There is still a possibility Big White could change provincial electoral ridings.
Although a preliminary report by the B.C. Electoral Boundaries Commission (BCEBC) released Oct. 3 still has the ski resort in the Boundary-Similkameen riding, chairperson B.C. Supreme Court Justice Nita Iyer said they will revisit the issue.
âWe need to look at that, we will look at that,â she said. âWhether or not we decide to change which riding Big White is in, in terms of our proposal we will give an explanation that addresses that concern. Thatâs our responsibility to go back to people who have taken the time to express their views to us.â
The commission was in Âé¶čAV Oct. 19 to receive public input on its preliminary report regarding proposed changes to electoral ridings in B.C. It has had several public submissions previously, asking that Big White be moved into a Âé¶čAV riding. Caroline Miller with the Âé¶čAV Chamber told the commission the organization would still like to see that change.
âMost of the property owners at Big White, we believe, are residents of the Central Okanagan rather than being residents farther east in the Similkameen,â added Miller. âAdding Big White to the Âé¶čAV ridings would much better align the development to the local economyâŠhaving an MLA closer to the people that he or she represents would be a positive for those living in the Big White area.â
Âé¶čAV councillor-elect Gord Lovegrove spoke to commission members about a proposed, new provincial riding (Âé¶čAV Centre) for the city.
He asked if they would consider pushing the northern section of the boundary from Scenic and Sexsmith roads farther north to align with John Hindle Drive and Glenmore Road.
âIt becomes a physical marker for voters,â said Lovegrove. âUBCO, did you want to include that, then connects to the UBCO downtown campus.â

The BCEBC reviews electoral ridings after every second provincial election and is proposing six new ridings in its report. The change would bring the total number of seats in the legislature to 93. Justice Iyer noted the recommendation is a response to B.C.âs population growing by more than 300,000 people over the past five years.
The commission has until April 3, 2023, to present its final report to the B.C. Legislature, which will then decide whether to accept some or all of the recommendations.
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gary.barnes@kelownacapnews.com
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