Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

Construction industry battles labour shortage, lack of diversity

By Matt Hutcheson
City News Kitchener
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — With demand growing for new homes and infrastructure projects, construction companies are finding it increasingly difficult to find enough workers. The number of construction workers has been slowly declining for several years, made worse by the pandemic. …The Canadian Home Builders Association has estimated nearly one-quarter of residential construction workers plan to retire in the next decade. And experts say there aren’t enough people in line to fill those jobs. “This is a crisis, as it relates to talent,” Jeff MacIntyre, President of Grand River Construction Association said. MacIntyre said his organization is actively looking at ways to diversify its workforce and make it more attractive to different demographics, particularly women. MacIntyre believes there also needs to be a shift in attitudes towards skilled trades.

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‘We will leave no stone unturned’: forestry minister on the Terrace Bay mill

By Austin Campbell
Northern Ontario Business
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — The provincial government is providing some clarity in the face of questions surrounding the idling of Terrace Bay’s mill. Ontario’s minister of natural resources and forestry, Graydon Smith provided updates. It was earlier this month Premier Doug Ford… seemingly implying the plan was to close the mill for good. Smith, however, indicated that they have not given up on the possibility of reopening the mill. …Smith indicated that discussions between Aditya Birla Group and potential buyers are “ongoing” and, although the province’s involvement in those discussions is limited, he and his ministry are doing everything they can.” …Mayor Paul Malashewski alluded to the fact that time is of the essence, with sawmills in White River and Hornepayne — which used to send their wood chips to Terrace Bay —experiencing a backlog. “Sooner or later, the sawmills are going to have to go down, too,” Malashewski said.

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Gordon Murray named 2024 Canadian Biomass Champion of the Year

By Canadian Biomass
Wood Pellet Association of Canada
April 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Gordon Murray

Gordon Murray’s path from a forestry operations manager to an acclaimed leader in the bioenergy sector as executive-director of the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) reflects a career marked by significant transitions and a passion for sustainability. Murray was honoured as the 2024 Champion of the Year at the Canadian Biomass Awards. After graduating in 1982 with a Bachelor of Science in Forestry and qualifying as a registered professional forester, Murray’s early career revolved around forest operations for leading lumber manufacturers in British Columbia…. Under his leadership, WPAC has not only seen substantial growth but has also embraced rigorous safety and sustainability standards. “I am very gratified to have been part of the movement to demonstrate the sustainability credentials of our industry,” said Murray. Murray remains optimistic about the future of bioenergy, acknowledging both its necessity and the challenges it faces.

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CN’s Remi Lalonde to become chief commercial officer

Trains
April 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Remi Lalonde

MONTREAL —Remi G. Lalonde will become Canadian National’s executive vice-president and chief commercial officer effective April 24, succeeding Doug MacDonald, who will retire after almost 35 years. Lalonde had joined CN in January, becoming executive vice president and special advisor to the CEO while transitioning to the role he’ll assume on the 24th. He previously was CEO of Montreal-based Resolute Forest Products. Since joining the railroad, he had been gaining first-hand experience with scheduled railroading and CN’s “Make the Plan, Run the Plan, Sell the Plan” model. CN CEO Tracy Robinson said Lalonde’s “diverse experience and deep understanding of North American and global supply chains will bring important perspective as we focus our efforts on accelerating sustainable, profitable growth.”

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Kapuskasing mayor to Ottawa: ‘The forestry sector could help your housing needs’

By Ian Campbell
CTV News
April 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

David Plourde

“The solution to Canada’s housing crisis can be found in the forest.” The words of Mayor David Plourde in his open letter to Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapuskasing MP Carol Hughes. “Canada’s forest sector can offer expedient, economical and climate-resilient solutions to this problem, through the benefits of building with wood and harvested wood-based products,” wrote Plourde, in the letter. His letter to Hughes outlines that there are ‘boots’ on the ground ready to help and as far as he’s concerned, it is the federal government that can get things rolling. Among his recommendations, “actively promote Canadian wood and mass timber solutions within a federal affordable housing strategy, establish a harmonized regulatory framework for permitting processes to expedite approvals safely and responsibly, adopt a performance-based approach and increasing tall wood building height allowances in the National Building Code, and promoting national certified, pre-fabricated building typologies for wood-based structures that meet municipal standards.”

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‘There was no land surrender’: Land under control of logging firms belongs to Wolastoqiyik, lawyer says

By John Chilibeck
The Saltwire Network
April 8, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — A lawyer for the Wolastoqey Nation has asked a judge to dismiss motions filed by J.D. Irving, Acadian Timber and H.J. Crabbe & Sons. They are among a couple of dozen companies that have been named in the lawsuit that own about 3.2 million acres of forested land in western New Brunswick. Renée Pelletier argued millions of acres under the firms’ control belong to Indigenous communities. Pelletier said although the Wolastoqey Nation considers the businesses “innocents” in the claim they are nonetheless in possession of property that is not rightfully theirs. “There was no land surrender.” …Besides those private lands, the Wolastoqey Nation also wants nearly five million acres of public property given back to it. The entire claim includes about 60% of New Brunswick’s territory. The judge reserved her decision on Friday. …The massive lawsuit is expected to take up to a decade unless a settlement is reached first.

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Kruger temporarily suspends production at Corner Brook Pulp and Paper over steam issue

CBC News
April 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

CORNER BROOK, Newfoundland — Corner Brook Pulp and Paper said Friday that it was temporarily halting operations at its western Newfoundland mill. The company said repairs need to be made to the mill’s steam distribution system. The company said it was working with Newfoundland and Labrador government departments and that employee safety was its “top priority.” “[We] will take all necessary measures to ensure that all equipment is compliant with safety regulations, with the goal of resuming operations as quickly and as safely as possible”. The company, a division of Montreal-based Kruger Inc., said it is “evaluating the scope and nature of corrective actions to be implemented.” The move comes after a one-week shutdown in November, which Kruger blamed on “the difficult business environment in the newsprint sector.” About 300 workers were affected by that seven-day halt in production.

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New Brunswick Indigenous title claim ‘an attack on industry,’ court hears

By John Chilibeck
The Daily Gleaner in Yahoo! News
April 4, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Wolastoqey Nation’s attempt to recover millions of acres of privately held woodlands in New Brunswick is “an attack on an industry,” says Hugh Cameron on behalf of Acadian Timber, where 18 lawyers are battling over the Wolastoqey Nation’s title claim for over half of New Brunswick’s territory. He argued before Justice Kathyrn Gregory that she should remove Acadian Timber and other industrial defendants – all of them big, private landowners – from the claim. Cameron accused the Indigenous leaders of singling out the most successful timber companies, leaving behind mines, farms and other enterprises, as a tactic in their fight with the provincial government. …”Their case is not balanced, not reasonable. It’s frivolous, but not in a fun way, it’s vexatious.” …Cameron said he had no doubt the Wolastoqiyik would be successful in their claim against the Crown… but that doesn’t mean they can arbitrarily pick a fight with a handful of landowners.

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Finance & Economics

Goodfellow reports Q1, 2024 new loss of $108,000

Goodfellow Inc.
April 30, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

DELSON, Quebec — Goodfellow announced today its financial results for the first quarter ended February 29, 2024. The Company reported a net loss of $108 thousand to a net loss of $211 thousand a year ago. Consolidated sales for the three months ended February 29, 2024 were $105.3 million compared to $105.9 million last year. Though under pressure from lingering inflation and cautious consumer sentiment, Goodfellow achieved a comparable overall financial performance. …With uncertain economic conditions ahead, the Company will continue to protect margins and seize opportunities for growth with new and existing customers.

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Ford government unveils sweeping new changes to housing rules

By Isaac Callan & Colin D’Mello
Global News
April 10, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Ford government has unveiled a new omnibus bill focused on streamlining home building and approvals in the province. The new Cutting Red Tape to Build More Housing Act includes a reduction in the amount of parking developers need to build, special rules to fast-track the construction of student accommodation and a long-awaited use-it-or-lose-it policy. “These measures recognize the struggles that our municipal partners have faced in building homes and are targeted at removing those obstacles,” said Paul Calandra, minister of municipal affairs and housing. Speaking to reporters after the new legislation was unveiled, Calandra repeatedly said the law included many “targeted” measures to fix parts of the province’s planning rules. …The government is also proposing to introduce rules designed to stop developers from sitting on land that is ready for housing construction until market conditions are more favourable — something known as land banking.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Examining the implications of encapsulated mass timber construction in Ontario

By John Bleasby
The Daily Commercial News
May 1, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario’s Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing announced on April 8 amendments to the Ontario Building Code allowing encapsulated Mass Timber Construction (MTC) buildings up to 18 storeys. It opens up a number of interesting issues. This proposal would put Ontario on par with the 2021 International Building Code (IBC) and see it join BC and 28 US states that have adopted the provisions. …Ontario’s announcement goes beyond the code amendment itself and speaks about potential benefits of MTC in terms of the province’s affordable housing shortage. …Any increased production of MTC components has environmental implications founded in concerns over tree harvesting, an animated ongoing debate. It boils down to the basic question regarding which is better: a mature tree standing in a forest; or a portion of that tree harvested. …The worst outcome is rampant clear-cutting and a series of unmanaged forests, combined with the burning of wood scrap for heat or energy.

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Government of Canada invests in launch of second production line at Les Pliages Apaulo

By Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions
Cision Newswire
April 29, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

WATERVILLE, QC—Supporting business growth contributes to economic development in Quebec’s regions. That is why Canada Economic Development announced a repayable contribution of $500,000 for Les Pliages Apaulo Inc. This CED assistance will enable the business to improve its productivity by adding a second production line. Created in 1988 by the Compagna family, Les Pliages Apaulo manufactures different molded plywood products for the furniture industry and the corrugated cardboard manufacturing industry. Acquired by Estrie entrepreneurs in 2022, the business will install a second production line to better support its growth by expanding its operations. CED’s funding will focus on the acquisition and installation of a robotic cell for a cutting and sanding station.

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Mass Timber Construction Showing Long-Term Economic Benefits

By Rick Muller
Urban Toronto
April 24, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — It took some time to get here, but the use of sustainable materials in construction is proving to be cost-effective and economically beneficial in the long term and most experts in the development industry see this continuing. The move to sustainable construction is growing in popularity and one of the most popular materials is the use of mass timber in buildings. It can be manufactured off-site and assembled on-site, bringing products to market faster and is much more environmentally friendly than concrete or steel. A leading voice for incorporating mass timber as an economic benefit for sustainability in construction is Don Manlapaz, Partner at Leader Lane Developments. In partnership with Windmill Development Group, Leader Lane currently has three projects in its pipeline using mass timber in its construction, Hälsa, two projects on Royal York Road, and a 12-storey building at Bloor and Jane, with the first project to begin construction this fall.

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Arch-i-text: Wood can be a happy answer to design problems

By Brian Marshall
Niagara Now
April 24, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

NIAGARA, Ontario — Driving into the outskirts of Old Town, it is impossible to miss the steel and concrete edifice rising on Niagara Stone Road. Now, this is not a commentary on the design – the rendering of which makes it appear vaguely like a temple – but rather the construction method and materials, which impose limits on architectural creativity and expression. One can make a concrete and steel building look industrial, commercial or institutional and through decorative artifice and elements reduce its inherently cold, brooding and rigid appearance. …However, you cannot make it organically inviting nor warm and embracing on an intuitive human level. Moreover, the cement and concrete industries are one of the two least sustainable industries in the world. …There has to be a better way. The happy answer is look to wood — but, not just any wood as we will see.

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18-storey wooden buildings? Bring them on: Element5

By Norman De Bono
Simcoe Reformer
April 16, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Patrick Poulon

ST. THOMAS, Ontario — Wooden buildings are on the rise and a St. Thomas business is bracing for its own growth, as a result. The province is about to alter the building code for mass timber towers that use all wood in construction, allowing them to go as high as 18 storeys from the current limit of 12. Element5 on Dennis Road supplies wood panels used in mass timber construction. The more than 30 per cent increase in building height for wood towers may mean greater demand for its products, chief executive Patrick Poulin said. The Ontario government announced April 8 it is expanding the use of advanced wood construction like mass timber to help speed construction and reduce costs. Other jurisdictions such as British Columbia and in the U.S. now allow mass timber building as high as 18 storeys and it is becoming more accepted as a construction option, Poulin said.

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Tim Hortons testing plastic-free and recyclable hot beverage lids in select Tims restaurants in Ottawa for up to 6 weeks

By Tim Hortons
Cision Newswire
April 15, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA, ON – Starting this week, select Tim Hortons restaurants in Ottawa and Gatineau will begin testing plastic-free, fibre hot beverage lids for up to six weeks as part of our efforts to reduce the use of single-use plastics. The goal of the trial is to work toward developing a guest-friendly alternative to plastic lids that are easier to compost or recycle, while still providing a great drinking experience. “We’ve worked hard on developing a fibre lid that feels like our current lids but is plastic-free. These fibre lids are part of our five-year journey to develop more innovative solutions for all our packaging,” says Paul Yang, Senior Director of Procurement, Sustainability and Packaging for Tim Hortons. Over the past year, Tim Hortons has transitioned a number of packaging items in an effort to help reduce the use of single-use plastics, including introducing wooden and fibre cutlery, and replacing plastic lids on Loaded Bowls with fibre lids.

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RJC Engineers plants roots in Halifax as mass timber market expands

By Angela Gismondi
Daily Commercial News
April 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

National engineering firm RJC Engineers recently opened an office in Halifax and says the $215 million new mass timber manufacturing plant being developed in the area can provide many opportunities for players in the construction industry. “The local industry and all the jobs it will create and the availability of the products locally, I think there’s some great opportunity there,” said Andrew Bayne, managing principal for Toronto Structural and the overseeing leader of RJC Engineers’ new Halifax office. “We always support local industry and look forward to some collaboration with them once it’s built and up and running.” …“More and more focus has been out in Atlantic Canada where there is opportunity and local growth…so we’re out there more these days,” Bayne said, adding RJC just opened its Halifax office on April 3. “We’ve been servicing the region for 20-plus years but not necessarily had boots on the ground.”

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Ontario moves to allow 18-storey timber buildings

By Tessa Adamski
The Globe and Mail
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario has joined other provinces in a growing trend to upgrade its building code allowing encapsulated mass timber construction up to 18 storeys tall. An upgrade in Ontario’s Building Code, which currently permits residential and commercial buildings to use mass timber up to 12 storeys tall, will help build homes faster and reduce long-term construction costs, the province said in announcing the move Monday. …Increasing the building code regulation to 18 storeys will provide an incentive for more architects, engineers and building developers to create structures using mass timber, Anne Koven, executive director from the Mass Timber Institute at the University of Toronto said. …Increasing the building code regulation to 18 storeys will provide an incentive for more architects, engineers and building developers to create structures using mass timber, Koven added.

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Mass timber construction reaching new heights

Northern Ontario Business
April 9, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario’s forest products industry is welcoming the government’s move to allow mass timber buildings to reach greater heights. The Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing said it will be amending Ontario’s Building Code in the coming months to permit for construction of these buildings to be upsized from its current 12 storeys to 18. Steven Street, the executive director of WoodWorks Ontario, a wood construction advocacy group,, applauded the decision taken by Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing. “Increasing the height of mass timber construction up to 18 storeys will enable low-carbon, advanced wood construction solutions to have a greater role in achieving our housing targets,” Street said in an emailed statement. …Ontario first permitted the use of wood-framed buildings in 2015 in allowing construction, initially, of up to six storeys.

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Liquor Control Board of Ontario bringing back paper bags following Ford demand

By Miranda Chant
London NewsToday
April 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — Single-use paper bags are coming back to the LCBO. The Crown-owned Liquor Control Board of Ontario has reversed course on the year-old change after receiving a curt letter from Premier Doug Ford. “LCBO has received direction from the provincial government to take steps to reintroduce single-use paper bags at LCBO retail locations,” the LCBO wrote in a statement. “While we are not able to confirm an availability date at this time, we will share more details with our valued customers in the coming weeks.” Ford sent the letter addressed to George Soleas, the liquor retailer’s president and CEO. …But Ford called the environmental merits of the LCBO’s decision to ditch paper bags “questionable at best.” “Paper bags are an easily recyclable alternative to single-use plastic, which is why the LCBO adopted them in the first place,” Ford wrote in his letter.

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Ontario Expanding Mass Timber Construction Up to 18 Storeys

By Municipal Affairs and Housing
Government of Ontario
April 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – Ontario is expanding the use of advanced wood construction like mass timber to help build homes faster and reduce costs over time while supporting good-paying jobs in forestry, technology, engineering design and manufacturing. Currently, Ontario’s Building Code allows Encapsulated Mass Timber Construction buildings to be up to 12-storeys tall. The province intends to amend the Building Code in the coming months to permit encapsulated mass timber construction up to 18 storeys. “The use of mass timber can help the sector build more homes faster, keep the cost of construction down and boost our northern economy,” said Paul Calandra, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing. “As we work to cut red tape in order to increase housing supply, we’re taking an innovative approach to help our partners get shovels in the ground.”

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Forestry

Ontario investing an additional $6 million in forest access road construction and repair

By Natural Resources and Forestry
Government of Ontario
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – The Ontario government is investing an additional $6 million in the Provincial Forest Access Roads Funding Program to help construct and maintain forestry roads used for regional travel between communities, the transport of goods and emergency preparedness and response along with providing access routes for the tourism sector and industry. The investment will increase funding for the program to over $59 million in 2024-25. “Many people rely on this road network every day for travel between work and home and everywhere in-between,” said Graydon Smith, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry. “This investment will keep people and vehicles moving safely, support efficient business operations and build safer, stronger communities.” The Provincial Forest Access Roads Funding Program provides funding for new construction and maintenance of over 19,500 kilometres of public forest access roads and other essential infrastructure. …Public forest access road infrastructure is vital to Northern, rural and Indigenous communities. 

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Federal government concerned about further delays in release of Quebec government’s caribou strategy

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

GATINEAU, QC – The Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, has issued the following statement in response to the measures announced today by the Government of Quebec for the Boreal and Mountain Caribou in the Gaspé Peninsula. “I would like to thank the Government of Quebec for presenting their plans before the May 1 deadline. However, several critical elements are missing, particularly the Quebec government’s August 2022 commitment to reduce the rate of disturbance in caribou habitat so that at least 65 percent of the territory for each caribou population is undisturbed. In addition, today’s announcement does not mention several caribou populations. The Government of Quebec must publish a strategy for all Boreal Caribou populations in Quebec, including immediate interim measures.”

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Review says Nova Scotia wildfire response was ‘impressive,’ but finds staffing, training gaps

By Jean Laroche
CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

An independent review of the fires that destroyed more than 200 homes and burned 25,000 hectares of Nova Scotia forest last year is generally positive about how the province deployed resources, but noted many areas for improvement. The Nova Scotia government paid Calian, a consulting and research firm, $45,500 to do an “after-action report” on the wildfires that started on the South Shore at Barrington Lake, and in the Halifax-area community of Tantallon. The more than 200 email responses to their survey included agencies, first responders, municipal and provincial governments, including Department of Natural Resources (DNR) staff. The review highlighted a number of strengths in the province’s response to the wildfires… [and] it found gaps in a number of areas, including training and department response plans. …The review also found staffing levels were inadequate, and some of those involved in responding to the fires lacked training for the jobs they were called on to do.

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Ontario short forest firefighters as over a dozen wildfires are reported, union says

By Katherine DeClerq
CTV News Toronto
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

More than a dozen wildfires have been reported in Ontario and the union representing forest firefighters says their crews are still short about 25 per cent of their staff. As of April 29, there have been 14 wildfires recorded in Ontario, compared to two last year. …Noah Freedman, vice president of Ontario Public Service Employees Union Local 703 and a provincial forest fire crew leader, said the province is still missing about 25 per cent of its firefighting staff. “Ontario is supposed to have 800 firefighters, which represents 200 fire crews,” Freedman told CTV News Toronto. “The more crews we have, the more incidents people can respond to at one time. It’s not uncommon in a bad fire season to have … 12 fires in one area when you wake up in the morning.” …A spokesperson for the Minister of Natural Resources says that 630 fire crew positions have been filled and said it was “well within” their recruitment range.

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Ottawa fire fighters get specialized urban wildfire training

By Natalia Goodwin
CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Twenty-five members of Ottawa’s wildland firefighting crews have completed a special training program that certifies them to fight forest fires in an urban setting. The crews were already doing that work, but this weekend’s training has brought them up to the standard set by Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. It’s part of a provincial mandate to have all firefighters properly certified for the fires they’re tasked with fighting. The course focused on a scenario that firefighters in Ottawa would more regularly deal with: the “urban interface,” a situation where combustible forests and grasslands are close to urban developments. Tackling an urban interface fire is typically a less intensive undertaking than fighting an out-of-control forest fire, which can require crews to camp remotely for weeks at a time, said Ottawa Fire Services rural sector chief Tom Miller.

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Fire season is torching parts of the country. These volunteers in rural Newfoundland are getting ready

By Mike Moore
CBC News
April 27, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jeff Jackson

As forest fire season draws near, volunteer fire crews in rural Newfoundland are preparing. A new proactive approach was a year in the making. Departments from Blaketown to Heart’s Content along Trinity Bay are partnering up to have clear plans in place in the event of worst-case scenarios. “It is a drill, and at the end of it we’re going to have a postmortem or a debrief of it and pick it apart and say, ‘Boys, we could have done this better’ or ‘That was a really good point’ and we can follow it from there,” said Jeff Jackson, a 39-year veteran firefighter in Whiteway. …Wildfire season in Newfoundland begins on May 1 and ends on Sept 30. In Labrador, the season begins May 15. Jackson said it’s about being in the right place — protecting the communities — while provincial fire teams battle the fires from inside forested land.

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Forestry Commission hosting public meetings regarding a new forest policy

Government of Prince Edward Island
April 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Islanders are invited to provide input on forestry priorities at upcoming public meetings across the province. Towards A New Forest Policy, a discussion paper by the Prince Edward Island Forestry Commission, outlines 13 key issues related to our forests and the forestry sector. These include the future legislative framework, government assistance to woodlot owners and the forest industry, the protection of forest ecosystems, and the need to develop more resilient forests. The public meetings will help the Commission understand more about Islanders’ forestry priorities and the issues facing PEI forests. 

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Eastern Ontario Model Forest to Offer SFI Forest Certification

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
April 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

KEMPTVILLE, Ontario – The Eastern Ontario Model Forest (EOMF) announced that it is expanding sustainable forestry on private lands by encouraging its members to certify to the SFI Indigenous Peoples and Families Module. The EOMF Certification Program, administered by the Ontario Woodlot Association (OWA), celebrated 20 years of certification in 2023 and is now offering the SFI module to its members. SFI Certification will complement the EOMF’s existing Forest Stewardship Council (FSC®) Certificate (FSC C018800), which it is committed to maintaining. …Glen Prevost, Program Manager, EOMF, “Retaining both SFI and FSC certifications will help us grow the EOMF certification program beyond our current 74,000 hectares of certified forest.” …Executive Director of the EOMF and OWA, John Pineau, said, “The SFI community is strong and welcoming and will support our certified forests.”

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Conditions ripe for Ontario’s wildfire season to heat up this summer

By Elaine Della-Mattia
The Sault Star
April 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The risk for forest fires in the northeast region of Ontario remains low. The Ministry of Natural Resources Forest Fire management centre reports the fire hazard is low in areas located south of Timmins and Wawa. To date, since the forest fire season opened on April 1, there has been one fire in the Northeast region. Sault Ste. Marie 2 was reported on April 16 and called out the following day. The 0.6 hectare fire was located off Mission Road in Goulais Bay, about 26 km northwest of Sault Ste. Marie. A small forest fire in Hearst – 0.4 hectares — marked the start of the season on April 11. There are no active fires in Northwestern Ontario. While some experts have said that it is expected to be a severe wildfire season, others say the season is hard to predict.  

 

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Stop the Spray group wants herbicides banned for Ontario forests

CBC News
April 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

As a bush plane pilot in northern Ontario, Joel Theriault has seen firsthand the effect herbicides have on forests in the region. “There’s something very wrong when you can see a mile in each direction and you can fly for weeks over these areas and not see a bear, and not see a wolf, and not see a moose,” he said. In the late summer and early fall, forestry companies and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry spray herbicides over wooded areas that are cultivated for their timber. “They’re spraying them to eliminate all of the competition for sunlight for the replanted conifer trees,” said Theriault. …In an email to CBC News, Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry spokesperson Marcela Mayo said herbicides are only applied to 0.2 per cent of the managed forested areas in Ontario every year.

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Ontario wraps up its wildland firefighter recruitment as the threat of a new fire season looms

By Aya Dufour
CBC News
April 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario confirms it has hired about 600 forest firefighters this year, although it has the budget to hire up to 800 people. The recruitment number is “well within the range” the province aims for, according to Natural Resources and Forestry Minister Graydon Smith. “We spent a significant amount of money, time and effort this year to recruit and retain more people and I think those efforts are paying off,” he said. Earlier in March the province rolled out an incentive program promising lump-sum payments to wildland firefighters. …Smith says “crews are deployed across Ontario as provincial resources during the fire season to where they are needed.” In other words, if a fire breaks out in the Greenstone area and there aren’t enough available crews to tackle it, resources will be sent in from other bases. 

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Debris debate: What should happen with Fiona’s remnants?

By Sheehan Desjardins
CBC News
April 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A year and a half after post-tropical storm Fiona ripped through Prince Edward Island, some are raising questions about how to deal with the debris that remains. Provincial officials have estimated that 13 per cent of the woodland on the Island lost at least 70 per cent of its trees in the September 2022 storm. The clean-up job was massive. Crews worked for weeks to untangle a web of downed trees and power lines, while the P.E.I. government opened 41 disposal sites to its contractors and another 16 for people to drop off their Fiona debris free of charge. …It’s also wildfire season across Canada. With the weather warming up, Simpson worries the pile of drying out trees and branches could be dangerous. “Everybody else’s fire hazard has now become our fire hazard,” she said. “It’s a large pile of wood that we would really like to see gone.”

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As wildfire season starts, New Brunswick ready to take firefighting to ‘whole new level’

CBC News
April 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Roger Collet

Fire officials are preparing as wildfire season begins in New Brunswick, with teams and equipment situated around the province. …Tuesday was the official first day of wildfire season. Collet said the fire season begins in the southern parts of the provinces and progresses north as summer begins. Data released by the province shows that New Brunswick’s 209 wildfires last year amounted to fewer than the 10-year average of 246. However, the Stein Lake Fire near Saint Andrews in May nearly doubled the amount of land that was burned in wildfires. …Holland also spoke highly of the province’s wildfire co-ordination centre in Fredericton, which reminds him of the aircraft in the Star Trek TV series. The centre first, which first operated last year, has large screens where fire officials can monitor weather and environmental data in real time.

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Senate ag committee should study Canada’s forest fire problem

By Alex Binkley
National Newswatch
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ottawa-Senator Rob Black is seeking approval from the Senate for a study on the growing challenge forest fires pose to the agriculture and forestry sector as well rural and Indigenous communities. He also wants the study to examine what wildfires do to water systems, air quality, food security and biosecurity as well as the federal government is doing to adequately monitor and organize a response to wildfires. The committee should also consider possible improvements to how the federal response to wildfires compares to international best practices. …Meanwhile federal cabinet ministers released a forecast of weather trends for 2024 and talk about how Ottawa is preparing to deal with wildfires this year after last year’s wakeup call events. …The federal Government Operations Centre is the lead for federal response coordination for emergency events affecting the national interest and works in close collaboration with federal organizations, non-governmental organizations and provincial emergency management partners.

In related news: Canada shares outlook, wildfire projections & emergency preparedness

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Hiring blitz at Quebec’s fire protection agency as fears over early and intense wildfire season grow

By Pierre-Alexandre Bolduc
CBC News
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The images of millions of hectares of burned forest, thousands of people being evacuated and the smoke from Quebec fires reaching as far south as New York City brings back bad memories for Quebec’s forest fire prevention agency and communities across Quebec. “We’re going to be worried all summer,” says Guy Lafrenière, mayor of Lebel-sur-Quévillon, Que., a town located 800 kilometres north of Montreal. Lafrenière says he’s hoping for a rainy summer but fears a repeat of last year’s hot, dry weather, which forced his residents to evacuate twice. The Société de protection des forêts contre le feu (SOPFEU) is hoping to expand its ranks this year to be better prepared across Quebec by hiring 160 people including 80 firefighters in the next two years — increasing its staff by 32 per cent. A permanent SOPFEU base of operations with 14 firefighters will also be set up over the next few weeks in Lebel-sur-Quévillon.

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Foresters to get ‘fired up’ in Sault Ste. Marie

By Jeffrey Ougler
North Bay Nugget
April 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Addressing current climate “challenges,” embracing innovation,and fostering “excellence” in landscape management, will be prime themes when Ontario foresters meet in Sault Ste. Marie later this month. ‘Forestry…Fired Up!’ is the theme of the Ontario Professional Foresters Association (OPFA) conference and annual general meeting April 16-18 at the Water Tower Inn. Prof. Alexis Achim, of Laval University, will deliver the keynote address, Don’t Give Up on (Canadian) Forests, and the conference agenda will be a mix of presentations, panel discussion, field tours and networking opportunities. Both in-person and virtual attendance options are available. The conference agenda reflects a “broad spectrum” of interests, from the transformative role of AI and drone technology in forest management to exploring new economic opportunities in wood use and addressing the “vital” task of engaging and welcoming the next generation into a profession in forestry, a release says.

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Health & Safety

Forest firefighters secure presumptive Workplace Safety and Insurance Board coverage for high cancer risk

By Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Cision Newswire
April 29, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – Ontario’s forest firefighters will soon have the same presumptive Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) coverage that urban firefighters do. Like urban firefighters, forest firefighters are at a higher risk of cancer, heart disease and heart injuries, and post-traumatic stress disorder. While certain diagnoses for urban firefighters are presumed to be work related, forest firefighters didn’t have automatic recognition for WSIB. …”The fight is not over and there is still work to do to. But for all those who have sacrificed their health and their lives, and those who continue to, we can at least celebrate the promise of change. Now it’s up to this government to implement this change immediately,” said OPSEU/SEFPO Local 703 Vice-President, Noah Freedman. Experienced forest firefighters are leaving Ontario’s wildland firefighting program for higher paying jobs elsewhere. The insultingly low wage the Ontario government offers doesn’t reflect the high-risk nature of this job. 

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A smoky summer is expected in parts of Canada as wildfire season begins. Here’s how to prepare now

By Kate Bueckert
CBC News
April 6, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

People in southern Ontario should start preparing now for the potential of smoke hanging over this part of the province during the upcoming wildfire season, one researcher says.”The most important thing is to act early,” said Amy Li, an assistant professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at University of Waterloo. She suggested taking two important steps: Make sure a home’s centralized HVAC system can recirculate the indoor air for heating and cooling and have high-efficiency filters; and Consider purchasing portable air cleaners that are an appropriate size for the space you want to clean. With wildfires will come warnings about PM 2.5, which is the particulate matter in smoke, Li said. The small particles have a diameter equal to or smaller than 2.5 micrometres. “…exposure to elevated concentrations of PM 2.5 can cause adverse effects to the respiratory and cardiovascular systems,  especially for children, people with respiratory disease or older people,” Li said.

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Forest Fires

Ten forest fires in Northeastern Ontario since start of the season – but they’re all out

By Bob McIntyre
My North Bay Now
April 23, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Wildland fire season is already in full swing in British Columbia and Alberta, but so far, so good in Northeastern Ontario. Natural Resources and Forestry Ministry fire information officer Evan Lizotte says there have been ten fires this season, but they’re all out. “The hazard is currently low in the Northeast Region,” he adds, “with a small patch of moderate hazard in the Sudbury area.” Precipitation during the week is expected to keep the fire hazard low to moderate. “There will be some sunny but cool days later this week, which will be flowed by rain over the weekend,” Lizotte says, “so the hazard will most likely not bounce back this week.” He reminds us that outdoor burning is only allowed between two hours before sunset and two hours after sunrise, and never in windy conditions.

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