Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Public agencies in Alberta are organizations linked to particular government ministries of the Executive Council of Alberta, operating under their direction and mandate. Their functions are roughly equivalent to federal crown corporations.
Alberta Educational Communications Corporation; Alberta Foundation for the Arts; Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission; Alberta Government Telephones; Alberta Investment Management Corporation; Alberta Oil Sands Technology and Research Authority; Alberta Pensions Services Corporation; Alberta Petroleum Marketing Commission; ATB Financial
Boards, agencies, and local government: employees of quasi-independent boards set up by the government of Alberta, government agencies, and municipal governments, as well as ATB Financial (a wholly-owned provincial crown corporation) and Alberta Terminals Ltd., [2] a private grain-handling company and division of Cargill that was formerly a ...
Calgary: 5 294 Toronto-Dominion Bank: Banking 48,700 13,535 94,945 Toronto 6 ... All 56 companies from Canada are listed. [3] Rank Forbes 2000 rank Name Headquarters
After Confederation in 1867, the secretary of state for Canada executed the functions of the registrar general. In 1966, the registrar general was created as a separate ministerial office. The following year in 1967, the Department of Registrar General was abolished and its functions assigned to the minister of consumer and corporate affairs ...
The Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo) was established in 2008 as a crown corporation to consolidate and manage Alberta's public sector investments. The Progressive Conservative government introduced the Alberta Investment Management Corporation Act in 2007, aiming to improve investment returns by up to $500 million annually.
When first MPs were elected in what is present-day Alberta in 1880s/1890s, Calgary and southern Alberta generally elected Conservatives, such as Donald Watson Davis and north-central Alberta elected Liberals such as Frank Oliver. After province-hood, Alberta's federal representation mostly echoed that of its provincial government.
Matt Jones ECA MLA is a Canadian politician who was elected in the 2019 Alberta general election to represent the electoral district of Calgary-South East in the 30th Alberta Legislature. [1] [2] He was re-elected in 2023. Jones is the Minister of Jobs, Economy and Trade as well as being active on the Alberta First Cabinet Policy Committee.