The City of Prince Rupert has six elected Councillors and one elected Mayor. Our current Mayor and Council was elected in October of 2022. They each serve 4 year terms.
Get to know our Mayor and Councillors below:
Mayor Herb Pond
Mayor Herb Pond began his second foray into local government in 2022, after a 14-year sabbatical. He previously served as mayor through the tumultuous years of 2002 to 2008 and was first elected to Prince Rupert City Council in 1996. In the worst economic collapse on record, his team focused on driving down costs and attracting new employment, culminating in the opening of Fairview Container terminal in 2007. Herb credits partnerships as the key to the community’s recovery - partnerships with labour, industry, First Nations, other communities, and senior governments. Inspired by the achievements of ensuing Councils, Herb re-entered political life to “help the community catch up to the successes of industry.”
Herb has actively volunteered since arriving in the community in 1988. He currently chairs four boards involved in seniors’ housing, student bursaries, community wellness and early childhood education. He has also served on provincial and national boards. Herb has broad industry experience in diverse sectors - forestry, transportation, tourism, energy - and has owned several small businesses.
He and his wife Sandy, an administrator with School District 52, raised four children in Prince Rupert and are currently exploring the joys of long-distance grandparenting.
Email: mayor@princerupert.ca
Councillor Barry Cunningham
Councilor Barry Cunningham has lived in Prince Rupert for 37 years, working first as a flooring contractor and now in environmental response for the Canadian Coast Guard.
Barry’s volunteer activities have included the Prince Rupert Labour Council, the Unemployed Action Centre, Executive member of Prince Rupert Minor Hockey, and minor soccer coach.
Barry’s focus on Council is promoting economic development with a focus on equality, fairness, labour issues and environmental commitments from industry.
Barry is considered an avid listener who endeavours to hear all the facts before addressing an issue. He resides in Prince Rupert with his wife, enjoying the company of his 3 children and 5 grandchildren.
Councillor Teri Forster
Councillor Teri Forster is currently in her first term as a City Councillor in Prince Rupert. She works as a nurse in the community, and is currently the elected representative for Nurses in the North West for the BC Nurses Union. She is nearing completion of a Masters through Royal Roads University, and is an alumni of the Governor General of Canada's Leadership program.
Teri is an active volunteer with multiple animal welfare and rescue agencies, as well as a mentor with at risk and marginalized youth. She has helped to organize and plan many social justice, sustainability, and other health related actions and also participates in pride events, Kidney Walks and more.
She is married, uses she/her pronouns, and identifies as a person with a disability, as she has rheumatoid arthritis and at times struggles to walk and perform daily activities unassisted. On Council, she is a member of the City’s Reconciliation Committee, and will work to advocate for social justice and equitable access to services for our beautiful City.
Email: teri.forster@princerupert.ca
Councillor Wade Niesh
Councillor Wade Niesh has lived in Prince Rupert since the age of 1. Currently he is a sole proprietor operating his own building contractor enterprise. He has worked in other sectors in the community including the airport, bus transportation, and retail.
Wade strives to apply his strong work ethic to Council.
He encourages conversation with the community to enable him to make wise, common sense decisions to move the community toward a brighter, open for business, future. By focusing on economic prosperity, he believes the City can build a better community for local citizens and newcomers alike.
Email: wade.niesh@princerupert.ca
Councillor Gurvinder Randhawa
Councillor Gurvinder Randhawa and his family, including his three children, have been living in Prince Rupert for over 25 years. He has a Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Education in India. After arriving in Prince Rupert, Gurvinder also attended Northwest Community College (now Coast Mountain College) for a few years to continue his education.
In India, Gurvinder worked as an auditor with the Accountant General. He is currently self employed as an owner-operator of a driving school as well as a local taxi. He is an active member of the recreation community, and has coached minor soccer for many years. He has served on the Board of Directors for Tourism Prince Rupert and also served as a board member of the Northwest Community College (now Coast Mountain College).
As a Councillor, Gurvinder advocates for training and employment opportunities for residents, so that there is as much local economic benefit as possible from industry. Gurvinder also advocates for policy to attract new economic opportunities and encourage growth in existing businesses. Additionally, he is concerned with the renewal of Prince Rupert’s aging infrastructure.
Councillor Nick Adey
Born in Leicester England, Nick moved to Victoria in 1967, where he attended school and university. He first came to Prince Rupert in 1979 as a summer student, and worked at the old grain elevator on the waterfront. After graduating from UVic with a BA in History, and a teaching certificate, he took his first teaching position as a secondary teacher in Kitkatla in 1983. He transferred to Prince Rupert in 1985, where he taught for 32 years at Port Edward, Westview, PRSS, and CHSS. He was a Vice-Principal at both Westview and PRSS for 4 years before returning to the classroom in 1995. He has been an active staff representative in the PRDTU. He served for 2 years on the Library Board, for 2 years on the Golf Course Executive, and coached community soccer and basketball. He is also a guitarist, and has played in local groups for over 30 years as well as teaching music.
Nick retired from teaching in 2017, and is serving on City Council for the first time. His approach to serving on Council can be encapsulated by the phrase “Listen, Learn, Collaborate, Act”. As a Councillor, he hopes to focus on economic diversification, affordability, environmental sustainability, and quality of life issues. He hopes to build on the successes of the previous Council, while responding effectively to new issues as they arise.
Email: nick.adey@princerupert.ca
Councillor Reid Skelton-Morven
Councillor Reid Skelton-Morven is a born & raised 2nd generation “Rupertite”, with strong Ts’msyen & Nisga’a Roots, with his Ts’msyen Matrilineal roots coming from his late Grandmother, Roberta Ryan, of Metlakatla, British Columbia. And his patrilineal Nisga’a roots coming from his Grandfather, Nelson Morven Sr. of Gitlaxtaamiks, (New Aiyannsh,B.C).
Public Service runs in his blood, especially in Prince Rupert where his grandmother, Eleanor Skelton who after serving in the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, moved to Prince Rupert where she served 3 terms as a School District Trustee. All before retiring in her work across many different community organizations like the Friendship House, and Community Enrichment Society to name a few.
Councillor Skelton-Morven has also had a very diverse career before public office, having served in positions; which have included the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Private Security, Gaming Security, Food & Beverage Management, Bartending, and Close Protection. As well as serving in various capacities as an entrepreneurial business consultant, and business education facilitator for organizations like ThriveNorth, Futurpreneur Canada, Tribal Resources Investment Corporation, and the University of Victoria’s Peter B. Gustavson’s school of Business.
Outside of Council, Reid also owns & operates two of his own business ventures, and leads a non-profit with a social enterprise portfolio. In his spare time, you can find Reid volunteering for various community events, and organizations, as well as volunteering as a youth entrepreneurship mentor for the Martin Family Initiative’s Aboriginal Youth Entrepreneurship Program (AYEP).
In his second term of office, Reid’s focus will be continuing to empower the City & Regional Partners to embracing an enterprising lens of opportunity to expand on the City’s existing portfolio of Major Projects, and Municipal Enterprise Corporations. As well as ensure we meet our vast demand of housing developments so that all people, from all walks of life have a fair opportunity to make a life in the community they choose to call home.
On the economic development front, and in his various capacities, Reid aims to continue to pave a path towards creating a strong regional innovative & entrepreneurial ecosystem in Prince Rupert & North Coast as a whole. So that the dreamers of the day can work to see that their dreams become reality, while also creating immense value & opportunity for those around them.
Reid firmly believes in the potential of embracing entrepreneurship within all levels of government, and creating a strong base of alternative revenue generating tools that both offset the tax burden & costs on residents, but also create great jobs & opportunities, which are the key ingredients for a resilient & diversified local economy.
Council History
Prince Rupert’s City Council has an interesting and complex history since the incorporation of the City in 1910 – including one of the longest serving Mayors in Canada, our first female Mayor in 1943, and a 9 year bankruptcy during the Depression era.