BCBusiness

December 2016 Best Cities for Work

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/751527

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 48 of 67

BCBUSINESS.CA DECEMBER/JANUARY 2017 BCBUSINESS 49 famous. In 2004, San Diego-based law- yer, cosmetics entrepreneur, construc- tion company owner and avid skier Howard Katkov purchased the Ross- land resort for an undisclosed amount. The 66-year-old says he was attracted to the property because it reminded him of the folksy community-focused hill that Mammoth on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevadas used to be when he was a SoCal surf-and-ski bum. Since buying Red, Katkov has £nanced devel- opments and improvements through institutional investors—but this year he decided to switch gears, launching a crowdfunding campaign through Start Engine. By mid-September, Katkov had exceeded his funding target with more than 1,000 people pledging a total of approximately $5 million to "own a piece of the mountain," in what he calls "the testing the waters phase." "I'm not in the business of putting down other ski resorts, but public com- panies usually grow through acquisi- tion and consolidation and ultimately have a duty to shareholders. You tell me if that's good for keeping skiing affordable and community-focused. What I'm saying is that Red is one of those places that are memorable and unique, and I see myself as a custodian of that," says Katkov, adding that Red's 2015«16 season was its biggest revenue- earner on record. While the crowdfunding model might work when you're in need of $5 million, the challenge is a bit di©erent when you need hundreds of millions of dollars to pursue capital projects on the scale of Whistler's Renaissance. So too is the challenge for residents liv- ing in the shadow of a "world-class" resort with global ambitions. Unlike Rossland, where tra¬c is nonexistent, a house can still be bought for less than $300,000, and lift tickets at Red go for $89, Whistler residents grapple with perpetual tra¬c jams from Vancouver, a real estate market in which $800,000 detached homes are considered a bar- gain and $140-a-day lift tickets. And yet for residents like Chris Winter, an Ottawa native who £rst chased the skiing lifestyle in Whistler 15 years ago, the positives still outweigh the nega- tives: "It's an amazing community that lies beneath the tourism machine." ® The Cities of Cranbrook and Kimberley are joining forces to produce jobs, lower taxes, and increase the population in our region. As a corridor we oer workforce, lower costs, operational and lifestyle advantages. And we're working together to share the secret for everyone's benefit. To be part of this contact Kevin at: 250.427.9666 or 250.489.0232 A secret worth sharing. THE UNCOMMON BUSINESS CORRIDOR Cranbrook.ca \ InvestKimberley.com Two Rocky Mountain communities, working together, for tomorrow. kwilson@kimberley.ca or kweaver@cranbrook.ca

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of BCBusiness - December 2016 Best Cities for Work