Open letter to Kelowna Mayor Colin Basran:
It has been my experience that the people on the frontline are often those that have been forgotten when the plaudits are being handed out.
We arrived late afternoon of August 1 in your fine city with no place to stay for the night. This was an impromptu trip, it was the opportunity for the family, residing across the country, to get together for the first time in many years. Knowing that the possibility, being the summer’s long weekend, of obtaining preferred lodging would be based on luck and faith, we approached our usual choice; they immediately referred us to the “Tourist Information” office as our only hope. Thank you.
Locating the office with less than an hour of their posted operating times, we entered a busy service area expecting tired, looking forward to their own long weekend, uninterested employees with the easy rhetoric of: “everything is booked.”
Were we ever surprised. Your wonderful ambassadors at 544 Harvey Ave. provided the expected disclaimers followed with “let’s see what we can do….”
We witnessed two (!) congenial professionals work the phones looking for accommodation or leads for same. It was an amazing display of a team working together in an effort to uphold their city’s reputation as the traveller’s destination.
We had all but resigned ourselves to sleeping on the floor, backseat of the car when one of the ladies hit on a possibility. Knowing that our main area of activity would be in Peachland, would it be OK to be north of the city. Of course.
They were willing to put the effort in to look way outside their jurisdiction, knowing that this may be the only room available for 100 km.
It turned out that The Wheel House bed and breakfast in Lake Country was a home run for us. One of the best B&B’s we have been to anywhere.
The opportunity to unite a family was exceptionally enhanced by the efforts of your city’s front line emissaries. It was a perfect long weekend for us with our only regret being that we did not obtain the names of the staff who helped to make it possible.
Thank you to all.
Dean Wilson and Betty Spencer,
Victoria