BCBusiness

October 2016 Entrepreneur of the Year

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.

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/729312

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 17 of 103

16 BCBusiness OCTOber 2016 POrTraiT: ClinTOn Hussey; ClOTHes COurTesy OF nOrDsTrOM Somewhere along the road to aordability, Vancouver's never-ending housing debate got lost in discussions of $4-million teardowns, ckle foreign owners and poor millennials who would never have a place to call their own. But this singular obsession with the market's top end misses a critical point. Through a conf luence of factors that includes government abandoning the housing business and anemic local incomes, the cost of living in Vancouver—owning, yes, but also renting—is now prohibitive for the average citi- zen. Barring a market collapse, any aordabil- ity solution now comes down to a combination of two factors: more government intervention in the market, and more wealth creation so local incomes can match local prices. In Kerry Gold's feature "The Great Canadian Fire Sale" (p. 72), she makes the case that the time for the province and feds to act is now, and that o‹oading responsibility to the pri- vate sector—in exchange for density, say, as the City of Vancouver does—no longer cuts it. Central to a new housing strateŽy, she argues, is keeping publicly owned land public—and not selling o what is arguably our most valuable, lever- ageable asset. One of the options Gold examines is the leasehold model— adopted by, among others, SFU, whose UniverCity development contains a mixture of market and non-market housing on leasehold land. "Let's ask what will we have left that is strategically located—publicly held lands that could be used to the greater good," Gordon Harris, CEO of UniverCity, tells Gold. "If we squander that now, it's gone." On the question of boosting incomes so that we can aord our ticky-tacky little boxes—well, the record of govern- ment in creating wealth is spotty at best. Luckily, B.C. entrepreneurs are work- ing hard to boost provincial fortunes, which is abundantly clear in this year's Entrepreneur of the Year proles (p. 35). Now in its 23rd year, the EOY program highlights the success of B.C. entrepreneurs in creating wealth and high- paying jobs—thousands of jobs among the 30 nalists alone. If ever the day comes that local incomes can aord local real estate, thank B.C.'s entrepreneurs for making it happen. And it's not just the established, well-oiled business machines driving our economy. It's also young entrepreneurs such as Matias Marques of Buyatab and David Gens of Merchant Advance Capital—previous recipi- ents of a BCBusiness 30 Under 30 award. Both men are showing that millennials, rather than just griping about their lousy inheritance, can actually do something to change the prov- ince. If you know somebody who ts the bill, nominate them for this year's 30 Under 30 at BCBusiness.ca/30Under30. C O N T R I B U T O R S Matt O'Grady, Editor-in-Chief mogrady@canadawide.com / @bCbusiness Kerry Gold ("The Great Canadian Fire Sale, " p.72) has written a Globe and Mail column on Vancouver real estate for almost 10 years. Gold thinks we shouldn't shy away from discussing the real reasons for our affordability problem, arguing that "vast amounts of foreign money" are largely to blame. In her BCBusiness feature, she explores the role government plays—or should play—in protecting affordable housing. Primarily a portrait photographer for advertising, movies and TV shows, Adam blasberg says shooting the winners of the 2016 EY Entrepreneur of the Year program (p.35) was great. "It was hard to shoot a bad portrait in the Prohibition Bar. It's so full of rich texture and great colours that it was simply a matter of showing the architecture and being true to the era when glamour was at its peak. " Building the Future editor's desk In our leadership issue, we look at the succession plans at some of B.C.'s biggest companies IN NOVEMBER

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of BCBusiness - October 2016 Entrepreneur of the Year