2026 - 2030 Surrey Financial Plan
COMMUNITY OF SURREY
CITY SERVICES In 2025, the City of Surrey collected $679 million in taxation revenue, for both general and utilities operating. These funds are used to support City services such as:
• 15 fire halls and 440 fire fighters, of which 12 are paid-on-call volunteers; • 10 library branches, including the main branch located in Surrey City Centre, and one mobile van to increase library access for underserved areas; • Four cultural institutions including the Museum of Surrey and its interactive kids gallery, textile studio, and cultural events; the Surrey Art Gallery with visual arts studios, Tech-Lab, digital media gallery and the City’s permanent art collection; the Civic Archives provides access to local government records and community collections including extensive photographic records; and the Historic Stewart Farm which is a heritage site featuring eight designated heritage buildings that support a range of year-round programming; • 11 community recreation centres that include gymnasiums, fitness and multi purpose rooms; one nature centre; five indoor pools and eight outdoor pools; six ice arenas providing 11 sheets of ice; eight skate parks including two covered youth parks and two parkour parks; ten drop-in youth lounges; one seniors centre; and seniors programming in community recreation centres; • Totest Aleng: Indigenous Learning House is a unique venue supporting indigenous cultural practices located within Elgin Heritage Park; • Surrey Civic Theatres include the Main Stage (402 seats) and Studio Theatre (130 seats) at the Surrey Arts Centre along with the Centre Stage venue (200 seats) at City Hall;
• UrbanScreen, Surrey Art Gallery’s award-winning outdoor venue, moved to Surrey Civic Plaza. This art-dedicated projection venue showcases digital art after dark, year-round; • Over 150 public art installations are distributed across Surrey in civic facilities, parks, and the public realm; • Four community arts facilities, which include the Arts Council of Surrey, Newton Cultural Centre, the Parkway Studios, and South Surrey Recreation Centre & Arts Centres; • 7,161 acres of City owned parkland (excludes Metro Vancouver Regional Parks within City boundaries) that contain 221 athletic fields, 17 full-size artificial turf fields, three track and field complexes, 73 public tennis courts, eight skate parks, 329 kilometres of trails and paths and two large urban forest parks; • Improvements to the various transportation routes within the City, including road widening, construction of cycling and pedestrian facilities, and large scale transportation projects; • New utility improvements throughout the City and supportive works for the Surrey Langley SkyTrain extension; and • Transforming Surrey from a suburban community to a thriving urban environment with national and international opportunities for business and tourism.
City of Surrey | 2026—2030 Financial Plan | Community Profile
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