BCBusiness

October 2018 - The Wheel Deal

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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bCbusinEss.Ca OCtObER 2018 BCBusiness 29 gets knocked repeatedly by the radical reformers for not having kicked Burnaby Mayor Corrigan's butt publicly about apartment demolitions. That pegs him as too much of a collaborator for Vancouver's crusaders against real estate capitalism. INDEPENDENTS' DAY? In the end, the real face of city councils in the region may not have anything to do with choices about mayors. In Vancou- ver, the poster child for extreme electoral trends, there's not just a wave of candi- dates from new parties but also a wave of credible council contenders who are choosing to run with no parties. Sarah Blyth, the woman who set up drug over- dose prevention tents in the Downtown Eastside, has abandoned her one-time party, Vision, to run on her own. Rob McDowell, a staunch pillar of the NPA for years, is also running as an independent. So are housing advocate Adrian Crook and former Musqueam band councillor Wade Grant, both of whom had originally been recruited by Yes Vancouver's Bremner as potential candidates. Voters look ing for change may well choose a mix from among the big parties, the small parties and the inde- pendents, with the result that there will be no majority group on council. How revolutionary that group is will depend on just how angry people are—and about what. The election will be a litmus test of what issue is emotional enough to drive a committed throng of voters to the polls: their feeling that foreigners have distorted the housing market, their desperate hope that lots of new supply (especially in West Side neighbourhoods) will solve the problem, their annoyance about bike lanes, their irritation over unmowed bou- levards, their desire to throw all current bums out. Metro Vancouver residents have tended to vote for moderates, mayors and coun- cils who work diligently at incremental changes—a signiŽcant contrast to Toronto, which has produced more than one bel- ligerent populist suburban mayor. But this time around, people are more frantic than ever about how the region is evolving. Says pollster Canseco, who's tracking the sentiments of the people who will be voting, "There's deŽnitely the sense from residents that things are out of control." " CFA Society of Vancouver CFA Vancouver - 2018 Awareness Campaign - BC Business Ad 4/C 4.75" x 4.9375" (plus bleed) Prepared: August, 2018 C1808 BCBusiness_Hand LET'S BUILD A BETTER WORLD FOR INVESTING. LET'S MEASURE UP. Let's do our part. Let's start today. Let's measure up. www.cfavancouver.com C1808 BCBusiness_Hand.indd 1 2018-08-20 4:52 PM

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