Whiff of Grape

Vancouver, BC, Canada


Next dinner meeting: January 25th

Speaker: Wally Oppal, Q.C.

Chancellor TRU


Time: 6:15 – 6:30 cocktails, followed by dinner at 7:00


Wally Oppal, Q.C.
Former MLA; Chancellor of Thompson Rivers University.

Wally has dedicated his entire working life to improving social justice and community safety. He was born in the Vancouver-Fraserview neighbourhood, attended law school at UBC, and then practised law for 14 years. He was Crown Counsel and Defence Counsel on numerous high-profile criminal cases. Wally was appointed to the County Court of British Columbia in 1981 and to the Supreme Court of British Columbia in 1985. In 2003, he was appointed to the British Columbia Court of Appeal. Wally served as Attorney General and Minister Responsible for Multiculturalism from 2005 to 2009. Wally’s passion for the Canadian legal system is exemplified by the various positions he has held throughout the years:

  • Frequent guest lecturer for Continuing Legal Education Society seminars
  • Frequent lecturer and speaker on criminal justice, violence against women and women’s justice issues
  • President, Law Courts Education Society of British Columbia
  • Former Director, Family Services of Greater Vancouver
  • Member, Advisory Committee, Law Reform Commission of Canada
  • Member, 1993 Ad Hoc Advisory Committee for a National Strategy on Community Safety and Crime Prevention
  • Former Director, B.C. Coalition for Safer Communities
  • Past Member, Supreme Court National Criminal Law Programme Judges Criminal Law Committee
  • Member, Delegation to South Africa on Access to Justice
  • Author, 1994 Oppal Report on Policing

Wally has been recognized with several awards, including:

  • Georges A. Goyer, QC, Distinguished Service Award (2000)
  • Lawyers Assistance Program of B.C., Lawyer Helping Lawyer Award (2007)
  • Anthony P. Pantages, QC, Medal for Outstanding Contributions in the Field of Public Safety (2005)
  • RBC Mehfil Magazine, Lifetime Achievement Award (2010)
  • Honorary Doctor of Laws, University of the Fraser Valley (2010)

Wally has recently been appointed to the Board of Directors of the Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation. In May of 2011 Wally was appointed Chancellor of Thompson River University

Wally is a frequent lecturer and keynote speaker at National and International conferences and seminars on Policing He was appointed Commissioner of the Missing Women commission of Inquiry in September 2010

Wally is an avid reader, enjoys staying physically fit by playing basketball, as well as coaching in the Steve Nash basketball league.

January 25, 2012

Wally Oppal

Future Meetings

Wally Opal
Former MLA and BC Attorney General; TRU Chancellor

bio to appear

January 25

 

 

  Source wikipedia commons


Past Meetings

November 30, 20011
Matthew Carter

President, Great Northern Way Campus Trust

Matthew Carter is president of the Great Northern Way Campus Trust, a joint venture collaboration between UBC, SFU, BCIT and Emily Carr University of Art and Design.

Matthew’s position is focused on developing Great Northern Way Campus Trust’s 20 acre parcel of land on the False Creek Flats into a revitalized district in East Vancouver that stimulates B.C.’s creative economy through strong collaboration among creators, entrepreneurs and educators. Great Northern Way Campus is home to the Centre for Digital Media, which offers a Masters of Digital Media graduate degree for which students get to collaborate with entertainment and computer games industry leaders. Construction is currently underway on a new home for the Centre for Digital Media, which will welcome students in September 2012. This building is the catalyst for the redevelopment of this former-industrial brownfield site.

Prior to his current position, Matthew was vice-president at UBC Properties Trust, a real estate development company owned by the University of B.C. He led initiatives to advance UBC’s vision to build a mixed-use community while creating significant endowment for research and learning.

Prior to joining UBC Properties in 2002, he worked with Citigroup in London, England in various real estate financing roles.

Matthew and his wife live in the Douglas Park neighbourhood of Vancouver with their three children

November 30, 2011

Matthew Carter

October 26, 2011
Marvin Storrow

You may find a profile of Marvin Storrow at: http://www.blakes.com/english/people/lawyers2.asp?las=MRVS

Our freind Marvin repalced Susan Anton at the last minute.

June 22, 2011
Gregor Robertson
Mayor of Vancouver

In November 2008, the people of Vancouver chose Gregor Robertson as their new Mayor. He was elected on a platform of ending street homelessness in the City of Vancouver by 2015, and making Vancouver the greenest city in the world.

Mayor Robertson is committed to building a sustainable and thriving economy in Vancouver. By working to foster economic hubs in the burgeoning green economy, including digital media, clean technology, and renewable energy, Mayor Robertson is establishing Vancouver internationally as the Green Capital—a City where going green is good for business. Vancouver was recently named the greenest city in Canada by Corporate Knights, as well as predicted to have the fastest growing economy in 2010 by the Conference Board of Canada.

Under Mayor Robertson’s leadership, Vancouver has taken swift action on becoming more sustainable by doubling the City’s bicycle infrastructure budget, setting the highest electric vehicle charging standards for new buildings in North America, and approving laneway housing. Vancouver now has the greenest building standards in North America, requiring all new buildings to be LEED Gold. Since being elected, Mayor Robertson and City Council have also expanded the popular car-free days throughout the city, installed protected bicycle lanes on the Burrard Street Bridge and Dunsmuir Viaduct, and launched curbside compost pick-up in Vancouver.

On his first day in office, Mayor Robertson moved quickly on homelessness and established the Mayor’s Homeless Emergency Action Team (HEAT). HEAT rapidly opened five low-barrier shelters that immediately filled to capacity, providing close to 500 people a night with a safe, secure place to sleep. The Mayor has since secured over $333 million in new funding from the provincial government for social housing throughout the City.

Prior to entering politics, Gregor co-founded Happy Planet, and grew the Vancouver-based socially responsible company up to 50 employees in 10 years. Happy Planet produces organic juices and promotes health and nutrition. For his achievements as a successful entrepreneur and community leader, Gregor was named one of Canada’s “Top 40 under 40” by The Globe and Mail in 2004.

Gregor and his wife Amy have four children: Terra, Satchel, Jinagh and Johanna. He is a dedicated cyclist, avid soccer fan, and plays the tuba, guitar, and drums.

 

Mayor

May 25, 2011
Thomas Berger
Lawyer

Now a practicing lawyer in Vancouver, Thomas Berger has been prominent in defending minority rights and establishing the rights of Canada’s Aboriginal peoples.

He served as a Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia from 1971–1983. During that time, he was Chairman of the Royal Commission on Family and Children’s Law, B.C, 1973-74, Commissioner of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry 1974-77, and of the Inquiry on Indian and Health Consultation 1979-80 for the Government of Canada. From 1983-85, he was Chairman of the Alaska Native Review Commission. In 1991–1992 he served as deputy chairman of the World Bank’s Sardar Sarovar Commission in India.

Thomas Berger is the author of Northern Frontier, Northern Homeland (1977); Village Journey: a Long and Terrible Shadow (1985); Fragile Freedoms: Human Rights and Dissent in Canada (1981), and One Man’s Justice: A Life in the Law (2002).

He acted as Conciliator in 2005-2006 with respect to a series of disputes between the Government of Canada and the Government of Nunavut; his report is called “The Nunavut Project.”

To read more about Thomas Berger, click here.

berger

April 27, 2011
Hon. Thomas J. Gove
Presiding Judge at the Downtown Community Court

Judge Thomas Gove is Vancouver's Downtown Community Court presiding judge, since it opened in September 2008. Judge Gove was instrumental in the design and establishment of the court and is dedicated to reforming how crime is addressed in the community.

Called to the B.C. bar in 1974, after studies in Commerce and Law at UBC, Judge Gove's early professional years included criminal and youth defence work. In 1990, he was appointed to the Provincial Court of British Columbia where he has presided over criminal, youth, child and civil cases. From early 1994 to December 1995, he was the commissioner of the Gove Inquiry into Child Protection, which resulted in the redesign of B.C.'s child welfare system.

Judge Gove is the recipient of the 1996 Tony Pantages Medal from the Justice Institute of British Columbia. The award recognizes "a person in the justice system who has made a significant contribution to improving the system for the benefit of British Columbians."

Gove

March 30, 2011
David Emerson

David Lee Emerson is a former Member of Parliament for the riding of Vancouver Kingsway. He was first elected as a Liberal (2004) and served as Minister of Industry under Prime Minister Paul Martin. After controversially crossing the floor to join Stephen Harper's Conservatives, he served as Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Pacific Gateway and the Vancouver-Whistler Olympics (2006-2008), followed by Minister of Foreign Affairs (May-Oct. 2008).

Emerson attended the University of Alberta and obtained his Bachelor of Economics degree in 1968 and his Master of Economics degree in 1970. He then went on to Queen's University where he received his Ph.D in Economics. In 1975, after working as a researcher for the Economic Council of Canada, Emerson moved to British Columbia and joined the public service. In 1984, he became Deputy Minister of Finance.

In 1986, Emerson was appointed President and Chief Executive Officer of the Western and Pacific Bank of Canada. He transformed it into the Western Bank of Canada- the only regional bank to survive and prosper. Four years later, he returned as Deputy Minister of Finance and was quickly promoted to Deputy Minister to the Premier and President of the British Columbia Trade Development Corporation. From 1992 to 1997, Emerson was President and Chief Executive Officer of the newly created Vancouver International Airport Authority.

In 1998, Emerson was appointed President and Chief Executive Officer of Canfor Corporation, a leading integrated forest products company and Canada's largest producer of softwood lumber. With 8,100 workers and annual revenues of $3.2 billion servicing 10 % of the U.S. market, Canfor operates pulp and paper mills as well as 19 sawmills across B.C., two in Alberta and one in Quebec. Despite US duties and a higher Canadian dollar, Emerson managed to increase profits and raise share prices through a major acquisition deal and efficiency upgrades, which increased capacity by 30% while reducing production costs by 24%.

In 2008, Emerson joined private equity firm CAI Capital Management as a senior advisor.

Emerson's directorships included: Terasen Inc; Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Company of Canada; Vice-Chairman of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives; Chair, British Columbia Ferry Services Inc.; and Chairman and Director of Genus Resource Management Technologies Inc.

dinner

February 23, 2011
Rex Weyler
Writer and ecologist

Rex Weyler is a writer and ecologist. His books include Blood of the Land, a history of indigenous American nations, nominated for a Pulitzer Prize; Greenpeace: The Inside Story, a finalist for the BC Book Award and the Shaughnessy-Cohen Award for Political Writing; The Jesus Sayings, an analysis of first century history, a finalist for the BC Book Award; and The Story of Harmony, the history of musical knowledge and technology.

In the 1970s, Weyler was a cofounder of Greenpeace International and editor of the Greenpeace Chronicles. He served on campaigns to preserve rivers and forests, and to stop whaling, sealing, and toxic dumping. He remains active in ecological campaigns, worked on water quality legislation in BC and forest preservation in Canada and South America.

He currently writes the “Deep Green” column for the Greenpeace International website and appears on The Tyee and other websites, including his own site, rexweyler.com. He writes and consults on film and television projects, speaks on issues of ecology and literature, and is currently writing a book about “Ecology and Economy.”

In 1982, Weyler cofounded the Hollyhock education centre on Cortes Island in Canada, which continues to offer seminars in practical and creative arts. He has 3 grown sons and lives in Vancouver, B.C. with his wife Lisa. He and his wife are foster parents and members of the Foster Parents of British Columbia.

Weyler's photograph

January 26, 2011
Rev. Bruce Curtiss
Senior chaplain at Union Gospel Mission

Rev. Bruce G. Curtiss is the Senior Chaplain/Manager of Chaplaincy/Coed-Outreach/Men’s Emergency Shelter/Mobile Mission-Rescue Vehicle at Vancouver’s Union Gospel Mission. He has over 10 Years experience in Urban Pastoral Ministry and has spent multiple years in Hospital Chaplaincy, Prison Chaplaincy, and Police Chaplaincy with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the past.

Bruce has a Bachelor of Theology Degree and is near completion of his Masters of Divinity Degree. He has many other certificates and diplomas in such things as Law Enforcement Chaplaincy Diploma, Non-Violent Crisis Intervention Trainer Certificate, and Auxiliary Constable - Tier 1 Diploma - Justice Institute of British Columbia, and Emergency Medical Responder - First Responder - Tactical Level 1. Bruce teaches many classes and seminars on a regular basis to church groups, business professionals, and college and seminary students.

Bruce teaches many classes and seminars on a regular basis to church groups, business professionals, and college and seminary students.

Bruce is married to the wonderful Stephanie has no children as of yet. He and his wife live in Kerrisdale at present and he also actively volunteers in his spare time with the RCMP as an Auxiliary Constable in the Province of British Columbia.

Curtiss

November 24, 2010
Honourable Colin Hansen
Minister of Finance and Deputy Premier

Colin Hansen was re-elected to represent Vancouver-Quilchena on May 12, 2009. He was first elected in 1996, and re-elected in 2001 and 2005.

He was appointed Minister of Finance on June 23, 2008. He previously served as Minister of Economic Development, Minister of Health Services, and a previous appointment as Minister of Finance.

Minister Hansen served as health critic for the Official Opposition, as well as the critic for Employment and Investment, and for Labour. He sat on the Select Standing Committees on Crown Corporations and on Economic Development, Science, Labour, Training and Technology. He also sat on the Official Opposition Caucus Committees on Health and Economy.

Minister Hansen received his bachelor of arts degree in political science from the University of Victoria in 1975.
Before his election to the Legislative Assembly, he and his wife Laura owned and operated a small business they established in 1988. Prior to that, he was vice-president of finance and administration for the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada.

Colin Hansen pic

June 23rd, 2010
Dan Doyle
Chair, BC Hydro

Dan Doyle was appointed Chair of the BC Hydro Board of Directors on July 16, 2009
In May 2006, Doyle was appointed Executive Vice President at VANOC with responsibility for the $580 million development and building of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Games venues. In addition to venue construction, Doyle oversees aboriginal participation, legal, people and sustainability, and special projects.
Large complex building projects are second nature to Doyle. With more than 35 years of experience with B.C.'s Ministry of Transportation, most recently as deputy minister, he has overseen some of the province's landmark construction initiatives. Highlights include the rehabilitation of Vancouver's Lions Gate Bridge and the development of the Sea-to-Sky Highway Improvement project. Doyle also served as chairman for Rapid Transit 2000, the company responsible for building the Millennium Line extension to Vancouver's rapid transit system.

A civil engineer by training, Doyle’s lengthy career has been recognized with many accolades, including the APEGBC President's Award in 2007, the Canadian Transportation Person of the Year (2005) and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Institute of Transportation Engineers. In addition, he was awarded the Lieutenant Governor's Silver Medal for Excellence in Public Administration (2002).

.

 

Dan Doyle

May 26th, 2010
Tim Hayman
Retired Air Traffic Controler

Tim’s career began “in the Levesque era” in Montréal before his career path took him to Kelowna and then on to Vancouver where he served for eight years in the YVR tower and sixteen in the mysterious bowels of the regional radar centre.

April 28th, 2010
Paddy Gooderham

Paddy Gooderham was born in South Africa in 1940, and immigrated to Canada in 1965.

He is by profession a Mechanical Engineer with a degree in Business Administration. In 1978, he and two partners founded Burtek Systems Inc, a security products distribution company, which surprised everyone by growing to 10 warehouses and 150 employees. He was CEO of Burtek for 25 years before retiring in 2002.

Other interests include boating, skiing, golf and squash. He is a past President of the Evergreen Squash Club. Currently, with time on his hands, he dabbles in sundry projects, which with more sense he would avoid; hence this evening's topic!

Gooderham

January 27th, 2010
Bruce Flexman
President of IFC BC

Bruce Flexman, formerly Canadian Managing Partner, Tax at KPMG LLP, is the President of the IFC BC. He is currently Chair of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) Tax Policy Committee, which includes the managing partners of the six largest accounting firms in Canada. Bruce is also a member of the Vancouver International Financial Sector Steering Committee, which has been tasked by the BC Ministry of Small Business, Technology and Economic Development and the Ministry of Finance to present recommendations to enhance Vancouver as an international financial centre. During his tenure at KPMG, Bruce Flexman was responsible for managing the Canadian Tax Practice of approximately 900 tax professionals as well as long-term strategic business and financial planning. He brings a wealth of international experience from serving as one of six members of KPMG’s International Tax Steering group tasked with coordinating the global tax practice. He served on KPMG’s Board of Directors and was elected Chair.

Bruce also served for two years on KPMG America’s Board of Directors. He is well-known in the Vancouver business community having served as KPMG Vancouver’s Partner-In-Charge, Tax from 1995 to 2003 and Office Managing Partner of the New Westminster office from 1986 to 1989. In 1989, Bruce transferred to the Ottawa office of KPMG to assist the firm in preparing for the introduction of the GST as its National Partner-in-Charge, GST. During the time in Ottawa, Bruce acted as Technical Advisor to the Senate Banking and Finance Committee on hearings into the GST. From 1991 to 1993, Bruce was on loan to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) as Deputy Director General, Policy and Legislation in Headquarters.

Bruce obtained a degree in Engineering Mathematics from Queen’s University and followed that with an MBA with Distinction from Cornell University. After a short stint with the Ford Motor Company as a financial analyst, Bruce volunteered for two years as a Lecturer at the Zambia Institute of Technology under the auspices of Canadian University Services Overseas (CUSO) before joining KPMG.

Bruce will be leading a discussion on the implications of the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) which will be introduced in BC and Ontario on July 1, 2010. What can we believe about the HST? What impact will it have on our economy? Is it another tax grab by the government? Will there be a shift of tax from businesses to consumers? Will businesses pass along any of their savings to consumers? Why did the government decide to introduce HST immediately after being re-elected?

Bruce was the technical advisor on the implications of the GST to the Senate Banking Committee in 1990 when the Liberal majority in the Senate were resisting the introduction of the GST. He was also asked by the House of Commons Finance Committee to be part of a panel looking at replacements to the GST during the early 1990s.

 

 

flexman

January 27th, 2010
Ken Georgetti, CM, OBC
President of the Canadian Labour Congress

Like his father, Ken Georgetti went to work at the giant smelter in Trail, B.C., where he earned his trade ticket as a pipefitter.

Active with the United Steelworkers of America, in 1986 he became president of the British Columbia Federation of Labour. Advocating what he calls "intelligent militancy," he has demonstrated a rare ability to bring together labour and management in joint projects that benefit all British Columbians. Kenneth Georgetti wears a number of hats to improve the lot of British Columbian’s, and he chairs and sits on a score of educational and sporting committees.

He is honourary chairperson of the Association of Learning Disabled Adults, chair of the Pacific Region Labour Education Studies’ Centre, and chair of the Working Opportunity Fund. He is director of the Whistler Olympics 2010 Bid Committee and on the steering committee of the 2001 Pacific Games bid. He sits with the UBC Board of Governors.

georgetti

November 25th, 2009
Dave Dickson
Outreach Worker, Downtown East side
Former Vancouver City Police Constable

Dave Dickson was born and raised around Vancouver; he left school early to go seek fortune pumping gas in Cache Creek. He held a number of different jobs over the years before going back to school, getting a Grade 12 degree and being accepted into the Vancouver Police in 1980.

He spent his entire career in the Downtown Eastside out of choice even after the Department tried to transfer him out in the early 90's. He became an advocate for the Youth and the Women that worked the Streets and from the year 2003-2008 received 8 or 9 different awards for Community Policing including an International Safety Award for a program that he and Inspector John McKay designed for Women in High risk occupations. He retired in 2005 but was contracted back as the Department's Sex Trade Liaison person.

He now works as an Outreach worker for Lookout Emergency shelter.

 

Dickson

October 28th, 2009
Suzanne Anton
Vancouver City Councillor

Suzanne Anton was elected to Vancouver City Council in 2005 and re-elected in 2008. Before becoming a City Councillor, she served three years on the Vancouver Park Board.

Since being elected, she served three years as the Vancouver director for the Federation of Canadian municipalities, where she also served as the vice-chair of the Committee to Increase Women's Participation in Municipal Government. She served as a director of Metro Vancouver, where she was a member of the Waste Management Committee, the Land Use and Transportation Committee, and the UBC/ Metro Vancouver joint committee. She served two years on the Translink Board.

Outside public office, Suzanne has had a career as a mathematics teacher (Nigeria and Portugal) and a lawyer (Crown Counsel). She served many years as a community volunteer, particularly in the community sport area. Advocacy for better facilities and sport programs for all children led to her interest in the political realm and she was elected to the Park Board in 2002.

Suzanne has served with many organizations, including:

- MoreSports (founding member);
- ARKS (Arbutus Ridge Kerrisdale Shaughnessy) CityPlan
- Visioning community liaison group;
- Vancouver City Planning Commission;
- Rick Hansen Wheels in Motion Vancouver event;
- Kerrisdale Soccer Club (past President);
- Vancouver Field Sport Federation (past Vice-President);
- Achilles Track Society;
and
- Riley Park community association.

Suzanne and her husband Olin recently completed a cross Canada cycling trip. They have three adult children: Elizabeth, Robert and Angus. Suzanne is a gardener and is working on a local native plant rehabilitation project.

Suzanne received her Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from the University of Victoria. She went on to complete her Bachelor of Law from the University of British Columbia in 1979.

 

 

 

June 17th 2009

Doug Kelsey

President and Chief Executive Officer of the British Columbia Rapid Transit Company

 

President and Chief Executive Officer of the British Columbia Rapid Transit Company which encompass the SkyTrain system and the West Coast Express commuter rail system. He is responsible for the operating assets exceeding $4.5 billion that cover much of Greater Vancouver and parts of the Fraser Valley.

Doug has a strong private sector background in leading significant change to achieve top performance in both the private and public sectors including multi-national organizations, such as Shell Canada and Starbucks Coffee.

During his current tenure operating the Vancouver region’s urban passenger rail systems, he has significantly improved fiscal, operating performance and cost recovery. SkyTrain has reduced its costs by many millions of dollars while now carrying over 75 million riders per year and achieving an operating cost recovery of over 104%, unique among transit operations. West Coast Express has improved its operating cost recovery by well over 100% to 92.6% in 2008 or one of the elite top performers in North America.

Doug’s background includes; strategic planning, finance, mergers and divestitures, operations, asset management, marketing, distribution and real estate.

In addition to President/CEO of British Columbia Rapid Transit Company, Doug was the leader responsible for the development and defence of the transportation plan with the International Olympic Committee during the successful Vancouver 2010 Olympic bid phase. He was the Chairman of the Transportation Advisory Committee for 2010 Olympic Games and now is responsible for the Spectator and Workforce transportation for the Metro Vancouver area and TransLink’s strategic planning and all operations for the Olympic and Paralympic Games. He is the co-founder and past CEO with the HSBC Basketball Classic, now the largest High School tournament in North America. He does personal mentoring with at risk youth.

He is a graduate from the CEO program at the Kellogg School of Business.


 

Kelsey

May 27th 2009

Malcolm Hunter

President and COO of Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada

 


Malcolm Hunter is President and Chief Operating Officer of Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada, the exclusive Canadian distributor of Harley-Davidson® .

As a graduate of Simon Fraser University’s Economic in Commerce Department, Malcolm brought a background of finance, accounting and business systems to the company. Malcolm is also a graduate of Queen’s University Executive Program and the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Advanced Management Program.

One of Mr. Hunter’s most impressive accomplishment is through Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada earning the prestigious Canada’s 50 Best Managed Companies award for fourteen consecutive years (1995-2008). This award program, sponsored by Deloitte & Touche, Queen’s School of Business, CIBC Commercial Banking and the National Post, inducted Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada into the 50 Best Platinum Club in December 2003 in recognition of this outstanding achievement. Malcolm also sits on a number of committees with the Harley-Davidson Motor Company in the United States.

Malcolm is a member of the Rotary Club of Vancouver, he is past Chair of the Vancouver Community College Foundation Board, and also the past Chair of the Board of Directors of the Muscular Dystrophy Association of Canada, The Foundation for Fighting Blindness (formerly the RP Foundation) and he is the Past President and Director of the Hollyburn Country Club and Past President of the BC Safety Council.


 

Hunter

April 29th 2009

David Schreck

Political pundit

 

Dr. David Schreck is the secretary and treasurer of the "No BC-STV Campaign Society" currently working to defeat the proposal to change how MLAs are elected, and most probably the subject of his talk and our debate this evening.

David has had a long and varied career in BC politics. He was the NDP MLA for North Vancouver-Lonsdale from 1991 to 1996; he was an active member of the B.C. Legislature's Public Accounts Committee, served on the Parliamentary Reform Committee and on the Health and Social Services Committee, and served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Premier and to the Minister of Employment and Investment. He also was a special advisor to the Premier twice from 1998 to 2001, for both Clark and Dosanjh.

Prior to being elected David managed one of BC's largest dental insurers for ten years. He was involved with community management of social services in the 70s as chief executive officer of the Vancouver Resources Board, and was later involved in putting together B.C.'s first Pharmacare program. He currently works as an economic and management consultant, and as a political commentator, online and on the radio station CFAX in Victoria and posing questions on Vaughn Palmer's Voice of BC cable show. Visit his web site at www.strategicthoughts.com.

David Schreck has a BA in Economics from Grinnell College (Iowa), and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of British Columbia.

 

Don Cayo

March 25th 2009

Don Cayo

Journalist

 

Don Cayo is a journalist with a penchant for analysis and passion for fair play. He came to the Vancouver Sun eight years ago as editorial page editor, and four years ago switched to column writing.

His beat is loosely defined. It includes those areas — taxation, regulation and much more — where government policies and business practices intersect. Plus stewardship issues involving how well we take care of public money, public resources and/or each other. Plus mass poverty and international development issues. Plus other things that catch his fancy. His main qualification, he says, is a low threshold of outrage. This is manifest in his championing of causes that range from reining in over-zealous tax collectors, to protecting suckers from usurious lenders, to helping the destitute in more than two dozen dirt-poor countries.

Cayo has has spent all his adult life in journalism or related fields. For five years he taught journalism, and for two years he ran a business-funded think-tank in Atlantic Canada. Over his career he has won more than two dozen fellowships or other prizes. He now serves as volunteer project leader for Jack Webster Foundation’s Seeing the World Through New Eyes program, which gives young or beginning B.C journalists their first chance to report on mass poverty.

Visit Cayo's blogs:
Globalization: For Better or Worse
Taxing Issues

Don Cayo

February 25th 2009

Dr. Brian Day

President of the Canadian Medical Association

 

Brian Day is a physician and the 2007-2008 president of the Canadian Medical Association. He is known as Dr. Profit by opponents and Dr. Prophet by supporters for his advocacy of a role for private health care.

Day was raised in Toxteth, a working-class area, of post-war Liverpool, England. He was one of five children in a family with strong Labour views. Both his mother and father were socialists. The area could be tough. He has a permanent scar on a finger from a knife fight when he was 10 years old. His father, a pharmacist, was killed in the mid-80s by a hooligans looking for drugs. He was one of very few students from his elementary school who went to university. Day attended the Liverpool Institute, the same high school as Paul McCartney and George Harrison.

He obtained post-graduate qualifications in Britain, in both internal medicine and general surgery, and in 1978 completed his training and a M.Sc. degree at UBC. In 1979, Day received the Canadian Orthopaedic Association's Edouard Samson Award, for outstanding orthopaedic research in Canada. Following a fellowship in traumatology, in Basel, Switzerland, Oxford, and Los Angeles, he began practice at the Vancouver General Hospital. After starting in trauma, he developed an interest and expertise in orthopaedic sports medicine and arthroscopy. As an orthopedic surgeon, he earned an international reputation for performing arthroscopic surgery on knees, shoulders and elbows. Day is regarded as being instrumental in the introduction of arthroscopic joint surgery in Canada.

In 1997, Day founded Cambie Surgery Centre, a for-profit Vancouver hospital. Day is the facility's medical director and is one of over 40 shareholders. The centre operates outside Canada's publicly-funded health care system and sees about 5,000 patients a year. It caters mainly to people who have third-party insurance for their operations and has also been controversial for allowing patients waiting for surgeries in the public system to "jump the queue." (excerpted from Wikipedia)

 

Don Cayo

January 28th 2009

Bob Rennie

Director and Chairman AlterNRG

 

Bob maintains relationships with major developers throughout Canada and the United States specializing in the pre-sales of condominium developments. He has played a key role in many of Vancouver’s major development projects including Woodward’s, Yaletown Park, and the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Athletes’ Village (Millennium Water).

Bob has been marketing residential real estate for over 33 years. Since 2006, Rennie Marketing Systems has consistently maintained total sales in dollar volume exceeding $1 billion per year.

Bob’s dedication to the community and various charities has earned him a Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal in 2002. His commitment to his passion for art has also allowed him to sit on the acquisitions board of the Tate Museum of Modern Art in London as well as the Deans Advisory Board to the Faculty of Arts at UBC.

Earlier this year, Bob was presented with an Honorary Doctorate from the Emily Carr University of Art and Design.

http://www.rennie.com/rms/

Bob Rennie

 

November 26th 2008

Mike Heier

Director and Chairman AlterNRG

Mr. Heier is the founder and Chairman of Trinidad Energy Services. Mr. Heier also held the position of Chief Executive Officer of Trinidad or its predecessor from June 1998 until January of 2008. He is a journeyman millwright and has been involved in the oil and gas industry in Western Canada since 1976. Mr. Heier played a key role in the growth of a family group of companies from that time until early 2000. At its peak activity level in 1997, this group of companies had combined revenues in excess of $50 million and employed just fewer than 400 people throughout western Canada.

Mr. Heier also served as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Trinity Energy from 1987 to 1998. Trinity Energy Ltd. grew from 25 barrels of oil per day to an average of over 2,000 barrels of oil per day making it one of the largest private independent oil and gas producers in the Province of Saskatchewan. During this same time frame, Trinity Energy Ltd. developed and sold over $75 million worth of oil and gas assets. Trinity Energy Ltd. became Trinity Energy Inc. in 1998 and went on to find one of the largest concentrated deposits of coal bed methane in the plains region in Alberta. This land position was successfully joint ventured with Nexen Canada in 2000. Trinity Energy Inc. operated as a public non-trading entity with approximately 135 shareholders.

Heier

 

October 29th 2008

Warren Buckley

President and CEO Of BC Pavilion Corporation


Warren Buckley returns to the helm of PavCo as President and CEO following a six-year term as the CEO of Suntec Singapore, International Convention and Exhibition Center.

Prior to his post overseas, he had worked with the PavCo organization for 20 years, initially as Sales Manager at BC Place and then through various senior positions at PavCo culminating to his promotion as President and CEO in the mid-90s. Warren has taught facility management at industry schools in West Virginia and Australia.

The former Chairman of the World Council of Venue Management, he is also past Director of the Asia Pacific Exhibition and Convention Council and past Board Director for the International Association of Convention Centres.

buckley

 

June 18th 2008

Brendan McLeod, Mighty Mike McGee, and RC Weslowski

Poets of the Spoken Word Group

Brendan McLeod has been Vancouver's SLAM poetry Champion, the Canadian SLAM poetry champion, and finished second at the 2005 World SLAM championships, held in Holland. As a novelist, he beat out over 500 original entries to win the 2006 International 3 Day Novel Contest for his book, "The Convictions of Leonard McKinley". He has performed all over the world, at over 200 poetry readings, and is a touring member of The Fugitives spoken word and music troupe.
Brendan is a high energy storyteller equally at home with social and political commentary, family histrionics, surreal love poems, obscure adventure stories, and powerful personal stories. He runs the gamut of performance poetry, making him an effective live performer and an artist well equipped for collaboration.
He has an MA in Philosophy from the University of Waterloo. See more at: http://www.brendanmcleod.ca/

 

Kitchen

Michael Matthew McGee, more commonly known as Mighty Mike McGee is an American slam poet. Born in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, in 1976 McGee is the oldest of 8 children from several marriages. McGee was born with the neural tube defect spina bifida and was never expected to walk or talk as an infant. However, his case of spina bifida is relatively mild, and McGee has been able to live a relatively normal life.
Mike McGee is an international spoken word artist, writer, performer, speaker, slam poet and comic. He has performed in thousands of venues all over North America, and was one of the first Americans ever to perform poetry at the University la Sorbonne in Paris, France. McGee began performing comedy and poetry to audiences at home in San Jose, California in 1998.
In 2003, McGee won the coveted National Poetry Slam Individual Grand Championship, besting over 300 nationally ranked poetry slammers. He has since toured over 300,000 miles throughout the United States and Canada where fellow National Poetry Slam Indy Champ, Shane Koyczan and beat-boxer poet extraordinaire C.R. Avery (of Vancouver, B.C.) joined him to form the group Tons of Fun University in 2004. They have since headlined music festivals across Canada, bringing their unique blend of poetry-laden “talk rock” to massive audiences all over the great north. In 2006, McGee became the first person to win two separate individual titles by being crowned the 2006 Individual World Poetry Slam Champion, besting over 70 of the world’s best ranked slam poets. His “stand-up poetry” has been written about in Writer’s Digest magazine, and been featured on NPR, HBO and CBC. http://www.mikemcgee.net/

Kitchen

RC Weslowski has been a clown mouth full of bologna in the Vancouver Poetry Scene since 1998. As a performer RC is a 5 time member of the Vancouver Poetry Slam Team and has performed at Festival across Canada, including The Calgary International Poetry Festival, The Winnipeg Writer's Festival, The Saskatchewan Festival of Words, The Vancouver Folk Festival, The Vancouver Storytelling Fesival, Music West, The Canadian Festival of Spoken Word. RC has also performed his poetry on the Eiffel Tower while snorting the remains of Orson Welles and along the Rhine River in Germany while debating Schopenhauer with a schnauser.
As an event organizer RC Weslowski was the Artistic Director for the 2005 Canadian Festival of Spoken Word and the Publicity Coordinator for the 2007 Individual World Poetry Slam. RC is the current President of Vancouver Poetry House and he is one of the main people making the Vancouver Poetry Slam run. The VPS is Canada's longest running poetry slam, now in it's 11th year. He is also on the board of the Spoken Word Arts Network (SWAN).

 

Kitchen

May 28th, 2008
Hon. William (Bill) Kitchen,
Provincial Court Judge

By way of a CV Judge William Kitchen received his law degree from the University British Columbia 1971 and then studied at the London School of Economics in 1972/1973.

Judge Kitchen return to Canada and then work for Law Reform Commission for 1973/1974. Judge Kitchen and then joined the Vancouver Prosecutor's Office and practiced as a Crown Prosecutor in 1975. Judge Kitchen joined the Defense bar and practiced as a criminal Defense attorney during the period 1975-1986. Judge Kitchen was appointed as a Judge of the Provincial Court of British Columbia in 1986 and has adjudicated numerous criminal matters at 222 Main St to date. Judge Kitchen acted as the Administrative Judge at 222 Main St. during 2003-2007.

Judge Kitchen was raised in the downtown Eastside and he has over 60 years of experience with the changes that have occurred, both to the Vancouver Eastside and the justice system, and will provide his insight into that setting and their respective issues.

 

Kitchen

April 30 th, 2008
Peter Ladner ,
Councillor, City of Vancouver

Councillor Peter Ladner was first elected to Vancouver City Council in 2002 and re-elected in 2005. Councillor Ladner is vice president and part owner of the Business in Vancouver Media Group, which he co-founded by establishing the award-winning Business in Vancouver weekly newspaper in 1989. He has more than 35 years of journalistic experience in print, radio and television and is a frequent speaker on business and community issues.

His community and business experience includes participation in the Vancouver City Planning Commission and the Capital Campaign for the Vancouver Public Library. He has also served on the boards of Leadership Vancouver, International Centre for Sustainable Cities, The UBC Alumni Association, New Media BC, the Forum for Women Entrepreneurs and the international Association of Area Business Publications.

He is the Honorary Chair of the Subaru Vancouver International Half-Iron and Sprint Triathlon.

His current local and regional appointments include:

  • Vice-Chair, Metro Vancouver board
  • Vice-Chair, Metro Vancouver Sustainable Region Initiative
  • Member, Metro Vancouver Waste Committee
  • Chair, Vancouver Standing Committee on City Services and Budgets
  • Member, Vancouver Standing Committee on Transportation and Traffic
  • Member, Vancouver Standing Committee on Planning and Environment
  • Member, Vancouver Economic Development Commission
  • Council Liaison, Food Policy Council

Councillor Ladner is a fourth generation British Columbian. The town of Ladner is named after his great-grandfather. He lives in Kitsilano with his wife, Erica. They have four children ranging in age from 19 to 28. He is a long-time commuter cyclist as well as a keen runner, skier, kayaker and singer. He holds his age-group record for the 50 km Knee-Knackering North Shore Trail Run.

peter ladner

March 26th, 2008
Sam Sullivan,
Mayor of the City of Vancouver

Since accepting the Olympic Flag at the closing ceremony of the 2006 Olympic Winter Games, Sam Sullivan has become one of the world’s most recognized mayors.

Mayor Sullivan is a recipient of the nation’s highest honour, the Order of Canada, for his community service on behalf of marginalized people. He is the founder of six non-profit organizations that have improved the lives of thousands of North Americans with disabilities.

After being elected to Vancouver City Council in 1993, Sullivan served as a Councillor for 12 years. He was elected Mayor in November 2005.

Among the initiatives he has introduced is EcoDensity, an innovative policy to reduce the City’s impact on the environment, reduce housing prices and improve the vitality of neighbourhoods through high quality densification. The Mayor has also introduced Project Civil City (PDF, 1.7Mb), a broad initiative aimed at improving public order and civility on Vancouver streets which includes four key goals to significantly reduce homelessness and incidences of crime and public disorder in the City by 2010.

A believer in life-long learning, Mayor Sullivan has devoted himself to studying a broad range of topics. He obtained a Business Administration degree from Simon Fraser University and has also taught himself the basics of several languages including Cantonese.

He is an avid sailor using a specially designed boat he helped to create, and also enjoys hiking in the Coast and Rocky Mountains using an assistive device he co-invented.

Mayor Sullivan’s achievements are noteworthy due to the fact that they were accomplished since he became a quadriplegic after breaking his neck in a skiing accident at the age of 19.

sullivan pic

February 27th, 2008
David Baines,
Reporter and columnist, Vancouver Sun

David Baines has been working as a reporter and columnist with The Vancouver Sun for the past 22 years. His beat is the Vancouver stock market and white-collar crime in general. His stories not only focus on perpetrators, but also professional facilitators such as lawyers, accountants and geologists, and the regulatory bodies that are supposed to be protecting the public interest. He has been sued 18 times, none successfully.

He has won four National Newspaper Awards, second highest in Canadian history.

David Baines earned his BA from Queen's and his MBA from Western.

 

baines

January 30th, 2008
Adrian Dix, MLA,
Vancouver Kingsway

Adrian Dix was elected as the MLA for Vancouver Kingsway on May 17, 2005. Adrian is the Opposition Caucus Deputy House Leader, and serves as Opposition Critic for Health. Adrian has extensive experience as a non-profit director, education community leader, government strategist and media commentator.
Prior to the 2005 election, Adrian travelled the province for five years as Executive Director of Canadian Parents for French - BC & Yukon Branch, a non-profit organization promoting language education. Adrian is a commentator on public policy whose regular columns were published in the Victoria Times-Colonist and The Source, a Vancouver multicultural newspaper. Adrian also served as the Chief of Staff to Premier Glen Clark from 1996 to 1999.

Adrian grew up in Vancouver, graduated from University of British Columbia and lives in the Collingwood neighbourhood.

Here's what the press has to say about our next guest:

"the most effective NDP MLA" Keith Baldrey, Global TV.

"Adrian Dix, the most effective member of the Opposition shadow cabinet, was shifting to health. He'd been devastatingly effective in his previous role as critic for children and family development. His almost-daily exposés led to a shakeup in the ministry and an independent review by Ted Hughes -- whose findings ultimately embarrassed the premier himself."Vaughn Palmer, Vancouver Sun.

"James' most significant change was to shift Adrian Dix from children and families critic to health. Dix was extraordinarily effective. There are two goals for critics, or there should be. They certainly want to score points for their side and make the other guys look bad. But they also have a chance to produce meaningful improvements in the way government works. Dix's efforts highlighted the Liberals' failures in the children's ministry. They also produced Ted Hughes' review of the ministry, the creation of an independent advocate for children and an overhaul of ministry management. By moving him to health, James confirms that's going to be an NDP priority." Paul Willcocks, Victoria Times-Colonist

Dix

November 28, 2007
Dr. Gail Anderson,
Forensic Entomologist, SFU

Dr. Anderson graduated from Manchester University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Zoology. She then pursued a Masters degree and a PhD in Pest Management at SFU. Today, Dr. Anderson is an associate professor in the Criminology department at SFU. You might be asking yourself how her degrees in Biology transfer to a professorship in criminology. The answer lies in Dr. Anderson's innovative application of her training in entomology. One of her major research interests is in forensic entomology, which is the use of insects in death investigations. Dr. Anderson is one of two full-time forensic entomologists in Canada (the second being a former student). Her work has been featured on several television programs, including "Go Deep", "Journeys," "Forbidden Places" and "The Nature of Things".

Dr. Anderson is internationally known for her pioneering work. She actively handles forensic death cases for the RCMP and city police with whom she has been involved in over 130 homicide investigations. Dr. Anderson uses insects to determine the elapsed time since death; information that is often vital to the successful resolution of murder cases. Dr. Anderson is developing a canada-wide database on the habits of flesh-eating insects, a tool which has been a great help to forensic scientists in pinpointing both the time and cause of death. She was also involved in establishing one of the first North American labs founded solely to refine the ways that insect biology can be used to help solve crimes.

In 1995, Dr. Anderson was awarded the Simon Fraser University Alumni Association Outstanding Alumni Award for Academic Achievement. In March of 2001, she was named one of six leading international innovators in the field of crime and punishment by TIME Magazine.

Anderson

October 2007: Roger Woodhead, Ph.D, P.Eng.
Technical Director, Canada Line

Roger Woodhead has worked for both consulting engineering and construction companies for the past 30 years. He was Chief Engineer with Dillingham Construction when it was one of the largest construction companies in BC. From 1990 to 1995 he worked in Newfoundland for the design/build contractor on the $1.5 billion Hibernia Gravity Base Structure (GBS). Roger returned to Vancouver in 1995 and since then has worked on an eclectic mix of projects including:

  • Design Manager and Project Director for SNC-Lavalin on a $50 million cut and cover tunnel in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
  • Project Construction Engineer for three “Sinking Caissons” and several sheet piled excavations for conveyor tunnels at Vancouver Wharves.
  • Quality Systems Manager on the $1.2 billion SkyTrain Millennium Line.

Roger is a P.Eng. in BC, a structural P.E. in Washington and an Internationally registered Lead Quality Auditor. He is an Adjunct Professor in Construction Management at UBC. He is also a tutor for the University of Bath M Sc in Construction Management which is being delivered in North American by BCIT. He was selected by the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering to present its National Lecture Tour in 1997-8. In 2007 the American Concrete Institute presented him with its Construction Award for the best paper published in 2006.

He is currently Technical Director for SNC Lavalin Inc. the Engineering Procurement and Construction Contractor for the Canada Line Project. In this role he is responsible for overseeing all engineering and quality management on the $1.9 billion Public Private Partnership which is presently the largest infrastructure project in Canada.

Woodhead
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Past Meetings (2006-07 season)

June 2007: Dwight Jefferson, 2004 Vic to Maui racer

May 28th, 2007: Jamie Graham, Chief Constable of the Vancouver Police Department

April 25th, 2007: Bob Lenarduzzi, Vancouver Whitecaps

March 28, 2007:Dr. Carlos Ventura, Director of the Earthquake Engineering Research Facility at UBC

February 27th, 2007: Hon. John Bouck, Former member of the BC Supreme court

January 2007: Olga Ilich, BC Minister of Labour and Citizens’ Services

November: Christopher Gaze, Artistic Diredtor, Bard on the Beach Shakespeare Festival

October: Russel J Anthony, President, Vancouver Convention Center Expansion Project

Past Meetings (2005-06 season)

June 22nd, 2006 - Alister Browne, Ph.D. (philosophy), Faculty of Medecine of UBC

May 25th, 2006 - John F. Helliwell, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and UBC

April 26th, 2006: Warren Gill, Vice President, University Relations – Simon Fraser University

March 2006: James W. Wright, Director and CEO of Vancouver Opera

February 22nd, 2006 - Michael Geller, B.Arch MAIBC, MCIP, President and CEO SFU Community Trust

January 25th, 2006 - Jonathan Manthorpe, Vancouver Sun Columnist

November 30 th, 2005 - Ms. Faye Wightman, president and CEO of the Vancouver Foundation
October 26th, 2005 - Geoff Plant, Q.C., Partner at Heenan Blaiki


Past Meetings (2004-05 season)

June 22nd, 2005- Larry W. Campbell, Mayor of Vancouver -

May 25th, 2005- Peter Armstrong, President and CEO of Rocky Mountaineer

April 27 , 2005 - Dr. David W. Strangway, O.C., Ph.D., Founder, Chair and C.E.O., Sea to Sky University

March 30, 2005 - Pat Jacobsen, CEO of Translink

February 23rd, 2005 - "King" Richard Brodeur, Hockey player extraordinaire, former Canuck (1970-88) NHL Goaltender 1972-1988.

January 26th, 2005 - Dr. Johanne Cashman, Pathologist, Head of Research at ARC Pharmaceuticals Inc., Vancouver

November 24 th, 2004 - Lorne Mayencourt, MLA Burrard
October 27th, 2004 - John Morgan, retired President and CEO of Labatt Breweries

Past Meetings (2003-04 season)

June30th, 2004 - Arthur Erickson, Architect, Principal of Arthur Erickson Architectural Corp., Vancouver
May 26th, 2004 - Michael Stevenson, President and Vice Chancellor of SImon Fraser University
April 28th, 2004 - Mr. Richard Mahler
March 31st, 2004 - Mr. David Baines, Vancouver Sun
February 25th, 2004 - Dr. John McDonald, chairman and CEO of Day 4 Energy, Inc
January 28th, 2004 - Ian Pitfield, BC Supreme Court Justice
November 27th, 2003 -The Honourable Lloyd Axworthy, P.C., O.C., O.M., Ph.D.
October 29th , 2003 - Jim Green - Vancouver City Councilor

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