BCBusiness

January 2016 Best Cities For Work in B.C.

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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(who compiled the raw numbers for us), measuring income for the under-35 group is a good way of measuring the overall economic health of a community. "It's one of the most mobile portions of the population," explains Miron. "When we see under-35 house- hold incomes popping up, that's an indication that we have relatively low unemployment, higher participation rates and higher incomes. If you're a young family and trying to figure out where the best place is to raise a young family, the places where you see the high- est incomes under 35 are a good indicator." As for the overall top 10 list, while there has been a repeat standout performance from some of last year's winners (Fort St. John is number one again, by a decent margin; neighbouring com mu n it y D aw s on Creek moves up a few spots to number two; North Van and Coquitlam hold their ground in the top five), there are also some noteworthy shifts. The City of Vancouver falls down seven spots, out of the top 10, while Squamish leaps eight spots to number four. Why? As you might guess, Vancouver proper is faced with a variety of constraints that limit its ability to grow—both physically (through adding more people) and eco- nomically (fewer and fewer work- ers can afford to live there on local incomes). Those people move to places like Langley or Delta or Squamish—all big winners on this year's list. "It's not necessarily that they want to live in some of these communities," adds Miron, "but that is where the land is available. These communities improve because they can physically grow." One final note: unher- a lded, perhaps, but worth mentioning is the big jump from two communities low on the 2015 list, Prince Rupert (number 36 last year) and Terrace (number 34). This year PR and Terrace are 24 and 25 respectively—and a big reason for the rise is their five-year income growth, which is over 20 per cent in each case. As Miron points out, it's a sign of good things to come for those two communities, currently in the crosshairs of a slew of energy development plans. "Overall it means that a lot more money is flowing into the local economy. The service sector will increase in those economies, and we will see those being much more wealthy and economically healthy—it's a big positive feedback loop." The BesT CiTies Methodology To evaluate B.C.'s Best Cities for Work, we looked at six economic indicators, each weighted differently, that we believe reflect the health of a city's job market. each statistic was divided or multiplied to come up with a score suitable to its weighting. rank 1 Fort St. John 2 DawSon Creek 3 north VanCouVer (DiStriCt) 4 SquamiSh 5 Coquitlam 6 langley (DiStriCt) 7 Surrey 8 Delta 9 new weStminSter 10 Port Coquitlam 11 kelowna 12 riChmonD city As for the over- all top 10 list, there has been a repeat standout performance from some of last year's win- ners—with Fort St. John at num- ber one again, by a decent margin 36 BcBusiness JanuaRY 2016 f o r w o r k i n B . C . BUILDING BC – ONE BUSINESS LEADER AT A TIME.

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