Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nick Geer, Businessman And Former Head Of ICBC, Dies In California Car Crash

The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2018 11:30 AM
    VANCOUVER — Prominent British Columbia business leader Nick Geer has been killed in a car crash in California.
     
    A statement from his family says Geer and his wife Penny were on the way to their home in Loreto Bay, Mexico, when they were involved in a car accident on Jan. 22 near Sacramento.
     
    Geer was 75 years old.
     
    The family statement says his wife was seriously injured.
     
    Geer was the CEO of the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia and is credited with turning a $250 million loss in 2001 into a profit of $389 million by 2004.
     
    A chartered professional accountant, Geer was vice-president and managing director of the Jim Pattison Group of Companies from 1980 to 1999.
     
    Geer was born in London, England, and his family says he "made his way to Vancouver" in 1967.
     
    He served on the boards of the Vancouver Foundation, the Canadian Tax Foundation and Collingwood School, which he and Penny Geer helped found in North Vancouver.
     
    "Starting a new school was true to our father's philosophy," his three children, Samantha Geer, Jill Tiffin and Noel Geer, said in the statement.
     
    He started the Scholarship Foundation for Collingwood to give those who could not afford it a chance at a private education.
     
    "Dad always said the easiest way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time. He approached a problem not as a problem but as an opportunity and giving us the best education was an opportunity he would not miss. In everything he did, he strove to create a legacy through his work, his community and love for his country, family and friends."
     
    In 2003, he was awarded a Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal for his work in the community.
     
    He is survived by his wife of 49 years, his three children and their spouses, and four grandchildren.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada
    FERNIE, B.C. — A member of a team of explorers has reached a record depth in a cave near Fernie, B.C., that is believed to be the deepest in Canada.

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club
    Jodi Moskal, an electrician who also ran for the provincial Progressive Conservatives in a byelection last year, has been researching clubs in Winnipeg that once allowed only men but changed to admit women.

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club

    Ottawa Man Charged With Assault On Plane In Flight: Thunder Bay, Ont., Police

    THUNDER BAY, Ont. — Police say an Ottawa man has been charged after an Air Canada flight was diverted to Thunder Bay, Ont., because of an unruly passenger.

    Ottawa Man Charged With Assault On Plane In Flight: Thunder Bay, Ont., Police

    Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School

    Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School
    TORONTO — Grief counsellors were at a north Toronto school Tuesday to help students and staff cope with the news that a five-year-old girl had died after being pinned between two SUVs.

    Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School

    Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down

    Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down
    A trade association for Canada's beer industry wants the federal government to stop its plan to annually increase a tax on the alcoholic drink.

    Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down

    'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border

    'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border
    WINNIPEG — Kangni Fiowole-Kouevi says he wasn't sure he had made it to Canada when — overcome by bitter cold and barely able to use his hands — he took a risk and dialled 911 on his cellphone.

    'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border