BCBusiness

August 2014 The Urban Machine

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 August 2014 BCBusiness 39 Lower Mainland to a nearby destination. But even without port-related activity, Vancouver is a critical hub for millions of products passing through from Whistler to Kamloops or from Cranbrook to Van- couver Island. While Williams is weav- ing his way through Surrey's industrial zone, for instance, a large pile of stuff at the Argus warehouse is waiting to go to the Interior: a moulded plastic rain- catcher on its way to a gas bar in Fort Nelson, an empty drum being delivered to the City of Vernon, Harley Davidson parts off to Kelowna. And then there are changes to the very nature of business that are put- ting more trucks on the road. Those local retailers who still operate store- fronts are choosing to limit the amount of expensive space they rent in places like Vancouver and Surrey; rather than having a lot of stock delivered at once and stored on site, they get only small amounts brought to their outlets as needed. This morning, Williams deliv- ered a single television to the Visions on King George Boulevard, a single pallet of poly bags and plastic film to Cosmeceuti- cal Research on 129th Avenue, a small load of paint to the Dulux store on Main near Broadway. And for those who oper- ate in the new universe of online sales, there's no retail outlet at all—just a truck somewhere with our stuff in it, being deployed from a distribution warehouse on the edge of the region. So all kinds of people, from those dis- patching the trucks to the people who have a province-wide view, see rapid transit in the Lower Mainland as a key part of the way the provincial economy physically operates. "Any vehicle off the road is going to help us," says Derek Warnock, the operations manager for Phoenix Truck and Crane in Vancouver, whose company, similar to Argus, deliv- ers stuff, some of it from B.C.'s Interior, all over the region. At the Business Coun- cil of B.C., chief economist Ken Peacock takes a broader perspective. "The direct benefit [of good Lower Mainland transit] for someone living in Prince George is negligible. But having less congestion does benefit other parts of the province. The resources come from the north, but having great infrastructure and a good transit system is critical to B.C." RIPPLE EFFECT Proponents of a Broadway subway line say it would benefit all of B.C.—not just Vancouver.

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