Good news for the north

Posted on Sep 3, 2013 in Media

PUBLISHED IN THE PG CITIZEN ON SEPTEMBER 3, 2013

With great satisfaction I read the article of Ann English, the CEO of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of B.C. Finally our largest Technology Association is acknowledging that it is time to educate engineers in the North for the North for the benefit of all of B.C. The association of Technologists and Technicians of B.C. (ASTTBC) has supported the education of technologists in the North already earlier.

Yes, it is good news to have two Master of Engineering programs established in Prince George and so, will attract graduated engineers to our city. The Wood Innovation and Design Centre will house these programs and be an extension of UNBC. To feed the new programs and to satisfy the tremendous demand for technologists and engineers, the respective undergraduate programs have to be implemented locally. At the same time a technology program at the colleges should be reinstated.Roblox HackBigo Live Beans HackYUGIOH DUEL LINKS HACKPokemon Duel HackRoblox HackPixel Gun 3d HackGrowtopia HackClash Royale Hackmy cafe recipes stories hackMobile Legends HackMobile Strike Hack

There is tremendous interest in technology of students in our schools, and we have to provide the education that is in such a high demand. The gap between demand and supply is growing daily, while at the same time economic opportunities cannot be harvested due to the steadily increasing skills gap. I know, all of this is not new, but worthwhile to be pointed out over and over again.

The Northern Technology & Engineering Society of B.C. (NTES) – with now close to 250 members – has concluded a special educational and awareness program consisting of school visits in north central B.C. to educate teachers and more importantly students about the job opportunities in our northern economy, focusing on technology. A consultant had been hired and with the assistance of local engineers and technologists the school visits took place over a period of several months. One can consider this feeding the pump, because we all are expecting that the required educational programs will be implemented in the near future.

We seriously have to concentrate on diversification and innovation of our industry, although one can argue that the Prince George economy is fairly diversified. This, however, is certainly not the case in other and smaller communities of B.C. We have to be able to add more value to our resources and soften the economic up and down cycles.

Albert Koehler

President, Northern Technology & Engineering Society of B.C.

Undergraduate programs are next step: engineers

Posted on Jul 29, 2013 in Media

PUBLISHED IN PG CITIZEN ON JULY 29, 2013Watch Full Movie Online Streaming Online and Download

BY FRANK PEEBLES  |  CITIZEN STAFF

maxresdefaultUNBC still has more engineering work to do.

Those in the engineering field were not talking about new structures, they were referring to education programs that still should be added.

When university, government and private sector officials met at UNBC on Friday to announce two new wood-focused masters programs at the school, the name spoken most often as an advocate for the engineering expansion was Albert Koehler. An engineer and industrial product inventor himself, he has been lobbying for years, according to Prince George MLA Shirley Bond, the minister responsible for jobs and skills training.

“It’s the first time in Canada that a degree has this specialty,” said Bond. “It is essential, as we continue to use our revitalized wood sector, that we look at innovation and think differently about wood’s uses. I’m thankful I can look Albert in the eye, now, after seven or eight years [of his lobbying] and say yes, engineering is now underway at UNBC.”

Koehler said he “was not unsatisfied” but considered the two masters programs “an important step forward with a long ways to go, still,” for engineering at UNBC.

“It definitely brings the diversity and innovation agenda forward,” he said. “It adds imagination to our 2×4 and 4×8 and plywood thinking. But we need full civil and mechanical engineering programs at UNBC. The Canfors of the world are looking for those people and having trouble.”

Canfor’s engineering manager Olaf Starck agreed.

“The bottom line is, you can’t develop your resources without engineering,” Starck said. “We used to be able to call up Allnorth or one of the other regional companies, but there is so much demand on those companies that we have to go farther and farther away to find the expertise and then you run into people who don’t understand your region, the details of your local situation, or aren’t as responsive because their head office is far away.”

He agreed that undergraduate programs were the next step UNBC needed to really create a northern engineering culture and “underpin this important masters stream” announced Friday.

Shiloh Carlson also makes a case for a full engineering program at UNBC. Although her parents wanted her to attend UNBC and chose a different profession; she insisted on leaving Prince George because her mind was set on engineeringn. She was trained elsewhere and chose to return to her Prince George hometown, where she is now a geotechnical engineer with McElhanney see this here.

“I’m one of those who would have loved a local program. I didn’t want to leave but I had no choice,” she said. “I’m excited to see the wood innovation masters degrees, it’s a great step forward for UNBC, but I would hope to see an undergraduate program soon, as well.”

What’s missing, she said, is the commitment of the provincial government to invest in such programs in the north. She urged officials with the Ministry of Advanced Education to consider the alternative costs of having to import engineering expertise instead of honing area residents, and the cost of industrial slowdowns because the engineering talent wasn’t there when companies and levels of government needed them most.

Councillor recommends tax link

Posted on Jun 25, 2013 in Media
June 24, 2013Charelle EVELYN
Citizen staff
cevelyn@pgcitizen.ca

2013-06-25_17-06-38

Even though budget deliberations have wrapped up for the year, tax increases will be back in front of council next month.

Coun. Albert Koehler has submitted a notice of motion recommending that when administration prepares the 2014 draft budget, they do so with the caveat that the general levy increase not exceed the level of inflation. The proposal will be discussed at an upcoming council meeting.

The consumer price index (CPI) is a measure of rising costs of goods that consumers and taxpayers understand, said Koehler.

“It would be nice if we could manage to hold the taxes on this [CPI] because we owe it to our taxpayers,” said Koehler. “The taxes are given to us in trust so that we manage them properly.”

Some Canadian communities measure their spending against a municipal price index, which takes into consideration expenses such as labour, asphalt and waste management that aren’t weighted in the average homeowner’s basket.

The city doesn’t have an MPI and a proposal from Maple Ridge to the Union of B.C. Municipalities to have the development of a provincial one incorporated into the work of the municipal auditor general last year wasn’t endorsed.

During February’s budget deliberations, Koehler attempted to bring forward a similar request to hold the general levy increase to two per cent instead of the approved 3.5 per cent, but was told it was too late in the process.

The increase to the city’s 2013 operating budget was only 0.65 per cent, but that was supplemented by a 1.85 per cent increase to the road rehabilitation levy and a one per cent increase to fund a new general infrastructure pot.

Discussions on the budget for the 2014 fiscal year will begin Nov. 27. Currently the CPI for 2013 is 1.5 per cent.

However Koehler said the CPI limit wouldn’t be set in stone. “In case there’s an emergency… that’s a different story. Then we have to sit down again and see how we manage,” he said.

Koehler said he believes the city owes it to the taxpayers to provide a level playing field and have all costs rise at the same rate.

“And we at city hall just have to be smart and work around it, be fiscally prudent,” he said. “That’s what I campaigned for one and half years ago and, by and large, so did other councillors, from what I remember. There were always those words going around: fiscal prudence and fiscal responsibility. And I would like to come up with that.”

 

Councillor wants more tech training

Posted on Jun 24, 2013 in Media
Here is a glimpse of an article that was recently in the Citizen regarding my attempts to get everything on the provincial level.
June 24, 2013
Charelle EVELYN
Citizen staff
cevelyn@pgcitizen.ca

Albert KoehlerCoun. Albert Koehler is hoping that when city representatives head down to the Union of B.C. Municipalities conference in September, they’ll be going to support one of his ideas.

During tonight’s meeting, city council will vote on a recommendation from the intergovernmental resolutions committee to advance a request supporting new technology and engineering programs in post-secondary schools.

The proposed resolution, which would be debated at the UBCM annual meeting in Vancouver, would see the organization lobby the provincial government to “develop a strategy for technical and engineering education, allowing for a seamless transfer from colleges to universities” as well as provide funding to establish programs.

To read the full article, click here.

Innovation and Engineering in the North

Posted on Jan 22, 2013 in Videos

As many of you may (or may not) know, I am the president of NTES (Northern Technologist and Engineering Society) in the North. We meet monthly to see how we can help to push forward the need for Engineering in Post Secondary Education. Specifically we are looking to build a school of Engineering right at UNBC.

Our belief is that those that are schooled in the North will end up staying in the north to live and work.

Often at different talks that I present I am asked, “Why Engineering? What does it have to do with Innovation?”

Watch this video where I say a quick sound bite of how they are connected:

From Years Past – Tribotec Service Award

Posted on Jan 22, 2013 in Videos

This video goes back even further from our days in Vancouver and my company Tribotec. It has been fun going through all the old footage.

APEGBC Community Service Award

Posted on Jan 22, 2013 in Videos

I have been going through all my old files and I found this video. It is from a few years back but I thought I’d share it here.

Festival of Trees – It is that time of year again!

Posted on Nov 22, 2012 in Local Events

It’s hard to believe it is already that time of year again. We are getting ready to go to the Spirit of the North Gala Auction and the Prince George Festival of Trees.

As we all know there are many organizations to support in our city. But I believe that Spirit of the North Healthcare Foundation is a worthy cause for everyone living in the city. (more…)

How to make Northern BC more resilient, diversified and sustainable

Posted on Feb 29, 2012 in Local Events, Technology

As the keynote speaker for the UNBC Graduate Student Conference, I am looking forward to sharing how we can make the economy in Northern BC more resilient, more diversified, as well as more sustainable with well paying employment opportunities.

You’re invited to join me for the conference on March 1 as the topic I am going to be speaking about affects everyone – not just engineers and people interested in the sciences.

Although I am not an economist, I know that economies are more stable (more…)

Taste of India – Multiculturalism in Prince George

Posted on Feb 16, 2012 in Local Events
Yellow Head Rotary Taste of India Prince GeorgeAs the president of the Yellowhead Rotary, I am honored and proud of our group for organizing the 3rd annual Taste of India Event this weekend. Last year we raised $50,000 for the Kordyban Cancer Lodge and assisting with financing sanitary facilities at a school in Amreli, India.
The Kordyban Cancer Lodge, with the help of the Rotary donations (and many other corporate sponsors), will be running solely on donations. This is a vital facility in Prince George for the families of patients going through cancer treatment in our city.
(more…)
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