Search for B.C.'s best small town: Northern region, round 1
CBC
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most small towns in B.C. were settled for reasons a lot like Valemount's.
"We were that rail stop … and obviously, forestry was huge here," said Owen Torgensen, mayor of the town of just over 1,000 people, just west of the Alberta border near Jasper.
The first population boom came after a railway station was established in 1914, and the second came as the town became a hub for the forest industry in the Robson Valley.
But the railway has long ceased to be a pillar of Valemount's tourism and economic strategy. Most of the mills shut down over a decade ago. The town is now on the same path as many in B.C. — transitioning from being traditionally resource-based to something more diverse.
"The massive mill closure in 2007 … that's when we knew we couldn't have those pie in the sky dreams anymore," said Torgensen.
"It forced people to reinforce the smaller pieces of that pie, to find those niche markets, so that if we ever did lose a piece, there were other pieces to help with that transition."
Valemount has a few advantages in that journey. The area around town has enough trails for hiking, snowmobiling and ATV fans. It has a full-service health centre with three full-time doctors, an advantage in keeping older residents.
And as long as there are travellers going between B.C. and Alberta and looking to stop somewhere overnight, there will always be new people discovering Valemount.
"It's location, location, location," said Torgenson.
"Folks not from here would say that we might be in the middle of nowhere, but we're in the middle of everywhere."
Valemount is one of 32 communities competing in the northern division in The Search for B.C.'s Best Small Town, and over the next seven weeks a friendly competition will determine (unofficially) which community reigns supreme. For the purposes of this competition, we've defined the "north" as anything beyond north of Williams Lake or Clearwater.
We included every community in the province that was either:
A series of play-in votes were conducted last month to narrow the field down to 128 entries, leaving us with 32 towns that roughly fit into each of the following four areas of the province:
Each day from Tuesday to Friday, there will be a new series of one-on-one votes in a different region. Each week, we'll narrow the field down — from 128 to 64, 64 to 32, and so on, until we have a champion.
Debbie Sinclair may not be ready yet to talk at length about what it will feel like to be able to walk through the front door of her home in Cranberry Portage, Man., but one thing she's sure of: "They're heroes," Sinclair said of the fire crews, volunteers, emergency and Manitoba Hydro workers who for more than a week have been toiling to protect the wildfire-threatened community, which was deemed safe for residents to return to starting at 10 a.m. Sunday.