Happy Family Day!

The winters around here are long. T.S. Eliot may have reckoned April was the cruellest month, but anyone from Alberta knows it’s February, season of the original fake news: “Spring is coming!”
Given what the Internet had turned into even before Elon Musk bought Twitter and made fake news great again, we need a February long weekend even more than we did in the cold, dark ages before the present rapidly warming epoch.
So thank God (and Don Getty) for small favours!
As favours go, the 11th premier of Alberta’s gift to us was a fairly small one, and it didn’t come without an unfortunate quid pro quo.
Just the same, given the crowd now running the government of Alberta, it would be fair to say Mr. Getty gets a worse rap than he deserved – at least with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight.

At any rate, 35 years ago, thanks to Mr. Getty and the troubles his family was experiencing, Albertans celebrated their first Family Day statutory holiday.
The year before, during the run-up to a provincial election, Mr. Getty’s Progressive Conservative Government had announced in its pre-vote Throne Speech that henceforth and forevermore Alberta would mark Family Day on the third Monday of every February.
The initial reviews were not stellar. Indeed, a great howl of indignation rose up from all the usual suspects – the restaurant industry in particular – about how a February holiday would wreck productivity, cost untold bazillions that could never be recovered, and generally persuade the lazy slackers who were their employees to grow even lazier and slacker. Nothing of the sort happened, of course.
Ever since, though, killjoys of both right and left have been darkly carping that the former star professional football quarterback who became Alberta’s premier in 1985 only cooked up the idea to distract voters from the fact his son was in trouble with the law, accused at the time of trying to sell an ounce* of cocaine to an undercover narc in an Edmonton motel room.
Yeah, well, whatever.
Judging from the debate in the Alberta Legislature back in 1990, New Democrats and Alberta Liberals were not supportive. They were wrong about that.

There was some irony when the Opposition NDP caucus objected – or maybe just a case of turnabout is fair play. As Dave Cournoyer pointed out yesterday on his Daveberta Substack, a year before the Getty Government took up the idea, the NDP had proposed a February holiday. When that private member’s bill was debated in the Legislature, Tory MLAs catcalled the idea as “Karl Marx Day.” It was allowed to die on the order paper.
When the Tories brought it back a year later, Bob Hawkesworth, the NDP MLA for Calgary-Mountain View, complained in the Legislature that one Family Day in February wasn’t much of a consolation for the loss of a day off every week when working people could spent time with their families.
Mr. Hawkesworth, a churchgoer, was referring to Sunday, the Christian Sabbath, for those of you not old enough to remember when commercial establishments had to be closed on that day and you couldn’t get an alcoholic beverage other than sacramental wine to save your soul.

But by 1989, when Mr. Hawkesworth was carrying on, that train had already left the station and a statutory holiday in February is still better than no statutory holiday in February!
Laurence Decore, leader of the third-party Liberals in the Legislature, complained that the February holiday wouldn’t “excite and energize and stimulate Albertans.”
In 1990, as the first Family Day neared, Calgary Herald political columnist Don Braid, by then a crotchety old man, was still carping about the idea, blaming it on “couch potatoes in the Legislature who want another holiday.”
Like Mr. Decore and Mr. Hawkesworth, he was wrong too, which just goes to show that some things never change.
Unfortunately, Mr. Getty’s greatest achievement off the gridiron, unless you count not letting the premier of Newfoundland leave the room when he wanted to, was marred by a failure of nerve. Mr. Getty responded to the incessant whinging of the fast-food bosses about how their costs were bound to increase by downgrading another stat holiday, Heritage Day on the first Monday of August, which had been an official holiday in this province since 1974.
Heritage Day was busted back to a mere civic holiday to avoid the complaints about overtime costs. That was the quid pro quo.
If Rachel Notley’s Alberta NDP government had wanted a project that would have ensured the eternal gratitude of most Albertans, come what may, it should have returned the August holiday to statutory status. On this, they ignored your blogger’s advice.

When mean-spirited Jason Kenney was at the helm taking direction from Restaurants Canada and pursuing his wage-reduction strategy, there was no hope of that happening. In fact, I’m pretty sure that if Mr. Kenney could have figured out how to get rid of both of them, he would’ve.
Mr. Getty was inveigled into politics by Peter Lougheed, his former teammate on the Canadian Football League’s Edmonton Elks, then known by another name which I’m not going to mention here just to annoy the crybaby snowflakes of the anti-woke right. He was premier until the end of 1992.
The patrician Mr. Lougheed may not have been much of an athlete compared to Mr. Getty, playing two years as an undistinguished defensive back starting in 1950, but he was a far bigger star in politics.
Mr. Getty passed the football more than 8,000 yards in his career and led Edmonton to two Grey Cups.
Mr. Getty served Mr. Lougheed as intergovernmental affairs minister and energy minister, then prudently stepped out of politics in 1979. Not long after that, in the summer of 1981, a recession accompanied by plummeting oil prices hit Alberta. (That’s the one that Alberta Conservatives have been tendentiously blaming on Pierre Trudeau ever since.)
Mr. Lougheed stepped down in 1985. Mr. Getty was tempted once more unto the breach that same year. It was a fateful decision, because whatever timing magic he possessed on the gridiron deserted him, creating the opportunity for the neoliberal takeover of the Conservative Party that haunts Alberta and Canada to this day.
Alberta was the first Canadian province with a February long weekend. However, it must be acknowledged that Yukon created one in 1976, before any province. However, not being a province and at the time still having its territorial name preceded by the only definite article in the English Language, not to mention self-referentially calling the occasion Yukon Heritage Day, it gets no credit and no respect. Sorry about that, Yukon!
Saskatchewan finally climbed aboard the Family Day train 17 years after Alberta. A year after that Ontario joined the parade. Liberals in New Brunswick eventually followed suit, marking the occasion as a stat holiday for the first time in 2018.
“Liberals” in British Columbia, who in those days were really conservatives, created a February holiday with the same name starting in 2013, but decided to hold it on the second Monday, perhaps as a sop to the usual whiners at the Chamber of Commerce, seeing as the third Monday is also President’s Day south of the Medicine Line and thus was supposedly a big day for tourism in the fleshpots of Vancouver Island and the Kootenays.
In 2018, Family Day harmonization came to B.C., and the holiday was moved by a week, so we’re all one happy Canadian Family again. Or mostly, anyway.
By the way, the Presidents Day national statutory holiday, pegged approximately to George Washington’s Feb. 22 birthday, has been officially enjoyed by Americans on the third Monday of February since 1968, but was marked in U.S. federal offices as Washington’s Birthday at least since 1885. Until the current incumbent came along, Gen. Washington was revered by our American cousins as their greatest president.
Mr. Getty died in February 2016 at the age of 82, entitled to our qualified gratitude.
NOTE: This post is not exactly a repeat, but it certainly contains a few lines cribbed from earlier posts on the same topic published in this space. But as I always say, at least when you’re not writing an academic paper, it’s not plagiarism if you’re plagiarizing yourself. A correction is also required. The Alberta Liberals didn’t become the Opposition until the 1993 election, when the NDP were temporarily wiped out. The NDP’s Ray Martin was Opposition leader in 1989, so apologies to Ray! DJC
*An ounce is an archaic measurement of weight and mass for an extremely small amount of anything, except gold.
DJC— Acknowledgement and admiration from the pupils.
“Yeah well ‘whatever ‘is a stroke of genius. I’m not sure how you did that, but I heard the inflection, caught myself, then burst out laughing. Kudos. Well done!!
Crybaby snowflakes of the anti-woke right….lol 2 thumbs up
* an ounce is an archaic measurement…..
So, a natural hat trick…..
Doffs cap!!
(I’m sorry but @$45 I wouldn’t be throwing mine on the ice, if I was foolish enough to pay that much in the first place)
Anyway, thanks for the chuckle. Hope you had an enjoyable family day. *
*only occurs if you don’t turn on the news, that just makes you want to break down in tears of frustration.
” JD Vance telling European leaders that the enemy is within for silencing ‘free speech’ , just as they shut out the AP Reporter for not using the term Gulf of Ame…. {Meh`iko}
As POGO says, dirty deeds indeed.
It is hard to imagine or remember now, but it seemed like the PC’s rule might come to an early end with Getty, barely half way through what was their eventual record long long rule. But it turned out that Getty only used up a few of their nine or so lives.
It probably also would have been hard to imagine then that one of Getty’s greatest legacies would be this February Family Day holiday, which many other provinces subsequently followed in adopting.
Even more surprising was how the holiday came about, in response to a personal family incident that was somewhat politically embarrassing, and then with a lot of opposition and criticism from business and other parties.
Despite this unauspicious start, it now seems to be a fixture of the calendar, not just in Alberta but in much of Canada. Mr. Getty probably did not expect or intend for this holiday to be such a legacy either, but is nice we remember him here again as this holiday was his initiative.
Edmonton footballers Lougheed and Getty played the game before full face masks were attached to helmets; back then smash mouth football was more than a figure of speech.
Tom in Ontario You got that right it cost me a broken nose playing football in grade 10, and in grade 11 a major concussion when the helmet I had was too big. You had to take what ever they gave you.
Ladies and gentlemen, keep one in thing mind…. https://youtu.be/Cx_l9kLxycw?t=1 Yah it’s decades ago!
If this was true then: “In 1990, as the first Family Day neared, Calgary Herald political columnist Don Braid, by then a crotchety old man, …” how could he be described now? Politely of course.
Roger: Same old, same old … and I do mean old. DJC
Back in 1990, mid- to late-February seemed like the ideal time to have a winter statutory holiday, but with climate change, it now seems like February is a colder month than January.
It is refreshing to look back at the better times, when there was some ethics under the dome and the Premier et al had an interest in making things better for working people rather than always siding with and lining the pockets of business folks at the expense of working folks. After Lougheed and Getty, things really went down the toilet and haven’t gotten better.
Small correction: Decore would not have been leader of the opposition. That would have been Ray Martin. Seats after 1989 election: NDP 16 (same as 1986), Liberals 8 (up 4), though the Libs had slightly more of the popular vote. Combined popular vote of NDP plus Libs was 55 %. A total that I don’t think has ever been matched by any combination of parties nominally to the left of the old PCs.
Thanks very much, Michael. Not a small error. It does become easy in one’s dotage, though, to mix up the 1986, 1989, and 1993 Alberta elections. It was 1993, of course, when Mr. Decore’s Liberals wiped out the NDP and reached their high tide in Alberta political history. The passage has been corrected and restructured, and noted – which must be done even though I hate to admit errors as much as the next guy. DJC
an ounce is an archaic measurement……that was then. Now, Skippy Poilievre wants to put you in prison for life for carrying around 40 milligrams of fentanyl. Forty milligrams of fentanyl is less than half the size of a childrens aspirin. A typical fentanyl user consumes 100 milligrams a day. Old Skip wants to lock away all of them for life. I can’t imagine a fentanyl Kingpin walking the streets with drugs half the size of a baby aspirin.
Thank you for the history lesson and a walk down memory lane. I’m sure there are a lot of people who didn’t know any of this. When I think of Lougheed and Getty I do wonder how the provincial politicians of these parties got to be so bad (Conservatives/Liberals)
Today the province has Smith and yikes, it a very long come down.
e.a.f.: I sincerely believe it is the rise and dominance of the neoliberal ideology, which infected Conservatives first, so they are farthest along, but has now made inroads into all major parties in Canada, including the NDP. Look at Labour in the U.K. under Sir Keir Starmer if you want to see where this is going with historically more progressive parties. Look at so-called Conservatives everywhere to see where it goes, and in the Unites States where it is likely to end up. DJC
Anne Applebaum if you really want to despair. Timothy Snyder, Thomas Piketty, Maude Barlow Astra Taylor if you still think there’s a thread to hang on to. Maria Ressa if you need a hero to look up to, way up.
Sir K. S., yes when I’ve read some of the British news I do get confused. Doesn’t read like the Labour Party I used to read about. It looks like the political parties have all taken a shift to the right I remember when Tommy Douglas was M.P. for Nanaimo/Gulf Islands. He came to Mayne Island one summer and spoke at an out door meeting. I attended and was surprised at how short he was. He was a great speaker.
e.a.f.: My dad took me to hear Tommy speak in the Memorial arena in Victoria in 1962. Tommy shook my hand and said, “Good luck, son.” He was still taller than me in ’62. DJC
I was also at the Memorial Arena in 1962 and shook Mr. Douglas’ hand, not sure if he said anything to me. I was 10 yet still remember him as being short but his toughness was already pretty legendary. Short stature but a riveting and dynamic speaker, maybe something to do with being a preacher…
Absolutely it had something to do with Tommy being a preacher, Mickey. Also, it must be added, the quality of both theological and political discourse in Canada was generally considerably better in 1962 than it is in 2025. Now, if you cast your mind back to 1962, you will recall that you were considerably taller than me then, just as you are now. DJC
Thanks for your excellent work! In these truth challenged times the insights and historical context you contribute is invaluable.
As a father I understand the regrets that come with age and am grateful to the late Premier for the opportunity to spend time with my family.
And in the end, after all the joyous accolades for Getty’s (strange) foresight, even Stockwell Day still sought to abolish the holiday.
But won’t someone think of the employers and the burden this holiday causes? Day is reputed to have declared.
As for the times we are all living in, the rules-based world order that has survived since the end of WW2, we are all witnessing its collapse, and the myriad institutions that fostered progressivism and civilization.
What about those who pledged to defend the rules-based global order? They have all walked away, leaving everything to the billionaire barbarians to rape, pillage, and deface.
In my fever dream, I desire a global revolution and the wholesale execution of every single billionaire and all their minions. Yes, it will involve the slaughter of tens of millions of vermin, but it would be entirely worth it.
Just take the evening off, Just, like I am. DJC
Surprised this site would honor Getty given his record on labor relations
Doug have some perspective. I don’t think honour is the right description for this post, more like acknowledging the odd decent thing someone has done. Take Donald Trump for example…