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/1528012
T H E K I C K O F F : Niilo Edwards was born in Alert Bay and raised in Sointula, a fishing village of about 500 people on Malcolm Island on the northeast coast of Vancouver Island. That backdrop proved a slight contrast to his first professional work experience as a constituency advisor in Ottawa's House of Commons. "I had a lot of luck; people took chances on me," Edwards remem- bers. "I don't know that I was the best student in high school, but I took an interest in politics and wound up working a summer job for the local MLA right out of high school. The local member of parliament said to me that fall, 'Why don't you come work for me in Ottawa?'" Edwards did that while getting a degree in public administration at the University of Ottawa. He eventually became the executive assistant to senator Gerry St. Germain, a position he'd hold for about six and a half years. "He instilled in me an entrepreneurial spirit and a sense of urgency," Edwards says of St. Germain. "He gave me the ability to look at opportunities and gaps in systems and be able to think about how we would help First Nations fill those gaps and move forward on their own agenda." A C T I O N P L A N : When St. Germain retired, Edwards moved back to B.C. to work with the nonprofit First Nations Financial Management Board. "I was given responsibility for helping figure out how we could fur- ther the ability of First Nations to get S P E C I A L C I T A T I O N Niilo Edwards C E O , F I R S T N A T I O N S M A J O R P R O J E C T S C O A L I T I O N direct access to capital markets and lower the cost of borrowing so that First Nations could take equity positions in large-scale natural resource and infrastructure projects," he says. A few years later, some First Nations got together and decided to form the nonprofit First Nations Major Projects Coalition, which seeks to create pathways to reconciliation by advancing opportunities for First Nations to obtain ownership stakes in major projects that run through their territories. "As I had been involved with our initial leadership in creating the basic governance and operational principles of a new organization, they asked me to serve as interim CEO eight years ago. And I'm still here," says Edwards with a chuckle. C L O S I N G S T A T E M E N T: At its founding, the FNMPC represented 11 communities. Today, it serves over 170 First Nations across Canada and has a team of about 35 employees. It has a project portfolio worth over $45 billion, stretched across some 20 dif- ferent engagements. "It's a hell of a lot of financial benefit that's going back into the bank accounts of First Nations that otherwise would have been left on the table or gone to the banks because of the high cost of borrowing," says Edwards.–N.C. n 42 A d a m B l a s b e r g B C B U S I N E S S . C A N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 24 W H AT ' S A N ODD JOB Y OU ' V E H A D ? During high school, I ran my own lawn care company. I had all the contracts with the local town—I'd take care of the town hall and the cemetery and the baseball field. Q+A T H E K I C K O F F : As a teenaged Bahar Heravi Moussavi listened to an EA Sports panel at Electronic Arts, two things were computing: first, she wanted a career in the tech industry, and second, she'd have to get used to being one of the only girls in her class. Within a buzzy audience full of rambunctious high schoolers, only three were girls. "That made going into tech a bit of a harder decision," she remembers. "I felt empowered, but also, like—is this going to be my reality?" Later on, her UBC computer science cohort had a similar gender breakdown. Moussavi, along with colleagues Felicia Chan and Mikhaela Torio, decided to host a free youth community workshop as a small but meaningful effort to support diversity in the industry. F I N A L I S T Bahar Heravi Moussavi C O - F O U N D E R A N D E X E C U T I V E D I R E C T O R , T H E C . O . D . E . I N I T I A T I V E F O U N D A T I O N W H AT ' S Y OUR MO S T-U S E D A P P ? Notion. It's become an indispensable tool for organizing both my professional and personal life, helping me stay on top of tasks, projects and ideas. Q+A