Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Working safely around mobile equipment

By Marnie Douglas
WorkSafeBC
March 16, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Mobile equipment is essential to day-to-day operations, but it also presents a serious hazard. Large trucks, forklifts, loaders, and delivery vehicles often operate in close proximity to pedestrians, while busy yards can have limited sightlines and multiple contractors on site. Safe passage is possible, however, with proper controls. Through engineering controls, dedicated safety committees, and collaboration with WorkSafeBC officers, two major B.C. forest-products employers are building safer pathways for workers, contractors, and visitors. At West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd., the employer’s safety approach shows up across its operations — including Cariboo Pulp, Williams Lake Plywood, and WestPine MDF — while Millar Western Forest Products Ltd. focuses its safety leadership at Quesnel River Pulp. These operations use a mobile equipment pedestrian interface (MEPI) system — a safety approach that layers a variety of control measures to prevent injury from struck-by incidents. [This article first appeared in the spring issue of WorkSafe Magazine, shared here with their permission. Subscribe for free here.]

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First Aid Requirements: What You Need to Know for Compliance

By Michele Fry, Director, Communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 28, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Employers are responsible for first aid in the workplace to ensure injured workers receive prompt and appropriate treatment and, if needed, are transported to medical aid without delay. They are also responsible for ensuring their workplace has the required first aid equipment, facilities, means of transportation and attendants in place to treat injured workers. In November 2024, WorkSafeBC introduced updated first aid requirements to help protect workers and improve response when injuries happen. These regulations ensure the right level of care is available when it’s needed most, especially in high‑risk and remote environments. The updated regulations address worksite accessibility, first aid kits and attendants, drills and hazard ratings. Some forestry companies are still working through what these changes mean and what they need to do. Here’s what you need to know about the requirements and how to stay compliant. …The BC Forest Safety Council has developed resources and tools to help guide you through the process and make sure nothing is missed. You can also Visit WorkSafeBC’s website for full regulatory requirements.

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Safety Alerts – Sharing Information Helps Improve Safety for Everyone

By Michel Fry, Director, Communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 28, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Incidents can happen in the forest industry, often without warning. When these events are shared, they become valuable lessons that help others recognize similar hazards, strengthen prevention efforts and reduce the chance of repeat occurrences. BC Forest Safety Council’s (BCFSC) alerts provide practical insights to support workers, supervisors and safety committees in having meaningful safety conversations. These resources are ideal for tailgate meetings, crew talks, and Joint Occupational Health and Safety Committee meetings. Alerts help keep workers informed about emerging issues, common risks and opportunities for safer work practices. …BCFSC has a library with hundreds of alerts that we have compiled over the years. Search our database using the filtering tools and find information to share with others. You can also subscribe to have safety alerts sent to you via email.

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Finding strength in inspiring others

By Susan Kerschbaumer
WorkSafeBC
May 27, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Nearly 28 years after Darcy Kulai was injured at work, the memory and the grief remain strikingly real, affecting him both physically and mentally. Now, he wants to inspire other young workers to stay safe on the job. In 1997, Kulai was 20 years old and working at a sawmill. He had just completed his second year at the University of Victoria. He planned to work through the summer, then transfer to Camosun College, where he was looking forward to an exciting year playing basketball on the college team. Unfortunately, that’s not how the next year played out. On an evening shift, Kulai was stationed at the “stick belt,” a conveyor located in an out-of-the- way area of the mill. …When some sticks became caught in the conveyor belt’s chain, Kulai reached in to dislodge them. …When it comes to a healthier future, Kulai sees hope. His son is now 20 — the same age Kulai was when he was injured at work. “If my son got hurt, I’d be shattered,” he says. “Being a father has made me want to do more for young people — to see if there’s a way to inspire.”

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Preventing Tick Bites and Disease

By Gerard Messier, Manager, Program Development
BC Forest Safety Council
May 27, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

As BC forestry workers head into the field this season, hazards like tick exposure and wildlife encounters should be top of mind. In April, BCFSC released a safety alert on ticks, which are becoming more common in many parts of British Columbia. Ticks can pose serious health risks, including the transmission of Lyme disease and other infections. Working in dense vegetation, tall grass and wooded areas increases the chances of contact, making it essential for workers to take simple precautions and know what to look for. We are sharing this safety alert in this issue of the Forest Safety News to provide practical information to help you recognize risks, protect yourself on the job and respond quickly if you do get bitten. If you’d like to download a copy to share with your crew, click below. You can also subscribe to BCFSC’s monthly safety alert by clicking here.

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Worker Assessments – An Important Part of a Successful and Safe Business

By Michele Fry, Director, Communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 27, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Completing worker assessments is an important part of maintaining a safe and successful operation. Typically, a supervisor is responsible for this process within a company or operation. BCFSC’s one-on-one assessments are a valuable tool to ensure there are no gaps in the knowledge, skills and attributes each worker needs to do their job safely and productively. These assessments are intended for both new workers and experienced workers. Young workers can benefit from the guidance and experience they gain through interaction with their supervisor. Experienced workers can benefit by demonstrating their skills and knowledge against an industry-developed standard.

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Conducting Employer-Led Investigations in Forestry

By Alexandra Skinner
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
May 26, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

How employers can respond promptly, uncover causes, and prevent future incidents. Forestry work is inherently risky, from felling trees on steep slopes to operating heavy machinery in remote locations. Even with the best safety practices in place, serious incidents can still occur. When they do, employers are required to investigate promptly and thoroughly. An effective employer incident investigation isn’t just paperwork. It’s a structured approach to uncovering what went wrong, protecting workers, and preventing similar incidents in the future. WorkSafeBC lays out a clear framework that forestry operations can follow, from the first hours after an incident to the final corrective actions. The first step is knowing when an employer-led investigation is required. Serious injuries, fatalities, or incidents that could have caused major harm must be investigated immediately. Even minor injuries or near misses are important: understanding how a near miss happened can prevent a serious incident down the line.

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Wildlife Awareness on the Road and in the Bush

By Michele Fry, Director, Communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 26, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

As summer forestry work ramps up across British Columbia, workers face a range of hazards both on the road and in the field. Two risks this time of year are wildlife encounters at worksites and wildlife collisions while driving. So, whether you’re heading out to the worksite or working in remote areas, being prepared can help prevent serious incidents. Stay Alert Behind the Wheel: Wildlife collisions remain a significant risk for drivers in BC, with thousands of animal-related crashes reported every year. These incidents can lead to serious injuries, fatalities and costly damage to vehicles. …Working in Bear Country: Bears are coming out of hibernation in the spring and becoming more active across many parts of the province. Forestry workers often operate in high‑risk areas, making it important to understand how to avoid and respond to bear encounters. The best approach is prevention. Most bears will avoid people if they are aware of your presence.

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Supporting Safe, Confident Leaders: BC Forest Safety Council’s Forest Supervisor Training

By Michele Fry, Director, Communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 26, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Effective supervision is one of the strongest predictors of a safe and productive forestry operation. Supervisors set the tone for safety culture, guide risk management, support worker development and ensure the work is done correctly. To help build these essential skills, the BC Forest Safety Council (BCFSC) offers several courses, both in-person and online, that are intended for new and experienced forest supervisors. These courses provide practical, industry‑specific knowledge to help supervisors meet their responsibilities, strengthen communication and make informed decisions in varied work environments. …BCFSC’s classroom and field‑based supervisor courses are instructor‑led, hands‑on courses designed to build leadership capacity through real world forestry examples. …BCFSC’s online supervisor training options are ideal for workers who are unable to attend in person, need flexible self-paced learning or want a refresher after previous training.

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Business & Politics

US plans tariffs on USMCA countries, has issues with Canada

By ‌David Shepardson and David ​Lawder
Reuters in Newsmax
May 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Trump administration intends to maintain tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said as the US launches negotiations to revamp the North American free trade pact. The US has “significant” trade issues with Canada. …”The US is going to have tariffs,” Greer said. “I mean, even with somebody like Mexico, or other countries that are in our own hemisphere, ⁠we’re going to have tariffs as long as we have a giant trade deficit.” His comments that the 6-year-old US-Mexico-Canada ​Agreement will not continue as a tariff-free trade pact echo comments he made privately last month to industry executives in ⁠Mexico — that auto and steel tariffs will remain in place under the revamped USMCA. …Greer said the Trump administration’s issues with Canada go well beyond trade “irritants” and it was difficult to see how the two can work out their differences.

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Canada’s push to diversify trade away from U.S. seeing mixed results: report

By Catherine Morrison
Canadian Press
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA – A small group of cities across the country drove Canada’s progress on diversifying trade in 2025, while others fell behind, says a new report from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. The report says Calgary, Ottawa-Gatineau, Toronto, Saskatoon and Kelowna, B.C., are the cities that made the strongest gains in export diversification beyond the U.S. market last year. Of the cities surveyed, Calgary and Ottawa-Gatineau posted the largest increases in exports to non-U.S. markets between 2024 and 2025 — 64.67 per cent and 64.04 per cent, respectively. … The chamber’s new report says recent Statistics Canada data on business responses to U.S. tariffs suggests many Canadian firms are “adapting cautiously” rather than fundamentally repositioning their operations. The report says that while exports to non-U.S. markets rose sharply between 2024 and 2025, much of that growth came from existing exporters expanding their reach rather than new firms entering global markets. 

 

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U.S. floats tariff breaks for Canada, Mexico if they co-ordinate on external levies

By Mark Rendell
The Globe and Mail
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The United States’ top trade official says he’s pushing for changes to continental trade rules to prioritize U.S. content in manufacturing supply chains, but sees a path to preferential tariff rates in North America if Canada and Mexico co-operate with external tariffs on other countries. At the same time, Jamieson Greer warned that negotiations with Canada around the future of the country’s auto sector could be difficult, while discussions about trade in commodities should prove easier. …Canada has not yet started formal talks with the U.S. and won’t be at the negotiating table this week in Mexico City. The three governments have to decide on July 1 whether to extend the agreement for 16 years or move to a period of annual reviews for 10 years. …Ottawa has signalled an openness to this type of “Fortress North America” approach. But Prime Minister Mark Carney wants to see the U.S. lower its sectoral tariffs on automobiles, steel, aluminum, copper and wood products in return for moves toward deeper integration in key sectors. [A Globe and Mail subscription is required for full access to this story]

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Sale imminent in case of Fort St. John Canfor sawmill

By Ed Hitchins
Energetic City
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — The sale of a former sawmill owned by industry giant Canfor in Fort St. John could be happening very soon. According to a news tip received by Energeticcity.ca, a purchase by a salvage company based in the province’s interior was “99 per cent complete” with the new ownership possessing the property and hourly employees would have their last shift on Friday, May 29th, at midnight. The sawmill at 9312 259 Road was announced as closing in 2024, following a “systematic, orderly wind-down process” affecting 220 jobs. However, when approached by Energeticcity.ca, media relations representative of Canfor, Mina Laudan, said that no sale has been finalized as of yet.

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Canadian Pacific Kansas City receives 72-hour strike notice from International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers

By Canadian Pacific Kansas City
PR Newswire
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

CALGARY, AB – Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) said today that it has received a 72-hour strike notice from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Canadian Signals and Communications System Council No. 11, which represents approximately 300 Signals & Communications employees across Canada.  Should a work stoppage occur, the company has prepared contingency plans that will allow CPKC to continue to serve our customers and the Canadian economy. Safe and efficient railway operations will continue.  The IBEW has said it intends to strike at 08:00 MDT Sunday, May 31. We remain committed to bargaining in good faith with IBEW in order to reach a negotiated outcome that is in the best interests of our employees and their families, our customers, and the company. Negotiations will continue into the weekend.

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Kerry Rouck appointed to Forest Practices Board

By Tanner Senko, Communications Manager
BC Forest Practices Board
May 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Kerry Rouck

VICTORIA – Kerry Rouck has been appointed to the Forest Practices Board for a three-year term. Rouck, based in West Kelowna, is a registered professional forester with a master of science in forestry from the University of British Columbia. He has nearly 30 years of experience in private-sector forestry, including working with Indigenous communities and a range of tenure holders. Rouck brings extensive operational forestry experience to the board, including first-hand knowledge of forest practices, tenure management and the challenges facing the forest sector. As a woodlot owner and manager, he has practical experience applying forest practices on the ground. Rouck is also active in supporting forestry education and community involvement. He works with the Charles Bloom Secondary School forestry program and woodlot, and has served as a councillor and chair of the board of examiners with Forest Professionals British Columbia.

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Insolvent B.C. forestry company penalized $429K, banned from hiring migrant workers

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
May 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A B.C. forestry company embroiled in insolvency proceedings has been handed a $429,000 penalty and two-year ban from hiring migrant workers after it was found to have violated several federal regulations. The sanctions to San Industries (part of the San Group) came after federal inspectors found it had breached five sections of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, rules designed to protect temporary foreign workers. According to a May 15 decision, inspectors found pay or working conditions did not match what San Industries had advertised. The employer was also found not to be engaged in the business the workers were hired for and could not show that the job it had sought to fill matched its Labour Market Impact Assessment application. And in another violation, San Industries was found to have broken federal or provincial laws for hiring and recruiting employees. …At $429,000, the penalty is the province’s second-largest on record.

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Ontario Investing $14 Million to Strengthen Forest Sector Competitiveness

By Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
May 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

SAULT STE. MARIE — The Ontario government is investing more than $14 million to build a modern, digital system to inventory the province’s forest resources, giving industry access to better information to invest, grow and create jobs. …this investment will modernize the Forest Resources Inventory (FRI) Information Management System, the essential database of Ontario’s managed forests, by replacing outdated systems with cutting-edge technology to make critical forest data more accurate, accessible and easier to use. …Through a strategic partnership with Microsoft, powered by Databricks technology, the province is developing customized digital tools to modernize how Ontario collects, stores and shares forest inventory information, strengthening the sector’s long-term competitiveness and resilience in the global economy. This work is a key commitment in the Roadmap to Protecting Ontario’s Forest Sector, Ontario’s 10-year plan to defend forestry workers and businesses, adapt to global market pressures and grow long-term demand for Ontario wood products.

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Finance & Economics

Construction costs pile onto housing crunch as copper, lumber spike

The Real Deal – Real Estate News
May 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Rising mortgage rates aren’t the only thing freezing the housing market. Builders are contending with a fresh wave of sticker shock on the job site, as soaring prices for copper, lumber, diesel and aluminum drive up the cost of putting homes in the ground. A mix of geopolitical turmoil, tariffs and supply-chain disruptions is rippling through construction materials markets at a moment when affordability is already stretched thin, the Wall Street Journal reported. The result is higher costs for developers, more uncertainty for homebuilders and even fewer paths to affordable homeownership. Copper has become one of the industry’s biggest headaches. …Lumber prices are climbing again, too. Canadian sawmill closures and tariffs tied to the long-running U.S.-Canada softwood dispute have tightened supply heading into peak building season. …The broader concern for developers is that construction inflation could become self-reinforcing. Higher material costs feed broader inflation fears, which in turn keep borrowing costs elevated. 

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Construction costs pile onto housing crunch as copper, lumber spike

The Real Deal – Real Estate News
May 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Rising mortgage rates aren’t the only thing freezing the housing market. Builders are contending with a fresh wave of sticker shock on the job site, as soaring prices for copper, lumber, diesel and aluminum drive up the cost of putting homes in the ground. A mix of geopolitical turmoil, tariffs and supply-chain disruptions is rippling through construction materials markets at a moment when affordability is already stretched thin, the Wall Street Journal reported. The result is higher costs for developers, more uncertainty for homebuilders and even fewer paths to affordable homeownership. Copper has become one of the industry’s biggest headaches. …Lumber prices are climbing again, too. Canadian sawmill closures and tariffs tied to the long-running U.S.-Canada softwood dispute have tightened supply heading into peak building season. …The broader concern for developers is that construction inflation could become self-reinforcing. Higher material costs feed broader inflation fears, which in turn keep borrowing costs elevated. 

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B.C. economy sends mixed signals as housing weakens while manufacturing rises

By Brian Yu, chief economist, Central 1
Business in Vancouver
May 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

B.C.’s housing market remained tepid into April as sales pointing to another disappointing spring market. Seasonally adjusted home sales decreased by 1.1 per cent in April to 5,227 units after a 0.5 per cent drop in March. This was also the lowest monthly figure since November 2023. …Weak housing market conditions are likely to progress in the near term given the shaky geopolitical climate, sluggish economic growth and weak labour market conditions. …On the manufacturing front, sales in B.C. rose marginally in March. …Wood product manufacturing also declined for the third consecutive month, falling 2.4 per cent to $728 million. This represents the lowest level since May 2020, when sales were $623 million. Year to date, durable goods sales are up 2.6 per cent.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada Wood Japan Secures Recognition of New Hem-fir(N) Design Values

By Canada Wood Group
LinkedIn
May 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Canada Wood Japan has helped secure an important market-access outcome for Canadian Hem-Fir (N) dimension lumber in Japan. In collaboration with the National Lumber Grades Authority and the Canadian Lumber Standards Accreditation Board, Canada Wood Japan worked with Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism to obtain recognition of the revised standard design values for Hem-Fir (N) dimension lumber graded under NLGA standards. For builders, designers and structural engineers in Japan, design values are essential. They provide the basis for structural calculations and help determine where and how lumber can be used in code-compliant buildings. When grading rules or design values are revised in Canada, those changes must also be properly understood and accepted by Japanese regulatory authorities to ensure continued market access. …Canada Wood Japan demonstrated that the revised Hem-Fir (N) design values would continue to meet Japan’s structural safety requirements and would not compromise the performance of conventional wooden buildings. 

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How engineered timber could reshape mid-rise housing

By Rebecca Keillor
Vancouver Sun
May 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ricardo Brites

Ricardo Brites has spent much of his career helping move engineered timber buildings from ambitious design experiments into practical housing solutions. Originally from Portugal, Brites completed his PhD in timber engineering before working in the United Kingdom during Europe’s rapid expansion of mass timber construction. At the time, Europe was already delivering large-scale timber buildings while North America was still cautiously testing the concept. …Today, as director of engineering and VDC at Mercer Mass Timber, Brites works across Canada and the United States on projects ranging from libraries and universities to large-scale residential and commercial developments. …Today, as director of engineering and VDC at Mercer Mass Timber, Brites works across Canada and the United States on projects ranging from libraries and universities to large-scale residential and commercial developments. …Canada, particularly British Columbia, has become one of North America’s most active mass timber markets.

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Forestry

Ottawa launches national aerial firefighting fleet for 2026 wildfire season

By Craig Lord
The Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA – The federal government has set up Canada’s first-ever reserve of firefighting aircraft to help provinces and territories respond to the 2026 wildfire season. The Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, or CIFFC, has leased 10 aircraft and two unspecified support assets for 150 days starting this month, thanks to a $317-million spending allocation in the federal budget. The government said that the Pan-Canadian Aerial Asset Program will boost national firefighting surge capacity by increasing provincial and territorial access to aircraft during periods of intense wildfire activity. Provincial and territorial wildfire agencies will be able to request the use of four air tankers, one spotter plane and five heavy lift helicopters to fight wildfires. The fleet will be sourced from British Columbia-based firms Conair Group, Coldstream Helicopters and VIH Helicopters. …This is the first time a national fleet of aircraft will be available to respond where needed.

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Experts urge B.C. to halt logging in Tsitika Watershed, north of Sayward

By Robin Grant
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Experts are calling on the B.C. government to halt logging in a Tsitika watershed cutblock on northern Vancouver Island that has been designated for old-growth deferral. But the some First Nations whose territory it falls in say they have their own approach to managing the area sustainably. Pacific Wild, an environmental organization, says B.C. Timber Sales (BCTS) is selling off rare and ecologically significant forests for minimal economic return. In letters sent to BCTS and other government decision-makers in April, the organization presented new data, maps and field evidence showing that cutblock TA1375 — identified by the Old Growth Technical Advisory Panel as a Priority Deferral Area — provides essential habitat for threatened species and stores significant amounts of carbon. The cutblock was auctioned in March despite opposition from scientists, community members and many First Nations whose territories overlap with the Tsitika watershed.

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Wildfire training exercise set for May 30 in Cowichan Bay

By Sarah Simpson
Ladysmith-Chemainus Chronicle
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents and visitors to Cowichan Bay on Saturday, May 30 take note. A large-scale exercise to help emergency responders train for potential wildfires is taking place in Cowichan Bay from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. “Please do not be alarmed and help ensure crews can safely complete their training by obeying signage and giving personnel and equipment plenty of space,” said CVRD spokesperson Lisa Moilanen. The exercise will include Shawnigan Lake, Malahat, Mill Bay, Cowichan Bay, Duncan, Sahtlam, Ladysmith, and North Oyster fire departments, as well as BC Wildfire Services and more “working, practicing and learning together to help be aligned, prepared and keep our communities safe,” Moilanen added. The exercise features a scenario where a forest fire is threatening a developed area or community. Moilanen said people will notice emergency vehicles, personnel, traffic cones, and wildfire response activities around Falcon Crescent, and Wilmot, Galdwell, Rondeault, and Hillbank Roads.

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Island firm to supply two helicopters for national firefighting fleet

Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A North Saanich aviation company will provide helicopters as part of the federal government’s first reserve of firefighting aircraft to help provinces and territories respond to wildfires this season. VIH Helicopters is supplying two Sikorsky S-92A heavy helicopters for the season, with contracts starting immediately and continuing to Oct. 18. They’re among 10 aircraft and two unspecified support assets being leased for 150 days starting this month by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, thanks to a $317-million allocation in the federal budget. …Along with VIH Helicopters, which is based at Victoria International Airport, the fleet will be sourced from B.C.-based firms Conair Group and Coldstream Helicopters. …Kelsey Winter, executive director of CIFFC, said at a media event at the Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa on Monday that the newly leased fleet will add to the existing model, not replace it.

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Masters of International Forestry Instructors Make Global Impact as Lead Authors of Landmark UN Forest Report

By the Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

When the United Nations released its Global Forest Goals Report 2026 this month in New York, the expertise behind it traced back to the classrooms of UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s Master of International Forestry program. Professor Terry Sunderland and Lecturer Peter Wood, director and coordinator of the MIF program respectively, served as lead authors of the report, released at the UN Forum on Forests. It is one of the most comprehensive assessments of global forest management ever produced, drawing on voluntary submissions from 48 nations representing more than half of the world’s forests. The fact the report’s lead authors are also shaping the next generation of international forestry professionals at UBC FES is no coincidence — it is exactly the kind of real-world engagement the MIF program is built around.

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What does it mean when a fire is Out of Control?

By BC Wildfire Service
Facebook
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

When you hear a wildfire is classified as Out of Control, it’s easy to picture massive flames racing through the forest. But Out of Control is used as an operational term, not a description of how dramatic or aggressive a wildfire looks. A wildfire is classified as Out of Control when it is spreading, or expected to spread, beyond the current containment lines. Think of it like plumbing, a slow leak and a burst pipe are both uncontrolled situations, but they behave very differently. One may grow slowly over time and require monitoring and management. The other may move quickly and need immediate, aggressive action. Wildfires can behave the same way.

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Forest Practices Board to audit BC Timber Sales operations near Hazelton

By Tanner Senko, Communications Manager
BC Forest Practices Board
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

HAZELTON – The Forest Practices Board will audit the forest planning and practices of BC Timber Sales (BCTS) and timber sale licence holders in the Kispiox Timber Supply Area (TSA) portion of the Skeena Business Area, starting Monday, June 1, 2026. The audit will examine harvesting, roads, silviculture, protection activities and associated planning. These activities will be assessed for compliance under the Forest and Range Practices Act and the Wildfire Act. BCTS operates throughout the Kispiox TSA, within the Skeena Stikine Natural Resource District. Activities in the audit area are administered from the Hazelton Field Office. The audit area overlaps the territories of the Gitxsan, Wet’suwet’en, Gitanyow, Nisga’a, Lake Babine Nation, Kitselas, and Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha First Nations. …The area includes mountainous terrain, rivers and lakes that support recreation, wildlife habitat and important fish populations, including several salmon species, bull trout, Dolly Varden and lake trout.

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Cheakamus Community Forest awards inaugural grants to Sea to Sky stewardship and recreation projects

By Luke Faulks
Pique News Magazine
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Three Sea to Sky organizations have been named the inaugural recipients of the Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) Community Benefit Program, which has awarded more than $25,000 to projects tied to forest education, habitat stewardship, recreation access, and invasive species management. The funding, announced on May 19, comes from the community forest’s carbon offset sales revenue. …The community forest said the program reflects its broader goal of operating “as a model of regenerative forestry and reconciliation” while supporting partner communities through locally driven initiatives. The announcement comes ahead of the CCF’s spring 2026 information session, scheduled for May 28 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Istken Room at the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre.

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Lindsay Cuff Receives Killam Teaching Prize

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Lindsay Cuff

Lindsay Cuff is an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, jointly appointed with the Faculty of Land and Food Systems. She has developed, implemented, and shared innovative approaches to teaching and strives to weave real-world applications into the classroom. She is a UBC Sustainability Fellow, contributes to an interdisciplinary team developing an Indigenous Land Stewardship Program, and is the author of the open educational textbook Writing Place. As an instructor of discipline-specific scholarly writing, Lindsay supports students from diverse backgrounds, including those in their first year, helping them discover writing as a powerful tool for learning, reflection, and connection. Her impact is reflected in the outstanding feedback she receives from students, who consistently describe her teaching as motivating, engaging, and inspiring.

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Alberta utilities expand planned wildfire power shutoffs in Bow Valley

By Michelle McCann
CBC News
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

As wildfire seasons become longer and more destructive, Alberta electricity providers are introducing programs designed to intentionally shut off power in high-risk areas, like the Bow Valley, before wildfires start. The strategy, known as Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS), involves intentionally shutting off electricity during extreme conditions to reduce the risk of power lines sparking wildfires. This month, electricity providers AltaLink and FortisAlberta presented the program to Canmore town council. …Utilities say the decision to proactively shut off power would depend on extreme weather conditions such as wind speed, humidity, vegetation dryness and wildfire danger ratings —all of which can increase the risk of power lines sparking a wildfire. “It is not a decision we take lightly,” says AltaLink vice-president of operations Evan Mitchell. “We need to see conditions where, if a spark were to start, there is a risk it could produce a catastrophic wildfire.”

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Province turns to the Microsoft cloud to update its forest inventory

By Ian Ross
Northern Ontario Business
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©KevinHolland LinkedIn

Ontario’s Forest Resources Inventory is getting a high-tech upgrade. The province is providing more than $14 million over the next two years to technologically improve the database on how the province collects, stores and shares information on its 70.5-million hectares of forest. The funding is part of the roll-out of the province’s forestry road map, a 10-year strategy designed to protect the industry, jobs, and reposition the sector to make new products for the domestic market. Ultimately, it will also allow the province’s struggling forest industry to make better data-driven business decisions to stay competitive. Kevin Holland, the province’s associate minister of forestry and forest products, was on hand at the Ontario Forest Research Institute in Sault Ste. Marie May 26 to deliver the news. The Forest Resources Inventory (FRI) is considered the backbone of the entire sustainable forest management system in Ontario.

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Inside the Fight to Protect an Urban Forest in BC

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Three years ago, Barb Round heard heavy machinery chewing through the urban forest behind her home in Campbell River, a small city on east Vancouver Island that bills itself as the salmon capital of the world. Round waved down a man in a hard hat and asked why the excavator was working in the greenway, which is a haven for birds, dotted with pocket wetlands and adjacent to Simms Creek, home to four salmon species. “He explained to me that the property had been sold,” Round, a retired nurse, tells The Tyee. “Everyone in the neighbourhood thought it was protected land.” When residents found out a local developer planned to cut down much of the forest and fill in the wetlands to build a large housing development near the creek, “they were gobsmacked,” Round says.

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Forests Canada and Ontario Parks Complete Projects to Restore and Enhance Provincial Parks

By Forests Canada
PR Newswire
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – In an effort to restore the natural beauty and support species conservation in provincial parks impacted by extreme weather events, invasive species, tree loss due to insects and disease, or shoreline erosion, national charity Forests Canada and Ontario Parks have worked together to plant 12,000 native trees and shrubs across nine provincial parks. “Forests Canada is proud to lead the restoration efforts and promote the long-term health of these incredible spaces,” Jess Kaknevicius, CEO, Forests Canada, says. “We approach our forest recovery work in a systematic way – considering every stage from seed collection and seedling production to planting and long-term survival, and we are honoured to put our knowledge, experience and network of partners to work benefitting Ontario’s provincial parks.” This past fall and spring, 4,500 potted trees and shrubs of 39 different native species were planted in targeted areas… 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

A Company Funded by Bill Gates Wants to Capture BC’s Carbon

By Abigail Popple
The Tyee
May 28, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

…If completed, Canada’s first “carbon-casting” site could start operating in Valemount as early as next January, according to Graphyte, the company behind the plan. …The company is now negotiating with the Valemount Community Forest to secure a deal to build its proposed carbon-casting site in the local industrial park, four kilometres south of the town centre. In an email to The Tyee, Graphyte director of project development Murilo Amadeu said Valemount is a good option for the facility because of its proximity to a steady supply of wood fibre. …Drying the wood, compressing it and burying it aims to stop decomposition processes that release carbon into the air, said Graphyte scientific adviser Daniel Sanchez, who is also a professor at the University of California, Berkley. … Joe Nusse said the facility will be similar to a lumber kiln previously located at the mill site that also had to meet air quality regulations.

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Health & Safety

B.C. to become 1st in Canada to require commercial trucks have dashcams

By Amy Judd and Catherine Urquhart
Global News
May 26, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

It will soon be mandatory for commercial trucks in B.C. to have dash cameras. B.C. Conservative MLA Ward Stamer introduced a bill after a string of deadly collisions on Highway 5, which goes through his riding of Kamloops-North Thompson. British Columbia is the first Canadian jurisdiction to require commercial dash cameras. Stamer says cameras will help keep drivers accountable and ensure there will be enough evidence in the event of a crash. The bill requires outward-facing dash cameras on commercial trucks travelling B.C. highways and will come into force six months after receiving royal assent. “This bill started with families along Highway 5 who have buried loved ones after preventable crashes. It finishes with B.C. leading the country on commercial vehicle safety,” said Stamer in a release.

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Northern Alberta sawmill convicted in death of worker, fined $355K to pay for safety training program

By Iman Janmohamed
CBC News
May 25, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

GRANDE PRAIRIE, Alberta — Weyerhaeuser Company was convicted last week in the death of a sawmill employee and as a result, has been ordered to pay $355,000 for the development of a comprehensive training program for inexperienced workers. Weyerhaeuser was convicted on May 19 after pleading guilty under Alberta’s Occupational Health and Safety Act for failing to ensure the health and safety of a worker, who died on the job three years earlier on Nov. 18, 2023. The worker was using a pike pole to clear a blockage from a wood chipping machine at a Grande Prairie lumber mill when it was unsafe to do so, said the province. The man was then fatally struck by the pike pole. …Northwestern Polytechnic in Grande Prairie will use the funds the court ordered Weyerhaeuser to pay to develop the Northern Industrial Safety Pathways Program. …Mary Catherine McAleer said  “We continue to focus on learning from this tragic incident and strengthening our safety program.

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‘They’re hungry’: Tick nymphs pose extra danger, expert warns

By Matt Prokopchuk
The Thunder Bay News Watch
May 27, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY — While many people are used to watching for adult ticks, a local expert said their young can be even more dangerous. Nymphal ticks, or tick nymphs, are the life cycle stage the arachnid goes through before moulting into an adult. Ken Deacon, the coordinator of the Thunder Bay District Health Unit’s vector-borne disease surveillance project, said the black-legged tick nymphs are responsible for most of the transmission of the bacteria that causes Lyme disease. “Probably 60 to 70 per cent of the cases are transmitted by the nymph because people just don’t see them,” he said. “And they’re unaware that they were attached, that the disease was transmitted.” Black-legged ticks, also known as deer ticks, are responsible for Lyme disease, while wood ticks don’t carry the bacteria. While a fully-engorged adult female black-legged tick can be larger than the size of a pea, Deacon said, by comparison, the nymph is smaller than a sesame seed. 

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Forest Fires

Fire that burned 8,500 hectares in Nova Scotia in 2025 now officially extinguished

By Frances Willick
CBC News
May 26, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

A wildfire that ripped through 8,500 hectares in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley last year has now officially been deemed extinguished. The fire burned in the West Dalhousie area from mid-August until late September, though crews remained working at the site until late October. It destroyed 20 homes and forced hundreds of people to flee. While the blaze may have faded from the attention of some people in the province, the Department of Natural Resources was still keeping tabs on the area until Tuesday, when the fire was declared extinguished. …Jim Rudderham, , the director of fleet and wildfire management for Natural Resources, said it is possible for fires to continue burning underground through the winter despite rain and snow, but while “holdover fires” are common in Western Canada, he has not yet encountered one in Nova Scotia.

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