Lord God, we thank You that we live in a country and province where we have a government elected by and for the people. We take time today to give You thanks for MLA: Ralph Sultan as a member of our legislative assembly. We are thankful that a man with his background and credentials has decided to bring his expertise into the public sector. May You give him strategies and plans to be able to accomplish all the things that he needs to do to make this province an even better place to live and work. In Jesus name we pray.
Ralph Sultan was elected to the BC Legislature to represent the riding
of West Vancouver-Capilano in 2001, 2005 and 2009. He has served on the
Government Caucus Committee for the Economy and the Legislature's Public
Accounts Committee, and the Caucus Liaison for the Ministry of Finance. Ralph
previously served as the Chair for the Government Caucus Committee for the
Economy and the B.C. Mining Task Force.
Ralph is an economist, educator and businessperson who also maintains registration
as a professional engineer (P.Eng.). Prior to attending university, he worked
as a tree faller, as a lineman on the construction of the Kemano-Kitimat
transmission line, as surveyor's helper on the Lillooet and Bridge River
hydroelectric projects, and was an International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers permit member.
Graduating from UBC in 1956 with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering,
Ralph worked as a technical sales representative for a major international
company before earning MBA, MA, and Ph.D. (Economics) degrees from Harvard
University. He completed those degrees in 1965. He then served as Assistant and
Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard
University, for nine years. He was then employed by The Royal Bank of Canada
for almost ten years as Chief Economist; then Senior Vice President, Marketing
in Montreal, and subsequently Senior Vice President, Global Energy and Minerals
Group in Calgary. He was retained by the J. W. McConnell Foundation, Canada's
largest philanthropic fund, as investment advisor.
In 1974 and 1975 Harvard University Press published his two-volume study
of price fixing in the electrical industry.
Between 1980 and 2000, Ralph held senior officer and director positions
in a variety of financial, mining, forestry and technology sector companies,
and owned and operated his own investment company. In the mining sector, he was
Executive Vice President of Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company, a
subsidiary of Anglo American Corporation, and was Chair of Curragh Resources in
the Yukon, and held other executive positions.
In the 1990's, after returning home to British Columbia , Ralph served
as President of a joint venture with a major American corporation, engaged in
the development of a fibreboard mill in Williams Lake.
Ralph was the Eagle Harbour Yacht Club executive secretary and was an
Augustana Lutheran Church Councilor. He was Chair of the Financial Research
Foundation (1984-1985), Chair, Queen's University Business School Advisory
Committee (1981-84), Economic Council of Canada member (1979-83), and Harvard
Business School fundraiser (1968-1994). Ralph arranged for the endowment of a
UBC professorship in mining engineering (1990) and served on Harvard's Graduate
School Arts & Science Advisory Committee (1993-1996). Ralph has received
academic awards, including graduation from the Harvard Business School with
High Distinction, UBC's Cayley Prize, the Engineering Institute of Canada
Prize, Harvard's designation as Baker Scholar and Ford Foundation designation
as Fellow. Ralph is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers and
Geoscientists of British Columbia.
Born in 1933, Ralph was raised in a family of ten in the Mt. Pleasant
District of East Vancouver. He has lived on Vancouver's North Shore since
returning to B.C. His wife of 43 years, Shirley, a surgical nurse and
rehabilitation clinic entrepreneur, died suddenly in 1999. He has four children
and four grandchildren. He enjoys boating, skiing and gardening.
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