 634.2
Taber Taber, M.D. of Jul 1, 1907 8,428 8,104 +4.0% 15.67 537.8
Thorsby Leduc County Jan 1, 2017[19] 1,015
(2017)
985 951 +3.6% 3.85 255.8
Three Hills Kneehill County Jan 1, 1929 3,212 3,198 +0.4% 6.75 475.9
Tofield Beaver County Sep 10, 1909 2,081 2,182 −4.6% 8.21 253.5
Trochu Kneehill County Aug 1, 1962 1,058 1,072 −1.3% 2.78 380.6
Two Hills Two Hills No. 21, County of Jan 1, 1955 1,443
(2017)
1,352 1,379 −2.0% 3.38 400.0
Valleyview Greenview No. 16, M.D. of Feb 5, 1957 1,863 1,761 +5.8% 9.32 199.9
Vauxhall Taber, M.D. of Jan 1, 1961 1,222 1,288 −5.1% 2.72 449.3
Vegreville Minburn No. 27, County of Aug 15, 1906 5,708 5,717 −0.2% 14.08 405.4
Vermilion Vermilion River, County of Aug 27, 1906 4,150
(2017)
4,084 3,930 +3.9% 12.93 315.9
Viking Beaver County Nov 10, 1952 1,083 1,041 +4.0% 3.7 292.7
Vulcan Vulcan County Jun 15, 1921 1,917 1,836 +4.4% 6.34 302.4
Wainwright Wainwright No. 61, M.D. of Jul 14, 1910 6,270 5,925 +5.8% 9.1 689.0
Wembley Grande Prairie No. 1, County of Aug 1, 1980 1,516 1,383 +9.6% 4.75 319.2
Westlock Westlock County Jan 7, 1947 5,101 4,823 +5.8% 13.37 381.5
Whitecourt Woodlands County Dec 20, 1971 10,204 9,605 +6.2% 26.44 385.9
Total towns 454,181 420,498 +8.0% 1,248.01 363.9


New towns edit

New town is a former urban municipal status in Alberta that is no longer in use. The authority to incorporate a community as a new town came from The New Towns Act, which was chapter 39 of the Statutes of Alberta, 1956.

At least 12 communities incorporated as a new town between 1956 and 1967. Cynthia and Drayton Valley were the first communities in Alberta to incorporate as new towns on June 1, 1956.[20][21] Drayton Valley did so after only six months of incorporation as a village,[21] and was also the community that operated under new town status for the shortest period – eight months from June 1, 1956, to February 1, 1957.[22]

The last community to incorporate as a new town was Fox Creek on July 19, 1967.[23] Fox Creek was previously unincorporated prior to this date. It remained a new town for just over sixteen years until September 1, 1983, when it changed to town status.[24]

Rainbow Lake was the last community to be recognized as a new town. Its status was changed to that of a town in 1994 when numerous former acts under the authority of Alberta Municipal Affairs were transitioned into the current Municipal Government Act.[25] Rainbow Lake was also the community that operated under new town status for the longest period – nearly 28 years from September 1, 1966, to May 2, 1994.

Other communities that applied for new town status included Slave Lake and Smith. Slave Lake applied, despite already being incorporated, to access additional provincial funding but the application was denied by the provincial cabinet. In the case of Smith, after applying in 1968, its application was denied after the province's feasibility study for the community determined Smith was unlikely to attract further economic development.[26]

Below is a list of the 12 communities that were once incorporated as a new town. All but one of them are resource communities in northern or west–central Alberta and were recently founded communities at their dates of incorporation as new towns. St. Albert was the only community that was not in northern or west–central Alberta and had been incorporated as its own municipality since December 7, 1899.[27]

Former new town Incorporation date
(new town)
Previous
status
Subsequent status
change date
Subsequent
status
Cynthia June 1, 1956[20] Unincorporated May 1, 1959[28] Hamlet[N 6]
Drayton Valley June 1, 1956[21] Village February 1, 1957[22] Town
Fort McMurray June 30, 1964[29] Town September 1, 1980[29] City[N 7]
Fox Creek July 19, 1967[23] Unincorporated September 1, 1983[24] Town
Grande Cache September 1, 1966[31] Unincorporated September 1, 1983[32] Town
High Level June 1, 1965[33] Hamlet September 1, 1983[34] Town
Hinton November 1, 1956[35] Hamlet December 29, 1958[36] Town
Lodgepole July 1, 1956[37] Unincorporated March 1, 1970[38] Hamlet[N 8]
Rainbow Lake September 1, 1966[39] Unincorporated May 2, 1994[25] Town
St. Albert January 1, 1957[27] Town July 3, 1962[27] Town[N 9]
Swan Hills September 1, 1959[41] Unincorporated January 1, 1967[42] Town
Whitecourt August 15, 1961[43] Village December 20, 1971[44] Town

Former towns edit

All cities in Alberta[45] and the former cities of Fort McMurray[46] and Strathcona[47] previously held town status in their histories. Other communities that previously held town status include Beverly, Big Valley, Blairmore, Bowness, Black Diamond, Carmangay, Coleman, Cynthia, Diamond City, Forest Lawn, Gleichen, Grande Cache, Grand Centre, Grouard, Irvine, Jasper Place, Lac La Biche, Lodgepole, Montgomery, Turner Valley and Youngstown.[48][46][49] Of these, the villages of Big Valley, Carmangay and Youngstown are the only communities that remain incorporated municipalities.[50] The others either amalgamated to form other municipalities (Blairmore, Coleman, Grand Centre and Lac La Biche),[51][52][53] were absorbed through annexation by Calgary (Bowness, Forest Lawn and Montgomery)[54] or Edmonton (Beverly and Jasper Place)[55] or dissolved to become hamlets under the jurisdiction of municipal districts (Cynthia, Diamond City, Gleichen, Grande Cache, Grouard, Irvine and Lodgepole).[48][8]

Town status eligibility edit

The villages of Stirling, Duchess, and Alberta Beach, with population counts of 1,269, 1,085, and 1,018 respectively,[10] meet the legislated population requirements for town status. There are also at least ten hamletsCardiff, Clairmont, Dunmore, Fort Chipewyan, Grande Cache, La Crete, Lac La Biche, Langdon, Springbrook, and Wabasca – that meet the population requirements for town status.

City status eligibility edit

There are currently nine towns – Blackfalds, Canmore, Cochrane, High River, Okotoks, Stony Plain, Strathmore, Sylvan Lake and Whitecourt – that are eligible for city status having populations in excess of 10,000.[10] In addition, the Town of Hinton has expressed interest in incorporating as a city once it surpasses 10,000 people.[56] Its population in 2016 was 9,882.[2] In 2016, the Town of Morinville conducted a municipal census in which it anticipated the town would surpass 10,000; thus the town investigated city status as well as a specialized municipality model with Sturgeon County.[57] The census reported a population of 9,893, which was 107 people shy of the milestone.[10]

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Athabasca was formerly known as Athabasca Landing prior to August 4, 1913.[9]
  2. ^ Drumheller originally incorporated as a city on April 3, 1930, but reverted from city status as a result of its amalgamation with the M.D. of Badlands No. 7 in 1998.[9]
  3. ^ Fort Macleod, which grew around the NWMP's Fort Macleod barracks (built 1874), was formerly known as Macleod prior to April 1, 1952.[9]
  4. ^ Peace River was formerly known as Peace River Crossing prior to May 22, 1916.[9]
  5. ^ St. Paul was formerly known as St. Paul de Métis prior to December 15, 1932.
  6. ^ Cynthia dissolved as development in Cynthia "did not materialize sufficiently to warrant the attention of a Board of Administrators as appointed under the New Towns Act", and did not have "sufficient population or occupied dwellings ... to allow for its establishment into a town or a village under the provisions of The Towns and Villages Act."[28]
  7. ^ Fort McMurray later dissolved from city status on April 1, 1995, and is now designated as an urban service area.[30]
  8. ^ Lodgepole dissolved as development in Lodgepole "did not materialize sufficiently to qualify under the provisions of the Municipal Government Act for the formation of a town or village."[38]
  9. ^ St. Albert later incorporated as a city on January 1, 1977.[40]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Municipal Government Act". Alberta Queen's Printer. Retrieved March 21, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2016 and 2011 censuses – 100% data (Alberta)". Statistics Canada. February 8, 2018. Retrieved January 12, 2019.
  3. ^ a b "O.C. 156/2022". Government of Alberta. May 25, 2022. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
  4. ^ . Alberta Municipal Affairs. Archived from the original on April 19, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2010.
  5. ^ "Municipal Profiles (Towns)" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  6. ^ "Municipal Officials Search". Alberta Municipal Affairs. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  7. ^ "Local Authorities Election Act". Alberta Queen's Printer. Retrieved March 21, 2010.
  8. ^ a b "Communities Within Specialized and Rural Municipalities" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. April 9, 2013. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Municipal Profiles: Summary Reports (Towns)" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. May 17, 2013. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d 2018 Municipal Affairs Population List (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. December 2018. ISBN 978-1-4601-4254-7. Retrieved July 18, 2019.
  11. ^ a b "Population and dwelling count amendments, 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. January 16, 2018. Retrieved February 3, 2018.
  12. ^ "Census Profile - Map: Canmore, Town (Census Subdivision), Alberta". Statistics Canada. March 22, 2013. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  13. ^ (PDF). Town of Coaldale. July 8, 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2019. Retrieved July 6, 2019.
  14. ^ "2019 Municipal Census Count" (PDF). Town of Coalhurst. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
  15. ^ "Cochrane's population continues to grow". Town of Cochrane. May 28, 2019. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
  16. ^ "Census Profile - Map: Drumheller, Town (Census Subdivision), Alberta". Statistics Canada. March 22, 2013. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  17. ^ "Census Profile - Map: Peace River, Town (Census Subdivision), Alberta". Statistics Canada. March 22, 2013. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  18. ^ "The Town of Stony Plain's Population has Increased by 3.8%". Town of Stony Plain. July 8, 2019. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  19. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 344/2016" (PDF). Province of Alberta. December 13, 2016. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
  20. ^ a b "The Alberta Gazette, 1956 (Volume 52) – Order in Council 783–56: New Town of Cynthia Established". Government of Alberta. June 11, 1956. pp. 1122–1123. Archived from the original on July 24, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2015.
  21. ^ a b c "Order in Council (O.C.) 601/56" (PDF). Province of Alberta. May 9, 1956. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  22. ^ a b "Order in Council (O.C.) 403/57" (PDF). Province of Alberta. March 11, 1957. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  23. ^ a b "Order in Council (O.C.) 1405/67" (PDF). Province of Alberta. July 19, 1967. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  24. ^ a b "Order in Council (O.C.) 40/83" (PDF). Province of Alberta. January 12, 1983. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  25. ^ a b "Transitional Provisions, Consequental Amendments, Repeal and Commencement, Transition from Former Acts to this Act" (PDF). Province of Alberta. May 2, 1994. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  26. ^ Jack Masson; Edward C. LeSage Jr. (1994). Alberta's Local Governments: Politics and Democracy. The University of Alberta Press. pp. 91–92. ISBN 0-88864-251-2.
  27. ^ a b c Arlene Borgstede (1985). "The Black Robe's Vision: A History of St. Albert & District (Volume 2)". St. Albert Historical Society. p. 681. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  28. ^ a b "The Alberta Gazette, 1959 (Volume 55) – Order in Council 760/59: Dissolution of the Town of Cynthia". Government of Alberta. May 19, 1959. p. 911. Archived from the original on July 24, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2015.
  29. ^ a b Order in Council (O.C.) 930/64, Province of Alberta, June 30, 1964
  30. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 817/94" (PDF). Province of Alberta. December 21, 1994. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  31. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1605/66" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 30, 1966. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  32. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 749/83" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 31, 1983. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  33. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 967/65" (PDF). Province of Alberta. June 1, 1965. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  34. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 750/83" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 31, 1983. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  35. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1547/56" (PDF). Province of Alberta. November 6, 1956. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  36. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1661/58" (PDF). Province of Alberta. November 14, 1958. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  37. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1034/56" (PDF). Province of Alberta. July 31, 1956. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  38. ^ a b "Order in Council (O.C.) 325/70" (PDF). Province of Alberta. July 31, 1956. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  39. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1606/66" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 30, 1966. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  40. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1284/76" (PDF). Province of Alberta. December 1, 1976. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  41. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1242/59" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 18, 1959. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  42. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 2145/66" (PDF). Province of Alberta. November 15, 1966. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  43. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1253/61" (PDF). Province of Alberta. August 15, 1961. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  44. ^ "Order in Council (O.C.) 1917/71" (PDF). Province of Alberta. November 10, 1971. Retrieved March 13, 2010.
  45. ^ "Municipal Profiles: Summary Reports (Cities)" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. January 25, 2013. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  46. ^ a b "Population Data – 1958" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. 1958. Retrieved January 31, 2013.
  47. ^ History of Annexations (Map). City of Edmonton, Planning and Development Department.
  48. ^ a b "Order in Council (O.C.) 361/2018". Government of Alberta. November 27, 2018. Retrieved January 13, 2019.
  49. ^ "Population Data 1935" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. 1935. Retrieved January 31, 2013.
  50. ^ "2022 Municipal Codes" (PDF). Alberta Municipal Affairs. January 5, 2022. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  51. ^ "Municipality of Crowsnest Pass - Location and History Profile". Alberta Municipal Affairs. January 25, 2013. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  52. ^ "City of Cold Lake - Location and History Profile". Alberta Municipal Affairs. January 25, 2013. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  53. ^ "Lac La Biche County - Location and History Profile". Alberta Municipal Affairs. January 25, 2013. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  54. ^ "Chapter 3: Establishing the Pattern, 1955–1962" (PDF). Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  55. ^ "Population History". City of Edmonton. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  56. ^ "Town of Hinton Regular Meeting of Council Agenda (see page 113 of 157)". Town of Hinton. April 21, 2009. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
  57. ^ Tristan Turner (February 12, 2016). "Morinville Council Briefs". Morinville News. Pawn Marketing & Publishing Inc. Retrieved February 19, 2016.

External links edit

  • Alberta Municipal Affairs
  • Alberta Urban Municipalities Association

list, towns, alberta, town, urban, municipality, status, type, used, canadian, province, alberta, alberta, towns, created, when, communities, with, populations, least, people, where, majority, their, buildings, parcels, land, smaller, than, apply, alberta, mun. A town is an urban municipality status type used in the Canadian province of Alberta Alberta towns are created when communities with populations of at least 1 000 people where a majority of their buildings are on parcels of land smaller than 1 850 m2 apply to Alberta Municipal Affairs for town status under the authority of the Municipal Government Act 1 Applications for town status are approved via orders in council made by the Lieutenant Governor in Council under recommendation from the Minister of Municipal Affairs 1 Distribution of Alberta s 105 towns and 13 other communities that meet the legislated population requirements for town statusAlberta has 105 towns that had a cumulative population of 455 053 and an average population of 4 293 in the 2016 Canadian Census 2 Alberta s largest and smallest towns are Okotoks and Stavely with populations of 28 881 and 541 respectively 2 Diamond Valley is Alberta s newest town which incorporated on January 1 2023 via amalgamation of the former towns of Black Diamond and Turner Valley 3 When a town s population exceeds 10 000 people the council may request a change to city status but the change in incorporated status is not mandatory 4 Towns with populations less than 1 000 whether their populations have declined below 1 000 or they were incorporated as towns prior to the minimum 1 000 population requirement are permitted to retain town status A total of 699 elected town officials 107 mayors and 592 councillors needs update provide town governance throughout the province 5 The highest frequency of towns in Alberta is found in the Queen Elizabeth II Highway Highway 2A corridor between Calgary and Edmonton corridor including from south to north Crossfield Carstairs Didsbury Olds Bowden Innisfail Penhold Blackfalds Ponoka and Millet Contents 1 Administration 2 List 3 New towns 4 Former towns 5 Town status eligibility 6 City status eligibility 7 Gallery 8 Notes 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksAdministration editPursuant to Part 5 Division 1 of the Municipal Government Act MGA each municipality created under the authority of the MGA is governed by a council As a requirement of the MGA a town council consists of an odd number of councillors one of which is the town s chief elected official CEO or mayor A town council consists of seven councillors by default but it can consist of a higher or lower odd number if council passes a bylaw altering its size so long as it does not consist of fewer than three councillors 1 For the 2017 2021 term 82 towns have a council of seven and 25 have a council of five 6 Town councils are governed by a mayor and an even number of councillors that are elected by popular vote resulting in a total odd number of members to avoid tie votes on council matters 1 All council members are elected under the provisions of the Local Authorities Election Act LAEA 7 Mayoral or councillor candidates are required to be residents of their municipality for a minimum of six consecutive months prior to nomination day The last municipal election was October 16 2017 Alberta Municipal Affairs a ministry of the Cabinet of Alberta is charged with coordination of all levels of local government Administrative duties of towns include public safety local transit roads water service drainage and waste collection as well as coordination of infrastructure with provincial and regional authorities including road construction education and health List editThe below table is a list of only those urban municipalities in Alberta that are incorporated as towns The municipalities of Crowsnest Pass and Jasper are not listed because they are incorporated as specialized municipalities not towns For more information on specialized municipalities see Specialized municipalities of Alberta A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P R S T V W Name Specialized ruralmunicipality 8 Incorporationdate town 9 Municipalcensuspopulation year 10 Population 2016 2 Population 2011 2 Change 2 Landarea km2 2 Populationdensity per km2 2 Athabasca N 1 Athabasca County Sep 19 1911 2 965 2 990 0 8 17 65 168 0Banff Improvement District No 9 Banff Jan 1 1990 8 875 2017 7 851 7 584 3 5 4 77 1 645 9Barrhead Barrhead No 11 County of Nov 26 1946 4 579 4 432 3 3 8 17 560 5Bashaw Camrose County May 1 1964 830 873 4 9 2 99 277 6Bassano Newell County of Jan 16 1911 1 206 1 282 5 9 5 22 231 0Beaverlodge Grande Prairie No 1 County of Jan 24 1956 2 465 2 365 4 2 5 73 430 2Bentley Lacombe County Jan 1 2001 1 078 1 073 0 5 2 24 481 3Blackfalds Lacombe County Apr 1 1980 10 125 2018 9 328 6 300 48 1 16 44 567 4Bon Accord Sturgeon County Nov 20 1979 1 529 1 488 2 8 2 13 717 8Bonnyville Bonnyville No 87 M D of Feb 3 1948 6 422 2017 5 975 11 6 216 3 9 14 18 421 4Bow Island Forty Mile No 8 County of Feb 1 1912 2 043 2017 1 983 2 025 2 1 5 81 341 3Bowden Red Deer County Sep 1 1981 1 240 1 241 0 1 2 8 442 9Bruderheim Lamont County Sep 17 1980 1 395 2018 1 308 1 155 13 2 7 12 183 7Calmar Leduc County Jan 19 1954 2 228 1 970 13 1 4 68 476 1Canmore Bighorn No 8 M D ofKananaskis Improvement District 12 Jun 1 1966 13 992 12 288 13 9 69 43 201 5Cardston Cardston County Jul 2 1901 3 909 2018 3 585 3 580 0 1 8 59 417 3Carstairs Mountain View County Sep 1 1966 4 077 3 442 18 4 11 92 342 0Castor Paintearth No 18 County of Jun 27 1910 929 932 0 3 2 63 353 2Claresholm Willow Creek No 26 M D of Aug 31 1905 3 780 3 758 0 6 8 11 466 1Coaldale Lethbridge County Jan 7 1952 8 691 2019 13 8 215 7 493 9 6 7 99 1 028 2Coalhurst Lethbridge County Jun 1 1995 2 784 2019 14 2 668 1 978 34 9 3 11 857 9Cochrane Rocky View County Feb 15 1971 29 277 2019 15 25 853 17 580 47 1 29 83 866 7Coronation Paintearth No 18 County of Apr 29 1912 940 947 0 7 3 62 259 7Crossfield Rocky View County Aug 1 1980 3 308 2018 2 983 2 853 4 6 11 96 249 4Daysland Flagstaff County Apr 2 1907 824 807 2 1 1 75 470 9Devon Leduc County Feb 24 1950 6 578 6 515 1 0 14 3 460 0Diamond Valley Foothills County Jan 1 2023 3 5 259 4 540 15 8 9 63 546 1Didsbury Mountain View County Sep 27 1906 5 268 4 957 6 3 16 37 321 8Drayton Valley Brazeau County Feb 1 1957 7 235 7 118 1 6 30 72 235 5Drumheller N 2 Kneehill CountySpecial Area No 2Starland CountyWheatland County 16 Mar 2 1916 January 1 1998 7 982 8 029 0 6 108 03 73 9Eckville Lacombe County Jul 1 1966 1 163 2018 1 125 1 125 0 0 1 6 703 1Edson Yellowhead County Sep 21 1911 8 414 8 475 0 7 29 72 283 1Elk Point St Paul No 19 County of Jan 1 1962 1 452 1 412 2 8 4 91 295 7Fairview Fairview No 136 M D of Apr 25 1949 2 998 3 162 5 2 11 36 263 9Falher Smoky River No 130 M D of Jan 1 1955 1 047 1 075 2 6 2 78 376 6Fort Macleod N 3 Willow Creek No 26 M D of Mar 29 1912 2 967 3 117 4 8 23 41 126 7Fox Creek Greenview No 16 M D of Sep 1 1983 1 971 1 969 0 1 12 36 159 5Gibbons Sturgeon County Apr 1 1977 3 159 3 030 4 3 7 5 421 2Grimshaw Peace No 135 M D of Feb 2 1953 2 718 2 515 8 1 7 09 383 4Hanna Special Area No 2 Apr 14 1914 2 559 2 673 4 3 8 81 290 5Hardisty Flagstaff County Nov 9 1910 554 639 13 3 5 13 108 0High Level Mackenzie County Sep 1 1983 3 992 2017 3 159 3 641 13 2 29 2 108 2High Prairie Big Lakes County Jan 10 1950 2 564 2 600 1 4 7 22 355 1High River Foothills No 31 M D of Feb 12 1906 13 584 12 930 5 1 21 39 635 1Hinton Yellowhead County Dec 29 1958 9 882 9 640 2 5 33 52 294 8Innisfail Red Deer County Nov 20 1903 7 847 7 876 0 4 19 4 404 5Irricana Rocky View County Jun 9 2005 1 216 1 162 4 6 3 23 376 5Killam Flagstaff County May 1 1965 989 981 0 8 6 75 146 5Lamont Lamont County May 31 1968 1 774 1 753 1 2 9 2 192 8Legal Sturgeon County Jan 1 1998 1 345 1 225 9 8 3 18 423 0Magrath Cardston County Jul 24 1907 2 435 2017 2 374 2 217 7 1 5 99 396 3Manning Northern Lights County of Jan 1 1957 1 183 1 164 1 6 4 05 292 1Mayerthorpe Lac Ste Anne County Mar 20 1961 1 320 1 398 5 6 4 37 302 1McLennan Smoky River No 130 M D of Feb 11 1948 791 2017 701 809 13 3 3 71 188 9Milk River Warner No 5 County of Feb 7 1956 827 811 2 0 2 33 354 9Millet Wetaskiwin No 10 County of Sep 1 1983 1 945 2 092 7 0 3 72 522 8Morinville Sturgeon County Apr 21 1911 9 893 2016 9 848 8 569 14 9 11 15 883 2Mundare Lamont County Jan 4 1951 852 855 0 4 4 21 202 4Nanton Willow Creek No 26 M D of Aug 9 1907 2 181 11 2 132 2 3 4 87 447 8Nobleford Lethbridge County Feb 28 2018 1 278 1 000 27 8 1 59 803 8Okotoks Foothills No 31 M D of Jun 1 1904 29 002 2018 28 881 24 511 17 8 19 63 1 471 3Olds Mountain View County Jul 1 1905 9 184 8 235 11 5 14 93 615 1Onoway Lac Ste Anne County Sep 1 2005 1 029 1 039 1 0 3 32 309 9Oyen Special Area No 3 Sep 1 1965 1 022 2017 1 001 973 2 9 5 28 189 6Peace River N 4 Northern Lights County ofNorthern Sunrise CountyPeace No 135 M D of 17 Dec 1 1919 6 842 6 729 1 7 26 26 260 5Penhold Red Deer County Sep 1 1980 3 277 2 375 38 0 5 29 619 5Picture Butte Lethbridge County Jan 1 1960 1 810 1 650 9 7 2 85 635 1Pincher Creek Pincher Creek No 9 M D of May 12 1906 3 642 3 685 1 2 10 09 361 0Ponoka Ponoka County Oct 15 1904 7 229 6 778 6 7 17 33 417 1Provost Provost No 52 M D of Dec 29 1952 1 998 2 041 2 1 4 72 423 3Rainbow Lake Mackenzie County Sep 1 1995 795 870 8 6 10 76 73 9Raymond Warner No 5 County of Jul 1 1903 4 252 2018 3 708 3 743 0 9 6 66 556 8Redcliff Cypress County Aug 5 1912 5 600 5 588 0 2 16 25 344 6Redwater Sturgeon County Dec 31 1950 2 053 1 915 7 2 20 03 102 5Rimbey Ponoka County Dec 13 1948 2 567 2 378 7 9 11 4 225 2Rocky Mountain House Clearwater County Aug 31 1939 6 635 6 933 4 3 12 71 522 0Sedgewick Flagstaff County May 1 1966 811 857 5 4 2 72 298 2Sexsmith Grande Prairie No 1 County of Oct 15 1979 2 620 2 418 8 4 13 24 197 9Slave Lake Lesser Slave River No 124 M D of Aug 2 1965 6 651 6 782 1 9 14 44 460 6Smoky Lake Smoky Lake County Feb 1 1962 964 1 022 5 7 4 26 226 3Spirit River Spirit River No 133 M D of Sep 18 1951 995 1 025 2 9 3 14 316 9St Paul N 5 St Paul No 19 County of Dec 15 1936 5 963 2017 5 827 5 405 7 8 8 64 674 4Stavely Willow Creek No 26 M D of May 25 1912 541 505 7 1 1 83 295 6Stettler Stettler No 6 County of Nov 23 1906 5 952 5 748 3 5 13 14 453 0Stony Plain Parkland County Dec 10 1908 17 842 2019 18 17 189 15 051 14 2 35 72 481 2Strathmore Wheatland County Jul 6 1911 13 528 2018 13 756 12 305 11 8 27 4 502 0Sundre Mountain View County Jan 1 1956 2 729 2 610 4 6 11 11 245 6Swan Hills Big Lakes County Jan 1 1967 1 301 1 465 11 2 26 12 49 8Sylvan Lake Red Deer County May 20 1946 14 816 12 362 19 9 23 36 634 2Taber Taber M D of Jul 1 1907 8 428 8 104 4 0 15 67 537 8Thorsby Leduc County Jan 1 2017 19 1 015 2017 985 951 3 6 3 85 255 8Three Hills Kneehill County Jan 1 1929 3 212 3 198 0 4 6 75 475 9Tofield Beaver County Sep 10 1909 2 081 2 182 4 6 8 21 253 5Trochu Kneehill County Aug 1 1962 1 058 1 072 1 3 2 78 380 6Two Hills Two Hills No 21 County of Jan 1 1955 1 443 2017 1 352 1 379 2 0 3 38 400 0Valleyview Greenview No 16 M D of Feb 5 1957 1 863 1 761 5 8 9 32 199 9Vauxhall Taber M D of Jan 1 1961 1 222 1 288 5 1 2 72 449 3Vegreville Minburn No 27 County of Aug 15 1906 5 708 5 717 0 2 14 08 405 4Vermilion Vermilion River County of Aug 27 1906 4 150 2017 4 084 3 930 3 9 12 93 315 9Viking Beaver County Nov 10 1952 1 083 1 041 4 0 3 7 292 7Vulcan Vulcan County Jun 15 1921 1 917 1 836 4 4 6 34 302 4Wainwright Wainwright No 61 M D of Jul 14 1910 6 270 5 925 5 8 9 1 689 0Wembley Grande Prairie No 1 County of Aug 1 1980 1 516 1 383 9 6 4 75 319 2Westlock Westlock County Jan 7 1947 5 101 4 823 5 8 13 37 381 5Whitecourt Woodlands County Dec 20 1971 10 204 9 605 6 2 26 44 385 9Total towns 454 181 420 498 8 0 1 248 01 363 9New towns editNew town is a former urban municipal status in Alberta that is no longer in use The authority to incorporate a community as a new town came from The New Towns Act which was chapter 39 of the Statutes of Alberta 1956 At least 12 communities incorporated as a new town between 1956 and 1967 Cynthia and Drayton Valley were the first communities in Alberta to incorporate as new towns on June 1 1956 20 21 Drayton Valley did so after only six months of incorporation as a village 21 and was also the community that operated under new town status for the shortest period eight months from June 1 1956 to February 1 1957 22 The last community to incorporate as a new town was Fox Creek on July 19 1967 23 Fox Creek was previously unincorporated prior to this date It remained a new town for just over sixteen years until September 1 1983 when it changed to town status 24 Rainbow Lake was the last community to be recognized as a new town Its status was changed to that of a town in 1994 when numerous former acts under the authority of Alberta Municipal Affairs were transitioned into the current Municipal Government Act 25 Rainbow Lake was also the community that operated under new town status for the longest period nearly 28 years from September 1 1966 to May 2 1994 Other communities that applied for new town status included Slave Lake and Smith Slave Lake applied despite already being incorporated to access additional provincial funding but the application was denied by the provincial cabinet In the case of Smith after applying in 1968 its application was denied after the province s feasibility study for the community determined Smith was unlikely to attract further economic development 26 Below is a list of the 12 communities that were once incorporated as a new town All but one of them are resource communities in northern or west central Alberta and were recently founded communities at their dates of incorporation as new towns St Albert was the only community that was not in northern or west central Alberta and had been incorporated as its own municipality since December 7 1899 27 Former new town Incorporation date new town Previousstatus Subsequent statuschange date SubsequentstatusCynthia June 1 1956 20 Unincorporated May 1 1959 28 Hamlet N 6 Drayton Valley June 1 1956 21 Village February 1 1957 22 TownFort McMurray June 30 1964 29 Town September 1 1980 29 City N 7 Fox Creek July 19 1967 23 Unincorporated September 1 1983 24 TownGrande Cache September 1 1966 31 Unincorporated September 1 1983 32 TownHigh Level June 1 1965 33 Hamlet September 1 1983 34 TownHinton November 1 1956 35 Hamlet December 29 1958 36 TownLodgepole July 1 1956 37 Unincorporated March 1 1970 38 Hamlet N 8 Rainbow Lake September 1 1966 39 Unincorporated May 2 1994 25 TownSt Albert January 1 1957 27 Town July 3 1962 27 Town N 9 Swan Hills September 1 1959 41 Unincorporated January 1 1967 42 TownWhitecourt August 15 1961 43 Village December 20 1971 44 TownFormer towns editAll cities in Alberta 45 and the former cities of Fort McMurray 46 and Strathcona 47 previously held town status in their histories Other communities that previously held town status include Beverly Big Valley Blairmore Bowness Black Diamond Carmangay Coleman Cynthia Diamond City Forest Lawn Gleichen Grande Cache Grand Centre Grouard Irvine Jasper Place Lac La Biche Lodgepole Montgomery Turner Valley and Youngstown 48 46 49 Of these the villages of Big Valley Carmangay and Youngstown are the only communities that remain incorporated municipalities 50 The others either amalgamated to form other municipalities Blairmore Coleman Grand Centre and Lac La Biche 51 52 53 were absorbed through annexation by Calgary Bowness Forest Lawn and Montgomery 54 or Edmonton Beverly and Jasper Place 55 or dissolved to become hamlets under the jurisdiction of municipal districts Cynthia Diamond City Gleichen Grande Cache Grouard Irvine and Lodgepole 48 8 Town status eligibility editThe villages of Stirling Duchess and Alberta Beach with population counts of 1 269 1 085 and 1 018 respectively 10 meet the legislated population requirements for town status There are also at least ten hamlets Cardiff Clairmont Dunmore Fort Chipewyan Grande Cache La Crete Lac La Biche Langdon Springbrook and Wabasca that meet the population requirements for town status City status eligibility editThere are currently nine towns Blackfalds Canmore Cochrane High River Okotoks Stony Plain Strathmore Sylvan Lake and Whitecourt that are eligible for city status having populations in excess of 10 000 10 In addition the Town of Hinton has expressed interest in incorporating as a city once it surpasses 10 000 people 56 Its population in 2016 was 9 882 2 In 2016 the Town of Morinville conducted a municipal census in which it anticipated the town would surpass 10 000 thus the town investigated city status as well as a specialized municipality model with Sturgeon County 57 The census reported a population of 9 893 which was 107 people shy of the milestone 10 Gallery editTowns in Alberta nbsp Athabasca nbsp Banff nbsp Bowden nbsp Canmore nbsp Carstairs nbsp Cochrane nbsp Crossfield nbsp Didsbury nbsp Fort Macleod nbsp Innisfail nbsp Okotoks nbsp Olds nbsp Peace River nbsp Slave Lake nbsp Stettler nbsp Taber nbsp Vauxhall nbsp Vulcan nbsp WhitecourtNotes edit Athabasca was formerly known as Athabasca Landing prior to August 4 1913 9 Drumheller originally incorporated as a city on April 3 1930 but reverted from city status as a result of its amalgamation with the M D of Badlands No 7 in 1998 9 Fort Macleod which grew around the NWMP s Fort Macleod barracks built 1874 was formerly known as Macleod prior to April 1 1952 9 Peace River was formerly known as Peace River Crossing prior to May 22 1916 9 St Paul was formerly known as St Paul de Metis prior to December 15 1932 Cynthia dissolved as development in Cynthia did not materialize sufficiently to warrant the attention of a Board of Administrators as appointed under the New Towns Act and did not have sufficient population or occupied dwellings to allow for its establishment into a town or a village under the provisions of The Towns and Villages Act 28 Fort McMurray later dissolved from city status on April 1 1995 and is now designated as an urban service area 30 Lodgepole dissolved as development in Lodgepole did not materialize sufficiently to qualify under the provisions of the Municipal Government Act for the formation of a town or village 38 St Albert later incorporated as a city on January 1 1977 40 See also editList of census divisions of Alberta List of cities in Alberta List of communities in Alberta List of hamlets in Alberta List of municipal districts in Alberta List of municipalities in Alberta List of population centres in Alberta List of summer villages in Alberta List of villages in AlbertaReferences edit a b c d Municipal Government Act Alberta Queen s Printer Retrieved March 21 2010 a b c d e f g h Population and dwelling counts for Canada provinces and territories and census subdivisions municipalities 2016 and 2011 censuses 100 data Alberta Statistics Canada February 8 2018 Retrieved January 12 2019 a b O C 156 2022 Government of Alberta May 25 2022 Retrieved January 3 2023 Types of Municipalities in Alberta Alberta Municipal Affairs Archived from the original on April 19 2012 Retrieved March 21 2010 Municipal Profiles Towns PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs Retrieved January 14 2019 Municipal Officials Search Alberta Municipal Affairs Retrieved January 14 2019 Local Authorities Election Act Alberta Queen s Printer Retrieved March 21 2010 a b Communities Within Specialized and Rural Municipalities PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs April 9 2013 Retrieved May 21 2013 a b c d e Municipal Profiles Summary Reports Towns PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs May 17 2013 Retrieved May 21 2013 a b c d 2018 Municipal Affairs Population List PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs December 2018 ISBN 978 1 4601 4254 7 Retrieved July 18 2019 a b Population and dwelling count amendments 2016 Census Statistics Canada January 16 2018 Retrieved February 3 2018 Census Profile Map Canmore Town Census Subdivision Alberta Statistics Canada March 22 2013 Retrieved May 21 2013 Census Update PDF Town of Coaldale July 8 2019 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2019 Retrieved July 6 2019 2019 Municipal Census Count PDF Town of Coalhurst Retrieved July 12 2019 Cochrane s population continues to grow Town of Cochrane May 28 2019 Retrieved June 8 2019 Census Profile Map Drumheller Town Census Subdivision Alberta Statistics Canada March 22 2013 Retrieved May 21 2013 Census Profile Map Peace River Town Census Subdivision Alberta Statistics Canada March 22 2013 Retrieved May 21 2013 The Town of Stony Plain s Population has Increased by 3 8 Town of Stony Plain July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Order in Council O C 344 2016 PDF Province of Alberta December 13 2016 Retrieved December 15 2016 a b The Alberta Gazette 1956 Volume 52 Order in Council 783 56 New Town of Cynthia Established Government of Alberta June 11 1956 pp 1122 1123 Archived from the original on July 24 2016 Retrieved October 11 2015 a b c Order in Council O C 601 56 PDF Province of Alberta May 9 1956 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Order in Council O C 403 57 PDF Province of Alberta March 11 1957 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Order in Council O C 1405 67 PDF Province of Alberta July 19 1967 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Order in Council O C 40 83 PDF Province of Alberta January 12 1983 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Transitional Provisions Consequental Amendments Repeal and Commencement Transition from Former Acts to this Act PDF Province of Alberta May 2 1994 Retrieved March 13 2010 Jack Masson Edward C LeSage Jr 1994 Alberta s Local Governments Politics and Democracy The University of Alberta Press pp 91 92 ISBN 0 88864 251 2 a b c Arlene Borgstede 1985 The Black Robe s Vision A History of St Albert amp District Volume 2 St Albert Historical Society p 681 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b The Alberta Gazette 1959 Volume 55 Order in Council 760 59 Dissolution of the Town of Cynthia Government of Alberta May 19 1959 p 911 Archived from the original on July 24 2016 Retrieved October 11 2015 a b Order in Council O C 930 64 Province of Alberta June 30 1964 Order in Council O C 817 94 PDF Province of Alberta December 21 1994 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1605 66 PDF Province of Alberta August 30 1966 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 749 83 PDF Province of Alberta August 31 1983 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 967 65 PDF Province of Alberta June 1 1965 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 750 83 PDF Province of Alberta August 31 1983 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1547 56 PDF Province of Alberta November 6 1956 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1661 58 PDF Province of Alberta November 14 1958 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1034 56 PDF Province of Alberta July 31 1956 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Order in Council O C 325 70 PDF Province of Alberta July 31 1956 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1606 66 PDF Province of Alberta August 30 1966 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1284 76 PDF Province of Alberta December 1 1976 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1242 59 PDF Province of Alberta August 18 1959 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 2145 66 PDF Province of Alberta November 15 1966 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1253 61 PDF Province of Alberta August 15 1961 Retrieved March 13 2010 Order in Council O C 1917 71 PDF Province of Alberta November 10 1971 Retrieved March 13 2010 Municipal Profiles Summary Reports Cities PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs January 25 2013 Retrieved February 1 2013 a b Population Data 1958 PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs 1958 Retrieved January 31 2013 History of Annexations Map City of Edmonton Planning and Development Department a b Order in Council O C 361 2018 Government of Alberta November 27 2018 Retrieved January 13 2019 Population Data 1935 PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs 1935 Retrieved January 31 2013 2022 Municipal Codes PDF Alberta Municipal Affairs January 5 2022 Retrieved January 21 2022 Municipality of Crowsnest Pass Location and History Profile Alberta Municipal Affairs January 25 2013 Retrieved February 1 2013 City of Cold Lake Location and History Profile Alberta Municipal Affairs January 25 2013 Retrieved February 1 2013 Lac La Biche County Location and History Profile Alberta Municipal Affairs January 25 2013 Retrieved February 1 2013 Chapter 3 Establishing the Pattern 1955 1962 PDF Retrieved February 1 2013 Population History City of Edmonton Retrieved February 1 2013 Town of Hinton Regular Meeting of Council Agenda see page 113 of 157 Town of Hinton April 21 2009 Retrieved December 9 2009 Tristan Turner February 12 2016 Morinville Council Briefs Morinville News Pawn Marketing amp Publishing Inc Retrieved February 19 2016 External links editAlberta Municipal Affairs Alberta Urban Municipalities Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of towns in Alberta amp oldid 1176945135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.