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Opinion: Â鶹Éç¹ú²úpost-secondary opportunities key to our future

When we think about what we want for Squamish, generational sustainability should be part of it.
HispanolisticÂ鶹Éç¹ú²úUnivesities
Professor explaining something to a couple of college students in a robotics class using a laptop computer. With more post secondary opportunities, (and affordable housing) Â鶹Éç¹ú²úkids can stay in town and thrive.

If you hadn’t moved away from where you were born after high school graduation, what would you be doing for work today?

It is an interesting question and relates to what we can focus on in Â鶹Éç¹ú²úas hundreds of local youth head out into the world.

Many in town note that their kids have moved away.

Three of my four don’t live here.

I moved away from where I grew up.

I spent my early years in a mill town, much like Â鶹Éç¹ú²úused to be, called .

Both my parents worked in the local .

In my case, my parents moved away for my dad’s position, which became national.

My story is likely not much different than many in town.

If I had stayed in that original mill town, I would have worked there, too and married someone who worked there.

I am proud to have worked at that mill in high school, actually. . That was a lot of money.

Today though, as it weathered the economy’s ups and downs.

Today, that mill employs 590 people, including management. It employed about 2,000 when my parents worked there. Thus, had I stayed, I would likely have been under-employed and under-skilled. My kids would likely have had to leave to make a living.

The same can be said about many former industrial hotbeds around the globe.

So when we think about what we want for Squamish, generational sustainability should be part of it.

We want our kids to be able to stay and be educated.

So we need educational opportunities and housing affordability.

If we don’t have those, we risk a ‘brain-drain’ as younger people — along with their ideas for innovation that will grow our economy — will leave our town for better opportunities.

Post-secondary institutions are one option that can breathe fresh life into a community.

We have to cross our fingers that can expand and thrive, and celebrate that Capilano University is coming back to the oceanfront. That can’t happen soon enough.

We need as many educational and skills training opportunities here in town for our youth as we can get.

As is quoted as saying, in his course   “the best way to encourage economic development is to attract and train smart people and then get out of their way.”

*Please note, this column has been corrected to say Jennifer Thuncher worked at the mill in 1987, not 1986 as first stated. We also added the course where the quote was said by

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