BCBusiness

December 2014 The Great Pipeline Debate

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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December 2014 BCBusiness 15 bcbusiness.ca Building the Tech Ecosystem More companies, both large and small, setting up shop in Vancouver, Victoria and elsewhere in B.C. will only have a positive net effect ("The Global Temp," October 2014). We need to have a strong digital/tech industry ecosystem, and to do that we need a good mix of large tech foreign investment and indie develop- ment companies. Foreign tech companies attract sig- nificant investment, pay competitive global wages and benefits, provide excellent training, produce high-qual- ity product, help increase the size of our tech labour pool, help fill gaps in senior management and technical posi- tions and bring experienced Canadian talent back home that might have left years ago when prospects weren't as appealing as they are today. As a result, the indie and start-up development community benefits from a larger and more experienced talent pool to better execute on their ideas. It becomes a win-win situation for us all. Patrick Sauriol Executive Director, DigiBC Vancouver Making Room for Mental Health In B.C., we have made immense strides in the accommodation of employees with physical disabilities in the work- place ("The business case for accom- modating employees with disabilities," BCBusiness.ca/your-business). We are more considerate of them than in the past: there are elevators, and most work- places are wheelchair-accessible. Some elevators have Braille keypads. But we have been negligent in caring for indi- viduals with mental health issues. Mental health is shrouded in stigma, and those individuals who fall into this category are reluctant to come forth and announce that their issue is schizophrenia, bipolar affective disorder, depression and so on. Each individual is capable of contribut- ing in some measure—and we have to recognize that if we utilize that contribu- tion effectively in small business in B.C., we will increase our profit margin and become leaders in Canada. Trusha Desai Innovation Management Vancouver What's Nice, Anyway? I think the key to your question is under- standing that "nice" has a different meaning for everyone ("A nice house or a nice life? Canadian Gen Xers overwhelm- ingly pick the latter: study," BCBusiness .ca/real-estate). One person's nice could be a rented one-bedroom basement suite, while another person's nice could be owning a 6,000-square-foot house with a pool and tennis court. As for a nice life, that's also up to the individual. With that being said, everyone's goal should not be one or the other, but both. Mike Nunn Operations Team Leader, Ideon Packaging Richmond @John_Yap (October 8) Wonder how SeattleTacoma Port man- ages 'oppose everything' B.A.N.A.N.A. (Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anything) types? ("Vancouver's port faces new, larger American rival," BCBusiness.ca/manufacturing-transport) @shannomiller (September 30) The juice is really good, and these ladies are lovely. Nice to see them mentioned in @bcbusiness ("Nectar Juicery sup- plies juice on tap to corporate clients," BCBusiness.ca/retail) @Gryph43John (September 26) Oh what's $10 B here or there given that B.C. has already squandered its wealth in past years. ("Christy Clark unconcerned as Petronas teeters on $10-billion LNG investment,"BCBusiness.ca/natural- resources) feedback y WHAT YOU SAID @BcBusiness

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