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.
Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/1030289
12 BCBusiness OCtObER 2018 pORtRait: aDam blasbERg E ver done something for so long you start taking it for granted? We'll never make that mistake with EY Entrepre- neur Of The Year. EOY's Paci•c Region program is now a quarter-century old, and from the start, BCBusiness has joined forces with Ernst & Young each year to present the winners (p.31). We hope to have the honour of celebrating B.C.'s top entrepreneurs for decades to come. "The program has become a mirror image of the province and how it's developed over the last 25 years," says Lui Petrollini, EOY program director for the Paci•c Region. For example, the EY assurance partner notes, in some years there was no mining category as that industry weath- ered a downturn. Now mining is back in and technolo'y categories have multiplied, a sign of B.C.'s growing economic diversi•cation. Petrollini says his EY colleagues elsewhere often ask him how the Paci•c Region program puts on one of the largest EOY galas in 145 cities worldwide, typically drawing about 1,300 guests. "It's not about EY; it's about the province," he reckons. "Entre- preneurs supporting entrepreneurs —I think that's what has led to our success." As Petrollini looks ahead to EOY's next 25 years, what message does he have for B.C. business owners? "We need to support women entrepreneurs better," he says. "We will have more success stories coming from female entrepreneurs, probably coming from younger entrepreneurs as well." How- ever, he wonders if B.C. may need to create an incentive for the latter group to stay here, given high housing and other living costs. Pointing to the province's shortage of major homegrown companies, Petrollini has one more wish for the next quarter- century. "What I would love to see in the future is entrepreneurs growing their businesses and continuing to grow them and keep them as British Columbia busi- nesses," he says, "as opposed to selling out when they see a decent-sized valuation." The high cost of living also plays a central role in "Split Decision" (p.23), Frances Bula's illuminat- ing guide to this month's Vancouver election. If the EOY judges had their work cut out for them, voters in B.C.'s largest city face an equally tough choice. A dizzying number and variety of mayoral and council candidates oŸer potential solutions to the housing crisis, which has made Vancouver unaŸordable for residents and businesses alike. Whatever the outcome of the civic vote, the new city council will have to confront that prob- lem, for better or worse. It will also in¡uence how Vancouver—and, to some extent, the rest of the province—does business. Something tells me we don't have 25 years to •x housing. Nick Rockel, Editor-in-Chief bcb@canadawide.com / @BCBusiness ( editor's desk ) Premier John Horgan, BC Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver and Lululemon founder Chip Wilson I N NOV E M B E R time to shine C ON T R I B U T OR S This year marks the ninth Vancouver civic election Frances Bula ("Split Decision," p.23) has covered since she started reporting on local politics almost a quarter-century ago—and, she says, it's the strangest. "I talk to people who are usually politically savvy, and they have no idea anymore who to vote for," Bula observes. She sees big change on the horizon. The portraits of the latest Entrepreneur Of The Year finalists (p.31) are some of many taken by Vancouver photographer adam Blasberg for BCBusiness and other publications. "When we were looking for inspiration for a background for the photos, the area around the Vancouver Art Gallery was an easy choice," Blasberg says. "The simple lines of the steps and cement let the subjects stand out."

