Career
He is a businessman, conservationist and former candidate in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country. A “ski bum turned politician,” Melamed settled in Whistler in 1976. Before and after becoming active in municipal politics, Melamed was part of several sustainability initiatives.
From 1990 to 1996, he was president of the Association of Whistler Area Residents for the Environment (AWARE), where he worked to raise awareness about local wetlands.
In 1996, he was elected to municipal council and gained recognition for scrutinizing large-scale developments and articulating the long-term implications of re-zoning In 1999, Melamed became a founding director of Smart Growth British Columbia, where he worked on solutions for affordable housing, agricultural land preservation, and climate change.
Ken Melamed was first elected to the Whistler council in 1996, serving as a councillor until 2005. He was elected as mayor in 2005 and served in that position until 2011, when he was defeated by Nancy Wilhelm-Morden.
Melamed is best known for his negotiations during the, which the Resort Municipality of Whistler co-hosted with the City of Vancouver.
As a councillor, Melamed voted against an unconditional Olympic bid and was later elected mayor, perhaps because of his lone vote of caution, replacing Hugh O’Reilly who initiated the Olympic bid. The Olympic bid was eventually successful and, as mayor, Melamed represented Whistler in negotiations with other stakeholders, including the Government of Canada, the Province of British Columbia, four host First Nations, the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC), and the International Organizing Committee (International Olympic Committee). Melamed ensured Whistler had the financial tools it needed to host the Games, demanding a greater share of provincial hotel taxes, initiating a long-term financial plan, and ensuring an affordable housing legacy.
Participant of this plan included a new annual income from Resort Municipality Funding ( Remote Method Invocation), which still funds tourism in Whistler, and now 13 other communities in British Columbia. Despite VANOC driving up accommodation costs in Whistler, Melamed encouraged media and sponsors to stay in Whistler Village rather than commuting from Vancouver and pushed VANOC to use a previously promised location to host medal ceremonies.
In addition to making sure the Games were a financial success for Whistler, Melamed put a community plan in place that made 2010 Olympics the most ecologically sustainable Games ever. He was named the Finance Critic for the and is one of several high-profile Green candidates running in British Columbia in 2015, including Claire Martin (North Vancouver), Lynne Quarmby (Burnaby North–Seymour), Jo-Ann Roberts (Victoria), and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May (Saanich–Gulf Islands).
Whistler Mayor 2011
Whistler Mayor 2005
Whistler Mayor 2008.