BCBusiness

June 2014 The Craft Beer Revolution

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 JUNE 2014 BCBusiness 41 and her council, as well as the Haisla First Nation, to sell non-strateg ic land assets to help the community grow for the future. Monaghan has tried to get subsidies from both industry and the province for rental units (mostly for seniors and those with disabilities), so far with lim- ited success. "I work on it every day. I lose sleep over it. I'm trying to put together developers, BC Housing and the province," says Monaghan. "Getting land is the biggest challenge, because we don't have that much." Perhaps a bigger question for Alcan is what impact the arrival of LNG export terminals, and an estimated five- to 10-year buildout of that industry locally, will have on their workforce. "The main thing is with people," says Poirier. "To have more projects coming in, it would be more challenging for the labour." However, he expects the LNG rush to be only a temporary draw on local labour pools: "The construction is a boom. We're going to be here for another 60 years." s teven Forrest's livelihood has ebbed and flowed with the for- tunes of Kitimat's big employ- ers. A lifelong resident, Forrest, 49, owns TL&T Electric Ltd., a business formed 40 years ago by his Irish-immigrant father and three other partners (but now solely under his con- trol). It's located on the town's western shore, among autobody shops and other industrial contractors. Forrest is a harried-looking man who, asked what keeps him up at night, responds, "I never sleep." He's busy these days with the Alcan moderniza- tion project, which represents 40 per cent of his current business, but he also has more and more work from the LNG operators that are setting up camps in anticipation of a final investment deci- sion to build, expected this fall. The father of four teenagers, For- rest has seen the boom-and-bust cycle before. "Historically Kitimat was a three- company town: Methanex, Eurocan and Alcan," he explains, gazing out his clut- tered office window at his boat Cougane Barra, up on wheels in the parking lot. "There was no other industry, so people came to work and did their thing. But in the past seven years, when Methanex closed and Eurocan closed—that's when a shudder was sent through the commu- nity. After the pulp mill closed at Euro- can, which was our bread and butter, we had to ask ourselves: What are we going to do to hang on?" Forrest's answer was two-part: diver- sify (the company, with 12 full-time and between 20 and 50 part-time work- ers, now owns property around town, which it leases to other businesses; it has also taken on contracts in Alberta and Taiwan) and develop competen- cies in other areas (including getting accredited for electrical work in the oil and gas sector). His business is growing p36-49-Kitimat_june.indd 41 2014-05-01 1:30 PM

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