August 2015 BCBusiness 37
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Sure, it's the heart of wine country and home to some of B.C.'s
most spectacular natural wonders. And yes, retirees and tourists
still come here in droves. But with a burgeoning tech sector, an
acclaimed university and a boom in housing, the Okanagan's biggest
city is now taking on a decidedly younger •air
BY
JAMIE
MAW
// PHOTOGRAPHY BY DARREN HULL //
Municipal Election Day dawned clear and piercingly
cold in Kelowna. After months on the stump, and a quiet celebration
of his 37th birthday with his wife, Leanne, the night before, Colin Basran,
a young Indo-Canadian former broadcaster, realtor and one-term city
councillor—and now mayoral hopeful—hauled himself out of bed
and poured a bowl of cereal on the morning of November 15.
Civic election polling is almost non-existent in smaller cities. Despite
running a largely positive campaign that dominated social media, his
connection with professionals and seniors was tough to quantify. Election
Day was proving the most anxious day of his life. "On a scale of one to 10,
I was at least an 11," he says today, almost six months later. After all, he was
up against a former three-term councillor and two-term mayor, Sharon
Shepherd, older than he by a generation.