GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLO MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONET IPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Ra Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL G enton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Math MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sarto SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDR OUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DA FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MAR onald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RI Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wri ANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Ed DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard S ARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith A RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON Jo right SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE ddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Ling ID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Sm NDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILS hn Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS E Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE B ngard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Dan Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHA WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis D CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLE KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISO REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Ste Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COS aig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Joh VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Pur LISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKL Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DAN OSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI R ohnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DA ICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Ca DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRA WANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PIL KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Ang Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROW Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Case udson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’B RINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID ERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICH BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDE asey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL TheLingard 50 MostSIDInfl uential ranking is simultaneously one of Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Sim ’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill T this magazine’s most popular items and one of its most AVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wrightafter SANDRA Randy Remington perplexing. Influence, all, isYOUNG a bit like happiness – youJACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookm MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDO know when it’s there, but it’s not something you can measure HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEV orREDFORD weigh. That’s why,Smith as weANDY do every year, spent some SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWAR NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON Danielle RIDGE Bobwe Sartor SIMONETTA time reflecting on theWILSON word “infl andYOUNG what Randy it ENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL Johnuence” Wright itself SANDRA Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCK really means. a relationship power, and Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Ja George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig CurtisInfl DR.uence CHRIShas EAGLE Bill Eddinswith DAWN FARRELL you willVIsee plenty KONKLE of chief executives alford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson (VIOLET) Bill Lingardand SIDsenior MARTYpoliticians Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY D Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis REDFORD Smith ANDY Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Sw on thisALISON year’s list, but theDanielle two concepts are notRIDGE synonymous. HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA The more compelling definition of influence is the idea YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIG BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL Craigthe Curtis DR.a CHRIS Bill others, Eddins DAWN that itCOSTA describes effect personEAGLE has over and FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREE FIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) Billnot Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton R this year’s list is full of peopleKONKLE who may be headlineILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Purvis recognized ALISON REDFORD RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTH makersClif or widely namesDanielle but whoSmith haveANDY had an evin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Bl undeniable – and an undeniably positive – influence on others. R. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DON REENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaugh That’s the real value of thisVIlist, and why we’re proud to present REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA itPILLAY-KINNEE ALISON REDFORD Smith again in 2012.Clif It’sPurvis nice to recognize peopleDanielle who may not ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY OUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus DAN WICKLUM Stevecertainly Williamsdon’t MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERS always getWatt recognition, and who go around Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS seeking it, but who deserve credit for making Alberta a better EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOHN GIBSON Ma ffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryanado, Johnson VI (VIOLET) place to live. So, without further Alberta, meet yourKONKLE makers.Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLON MCDOUGALL McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sl NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Randy Remington JAC and how far does alberta’s influence spread? ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL Greg Fenton JOH go online to meet the fiCasey ve most influential albertans not currently living inSHIRAZ the province. usJohnson at GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson JIWANIvisit Ryan VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Mathison MARLO uenceoutsideab MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGELalbertaventure.com/infl Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sartor SIMONET IPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDRA YOUNG Ra >> Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DAWN FARRELL G Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN enton JOHN GIBSON Matt Giffen DONALD GREENFIELD Jane Halford GORDON HOULDEN Casey Hudson SHIRAZ JIWANI Ryan Johnson VI (VIOLET) KONKLE Bill Lingard SID MARTY Ronald Math MARLON MCDOUGALL Drew McNaughton REG MILLEY Dave Mowat KEVIN NAGEL Simon O’Byrne KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE Clif Purvis ALISON REDFORD Danielle Smith ANDY RIDGE Bob Sarto SIMONETTA SIPIONE Linda Sloan NANCY SOUTHERN Kevin Swan HOWARD TENNANT Bill Tuer DAVID VETTERS Angus Watt DAN WICKLUM Steve Williams MICHAEL WILSON John Wright SANDR J u ly 2 0 1 2 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM 31 OUNG Randy Remington JACK ANDERSON Stan Blade DR. NIGEL BROCKTON George Brookman MICHAEL BROWN Michael Casey DANIEL COSTA Craig Curtis DR. CHRIS EAGLE Bill Eddins DA
Alison Redford/ Danielle Smith Politics
Agents of Change When Premier Alison Redford took to the stage at the Progressive Conservative party’s headquarters in Calgary on the evening of April 23, she looked triumphant and relieved in equal measure. She had just led the Tories to their 12th straight majority, winning 61 of the legislature’s 87 seats and extending the party’s 41-year lock on power. But unlike virtually all of those previous 12 victories, this one was a result that nobody had predicted. Danielle Smith’s Wildrose party had consistently polled ahead of the Conservatives in the weeks before the election. The final results were no doubt a disappointment to Smith, but she did her best to put a positive spin on the outcome. “Change might take us a little longer than we thought,” she told her followers. That may be true, but her party has already come a lot further than many expected. Her Wildrose Party took 17 seats and 34 per cent of the popular vote, up from zero seats and seven per cent of the vote in 2008. If it weren’t for controversial anti-gay and racially charged statements made by Wildrose candidates toward the close of the campaign, Wildrose may have fared even better. The election results represent a seismic change in Albertan politics. Smith and the Wildrose hived photographs Colin Way 32 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
off much of the right edge of the PC party, while Redford moved more aggressively to the centre of the political spectrum than any PC leader in recent memory. She managed to draw votes from the Liberal Party and the NDP, some because of strategic voting but many because they simply liked her policies. As such, she hearkens back to the years of Peter Lougheed, a fiscal conservative with a true progressive bent, more than to her more immediate PC predecessors. Redford, too, spoke of change on election night. “This Progressive Conservative party has introduced change, has promised change and will make change in this province,” she said. “Getting that change right is what I promise you tonight.” And so for the next few years, we will watch these two leaders battle it out in the legislature and in the cauldron of public opinion, with their ideological differences clearly reflected in their views on health care, education, the role of government and Alberta’s place in the federation. Redford’s progressive streak will stand in contrast to Smith’s small-c conservatism. Both will try to bridge the urban/rural divide that was evident in the election results. Redford will try to smooth over the rifts that were created in the PC party, and Smith will work to keep her rookie MLAs in line. It will be an exciting, refreshing time for Alberta, where elections have long been more like a coronation than a competition. And that’s change we can all get behind. > J u ly 2 0 1 2
ALBERTAVENTURE.COM 33
Jack
Anderson Philanthropy and Giving
Good Olds Boy Back in 2007, Calgary rancher Jack Anderson made the largest individual donation to Olds College in its history, giving the school $1 million to use without restrictions. In January 2012, he broke his own record, donating his collection of 100 vintage cars and trucks, worth around $2 million, to be auctioned off in 2013 to celebrate Olds College’s centennial anniversary. Anderson started the collection when he was 14, and it includes such gems as a Model A from 1928 and a $300,000 Rolls Royce from 1984 that was once owned by Indian guru Bhagwan Rajneesh. The funds raised from the auction are expected to go towards new facilities. Anderson has been named the Olds College 2012 Partner of the Year in recognition of his commitment to the school.
are pushing advances in technology in the agriculture and forestry sectors, investing in everything from biofuels and barley proteins to genetic testing for livestock. In 2011, AI Bio invested more than $18 million in 107 projects, helping academic institu-
STAN BLADE
tions, research companies, and agriculture and forestry corporations to develop innovative new products and techniques.
Dr. Nigel
Brockton Medicine
Medicine Man Dr. Nigel Brockton nearly became a marine biologist, but after surviving cancer
co-investigators on the Tomorrow Project, a longterm research project that aims to track the health of 50,000 Albertans over the next 50 years to investigate cancer prevention and treatment. And while Brockton is known for his research into the effects of HPV and inflammation in the progression of cancers, he’s not content only with doing lab work. The doctor is also a vocal supporter of fundraising efforts and participates annually in the 200-kilometre Enbridge Ride to Conquer Cancer. In 2011, he raised more than $4,000 as a participant in the ride.
George
Brookman Public Policy/Advocacy
Penny-Pincher It takes a brave man to stand in front of a room full of business leaders at a Calgary Chamber of Commerce luncheon and deliver a lecture on the virtues of
Stan Blade Ag r i c u lt u r e
Agricultural Innovator The traditional family farm might be the conventional image of Albertan agriculture, but today the industry is defined by research and innovation. That’s where Stan Blade, the CEO of Alberta Innovates Bio Solutions comes in. Blade and his organization
tion Calgary, Brookman was there to propose the implementation of a penny tax that would go directly towards local infrastructure investments that he says aren’t being adequately funded by government. “It really, to me, makes no sense whatsoever to run a city of a million-plus people with ad hoc little bits of funding,” he said to reporters afterwards. “We’ll be collecting bottles next. We need to figure out a better plan.”
Michael Brown twice in his 20s, he became a cancer researcher, instead. He now studies molecular epidemiology at Calgary’s Tom Baker Cancer Centre. He became one of the
a new tax, but that’s what West Canadian Industries CEO George Brookman was doing this past September. Along with other members of Transforma-
R e a l E s tat e
Revitalizer Michael Brown’s influence on Calgary’s built environment is both great and growing. Brown spent
time as a vice-president at Calgary Economic Development and was an associate vice-president with Matthews Southwest as it brought Encana’s landmark 58-storey downtown tower, The Bow, to fruition. Then, on September 21 of last year, he was named president and CEO of the Calgary Municipal Land Corporation (CMLC). Brown is now in charge of overseeing many developments around the city, but the most prominent of those is the revitalization of the East Village. The CMLC has attracted more than $725 million in private development to the East Village project, which will see an area now known for low-rent apartments and vacant lots turned into a mixed-use, inner-city community for 11,000 residents.
PhotoGRAPH of Dr. Nigel Brockton by Matt Wolske; PhotoGRAPH OF GEORGE BROOKMAN BY Wilkosz & Way 34 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
Eastern Promises There are those who believe that government should stay out of the way of the private sector and that investments made by the former are invariably less efficient than those made by the latter. But Calgary’s East Village is demonstrating that there are times when government investment can be a great idea – and that it can go hand in hand with private-sector activity. The City of Calgary has invested $150 million into the eastern portion of its downtown in order to make it more attractive to developers, and it certainly appears to have worked. Over the last two years, the area has attracted more than $720 million in private investment, and by 2027, the city thinks there could be as many as 11,000 people living there. There’s even a 315-room Hilton Hotel slated for construction in the area. It’s safe to say, in other words, that the city will see a healthy return on its investment – additional tax revenues, sure, but also a new and thriving neighbourhood. The City of Calgary has invested
$150 million
into the east portion of its downtown
Michael Casey H o s p i ta l i t y
Host with the Most Michael Casey, a partner at Field Law in Calgary, is also hosting that city’s biggest party since the 1988 Winter Olympics. The president and chairman of
the Calgary Stampede has been promoting the 100th anniversary of the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth all year. To celebrate the event’s centennial year, Casey is telling anybody who will listen that this year’s party will be bigger than ever, with Ian Tyson as parade marshal and performances by Garth Brooks and The Beach Boys. Casey’s work has caught
the attention of CNN, which placed the Stampede in the top five best places to visit in 2012. Combine that with Calgary’s designation as the Cultural Capital of Canada – which was secured in large part by the Calgary Stampede’s centennial – and 2012 is shaping up to be a banner year for tourism in the city. Casey is responsible for a large part of that.
Daniel Costa H o s p i ta l i t y
Top Chef If you live in Edmonton, you’ve surely heard the buzz about Corso 32, a newish restaurant located on Jasper Avenue in the city’s downtown core. And while some of that buzz >
PhotoGRAPH of DANIEL COSTA BY ROTH AND RAMBERG J u ly 2 0 1 2
ALBERTAVENTURE.COM 35
GOOD SENSE In its March 2012 issue, MoneySense magazine affirmed what most people in Red Deer already knew: it’s a great place to live. The Toronto magazine picked Alberta’s third-largest city as the ninth best city to live in, as well as the
is probably focused on how hard it is to get a seat there – the restaurant is often booked solid weeks in advance – the majority of it is about the quality of the food, and for good reason. Head chef and owner Daniel Costa’s relentless dedication to creating authentic Italian fare is reinvigorating the city’s food scene and helping to raise it to a whole new level. Western Living magazine recently named Costa as one of its Top 40 Foodies under 40, while enRoute picked Corso 32 as one of Canada’s best new restaurants.
fourth best place in the country to raise kids and the second best place to find a job. But while most of the media attention focused on Red Deer’s ranking, Edmonton actually finished one spot ahead in the rankings, in eighth place overall. Calgary, for what it’s worth, finished in 14th place. Hopefully the City of Edmonton’s political leadership will avoid the temptation to put that on the sign into town.
Craig Curtis
Politics and Public A f fa i r s
Red Hot MoneySense magazine surprised its readers in Vancouver and Toronto when it put Red Deer in its “10 Best Places to Live” list this year. One person the magazine didn’t surprise was Craig Curtis, Red Deer’s city manager. Back in 2008, he co-authored a study that highlighted the city’s strengths and described several “things we need to do better,” like reducing the city’s child poverty rate. He has since delivered. As city manager, he oversees the city’s 18 departments, 1,200 employees and $700million operating budget. According to MoneySense, the city today has “a low unemployment rate that
leaves Red Deer locals with cash to burn” and is one of the best places in the country to raise children.
Dr. Chris Eagle H e a lt h C a r e
The Fixer Dr. Chris Eagle, the CEO of Alberta Health Services, has his hands full. Not only is he the chief executive of the province’s largest employer (with more than 90,000 workers), but AHS is a lightening rod for criticism. In his first year at the helm, he has dealt with anger about emergency room wait times and surgery waiting lists. The situation is improving – in some cases surgical wait times have gone down by as much as 10 weeks – although Eagle acknowledges AHS still has a long way to go. A major new hospital in Calgary and strict performance goals will no doubt help Eagle and his staff get there.
Bill Eddins A r t s a n d C u lt u r e
The Maestro Bill Eddins, the music director of the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, has made a name for himself in Alberta with his inventive programming and energetic performances. But in May he found himself on an even bigger stage – the biggest in the world when it comes to classical music, in fact. Eddins and the ESO performed at New York’s Carnegie Hall as part of the 2012 Spring for Music
BILL EDDINS
Festival, a festival that’s open to any orchestra in the world brave enough to put its name in front of the selection jury. Eddins earned a spot for the ESO by proposing a concert featuring original music by Robert Rival, John Estacio and Allan Gilliland, the orchestra’s three most recent composers-in-residence. And while there may have been some grumbling from other parts of Canada about the selection of the ESO as one of this year’s performing orchestras, Maclean’s columnist and unofficial classical music critic Paul Wells was having none of it. “I don’t believe three new Canadian compositions have been featured in that hall in the half-century since [the Canadian government bankrolled a concert in the 1950s],”
he wrote. “It’s a program of music proposed by an American conductor and selected by an American jury, in competitive circumstances, strictly on its merit, fair and square.”
Dawn Farrell Utilities and Power G e n e r at i o n
Power Broker Trying to sell people on the merits of coal-fired power is an exercise that would test the resolve of even the most skilled marketer, but new TransAlta CEO Dawn Farrell appears to be up to the task. Farrell took over for outgoing TransAlta CEO Steve Snyder in January of this year, and while the company is pushing ahead with investments in >
Photograph OF BILL EDDINS courtesy of Edmonton Symphony Orchestra 36 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
wind energy (including projects in Quebec and Ontario), the bulk of its capacity continues to come from coal – and will for some time. Farrell, who worked for years at TransAlta and did a four-and-a-half year stint at BC Hydro before coming home to Alberta, recently broke from her predecessor by scuttling a proposed $1.4billion carbon capture and storage plan on the grounds that, despite almost $800 million in government subsidies, it wasn’t economically feasible. Whether that forces the provincial and federal governments to actually put a meaningful price on carbon remains to be seen.
Greg Fenton Environment
Bridge Builder Managing one of Canada’s national parks is no simple task. With new federal budget cuts,
WALK THIS WAY Brewster Travel Canada almost certainly didn’t expect to stir up controversy and international attention when it submitted a proposal to Parks Canada for its Discovery Walk project in Jasper National Park. The walk was to replace a roadside turnout on Highway 93 with a trail and a glass-floored observation deck that would extend 30 metres into the Sunwapta Valley. Environmental critics seized on it and accused the company of wanting to privatize parts of the park. Avaaz, a global civic organization that organizes protests and petitions around issues like climate change, human rights and poverty, tried to rally support against the project, but its factually challenged campaign failed to convince Parks Canada officials, who approved the walk this past February.
it’s more important than ever to attract visitors to the parks, but those same parks still have a mandate to protect native wildlife. Sometimes those goals come into conflict, and in Jasper National Park, it’s superintendent Greg Fenton’s job to balance development and conservation. Fenton entered the spotlight in January 2012 when more than 100,000 people signed a petition demanding he prevent Brewster Travel Canada from building a steel-and-glass walkway
John Gibson Energy
GREG FENTON
over the Sunwapta Valley. Fenton ultimately backed Minister of the Environment Peter Kent in approving the project, with construction to be scheduled around the mountain goat kidding season.
The Joint Chief John Gibson leads a company roughly the size of Nexen or PCL Construction, and if you haven’t heard of it yet, you will. Tervita Corp. formed in March 2012, when the ownership group for 13 private companies – including CCS Corp. and Hazco Environmental –
consolidated its holdings to create Alberta’s largest energy services company. Gibson will lead the new company, which employs 4,200 people and pulls in more than $5 billion in annual revenues, and hopes to turn it into a one-stop shop for energy services that does everything from developing an asset to reclaiming the land after it’s gone. While the company is new, Gibson isn’t exactly new to the role, having served as president of Halliburton’s energy services group. >
He’s just Dave to us. People often say that Dave doesn’t seem like your average banker. And while he’s definitely our leader, we say he doesn’t act like a CEO, either. He’s down to earth. He’s down in the trenches. And he’s down with a good joke or two.
Dave Mowat, CEO
From all of us at ATB, congratulations Dave on being voted one of the Fifty Most Influential People in Alberta.
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Matt Giffen
Banking and Finance
Energetic Banker When Scotia Capital relocated its global energy solutions team from New York to Calgary last year, it sent ripples through the city’s banking community and was hailed by many as a major sign of maturity for the local industry. Leading the way for Scotia Capital is Matt Giffen, a 20-year veteran of the banking industry who was in charge of Scotia Capital’s European and Asian capital market operations in London, Dublin and Singapore before returning to Toronto in 2007. The arrival of Giffen and his team complements the existing Scotia Waterous group, which has had tremendous success financing international oil and gas mergers and acquisitions in recent years.
Donald
Greenfield L aw
Billion-Dollar Dealer If a billion-dollar deal is going down in the oil and gas sector, the energy team from law firm Bennett Jones, co-chaired by Donald Greenfield (along with Patrick Maguire), is probably going to be involved. Last December, Greenfield and his team acted for Plains Midstream Canada in that company’s $1.67-billion purchase
of BP Plc’s natural gas liquids business. Then, in mid-February, they advised Mitsubishi on its $2.9-billion purchase from Encana of a 40 per cent stake in a B.C. shale project. A week later, the team worked with Calgary-based Flint Energy Services when it was bought for $1.5 billion by San Francisco-based construction and engineering firm URS. It all led to Greenfield being named Dealmaker of the Week by The American Lawyer magazine. He was also honoured with Queen’s Council designation at the end of last year.
pulled the plug on its participation. It’s a bold move by Alberta’s chartered accountants, as merger talks continue between other players nationally and between the two other Albertan bodies representing accountants: CMA Alberta and CGA Alberta. But the ICAA membership wasn’t convinced of the benefits and Halford and the ICAA leadership were concerned about the impact on the public.
Gordon Houlden
Education and Academia
Eastern Envoy
Jane Halford Accounting
Lone Wolf In February 2011, Canada’s three professional accountancy bodies (the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants, the Society of Management Accountants of Canada and the Certified General Accountants of Canada) and their provincial chapters began negotiating a merger. The plan was to adopt a superdesignation: the Chartered Professional Accountant. But a year later, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Alberta (ICAA), led by Jane Halford as CEO and executive director,
Alberta’s economic future depends in part on its growing relationship with China, and there are few people that understand that better than Gordon Houlden. He’s the director of the University of Alberta’s China Institute and a former director general at the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, where he worked in a variety of roles, including at the Canadian trade office
GORDON HOULDEN
in Taipei and the Canadian embassy in Beijing. Houlden was re-appointed to his role on May 1, 2012, and will be a key contributor to discussions about how Alberta can best continue to build its relationship with the world’s second-largest economy and the people who live there.
Casey Hudson C u lt u r e a n d E n t e r ta i n m e n t
Mass Effecter Casey Hudson, a programmer for Edmonton-based software developer and Electronic Arts subsidiary
BioWare, became the world’s most famous game programmer (for a few minutes, anyway) this past year when the company released the third instalment in its Mass Effect franchise amid massive controversy. Many of the franchise’s fans were upset by the game’s ending and accused the company of false advertising. Some even threatened to boycott future releases from the company. Hudson, the game’s executive producer, initially defended BioWare’s work, saying the company was happy the ending had made such an impact. But BioWare and Hudson eventually returned to the coding board, promising fans a free expanded ending
Photograph OF CASEY HUDSON courtesy of University of Alberta Alumni Association 40 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
for the game, the first time in gaming history that a major video game producer has significantly changed a game in response to an outcry from fans. The new content is due out this summer, and whether it’s loved or hated, its very existence will have an enormous impact on the gaming industry in Alberta and abroad.
Shiraz Jiwani
Philanthropy and Giving
NAIT’s Best Friend Shiraz Jiwani, president and owner of Sherwood Park’s Aman Construction Group, is helping to build NAIT’s future. Jiwani’s focus on community led the company to contribute heavily to NAIT’s Centre for Applied Technologies, the JR Shaw School of Business and the Hokanson Centre for Culinary Arts. In addition to their support of NAIT, Jiwani and Aman have supported a wide variety of charitable organizations and community events, including the Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital and the World Partnership Walk. In April, to recognize his commitment to both NAIT and the community as a whole, Jiwani was named the 2011 Distinguished Friend of the Institute. Jiwani’s company is also making strides
encouraging green building practices, and is a member of the Canada Green Building Council.
Ryan Johnson High-Tech
Geo-Whiz Lethbridge has designs on developing a high-tech hub and diversifying its local economy. If that happens, it will have had a lot to do with Ryan Johnson. He’s the CEO of Black Bridge Geomatics, a leading supplier of optical satellite imagery in Canada and the next-door neighbour and key investor in tecconnect, a new facility in Lethbridge that will serve as an incubator for companies in the information and communications technology sector. In addition to building a new corporate office and a tier III data centre on the site (and providing its services to tecconnect’s tenants),
Black Bridge will invest $1 million in the facility over five years. If Lethbridge’s fledgling high-tech community flourishes as a result, Johnson will have been the fertilizer that helped it grow.
Vi (Violet) Konkle R e ta i l
Retail Therapist When former Walmart Canada executive Vi Konkle joined The Brick in February of 2010, it was still reeling from the effects of the 2008/09 recession. Now, a little more than two years later and after Konkle was promoted from president of business support to president and CEO in January of 2012, she is in charge of a much healthier company. In December,
going forward, given that the company’s decision to shift its focus away from lower-margin electronics and towards mattresses appears to be paying off in a big way. During the first nine months of 2011, the company’s EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) rose by 19 per cent, even though same-store sales dropped by one per cent.
Bill Lingard
Sid Marty P u blic Policy/Advoca c y
Log Jammer On February 1, 2012, former Parks Canada warden and award-winning author Sid Marty stared down a bulldozer near Pincher Creek in southwestern Alberta. He had been picketing against clear-cut logging on 81 square kilometres of forest near Castle Mountain ski SID MARTY
Energy
Tech Support
As chair of the board at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) since September 2011, Bill Lingard has helped to set the mission for the institute in its pursuit of educational excellence and ensured that it is both financially accountable and responsive to the needs of the communities it serves. With 2,200 faculty and staff and more than 70,000 people enrolled in courses each year, SAIT is a crucial element in the province’s success. Lingard, the CEO of Flint Energy Services since 2005, grew that company to become a major presence in the oil field services sector and oversaw the $1.24-billion RYAN JOHNSON friendly takeover of the company by U.S. enginthe company paid off a eering giant URS Corp. in substantial portion of the May. Flint shareholders $120 million in high-yield got $25 per share – a 68 debentures The Brick had per cent premium on the issued in May of 2009 in stock price – in the deal. order to stay solvent. That Lingard remains the CEO shouldn’t be a problem of URS Flint.
resort because he believed it would destroy grizzly bear habitat. Marty was arrested and given a court order to stay off public lands. He ignored the order, giving speeches on public properties and encouraging people to bombard Premier Alison Redford’s office with more than 100,000 phone calls, letters and emails demanding the logging licence be relocated elsewhere. His arrest made headlines and stirred a debate about land use in special forest manage-ment areas, partly because of Marty’s high profile in southern Alberta – he has twice been finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Awards, most recently in 2008 for The Black Grizzly of Whiskey Creek. Foresters started logging in the region just >
illustration robert carter J u ly 2 0 1 2
ALBERTAVENTURE.COM 41
hours after Marty’s arrest, but motivated protesters have continued to push Alberta Sustainable Resource Development to stop activity scheduled for 2013. In April 2012, the Castle Crown Wilderness Coalition announced it was suing the government, saying that when the Alberta government designated the region a “special place” in 1998, “there was a reasonable expectation given these decisions that the Castle was already protected.” In fact, the area was once part of Waterton Lakes National Park. Marty is committed to ensuring it’s protected again.
Ronald
Mathison R e a l E s tat e
Towering Figure Few people can watch their investments grow like Ronald Mathison. The chairman of Matco Investments and veteran of the oil and gas industry has watched Eighth Avenue Place, a 49-storey tower in Calgary, grow to dominate the skyline in the west half of downtown. Mathison’s company owns a third of the development, which will include a second tower and add two million square feet of office space to the downtown. The towers are designed to look like mountain peaks and have been awarded LEED Platinum pre-certification. They are slated to become Canada’s first
LEED Platinum multitenant highrise office buildings, thanks in large part to Mathison’s vision.
Marlon
McDougall Energy
Smooth Operator It didn’t take Marlon McDougall very long to find a new job after leaving NAL Energy. In fact, McDougall resigned as chief operating officer of NAL in June 2011 and joined Pengrowth Energy as COO a month later. Eight months after that, McDougall’s new company announced it was purchasing his previous one. Pengrowth bought NAL for $1.3 billion in stock in March 2012, giving McDougall operating control of the company where he once worked. The acquisition is directly tied to Pengrowth’s hopes of developing the Lindbergh oil sands project, which contains more than 780 million barrels of bitumen. It’s an ambitious project, and now that McDougall oversees the combined operations of both companies, he is working to bring it to production as Pengrowth’s first oil sands operation.
Drew
McNaughton High-Tech
The Cable Guy As the chief technology officer at Calgary-based Axia NetMedia, Drew McNaughton has been integral to the company’s evolution from a feisty startup to an international
42 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
DREW MCNAUGHTON
player. He oversaw the company’s breakthrough triumph, the Alberta SuperNet, which provides high-speed Internet access to 402 rural communities in Alberta. But his influence is felt even more broadly through his work as president of the Alberta Information Communications Technology Association, a role that he assumed last year. The association is an industry-led, not-forprofit organization that supports companies in the province’s information and communications technology (ICT) sector. The sector includes some 5,200 companies in the province employing more than 55,000 people and generating more than $10.5 billion in annual revenue. With connectivity transforming the way we work, learn and play, the importance of the field, and of a healthy Albertan hand in it, will only grow.
(EIA) and the shutting down of City Centre Airport, as well as playing an important role with Port Alberta in integrating rail, trucking and air transportation in the Capital Region. The changes Milley oversees at all four of the region’s airports, including the construction of a new 50,000-squarefoot cargo facility at EIA, will help Port Alberta achieve its goal of building an integrated transportation hub in the middle of the province.
Dave Mowat
Banking and Finance
Poster Boy Most bankers prefer to stay out of the spotlight, but apparently Dave Mowat isn’t a behind-thescenes kind of guy. The president and CEO of ATB Financial, a Crown corporation owned by the Government of Alberta and the province’s largest home-grown financial institution, has been front and centre since coming back to Alberta in 2007 after a seven-year stint in Vancouver as the
Reg Milley
T r a n s p o r tat i o n a n d Logistics
High Flier Reg Milley’s hands are full. The president and CEO of Edmonton Airports is busy overseeing the $670-million expansion at Edmonton International Airport
DAVE MOWAT
DRAWN TOGETHER The slow-motion game of chicken between the Katz Group and the City of Edmonton picked up a bit of speed this spring with the release of design drawings that fleshed out what the proposed downtown arena might look like. The gorgeous renderings had Edmonton residents like David Staples, the Edmonton Journal ’ s most tireless arena cheerleader, absolutely agog about the transformative potential of the as-yet-imaginary arena: “Many Edmontonians who were lukewarm on the arena are warming up fast. The design is that hot. It’s a winner.” But the remaining $100 million needed to fund the project in its entirety remain unaccounted for, and until they are, the downtown arena remains little more than a dream – or a nightmare, depending on where you stand on the issue.
Land Use Plan and the Lower Athabasca Regional Plan. O’Byrne is a vocal supporter of walkable communities, green initiatives and affordable housing, but it’s his volunteer work that stands out this year. He is on the board of the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce and is chair of Edmonton’s Downtown Vibrancy Task Force, a group trying to develop a vibrant core for a city that desperately needs one. In the latter role, he came out in favour of the downtown arena and entertainment complex proposed by the Katz Group, bringing a credible voice to the debate over a project that, if it proceeds, will transform the downtown for decades to come.
CEO of Vancity. Most recently, he has become the face of his company’s new advertising campaign. Billboards for ATB feature Mowat’s email address, encouraging customers to drop him a line with any questions and receive a response from the CEO.
Kevin Nagel
Education and Academia
Trailblazer The president and CEO of Keyano College is helping bring post-secondary education to Alberta’s
northernmost communities. Kevin Nagel helped cut the ribbon at Keyano College’s new $3.5-million Fort Chipewyan campus in September 2011, kicking off the first academic year at Alberta’s northernmost post-secondary campus. Nagel, who joined Keyano College in April 2011, is also helping it expand its course offerings in northeastern Alberta. Under Nagel’s tenure, Keyano has launched new partnership programs with Finning Canada and partnered with educational boards from Fort McMurray to Fort McKay to help local high school students pursue further education.
Simon O’Byrne Architecture and Engineering
Urbanite Simon O’Byrne has long been one of Edmonton’s most prominent and vocal urban planners. A vice-president at Stantec Consulting and the practice leader for urban planning, he has been the principal planner on many new communities throughout the Capital Region and has been involved with several prominent projects, including the Downtown Arena and Entertainment District plan, the Capital Region
disaster, and it’s in part thanks to her that, a year later, Slave Lake is recovering, and even thriving. Pillay-Kinnee is working with both the Municipal District of Lesser Slave
KARINA PILLAY-KINNEE
Karina PillayKinnee
Politics and Public A f fa i r s
Community Rebuilder Nobody who lives in Slave Lake will ever forget the summer of 2011. In May, a wildfire destroyed more than a third of the town, including hundreds of homes. The fire was one of the most costly disasters in Canadian history, with insurance claims totalling over $700 million. In July, nature struck again, this time with heavy rains that caused significant flooding and displaced families that had already lost homes in the fire. Mayor Karina PillayKinnee guided her community through the J u ly 2 0 1 2
Lake and the Sawridge First Nation to plan for the long-term recovery of the Slave Lake region. She has also been the face of the community for those outside Slave Lake, discussing the challenges the town faces as it rebuilds.
Clif Purvis
Public Policy/Advocacy
Public Defender Who watches the watchers? Clif Purvis does. Purvis is a lawyer and former Crown prosecutor who is the civilian director of the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team, or ASIRT. The organization, created in 2007, is an independent agency that investigates incidents in which the actions of a police officer cause serious injury > ALBERTAVENTURE.COM 43
The people of Slave Lake had a very difficult year in 2011, but it was made a bit brighter by a pair of unexpected visitors. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, William and Kate, made a two-hour stop in the fire-ravaged town as part of their post-wedding tour of Canada. They spent time touring the town and talking to locals, an experience that clearly resonated with the shell-shocked locals who were still trying to get their lives back in order. Mayor Karina Pillay-Kinnee was touched by the support that celebrities like the royal couple and U2 lead singer Bono gave to the community.
Randy
Remington R e a l E s tat e
Urban Redeveloper Who looks at a gravel pit and industrial dump and thinks, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I can turn this into a liveable neighbourhood?â&#x20AC;? Randy Remington does. The chairman of Remington Development Corporation is transforming a Lafarge Canada dump into a southeast
Calgary neighbourhood with more that 1.7 million square feet of commercial office space and 90 acres of park space next to the Bow River. Unlike other new neighbourhoods, Quarry Park isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t on the edge of town and therefore contributing to the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s urban sprawl. Instead, the new neighbourhood will add density within the city and sits on a proposed southeast LRT line.
Andy Ridge
Politics and Public A f fa i r s
The Informer Hydraulic fracturing, commonly known as fracking,
is a controversial method of extracting oil and natural gas from otherwise inaccessible reservoirs. With good information about fracking hard to come by, the public is understandably wary of its potential environmental consequences. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s something Andy Ridge, the water policy director of Alberta Environment and Water, aims to change. Ridge is pushing for increased transparency, like sharing open-source data, in order to start a more honest conversation about the practice and get Albertans on-board. As part of that effort, he has also been participating at energy and environmental conferences, presenting on the governmentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s role
in hydraulic fracturing and water usage by oil sands producers.
Bob Sartor Business
Brewmaster Bob Sartor doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t do downtime, apparently.
Congratulations to Don Greenfield on being named one of Albertaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 50 Most Influential People in 2012 by Alberta Venture Magazine.
Don Greenfield, we tip our hat to you.
Your commitment to our profession and the law makes us proud to call you one of our own. You bring professional excellence, respect, integrity and a gracious spirit to all that you do. Congratulations from all of your friends at Bennett Jones.
Plug into Bennett Jones. CALGARY | TORONTO | EDMONTON | OT TAWA BEIJING | DUBAI | DOHA | ABU DHABI
BennettJones_AB Venture Magazine_Greenfield.indd 1 000AV-BennettJones-1_2H.indd 1
05/06/2012 8:55:05 AM 6/5/12 10:40:49 AM
illustration robert carter
THE ROYAL TREATMENT
or death. ASIRT is one of the first organizations of its kind, and police forces and agencies across the country, along with the Canadian military, have taken an interest in what it does and how it does it.
You would think that after engineering a deal that saw the Forzani Group – the sporting goods retailer of which he was CEO from 2003 to 2011 and where he’d worked for 15 years in total – get scooped up by Canadian Tire in a $771-million deal, Sartor would treat himself to some rest and relaxation. Instead, he’s back at the helm, this time with Big Rock, a company that’s even more iconic in Calgary than the Forzani Group. Founder Ed McNally stepped aside for Sartor and became chairman of the company’s board, and together they’re ready to make Alberta’s favourite beer a national name. “We have capital to invest,” Sartor
told the Calgary Herald. “The question is where and why.” Cheers to that.
Simonetta
Sipione Medicine
Life Saver What do you have to do to get a lab named after you? Well, coming up with a groundbreaking new treatment for Huntington’s disease certainly helps. Simonetta Sipione, an assistant professor of pharmacology at the University of Alberta and researcher at the school’s Simonetta Sipione Laboratory (SipioneLab), was part of the team that discovered a link between cholesterol
and Huntington’s disease while working in Milan. Now at the University of Alberta, Sipione and her new team have discovered what could be a life-altering treatment that restores motor function to those afflicted with the disease and may slow or even stop its progression. The team hopes to begin a clinical trial within the next two years.
Linda Sloan
Politics and Public A f fa i r s
Local Hero The relationships between municipalities and the provincial government can often be difficult, >
with bitter arguments emerging over funding and infrastructure. Linda Sloan is hoping to change that through the Alberta Urban Municipalities Association (AUMA) Local Matters campaign. As AUMA’s president, Sloan has been instrumental in raising the issues faced by urban municipalities responsible for funding infrastructure and essential services while relying on relatively few tax dollars and an outdated system of ad hoc grants from the provincial government. The campaign went public in March 2012, but Sloan’s message was already getting traction by April, when municipal funding became a significant issue in the provincial election.
CEO, Nancy Southern. But there’s no doubt she’s ready for it. The personable, unassuming heir to the throne has run the company’s day-to-day operations since 2003, leading it to its best year ever in 2010 (with a net income of $296 million) and closing a $1.1-billion deal for oil and gas assets in Australia last year. Southern was named Alberta’s Business Person of the Year for 2011 by Alberta Venture, receiving the award with characteristic humility. “I have such an incredible team of people that make Atco work,” she said at the time, “and I really feel that this is their recognition.”
Kevin Swan
Finance and Banking
Angel Investor
Nancy
Southern Business
Straight Shooter With the recent announcement that legendary Albertan businessman and longtime chairman of the board, Ron Southern, will step down from his position at the helm of the Atco Group, even more responsibility will fall to his daughter and the company’s president and
If you’re one of the hundreds of young (or, perhaps, not-so-young) tech entrepreneurs in this province, you probably know who Kevin Swan is. For those who don’t, Swan is a principal with Montrealbased iNovia Capital who specializes in providing venture capital funding for startup enterprises in Alberta’s tech community. It’s an interesting career for someone who once felt he was destined to become a bee farmer like his parents, but after spending a few years in California getting his master’s degree and generally immersing himself in the tech scene down there, he decided he wanted to go in a different direction. Now, he’s making a buzz of a different sort.
recommendations and coming up with sufficient sustainable funding.
Bill Tuer L aw
Integral Partner
Howard Tennant
Education and Academia
The Man in the Middle It’s easy to be critical of the lack of oversight in the oil sands but far more difficult to fix it. That’s the job that has fallen, in part, to Howard Tennant, the former president and vicechancellor of the University of Lethbridge. In 2011, Tennant co-chaired the Alberta Environmental Monitoring Panel, a committee charged with making recommendations to create a world-class environmental monitoring system for the province. The panel suggested a permanent, independent and highly transparent Environmental Monitoring Commission that would integrate environmental monitoring efforts. In March, Tennant was chosen to lead the six-member working group in charge of following up on those
Macleod Dixon and Norton Rose merged in January 2012 with the stated goal of becoming a new Canadian legal powerhouse. Bill Tuer is helping make sure that happens. Tuer had been managing partner with Calgary-based Macleod Dixon for 12 years and is now chief integration partner of the combined 2,900-lawyer firm, called Norton Rose Canada, with 43 offices worldwide. Tuer is no stranger to international law – Macleod Dixon had offices in Caracas, Bogota, Moscow and Kazakhstan. But as a member of the combined firm’s global executive committee, he and his team will be able to extend their reach. “This isn’t our first international rodeo,” he says, “but it is our biggest.”
David Vetters Banking and Finance
Merger Master As the head of oil and gas banking in Canada for Macquarie Tristone, the Australia-based global
investment bank, David Vetters has left his mark on many of Western Canada’s most prominent mergers and acquisitions. This year alone, the managing director of Macquarie’s Calgary office and his team have worked on deals for Connacher Oil and Gas, Corridor Resources, Terra Energy, TimberRock Energy, Suncor Energy and more. Since joining Macquarie in September 2009 as part of Macquarie’s acquisition of Tristone Capital, Vetters has advised on more than $15 billion in merger, acquisition and divestiture deals and more than $8 billion in equity financings. With predictions of ongoing strength in the oil and gas sector, expect to see his fingerprints on even more deals.
Angus Watt
Politics and Public A f fa i r s
His Excellency Angus Watt has a wellknown face (and voice) around Edmonton through his regular appearances talking finances on Global TV and 630 CHED. The managing director of individual investor services at National Bank Financial is equally comfortable discussing the markets, long-term financial >
FOREIGN INVESTMENT Macleod Dixon was the first Canadian law firm, and just the second international law firm in the world, to be accredited in the former U.S.S.R. That was in 1989, just before the fall of communism and the opening of Eastern Europe to Western business. Since then, Macleod Dixon has opened offices in Kazakhstan, Venezuela, Brazil and Colombia. The firm’s merger with Norton Rose, which has offices in places like Morocco, South Africa, Germany and Australia, extends the company’s reach even further. illustration robert carter
46 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
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planning and insurance policies. But he may be even better known for volunteering, whether it’s past work on the Edmonton Police Foundation and TELUS Edmonton Community boards or current involvement with the University of Alberta senate. Most recently, Watt has been instrumental in raising the profile of the Alberta Order of Excellence Awards, the highest honour the province bestows on its citizens. Watt is chair of the council that receives and considers nominations and has helped make the Alberta Order the distinguished honour it is meant to be.
Dan
Wicklum Energy
Defensive Co-ordinator For four years in the 1980s, Dan Wicklum defended the line of scrimmage as a linebacker with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Calgary Stampeders. Now, as the chief executive with Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA), he’s playing both sides of the ball: defending the oil sands from criticism of their environmental record and working to move the organization toward its goals of accelerating the pace of improved environmental performance. COSIA was launched in March 2012 in response to international concern over the environmental effects of oil sands development. Twelve of the biggest
STEVE WILLIAMS
players in the industry came together to say they would share technology and know-how to help each other improve operations. They picked Wicklum to lead the way, bringing together industry, government and academia to improve the performance and perception of Alberta’s energy sector.
Steve
Williams Energy
Biggest Boss Suncor Energy is this country’s largest integrated energy company, and the person in charge of it is bound to wield more than a little influence. So it is with Steve Williams, named in May as the successor to Suncor’s former chief executive, Rick George. Williams has been well groomed for the role, having risen through the company’s ranks over the last decade, most recently
48 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
serving as chief operating officer since 2007. Suncor is flush with cash and has a growing income, giving Williams options on how to grow. He has already laid down some ambitious plans, promising to nearly double Suncor’s production by 2020, a feat which, if accomplished, will cement his influence for the next decade. At the same time, he faces ongoing volatility in crude prices and the challenges of opening new markets at a time when environmental groups vociferously oppose pipelines in all directions.
Michael Wilson Ag r i c u lt u r e
Growth Expert Michael Wilson has a knack for finding deals. In 2012, the president and CEO of Agrium led the company’s $1.15-billion purchase of former rival Viterra’s retail shops in Canada and
Australia. “The transaction is an excellent fit,” he says. It certainly fits with Agrium’s stated goal of being the “leading global agricultural retailer,” with more than $1 billion in EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) from retail sales by 2015. Wilson has demonstrated he’s serious about reaching this goal. In 2011, the company made 17 retail acquisitions, and in 2010, it purchased the Australian Wheat Board’s retail operations for A$1.2 billion. The purchase of Viterra adds 230 retail stores to Agrium’s existing network of 1,250 locations. The only question for Wilson is, “Who’s next?”
floating a $900-million, high-yield bond and drawing down its credit facility. In the process, he restored the faith of investors in the company’s plan – they watched as the share price more than doubled in fewer than three months.
John Wright
Sandra Young, the vicepresident and general manger of Homes by Avi, took over as president of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association (CHBA) in Alberta in September 2011. CHBA represents more than 1,500 business members in the home construction industry, including builders, renovators, trade and supply companies and professional services, with regional associations in Calgary, central Alberta, Edmonton, Grande Prairie, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat. Young’s focus is working with those regional associations and the provincial government to build safe and sustainable communities and homes in Alberta. As president, she meets with stakeholders and government representatives on issues affecting homebuilders and buyers, such as mandatory newhome warrantees, housing affordability, labour market challenges and construction-worker safety. AV
Energy
Rebounder When John Wright took over as the CEO of PetroBakken in May of 2011, he probably imagined that it would mark the beginning of a turnaround for the company he helped found in 2009. Its share price had traded down from the mid20s to the high teens, and Wright admitted at the time that he hadn’t done a good enough job of communicating the company’s story to investors. By October, with those shares trading as low as $6.05, investors would have been justified in questioning whether Wright’s influence really was positive. He answered those questions by embarking on a decisive restructuring of the company’s balance sheet, one that involved selling off some non-core assets,
Sandra Young R e a l E s tat e
Home Maker
business vision meets community leadership
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Congratulations to our City Manager Craig Curtis on being named one of Albertaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 50 Most Inď&#x192;&#x;uential People. Your vision has led Red Deer to become a stronger, more vibrant city.
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T H E N E X T 1 0 A l be r t a ’ s R i s i n g S t a r s
Sikandar Atiq 23 VP Portfolio Development, Next Equities Twitter: @nextequities Most recent university graduates go to companies in search of a job. Sikandar Atiq, on the other hand, goes to them looking to invest. Atiq is the VP of portfolio development for Next Equities, an Edmontonbased private equity firm run by his father, Fred, that’s looking to invest $50 million in small and mid-sized companies. Those are precisely the kinds of businesses that don’t tend to get a lot of love from private equity firms, but Next Equities hopes to build a portfolio of 10 such companies with combined revenues of $100 million by 2015. Atiq, who is also doing his MBA at NYU’s Stern School of Business in his spare time, will play a critical role in making that happen.
Heather Christie-Burns 40 Co-founder and COO of Angle Energy
The energy sector is no longer the testosterone-rich boys’ club it was a few decades ago, but there are still precious few women working in senior management positions. Heather Christie-Burns is an exception to that. The 40-year-old co-founder and COO of Angle Energy has helped create a company that has grown its production to more than 13,000 boepd (barrels of oil equivalent per day) over seven years in business while surviving both the unexpected phase-out of the royalty trust system and the deepest recession the world has seen in more than 70 years. Christie-Burns’s training as an engineer, her background in the industry and her willingness to go out into the field and see how things are really done make her an archetype for what an energy company executive should be like in the 21st century.
Lisa Baroldi
31 Director and Vision Holder of Progress Unlimited Twitter: @lisabaroldi One of the most vexing problems that policy-makers and politicians face is finding a way to help offreserve aboriginals make a home for themselves in our cities. Lisa Baroldi is playing a key role in doing just that in Edmonton, a city with one of the country’s biggest off-reserve aboriginal populations. She wrote the grant that attracted $1.2 million in funding from Alberta Justice for a pioneering three-year project called New In Town Edmonton, and she has been essential in getting the word out about the services it offers. Baroldi used her connections to bring the project to the attention of Edmonton Mayor Stephen Mandel and other local representatives. They liked it – so much, in fact, that it may well end up serving as a model for other communities across the country.
Kara Claypool
39 Senior Vice-President, Jugo Juice
than 70 new stores were opened. She also volunteers as a speaker with a program called Dollars with Sense, which teaches junior high kids how to create a budget and manage their finances.
presentation, it routinely confuses CBC listeners expecting to hear The Vinyl Café or something equally earnest, and has generated more than its share of angry letters to management. Meet Canada’s next version of Bob and Doug Mackenzie – only way, way smarter.
Dominic Mishio 27 Alderman, City of Leduc Twitter: @domishio
Dana DiTomaso 37 Digital Marketing Consultant Twitter: @danaditomaso In a world where being on the web is no longer a choice and where a growing proportion of business is done online, owning an ugly or inefficient website is more than just an esthetic concern. Enter Dana DiTomaso, an Edmonton-based web design and search optimization expert and technology columnist with CBC Edmonton AM, who has spent the last 10 years helping individuals and companies present themselves properly on the web. As the range of ways people can communicate on the Internet has grown so has her portfolio of services, which now includes website audits, pay-per-click management and social media marketing, among other things.
Pat Kelly AND Peter Oldring
On October 15, 2007, Dominic Mishio was elected to represent the City of Leduc as an alderman. He was just 22 years old at the time, making him the youngest representative in Leduc’s history and the youngest serving elected official in the entire province at the time. But Mishio proved to be more than just a novelty act and was re-elected by Leduc residents in 2010. In April of 2011, Mishio challenged incumbent (and perennial backbencher) MLA George Rogers for the PC nomination in the riding of Leduc-Beaumont, and while he didn’t win (Rogers earned 826 votes to Mishio’s 625 votes), it’s safe to assume it won’t be Mishio’s last attempt at a seat in the provincial legislature.
Matthew Orr
Twitter: @karajugo
40 Creators, This is That
When it comes to future CEOs in this province’s retail sector, there might not be a more promising candidate than Kara Claypool. After spending 10 years at Big Rock moving from junior accountant to the senior manager of finance and strategic planning Claypool moved to Jugo Juice in 2006. She’s now the company’s executive vicepresident and has been at the centre of its ongoing expansion and growth. Between 2006 and 2010, overall sales increased by 138 per cent, while more
Satire might be a lost art, but don’t tell that to Pat Kelly and Peter Oldring, the Calgary team behind CBC Radio’s This is That. Their satirical version of a weekly news show (which has featured “stories” on subjects like locals being forced to drive on the wrong side of the road during a visit by the queen and Grade 4 being cancelled in Nova Scotia) has been an instant hit with listeners. In fact, because it’s so pitch perfect in both its tone and
Twitter: @cbcthisisthat
25 Owner and Operator of Canadian Sustainability and Water Solutions Twitter: @calgarysolar Albertans are waking up to the fact that environmentally sustainable products like solar heaters and LED lights aren’t just good for reducing carbon footprints. They’re also great ways to save money, and Vulcan’s Matthew Orr is one of the province’s most visible enviro-preneurs. The 25-year-old is the owner and operator
photograph of Chris turner by Ashley Bristowe 50 ALBERTAVENTURE.COM J u ly 2 0 1 2
of Canadian Sustainability and Water Solutions and was picked recently by the Globe and Mail as one of Calgary’s up-and-coming entrepreneurs. The company offers consumers everything from products like solar heaters and recycling bins to services like solar feasibility studies and water quality evaluations. Orr is not content just to sell sustainable products and services, either – he plans to lobby government to introduce more stringent efficiency measures in building codes for both residential and commercial infrastructure.
Browse and share the 50 Most Influential list online www.albertaventure.com/50Most2012
Shawna Pandya
27 Co-Founder and CMO of CiviGuard and Neurosurgical Resident at the University of Alberta Twitter: @shawnapandya If you fancy yourself something of an overachiever, look away – Shawna Pandya is about to put you to shame. The co-founder of CiviGuard Technologies, a Silicon Valley startup that combines smartphones with disaster response, also happens to be finishing off a medical degree at the University of Alberta. She is a past Rhodes scholarship provincial finalist and a two-time Peter Lougheed scholar, and was named as a finalist for the 2009 AStech Leader of Tomorrow award for leadership and innovation in science, technology and entrepreneurship. In her spare time – she doesn’t sleep, apparently – Pandya is involved with the SHINE clinic, which works with at-risk youth in Edmonton.
Chris Turner
38 Journalist and author of The Leap Twitter: @theturner It’s a sad commentary on the state of literate culture in 2012 that you’ll find more young people who can name their favourite YouTube video than favourite writer. But Calgary writer Chris Turner is trying to change that, one thought-provoking piece at a time. Turner has carved out a niche for himself writing about the intersection of energy, the environment and the economy, and he has received a number of awards for his work in recent years. He even parlayed it into two popular books, 2007’s The Geography of Hope: A Guided Tour of the World We Need and 2011’s The Leap: How to Survive and Thrive in the Sustainable Economy. AV
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