Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Are you logging near powerlines?

Woodlots BC
May 29, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Recent incidents in BC’s forest industry, in which trees being felled have contacted energized transmission lines, have led to the creation of some new documents by BC Hydro. These new documents support discussions with forest companies/ harvesting contractors to ensure obligations to identify the hazardous areas associated with harvesting near powerlines are addressed. One of these documents, The Logging Near Powerlines Emergency Contact Form, focuses on strict compliance with current WorkSafeBC (WSBC) Regulations. …Electricity seeks the path of least resistance to the ground. That path could include a tree, mobile equipment, tools, or the human body. …Health and safety in forestry workplaces is the responsibility of all parties that have an influence on how work is carried out. …Where possible as part of the initial planning process ensure that cut block boundaries are well away from the powerline corridor. 

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Training and Resources that Help Workplace Safety Grow

By Michele Fry, director, communications
BC Forest Safety Council
May 29, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

BC Forest Safety Council (BCFSC) is the Health and Safety Association for forestry’s harvesting, hauling and silviculture sectors as well as sawmills and wood pellet manufacturers. We’ve been proudly serving BC’s forestry industry since 2004. Everything we do is driven by our vision that every forest worker goes home safe – every day. Safety training for workers and companies is a cornerstone of our organization. BCFSC works with subject matter experts to develop forestry workplace training that is relevant, current and useful – because a trained workforce is a safer workforce. Through in-person, online or hybrid courses, we offer something for everyone who earns a living in BC’s forestry sector.

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Ensuring safety on Resource Roads: The Critical Role of Vehicle Inspections

BC Forest Safety Council
May 29, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forestry operations work in some of the most demanding environments. BC has more than 620,000kms of resource roads that are not built or maintained to public roadway standards and present various risks. Vehicles used to transport workers and equipment on resource roads travel on narrow, steep grades and rough surfaces. These conditions increase the risk of mechanical failures, loss of control and collisions, making regular vehicle inspections essential for anyone working in the woods. A solid inspection process catches issues early and reduces the likelihood of mechanical failure in the field. Regular inspections enhance safety, increase vehicle reliability, reduce downtime, improve cost efficiency and help meet safety and transportation regulations. Inspections also ensure vehicles are equipped for sudden weather changes, road hazards and emergency response in remote areas.

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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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Business & Politics

Canadian Pacific Kansas City to maintain rail operations across Canada during International Brotherhood of Electrical Worker strike

By Canadian Pacific Kansas City
PR Newswire
May 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

CALGARY, AB – Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) today said it has implemented contingency plans to maintain railway operations across Canada following the International Brotherhood of Electrical Worker (IBEW) Canadian Signals and Communications System Council No. 11’s rejection of CPKC’s latest contract offers. The IBEW, representing approximately 300 Signals & Communications employees in Canada, launched a strike at 08:00 MDT Sunday, May 31. Safe and efficient rail service has continued. After spending months bargaining in good faith, CPKC is disappointed that a work stoppage could not be prevented. CPKC has presented a fair and balanced proposal with wage and benefit increases consistent with collective agreements currently in place with all our other unions across Canada. We continue to encourage IBEW to end its strike and accept binding arbitration.

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B.C. attorney general, Cowichan Nation lawyers welcome Supreme Court decision on New Brunswick case

The Canadian Press in CBC News
May 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Both B.C.’s attorney general and lawyers for the Cowichan Nation welcomed the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision not to hear a case out of New Brunswick on First Nations’ ownership claims of private industrial forest land. It comes as the BC government and Cowichan Nation pursue appeals after a contentious BC Supreme Court ruling that recognizes that the Cowichan Nation’s Aboriginal title extends to privately-owned property in the Richmond area. …BC Attorney General Niki Sharma said that the decision not to hear that case bodes well for the province’s appeal in the Cowichan case. The Crown-Indigenous Relations Department said the Wolastoqey decision allowed by the Supreme Court of Canada to stand was an important ruling, adding that “private property rights are fundamental.” …Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie hopes the rejection of the Wolastoqey Nation’s leave application “is a signal of the current thought process of the Supreme Court of Canada.”

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‘Worth repeating’: U.S. ambassador welcomes PM Carney’s offer to ‘help make America great again’

By Rachel Aiello
CTV News
May 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Employing U.S. President Donald Trump’s marquee slogan, Prime Minister Mark Carney told a New York City business crowd on Thursday that “Canada strong will help make America great again,” a remark the U.S. envoy to this country said was “worth repeating.” Speaking at the Economic Club of New York, the prime minister detailed his economic diversification strategy, and his plans to recalibrate Canada’s relationships and reputation. “We’re focused on what we can control, and that means weaving a dense web of international partnerships abroad. That’s making us a much stronger, more resilient, more independent country,” Carney told the business crowd. Touting some key areas where the federal Liberals have made progress, Carney sought to make the case for why Canada and the U.S. should continue to co-operate in key sectors. … Business Council of Canada CEO Goldy Hyder said he thought Carney was “pitch perfect” in acknowledging the areas where Canada needs to do better.

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US, Mexico set three rounds of trade deal talks without Canada

By David Lawder
Reuters in Yahoo! Finance
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

MEXICO CITY – The Trump administration’s trade agency said on Wednesday it will kick off the first of three negotiating rounds with Mexico this week to revamp the North American trade agreement, but made no mention of any talks with Canada. The U.S. Trade Representative’s office ‌said in a statement that Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Jeffrey Goettman will lead bilateral talks in Mexico City on Thursday and Friday focused on “economic security and ‌rules of origin for key industrial goods.” USTR Jamieson Greer stayed in Washington to attend a White House cabinet meeting on Thursday. USTR said the U.S. and Mexico will hold a second round of negotiations in Washington June ​16 to 17, focused on agriculture and “a level playing field,” with a third set of talks in Mexico City scheduled for the week of July 20. …But USTR’s statement made no mention of bilateral talks with Canada.

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K’ómoks treaty nears finish line amid objections from neighbouring First Nations

By Les Leyne
Business in Vancouver
May 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Spencer Chandra Herbert

Even if the K’ómoks treaty clears the B.C. legislature today, it will be years before it takes effect — and governments are facing mounting pressure to resolve overlapping territorial claims before then. It will be two years or more after the B.C. legislature ratifies the K’ómoks treaty — assuming it is voted on and passed today — before Ottawa follows suit and it formally takes effect. The parties will need … to smooth out the nagging problem of overlapping claims. Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation Minister Spencer Chandra Herbert outlined the magnitude of that issue… Based on his account of ­trying to reconcile overlaps for one comparatively small treaty, there’s no denying considerable time and effort went into it. But … it doesn’t look like it produced much in the way of results. The bill’s passage today is uncertain, and is just a taste of how complicated the treaty ­process is in a province with over 200 First Nations.

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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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Supreme Court won’t hear Wolastoqey appeal of Aboriginal title ruling

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
May 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ernest Drapeau

Private industrial forest land in New Brunswick will remain excluded from an ownership claim by Wolastoqey First Nations after the Supreme Court of Canada turned down an application to hear the case. It means the New Brunswick Court of Appeal’s ruling from last December is the final word on the issue. The title claim case can continue, but the First Nations will only be able to seek damages and compensation for the loss of their traditional lands. They will not be able to assert ongoing ownership. …“The fight for our homeland will continue,” said Chief Patricia Bernard of Madawaska Maliseet First Nation. …Three large forestry companies — J.D. Irving Ltd., H.J. Crabbe and Sons, and Acadian Timber — applied to have forest land they own excluded from the case. Drapeau’s ruling said the companies had no role in the initial taking of unceded land, and any legal bid for a declaration of title would not succeed.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber market overview prices shift amid shipping delays

RISI Fastmarkets
May 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Framing lumber sales were slow to get started after the long holiday weekend in the US in most markets. Many buyers paused early to assess market conditions – especially prospects for shipping any new orders – before resuming moderate replenishment as the week progressed. Prices shifted modestly. Recent trends in sales of western S-P-F were little changed. Discounts grew increasingly tougher for buyers to procure as order files lengthened and mills cleared existing accumulations. …Lumber futures were little changed week to date, with the front month trading near par with the cash market in most deliverable species. …Southern pine mill sales outpaced producers’ ability to ship the loads, and backlogs of sold lumber continued to accumulate throughout the distribution pipeline. Prices shifted mildly with sales frequently reported on both sides of last week’s reported levels. …In the Inland market, prices were predominantly flat, or mildly higher in a few cases.

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U.S. softwood lumber imports fall by nearly 2 million m3 in the first quarter

The Lesprom Network
May 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Global softwood lumber imports in the 10 largest import markets by volume contract from a year earlier in January to March 2026, led by a 1.94 million m3 decline in the US, a 1.19 million m3 decline in Germany, and a 775 thousand m3 decline in China. Total imports across the 10 largest softwood lumber import markets by volume fall by 3.9 million m3 to 12.6 million m3 over the quarter. In the US, the decline comes as high import duties on Canadian softwood lumber restrain shipments and homebuilding stays weak as home sales remain soft and home prices stay elevated. Canada records the largest supplier volume decline in the quarter at 1.52 million m3. …Across suppliers in the period, volumes fall most for Canada at 1,516 thousand m3, Russia at 743 thousand m3, and Austria at 680 thousand m3, while Belarus records the largest increase at 15.7 thousand m3.

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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

Efficiency and productivity analysis of the secondary wood manufacturing sectors in British Columbia

By Lili Sun, Rico Chanand Bryan Bogdanski
Science Direct
May 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

We studied the efficiency and productivity of BC’s secondary wood manufacturing sector using Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) and Malmquist total factor productivity index (MPI), while incorporating data from both a survey on individual firms and Statistics Canada’s sectoral data. DEA results showed that BC’s secondary wood manufacturing firms had low efficiency and the factor contributing to the inefficiency was more lack of technical capability than scale of operations in most of the business types. The MPI results reveal that SWM consistently underperforms relative to the sawmill and panel sectors, with a clear divergence emerging after the 2007–2009 financial crisis. Weak productivity growth is largely attributable to limited and inconsistent technical change, reflecting a lack of innovation and adoption of new technologies. Policies aimed at supporting the sector could focus on factors improving firms’ technical efficiency and frontier such as process optimization, technology adoption and innovation, and training and skill development.

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Selkirk College and BCIT collaborate on mass timber training

By Amy Chen
British Columbia Institute of Technology
May 27, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The Mass Timber Connections and Constructability Hub—the British Columbia Institute of Technology’s (BCIT) mobile mass timber training platform—took a road trip to the Selkirk Technology Access Centre in Trail, BC, to give Selkirk College students direct, practical experience in construction and fabrication techniques. Learners in the Mass Timber Fabrication Foundations and Design for Mass Timber microcredentials spent a week [doing] hands-on work that mirrors the real-world tasks they’ll do on job sites. The workshop is part of a collaboration between Selkirk College and BCIT to build regional workforce capacity in mass timber. …“Through this partnership with Selkirk College and alongside industry partners, BCIT is expanding its workforce mandate by bringing hands-on training directly to learners in the West Kootenay and Boundary regions of BC,” says Dr. Jeff Zabudsky, BCIT President. “Together, we are equipping local talent with in-demand skills to lead in sustainable construction and drive growth in BC’s mass timber sector.”

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Forestry

Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002

By Matthew Jones
Nature Reviews
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002 and emitted the third-lowest CO2 total. Yet, a third successive year of extreme wildfire emissions prevailed in Canada, and catastrophic fires in Los Angeles, South Korea and Europe killed over 90 people and forced over 300,000 evacuations. At the global scale, land area burned by wildfire has declined in since 2002, mainly owing to reduced savannah burning in Africa. However, wildfires are expanding in extratropical forests, and show increasing intensity combined with extreme socioeconomic and environmental impacts1–3. In these areas, wildfire disasters are exacerbated by human land use and the wildland–urban interface4. Many regions are experiencing episodes of extreme wildfires with high rates of spread and intensity associated with substantial loss of life, infrastructure, or carbon stores, even in years with below-average burned area. These hallmarks define an era of declining global burned area but also of rising prominence of extreme and deadly wildfires.

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Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags … and found carbon crossed through fungal threads

By The Editorial Team
Make Tech Easier
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Suzanne Simard’s 1997 forest experiment did not show trees whispering to each other. It showed something narrower, stranger, and easier to test: carbon that began in the air around a paper birch seedling later appeared inside a neighbouring Douglas fir, after passing through roots and fungal tissue in the soil. The experiment, published in Nature in August 1997, used two carbon labels in the field. Paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings were sealed in plastic labelling chambers, exposed to carbon-14 dioxide or carbon-13 dioxide, left for a nine-day chase period, then harvested and analysed to see where the labelled carbon had gone. The result was not a fairy tale about kindness. It was a measurement. Carbon moved both ways between Betula papyrifera, the paper birch, and Pseudotsuga menziesii, the Douglas fir, with a net gain by Douglas fir in the second year of the field experiment. 

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Government of Canada invests $47.8 million to strengthen Parks Canada wildfire preparedness and protect communities

By Parks Canada
PR Newswire
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Parks Canada’s National Fire Management Program helps protect people, communities, treasured national parks and national historic sites from the growing risks of wildfire while maintaining healthy, resilient ecosystems. Today, the Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature, announced that the Government of Canada is investing $47.8 million over five years, to support wildfire preparedness, response, and risk reduction in places administered by Parks Canada. This investment will renew essential capacity under Parks Canada’s National Fire Management Program. Funded through Budget 2025, this investment will support the operational readiness of Parks Canada wildfire response personnel, nationally deployable equipment, and proactive wildfire risk‑reduction measures such as prescribed fire and vegetation management to reduce the build up of flammable material. It builds on previous investments to ensure Parks Canada can continue to prepare for, respond to, and reduce wildfire risks across the country.

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The Government of Canada provides update on the 2026 wildfire season preparedness and forecast

By Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada
PR Newswire
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – The Honourable Eleanor Olszewski, Minister of Emergency Management and Community Resilience … delivered an update on Canada’s wildfire preparedness and the forecast for the 2026 wildfire season. Minister Olszewski reported that, as of today, there are 65 active wildfires in Canada with six wildfires currently out of control. The total area burned so far this year is over 18,935 hectares. Long-standing precipitation deficits persist in Western Canada. Looking ahead, forecasts indicate above-normal temperatures for nearly all Canadian regions for June, July and August. Several regions of Canada have received significant amounts of precipitation over the past six months, which could delay potential wildfire conditions. Modelling of wildfire risk by Natural Resources Canada shows fire danger building across Canada through July, with British Columbia facing the highest and most sustained fire risk. 

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Wildfires are destroying trees faster than we are replacing them

By Karen Pauls
CBC News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MANITOBA — A northern Manitoba tree-planting program is trying to replace trees destroyed by wildfires, but the cancellation of the federal two billion trees program is making that more challenging. In 2016, this forest in Manitoba’s Interlake region, about 300 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, was devastated by a jack pine budworm infestation. It was starting to regenerate when wildfire ravaged the Devils Lake area in 2021. Areas just north are already burning this spring. Marley Moose says she felt sad when she returned to the forest three years ago as part of a tree-planting program through Nekoté LP, an Indigenous-owned corporation representing seven Swampy Cree First Nations in northern and central Manitoba. According to the Canadian Tree Nursery Association (CTNA), the country is losing trees faster than nature can grow them or people can plant them.

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Concerns raised as BC Timber Sales begins 4km logging road above Roberts Creek

By Jordan Copp
The Sunshine Coast Reporter
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new logging road project on the Sunshine Coast has drawn concern from local environmental advocates. At the same time, provincial officials say the work is designed to improve access and protect water resources. The Ministry of Forests confirmed to Coast Reporter that it is responsible for the road-building contract tied to Timber Sale Licence A94817. This project will see “just over 4km” of new road constructed to “move industrial traffic away from high-use public roads” and to create long-term access for multiple user groups. The ministry also said that the design has “enhanced overland techniques to minimize impacts to ground water,” along with water-quality monitoring and environmental oversight. However, Elphinstone Logging Focus’s (ELF) Ross Muirhead says the scope of the project is unusual for the region, saying four kilometres of brand new logging road is “unprecedented” on the Coast and that most projects are much shorter.

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B.C. Lions roar into Langford with assist for province wildfire program

By Ben Fenlon
Victoria News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

For the B.C. Lions, wildfire safety and preparedness is a team effort. The CFL club has announced a new partnership to help champion B.C.’s FireSmart program, amplifying wildfire prevention and preparedness messaging across the province. The Lions have teamed up with Port Alberni-based aerial firefighting company Coulson Aviation for the campaign, while FireSmart has invested $17,000 to leverage the team’s extensive reach through digital and radio advertising, including live game broadcasts on 730 CKNW. During the off-season, wildfire resiliency messaging will also be delivered directly to students through B.C. Lions school visits, with the goal of empowering young people to be equipped to protect their own turf. …Minister of Forests and MLA for Langford-Highlands Ravi Parmar said the event demonstrated what can be achieved when communities work together to reduce wildfire risk.

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Wildfire activity low so far — but a hot and dry summer could change that, officials warn

By Peter Zimonjic
CBC News
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The start to the 2026 wildfire season has been slow with the number of fires raging across the country well below average, but government officials warn that as the summer progresses there’s a risk things could get much worse. “Despite the fact that we’re seeing so little activity so far this year … this summer retains the potential to be a significant one right across the country,” a government official said Thursday during a technical briefing. The official said that while the wildfire risk is unlikely to result in a record-breaking year like 2023 or 2025, the federal government is forecasting above average conditions as the season progresses. Whether that happens depends, officials explained, on what happens to the weather over the next few months. If the above average temperatures predicted for across the county come to pass, B.C. faces the highest wildfire risk, particularly in July.

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Forest tent caterpillars feast in Calgary as outbreak spikes population across Alberta

By Amir Said
CBC News
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Olds College entomologist Ken Fry says forest tent caterpillars are native to Alberta and relatively common, but their populations go through cycles in which they increase dramatically. Municipalities in Alberta are advising residents of an increase in the caterpillars this spring. “Roughly every 10 years populations increase enormously,” he said. The cyclical population explosion is called an outbreak. He said the causes of these cyclical outbreaks are still being studied but are believed to be influenced by weather, health status of trees, and other factors like predators, parasites and disease. Forest tent caterpillars are perhaps best known for the damage they inflict on trees. …”Trees can usually withstand a one-season munching, but when it comes to prolonged persistent defoliation over two, three years, that can result in some twig death or branch death or die back, you know, vulnerability over the winter to winter kill, things like that,” Fry said.

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Spruce budworm outbreak prompts planned aerial spraying around Whistler

By Luke Faulks
The Pique News Magazine
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WHISTLER — As Western spruce budworm populations continue to spread through Whistler’s forests at historically unprecedented levels, the BC government is preparing to spray thousands of hectares around the resort municipality with a biological insecticide to blunt the outbreak. The Ministry of Forests is planning to aerially treat areas using Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki (Btk)—a naturally occurring soil bacterium used for decades to control defoliating insects. Taylor Holt, the provincial resource coordinator, said… the aerial overview surveys in 2025 picked up 275,000 hectares of damage. [It’s] nearly three times as much damage as noted ever historically.” …Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) executive director Heather Beresford, said. “So this is really the only viable treatment.” Still, she acknowledged the decision comes with uncomfortable trade-offs between wanting to prevent dead trees from posing a wildfire risk and protecting local non-budworm species who will be affected by spraying BtK.

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‘It’s an evolving relationship’: Prescribed fire gains renewed attention in B.C. ahead of wildfire season

By Amber Wang
CBC News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Prescribed burning is getting renewed attention in parts of B.C. as communities look for ways to reduce wildfire risk before summer. In Kimberley, B.C., that conversation recently took residents onto the trails near the city’s nature park. The city-led walk gave residents a look at treated areas where crews have been reducing forest fuels. They also heard from local fire officials and wildfire specialists about how planned fire can help protect nearby homes, trails and forested parkland from wildfire risk. Kimberley Fire Department Chief Will Booth says the tour was meant to help residents understand prescribed burning before more fuel management work happens in the city. The local tour comes as prescribed and cultural burning are getting more public attention after years of being less visible. …Bob Gray, a wildland fire ecologist and fire scientist, says warmer temperatures and drought are adding pressure to forests that already have too many trees competing for moisture.

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B.C. wildfire documentary draws 160K views and four Leo Award nominations

By Rob Gibson
Castanet
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The independently-produced B.C. documentary, BC is Burning, has drawn more than 160,000 YouTube views and earned four Leo Award nominations in its first week of public release. The documentary, a 47-minute film released May 20, has attracted viewers from eight countries, including Canada, the United States, Australia and Finland. It has received nominations for best picture, best direction, best picture editing and best sound in the short documentary category at the 2026 Leo Awards. “We are very honoured by this recognition from the B.C.film community,” says producer and director Murray Wilson, adding the response shows “this conversation about BC forests and wildfire is resonating with many people.” …Earlier this year the documentary took home Okanagan Screen Awards for best feature documentary, best director and best cinematography. The 2026 Leo Awards take place July 4 and 5 at the Hyatt Regency Vancouver, with winners selected by industry professionals from more than 1,400 entries.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia’s forests support a diversity of trees, plants, fungi and wildlife, while also providing recreational opportunities, cultural values, and economic benefits to communities. As we recognized the International Day for Biological Diversity on May 22 and Wildfire Awareness Month throughout May, it’s an important time to reflect on the connection between healthy forests, resilient ecosystems, and the communities and wildlife that depend on them. Wildfire resilience and biodiversity are deeply connected. Thoughtful forest management activities, including strategic fuel reduction treatments and cultural and prescribed burning, can help reduce wildfire risk while also creating healthier and more diverse forest ecosystems for generations to come. …Today, FESBC is investing in treatments that reduce wildfire risk around communities, infrastructure and other resources. We are supporting the return of cultural and prescribed burning to the landscape. We are asking questions about how wildfire risk reduction treatments can also support biodiversity and other forest values, such as recreation.

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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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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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Health & Safety

The Canada Truck Operators Association Calls for Driver Mental Health … Amid Growing National Conversation on Trucking Safety

By Canada Truck Operators Association
PR Newswire
June 1, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

BRAMPTON, ON – The Canada Truck Operators Association (CTOA) says governments and policymakers must look beyond headlines and listen directly to the drivers, owner-operators and small-to-mid-size fleet owners who make up the backbone of Canada’s trucking industry. CTOA hosted a Member Information Session in Brampton focused on driver wellbeing, mental health, safety, cargo theft, training standards, fair enforcement, insurance risk, evidence-based road safety policy and the real operating pressures facing trucking companies. The event brought together trucking operators, owner-operators, small and mid-size carriers, drivers, enforcement partners, training professionals, safety experts, insurance representatives and industry stakeholders for a practical discussion on how to strengthen the industry. …During the session, CTOA welcomed British Columbia’s recent move to mandate outward-facing dash cameras for commercial trucks, calling it an important step for road safety, accountability and fair investigations. 

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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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Interpretation of misrepresentation for classification changes

WorkSafeBC
May 29, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Classification change policy in the Assessment Manual lists the possible reasons for changing a firm’s classification. Under this policy, a firm’s failure to provide timely, complete, and accurate information to WorkSafeBC, and to respond promptly to information requests or information provided by WorkSafeBC (the positive duties), is addressed under the heading of fraud or misrepresentation. This creates confusion when the contravention is inadvertent. Our Policy, Regulation and Research Department is releasing a discussion paper with proposed amendments to policy in the Assessment Manual to clarify how a contravention of the positive duties is interpreted in the context of classification change. The discussion paper and information on how to provide feedback can be found here: Proposed amendments to policy on the interpretation of misrepresentation for classification changes. You’re invited to provide feedback until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, June 26, 2026. WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors will consider feedback before making a decision on the proposed amendments.

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Returning Home and Looking Forward Together

By Cherie Whelan
BC Forest Safety Council
May 31, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Cherie Whelan

Returning to the BC Forest Safety Council as CEO feels like coming home. Before moving east to lead the Newfoundland and Labrador Construction Safety Association as CEO, I spent six years here at BCFSC as Director of SAFE Companies. Those years gave me a deep appreciation for this industry, the people who work in it, and the incredible commitment that exists across British Columbia in keeping forestry workers safe. While I was back in Newfoundland and Labrador, part of that move was personal. I returned to be closer to my father after he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Some of my favourite moments during that time were walking the wood paths with him on our family land and visiting the old sawmill my great-grandparents once operated. …Over the course of more than three decades in health and safety leadership, across three provinces, multiple industries, government and workers’ compensation systems, I’ve learned something that continues to shape my leadership philosophy: There is no magic bullet when it comes to safety.

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Forest Fires

People ‘on edge’ in northwestern Manitoba as heat, fires return to area scorched last year

By Darren Bernhardt
CBC News
May 29, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Seven fires were burning at one point Thursday in northwestern Manitoba between The Pas and Cranberry Portage, reigniting fears embedded by the ferocious 2025 wildfire season. “The last couple of years we’ve had some pretty intense situations,” said Lori Forbes, the municipal emergency co-ordinator for the Rural Municipality of Kelsey, which encompasses 10 communities in that region. “So I think everyone that lives here and was part of last year is … pretty much on edge, especially with this heat wave we’re going to be receiving.” She expects there will be fires over the next few months, “but hopefully they can be managed by Manitoba Wildfire Service and we can all enjoy our summer like we deserve. “Every year we do this, we’re a little better prepared.” The fires burning Thursday were all around Egg Lake, on the west side of Highway 10. 

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Lobstick fire steady at 19,000 hectares in size

CJWW Radio Saskatoon Media
June 1, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©SPSA Facebook

The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency says the Lobstick Fire has reached 19,000 hectares in size but has not grown since Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Crews continue suppression efforts on the fire that is slightly bigger than the size of Regina. Type 1 and Type 2 firefighters, supported by heavy equipment, water tenders, local fire departments and aircraft, are working on both flanks of the fire. Officials say aircraft have successfully anchored the head of the fire into Callaghan Lake, while crews on the east flank near Macdowall continue building dozer lines and extinguishing hot spots. The Hamlet of Holbein, which is 11 km northeast of the fires’ northeast boundaries, is surrounded by irrigation lines feeding perimeter sprinkler heads. A fire guard was also constructed on the southwest corner of the community. …The blaze has triggered an evacuation order for the RM of Shellbrook, with has affected about 130 people so far. 

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