Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

Conducting Employer-Led Investigations in Forestry

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

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

Read More

Wildlife Awareness on the Road and in the Bush

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Safe Phase Integration: Preventing Congestion in Forestry Operations

By Alexandra Skinner
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
June 25, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Overlapping work activities are one of forestry’s most complex safety challenges; without proper controls, phase congestion can pose serious hazards to workers. However, with proper management, forestry operations can achieve safe, efficient phase integration. …Phase congestion occurs when multiple harvesting phases overlap in the same or nearby area, often due to insufficient time or distance between phases. It often builds gradually and can go unnoticed until a serious incident occurs. When phases aren’t properly coordinated, workers face greater risks of being struck by or caught between equipment, or missing other hazards. In 2019, a young worker was fatally injured after being caught between the counterbalance of a log loader and the cut slope beside the road. WorkSafeBC’s investigation found that four phases of work were happening simultaneously in an area less than 90 metres long. …Safe phase integration begins before work starts. Daily activities must be planned with separation in mind.

Read More

Connection to Care: Supporting Mental Health Across BC’s Forestry Sector

BC Forest Safety Council
May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

BC’s forestry sector has always been known for its resilience, strong work ethic and deep connection to communities. In recent years, though, that resilience has been tested. Mill curtailments, closures, workforce reductions and ongoing economic uncertainty have taken a toll on workers and communities across the province. As we continue to adjust, one thing is becoming increasingly clear, supporting and prioritizing mental health is essential to keeping forestry workers safe. Workers across harvesting, silviculture, log hauling, sawmills and wood pellet operations are no strangers to demanding work conditions. Long hours and physical work are part of the job. But when mental strain like job uncertainty and financial pressure are added to the mix, it creates another layer of stress that can quickly start to weigh on people.

Stigma and concerns about job security can make it hard to speak openly about mental health and many workers continue to push through without reaching out for support. It will take a collective effort across industry to close the gap between needing support and asking for it without feeling judged or like they have to tough it out on their own.

Read More

Manufacturing Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment – Being Proactive Matters

BC Forest Safety Council
May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Wood products manufacturing operations have their share of hazards to workers. Identifying hazards, assessing the risk level and building controls are essential in both harvesting and manufacturing settings. BCFSC offers a wide range of resources and training courses to assist those who work in forestry. Visit the following web pages to learn more:

Read More

Combustible Dust Cleanup: Why Using Compressed Air is Risky

BC Forest Safety Council
May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

In sawmill operations, combustible dust can accumulate on equipment, rafters, floors, and production surfaces. If the dust becomes airborne, it can create a serious fire or explosion hazard. Good housekeeping is essential, but some cleaning methods can unintentionally increase risk. One of the most common examples is using compressed air to blow down and clear dust. There are many challenges and risks with using compressed air for blowdown. It doesn’t actually remove dust; instead, it instantly generates a dense dust cloud creating a significant explosion risk. The dust gets redistributed, shifting from one place to another, spreading across machinery, product lines, and other sensitive areas. It can be forced into hidden spaces or up into rafters, making future cleanup more difficult. When hazards like static discharge or sparks combine with airborne dust, conditions for an explosion can develop quickly. …Combustible dust hazards are manageable when dust is prevented from becoming airborne and ignition sources are tightly controlled.

Read More

Stronger Together: Forest Safety Week at Tree Frog News

By Cherie Whelan, CEO BC Forest Safety Council
BC Forest Safety Council
May 22, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Cherie Whelan

Since stepping into my new role as CEO of the BC Forest Safety Council, I’ve been listening closely to industry to get a better understanding of the emerging trends and concerns that keep us up at night. These conversations have reinforced just how essential safety is to every part of forestry, and how important it is that we continue learning from one another. What I see clearly is that our sector is resilient, and when we stay connected, communicate openly, and work together, we become even stronger.

We’re proud to be partnering with Tree Frog News to deliver our third annual Forest Safety Week from May 25–29. I encourage you to take some time to read through the safety‑focused articles featured throughout the week. They highlight key trends that are shaping the future of forestry safety and support our shared commitment to making sure every forestry worker goes home safe, every day.

Read More

Business & Politics

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

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

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

Read More

Supreme Court of Canada to hear B.C.’s appeal of decision it argues brought DRIPA into law

By Alec Lazenby
The Vancouver Sun
May 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Supreme Court of Canada has decided it will hear BC’s appeal of a lower-court ruling that upended the Mineral Tenure Act and potentially gives the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act the force of law. No hearing date has been set by the Supreme Court of Canada. BC Premier David Eby has said the BC Court of Appeal’s 2-1 ruling in December, which found the Mineral Tenure Act “inconsistent” with DRIPA, could put too much power in the hands of judges regarding how reconciliation with First Nations should take place. The Act was intended to gradually bring provincial laws into alignment with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. But Eby has warned the decision brings it into place all at once. “It is absolutely crucial that it is British Columbians, through their elected representatives, that remain in control of this process, not the courts,” Eby said.

Related coverage by:

Read More

BCIT recognized by the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies of BC

Education News Canada
May 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) has been awarded the prestigious Client of the Year Award for 2026 by the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies of British Columbia (ACECBC). The Award recognizes a client who encourages positive collaboration with consulting engineering companies through effective communication, fair and transparent processes, and respectful working conditions. The Award was announced at the ACEC-BC Awards for Engineering Excellence ceremony on May 8, at the Vancouver Playhouse. Danica Djurkovic, Associate Vice President, BCIT Campus Planning and Facilities, said, “BCIT is thrilled to receive this award from the ACECBC. …In the last year, BCIT has completed the new Tall Timber Student Housing building and begun construction on three buildings that will be part of the Trades and Technology Complex, while preparing to break ground on the Concert Properties Centre for Trades and Technology and South Campus Infrastructure Renewal project.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wood Connections Newsletter – BC Wood

BC Wood Specialties Group
May 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Don’t miss news, program updates, and more in this month’s Wood Connections news.

  • The 23rd Annual Global Buyers Mission (GBM) will return to Whistler, British Columbia, from September 10-12, 2026. Exhibitor registration is now open! Please email gbm@bcwood.com to get your invite and secure your space.
  • Timber Tech Connect Vol. 8 returns to the Fast + Epp Concept Lab for an evening focused on material innovation, engineered wood products, and circular wood systems. June 11 – 5:30 – 7:30 | Concept Lab – 397 W E 7th Ave #300, Vancouver
  • TWIG has expanded the Wood-First-Wednesday programming into the Robson and North Thompson region through a new partnership with the RNT Forestry Coalition, led by organizer Kim Muddiman. 
  • BC Wood is organizing participation for its members at Carrefour International du Bois, the leading timber European trade event for 30 years, taking place June 2-4, 2026 in Nantes, Frace. We invite BC manufacturers of value-added wood products to join us and connect directly with European buyers. Carrefour International du Bois, Nantes, France, June 2-4, 2026

Read More

Selkirk College’s Fine Woodworking Year-End Show Highlights Creativity and Craft

Selkirk College
May 8, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Explore the exceptional artistry and skill of students in Selkirk College’s Fine Woodworking Program at the upcoming Fine Woodworking Year-End Show and Sale. The event runs from Friday, May 22, to Sunday, May 24, at the Nelson Trading Company. The weekend kicks off on Friday evening with a gala from 7–9 pm, featuring live music, hors d’oeuvres and beverages. Guests will have the chance to meet the makers and experience an impressive range of handcrafted work up close. This year’s collection showcases an array of unique creations: finely built cabinetry, tables of every style, elegant boxes and beautifully carved spoons. Each piece reflects the remarkable transformation of raw, natural materials into thoughtful, three-dimensional works of art. …Over the nine-month program, students gain hands-on experience with woodworking hand and power tools under the guidance of instructors Dave Ringheim and Scott Stevens. Both award-winning woodworkers, they deliver a learning experience centred on vision, form and function.

Read More

This building is Canada’s first tall timber Passive House

Construction Canada
May 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC– Indigenous families and individuals are now moving into Canada’s first tall timber Passive House building in Vancouver. A Passive House certification guarantees that buildings consume up to 90% less heating and cooling energy than conventional buildings. The Chief Leonard George Building, located at 1766 Frances Street, sets a new benchmark for low-carbon, culturally grounded housing in the city. Developed for the BC Indigenous Housing Society (BCIHS) and designed by GBL Architects, the nine-storey, 81-home mixed-use building combines energy-efficient construction with Indigenous design principles. It delivers a 75 percent reduction in embodied carbon and greenhouse gas emissions through mass timber construction, including locally sourced timber floor panels and prefabricated cross-laminated timber (CLT) envelope panels, along with Passive House certification. …“Wood plays an important role for Indigenous communities, so the mass timber construction is significant to us,” says Brenda Knights, chief executive officer of BCIHS.

Read More

Forestry

Forest Practices Board to audit BC Timber Sales operations near Hazelton

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Lindsay Cuff Receives Killam Teaching Prize

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

Lindsay Cuff

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

Read More

Alberta utilities expand planned wildfire power shutoffs in Bow Valley

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

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

Read More

New Forest Landscape Plan to reshape timber and ecosystem management in North Okanagan

By Bowen Assman
Castanet
May 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Local residents are being invited to help shape the next decade of local forestry management at an upcoming public open house in Coldstream. The provincial government, in partnership with local First Nations groups, are hosting a joint engagement session on Monday, June 8, to gather community feedback on the development of the tmíxʷ naqscn Forest Landscape Plan (FLP). …The new FLP framework is a legal mechanism designed to replace older Forest Stewardship Plans. Once established by the chief forester, the 10-year plan will govern all timber harvesting, road layout and silviculture activities for BC Timber Sales and local forest licensees across the region’s watersheds. …The finalized FLP will shift the focus toward long-term ecosystem health, addressing critical modern challenges such as wildfire risk reduction, climate change adaptation, old-growth protection, and biodiversity, while maintaining a predictable and sustainable timber supply

Read More

Mosaic partially blamed by Evergreen Alliance for Mt. Underwood fire

By David Wiwchar
The Nanaimo News Now
May 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

David Broadland of The Evergreen Alliance is asking the Forest Practices Board to launch an investigation into the role that MOSAIC Forestry played in the Mount Underwood fire last summer. …MOSAIC communications manager Olivia Lyle said the Mount Underwood was deemed not related to their harvesting practices and they are confident in their fire hazard management practices. Listed as “human caused”, within 70 hours the August 11th fire became the biggest fire on Vancouver Island in almost 60 years… The Forest Practices Board has yet to comment on the complaint.

Read More

Powell River Community Forest grants approved

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
May 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

City of Powell River Council has approved the spring 2026 not-for-profit organization grants from the Powell River Community Forest reserve fund, with 12 grants, totalling $304,836.68, to be distributed to community organizations. At the May 21 city council meeting, interim manager of partnerships, intergovernmental and public relations Susan Auchterlonie outlined the granting process, indicating the community forest board reviews the applications and recommends grants to be awarded for council consideration, in both spring and fall allocations. She said the community forest board also provides input on projects submitted by the city that utilize the community forest reserve fund. Auchterlonie said a budget of $1.2 million was approved in the 2026 to 2030 financial plan, which is $600,000 for spring and $600,000 for fall grant distribution.

Read More

Wildfires: “An Overwhelming Challenge for BC” But 7 in 10 British Columbians Ready to Act

By British Columbia Automobile Association
PR Newswire
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BURNABY, BC – New research from BCAA reveals nearly two-thirds of British Columbians expect this summer’s wildfire season to be worse than usual, with half reporting they feel scared about potential impacts. Yet, despite nearly three quarters describing wildfires as “an overwhelming challenge for BC”, a powerful resolve for action and a sense of hope shine through: Over two-thirds are likely to take action to reduce wildfire risk; six in ten say taking even a small action would give them a sense of hope; and three-quarters are hopeful that BC can become more resilient to wildfires. Championing this collective spirit of hope and resilience, BCAA’s summer Fireweed Pin Campaign is kicking off for its second year… One hundred per cent of Fireweed Pin proceeds directly supports wildfire resilience and recovery work through two organizations: First Nations’ Emergency Services Society (FNESS) and Canadian Mental Health Association BC (CMHA BC).

Read More

Valhalla Wilderness Society makes case for three new parks in one of the ‘rarest ecosystems in the world’

By Timothy Schafer
Castanet
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A West Kootenay-based environmental group is stepping up to call attention to that fact and to lobby for the creation of three new parks in one of the rarest ecosystems in the world. Valhalla Wilderness Society (VWS) has spent the last 50 years protecting important wilderness across the province but the focus has shifted in the last two decades to the inland temperate rainforest. The area receives less than half the protection of BC’s coastal temperate rainforest, said VWS wildlife biologist Amber Peters, despite its globally rare status. “Three park proposals of the inland temperate rainforest have been mapped to include the most biodiverse areas, considered ‘true rainforest,’ from the Quesnel Lake area to the south end of BC’s interior wetbelt.” The three proposed parks are the Selkirk Mountains ancient forest, Quesnel Lake wilderness and Rainbow-Jordan wilderness, representing ecosystems of globally significant biodiversity.

Read More

Northwest Territories releases new guidelines for managing wildfire response

CBC News
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

@NWT Fire

The N.W.T. government has developed new guidelines for managing wildfires in the territory, as it tries to reckon with the worsening impacts of climate change. The guidelines say they are the fruit of a “common mission”: improving “fire services and response … to protect the people we serve, the places they live, the critical infrastructure they rely on, and their social, cultural, and economic well-being.” They focus on wildland urban interfaces… In 2023, nearly two-thirds of the territory’s residents were forced to evacuate due to encroaching wildfires, including near Yellowknife. The evacuation forced a reckoning with emergency preparedness across the territory, as climate change makes forest fire seasons worse and harder to predict. The guidelines say the intended goal is to standardize training for local wildland firefighters, and establish standards around payment for services, deployment and management of resources, and techniques for use in the field.

Read More

Webinar: Science-based Solutions for ‘Barriers’ to Salmon Recovery

By Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
May 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Join the Pacific Salmon Foundation for a timely and thought-provoking online seminar exploring the future of Pacific salmon recovery in British Columbia. Despite record-high salmon abundances in parts of the Pacific Ocean, many salmon stocks — particularly in the southern regions of BC — continue to decline, threatening biodiversity, fisheries, and food security. This engaging presentation will examine how physical and management barriers are impacting salmon recovery, and highlight innovative, science-based solutions now being developed through collaborative research. Topics include “fish-friendlier” fisheries practices and improved passage infrastructure designed to help restore struggling salmon populations. The seminar features presenter Dr. Scott Hinch, Professor and Associate Dean of Students in the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship, with moderation by Jason Hwang, Chief Program Officer & Vice President of the Pacific Salmon Foundation.
When: June 11, 2026 | 12 pm | Where: Online via Zoom | Cost: Free and open to everyone

Read More

Province-wide tour to present new vision for B.C. forests and rural economies

By Robin Grant
The Campbell River Mirror
May 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A province-wide public tour this June will bring a citizen-led proposal for forest management reform to communities across BC, with stops in Campbell River on June 11, Quadra Island on June 13 and Courtenay on June 15. Jennifer Houghton, campaign director of the New Forest Act Proposal, will lead a series of public presentations called the 2026 New Forest Act Roadshow on the future of B.C.’s forests, watersheds and forest-dependent communities. …“Right now, B.C.’s forest laws are built around maximizing timber extraction,” Houghton said. “The New Forest Act is a proposal to shift forestry toward ecological limits, stable communities, and long-term ecological function instead of short-term liquidation. …Spearheaded by the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society, the proposal has been developed with contributions from forest ecologists, including forester Herb Hammond. …More information the full tour details are here.

Read More

Watching for wildfires: The lonely job of B.C.’s last fire lookouts

CBC Docs
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

“Lookouts are pretty simple,” says B.C. fire-watcher Bart Vanderlinde. “You have a guy looking for a forest fire 12 hours a day.” High atop Sinkut Mountain in northern B.C., Vanderlinde begins each summer day the same way — scanning the forest for smoke. “You get up, get out of bed … grab the binoculars and scan around,” he says. Vanderlinde is among the last fire-watchers in the province. Where more than 300 lookouts once formed an interconnected network, he now often finds himself keeping guard alone. The Last of the Lookouts is a portrait of a profession that will soon be obsolete. It follows Vanderlinde during what may be his last summer on the job. As of 2025, most of B.C.’s watchtowers had been decommissioned, replaced by new technology — including aerial detection — and improved public reporting. 

Read More

Award-winning documentary B.C. Is Burning now free on YouTube

By Rob Gibson
Castanet Kelowna
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

An award-winning documentary about B.C.’s wildfire crisis is now available for anyone to watch free on YouTube. B.C. Is Burning went public May 20, released online after more than a year of community screenings across the province. The film, produced and directed by retired forester and filmmaker Murray Wilson, and Kelowna entrepreneur Rick Maddison, examines how forest conditions, climate, fuel accumulation and land management practices are driving wildfire risk in British Columbia. “This film started as an attempt to better understand why wildfire seasons are becoming more destructive and what practical steps may help reduce future risk,” said Wilson. The documentary features foresters, wildfire researchers, emergency management professionals and Indigenous voices, and looks at the growing toll fire and smoke are taking on communities across western Canada. …“The response from communities across B.C. showed there is a real appetite for thoughtful, respectful discussion around forests, wildfire, and community safety,” Wilson said.

Read More

Fairy Creek anti-logging protesters win appeal in bid for class-action certification

The Canadian Press in the Coast Reporter
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Fairy Creek anti-logging protesters have won an appeal against a court ruling that denied the certification of their proposed class-action lawsuit against the federal and provincial governments. The class-action application now goes back to the BC Supreme Court for a new decision, after the BC Court of Appeal found the judge who rejected the claim erred on several points. The applicants, protesters Arvin Singh Dang and Kristy Morgan, say the RCMP wrongfully barred them and others from the Vancouver Island protest site, where Teal Cedar Products had secured an injunction against the protests targeting old-growth logging. …The unanimous ruling by the appeal judges says the original judge erred by refusing to admit affidavits that had been sworn for another application, and also by concluding that the class was overbroad. …The decision whether Dang and Morgan are appropriate representatives in the class action was also sent back to the lower court.

Read More

West Fraser defends Tecumseh harvest plan

By Nicholas Allen
Crowsnest Pass Herald
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

ALBERTA — West Fraser says its proposed Mount Tecumseh Harvest Plan would cover 474 hectares and is scheduled to begin in 2026, with the company stating the work is part of a broader approach to sustainable forest management and wildfire risk reduction near communities. In an emailed response to the Crowsnest Pass Herald, Joyce Wagenaar, director of communications for West Fraser, said harvest planning is a key part of the company’s work and allows it to source timber for renewable wood products used in home construction and other purposes. “Harvesting plans are a key component of our work at West Fraser enabling us to responsibly source timber to produce renewable wood products to support home construction and other uses,” Wagenaar said. She said West Fraser views sustainable forest management as an approach that balances environmental, social and economic values over multiple generations. …Wagenaar said questions specifically about the provincial program would be best answered by the Government of Alberta.

Read More

Looking beyond the trees

By Ian Biana
Resource Works
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Robert Michell

Robert Michell is thinking in decades, not quarters. As elected Chief of the Stellat’en First Nation, he brings a rare mix of legal training and deep forestry experience to the role. The community sits between Vanderhoof and Burns Lake, near the geographic centre of British Columbia, in a region shaped by timber and now by transition. Michell is not new to the sector. After graduating from law school, he chose the North over Vancouver. “I’m a northern boy and I like the north,” he says. That decision led him into decades of work in the forest industry. It also shaped how he now approaches economic development for his community. The closures of major forestry operations have not hit Stellat’en as hard as some nearby towns. That is by design. The Nation has already begun to diversify, moving into areas like energy development.

Read More

When Indigenous Peoples Steward the Land, Nature Wins

By Michelle Gamage
The Tyee
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The biggest comprehensive literature review to date has confirmed that Indigenous stewardship bolsters conservation goals. The literature review was published recently in People and Nature and found “a clear, positive relationship” between conservation and Indigenous stewardship, said lead author William Nikolakis, associate professor at the University of British Columbia faculty of forestry and environmental stewardship. “The evidence is clear that Indigenous Peoples’ lands do deliver conservation outcomes that are superior to, or at least equal to, state-run protected areas,” he told The Tyee. This is despite Indigenous lands largely not being protected by or formally recognized by their country, and Indigenous Peoples around the world largely not being paid for their stewardship by the state, Nikolakis said. In Canada, the federal government helps fund Indigenous Guardians who steward their traditional lands. Indigenous stewardship has a “value to humankind globally,” he said, and there’s an opportunity to boost it even further.

Read More

Experts warn B.C.’s forest carbon market hitting a ‘dead end’

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…forests absorb roughly 7.6 billion metric tonnes of carbon dioxide every year—double what they emit. That number hides some worrying trends. In Canada, logging and wildfires flipped Canadian forests from a net carbon reservoir to a net source about 25 years ago, according to the federal government. British Columbia responded by launching one of the world’s first large-scale projects designed to generate revenue for local communities by not logging old-growth forests. The model, which began in the Great Bear Rainforest in 2009 … created market value by putting a price on carbon locked in and absorbed by trees. …Cheakamus Community Forest forest raised $600,000 in forest carbon offsets in a single sale to a mining company… But while Cheakamus celebrates rising demand and higher prices, Gary Bull, a professor emeritus of forestry at the University of British Columbia, said B.C.’s decision to regulate the carbon market has made it nearly impossible for others to take part.

Read More

B.C. allowed logging in caribou habitat despite its own ministry’s recommendation

By Wolfgang Depner
Canadian Press in Kelowna Daily Courier
May 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…The habitat range of the caribou lies mainly in eastern B.C. stretching from the north-central regions of the province southwards, with some pockets in western B.C. and along the U.S. border. But decades of logging have destroyed their habitat, reducing their overall numbers to fewer than 1,400 spread across 18 herds, according to government figures from 2023. There are said to be just under 200 in the area near James’ family cabin, but he said he fears for their future after the Ministry of Forests allowed West Fraser Timber to log in the area — even after the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship recommended against it. …The Ministry of Forests said in a statement that it considers many factors, when it comes to issuing a cutting or road permit. …The Ministry of Forests said in a statement that it considers many factors, when it comes to issuing a cutting or road permit.

Read More

Dry weather rekindles wildfire concerns for Sooke

Sooke Mirror News
May 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sooke residents are being urged to prepare for an elevated wildfire season as dry conditions, low snowpack and an early campfire ban raise concerns across Vancouver Island. A campfire ban was implemented May 7 across the Coastal Fire Centre region, prohibiting all open burning and campfires until Oct. 31 or conditions improve. Officials say human-caused fires remain the leading cause of wildfires in British Columbia. At the same time, forestry company Mosaic Forest Management says it is expanding wildfire detection and mitigation efforts across its Vancouver Island land base, including areas around Sooke. According to the company, Vancouver Island entered the 2026 wildfire season under “precarious conditions,” with snowpack levels at 44 per cent of normal and forecasts calling for warmer and drier weather through June. Mosaic also noted that there is a 62 per cent chance of a strong El Niño developing later this summer, increasing the likelihood of prolonged heat and drought.

Read More

‘Everybody remembers where they were on that tragic day’: Lac du Bonnet marks 1 year since wildfire

By Santiago Arias Orozco
CBC News
May 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Manitoba — Spring brings a sombre and painful reminder for Lac du Bonnet resident Riva Karklin. “Remember when it was a normal spring? When we were getting our seedlings and our tomato plants planted and taking them over to the neighbours’ house ?” she said. “This is what we were doing last year when it all happened.” …Firefighters were called to put out flames burning through the grass only kilometres east of her house at around 9:30 a.m. Crews arrived, and the blaze had already engulfed dozens of pine trees in dry ground. Winds were gusting to 70 km/h, fanning what became a raging wildfire that burned through at least 40 square kilometres and forced around 1,100 residents out of their homes, the municipality said. …Fire Chief Earl Simmons said the majority of the fire spread that first day. Crews spent a week keeping the flames from spreading and putting out hot spots. 

Read More

Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC Newsletter for May 2026

WorkSafeBC
May 22, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Highlights from the newsletter include:

  • Ask an expert video: Noise-cancelling earbuds aren’t the same as hearing protection: In our latest video, WorkSafeBC occupational audiologist Sasha Brown explains why noise-cancelling earbuds or headphones are not a substitute for proper hearing protection, and what employers and workers should know about reducing the risk of noise-induced hearing loss.
  • All B.C. workers, regardless of their immigration status or term of work, are covered by WorkSafeBC insurance and health and safety provisions. If you employ workers from another country who are working temporarily in the province, they have the same rights as other B.C. workers.
  • Workers in roadside work zones face a serious risk of being struck by vehicles or mobile equipment. This WorkSafe Magazine article outlines how employers can help reduce the risk by assessing site-specific hazards, developing a traffic control plan, orienting workers, and updating plans as conditions change.

Read More

Forest Fires

Cooler temperatures provide some relief for northwestern Ontario wildfires

By Rajpreet Sahota
CBC News
May 18, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Cooler temperatures and recent rainfall are helping wildfire crews contain fires across northwestern Ontario after a stretch of hot, windy conditions sparked multiple new blazes late last week. As of late Monday afternoon, there were five active fires in the northwest region, according to Ontario’s fire map. One fire near Dryden is not under control, at about 150 hectares. Five fires are being held, and three are under control. “Recent wet weather is really helping to moderate conditions following multiple new fire starts that happened late last week in the northwest region amid some high winds and some warm temperatures,” said fire information officer Chris Marchand. Marchand said overnight rainfall has already helped crews make progress, particularly in the Fort Frances fire management area.

Read More

Northwest Territories battles three wildfires as season gets underway

CBC News
May 18, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

The government says it is fighting three fires in the Northwest Territories, and it says humans caused two of the fires. It says one human-caused wildfire in the South Slave region is under control. It says the fire measuring about 0.0001 square kilometres, or roughly the size of a large house, began on Monday. The Environment and Climate Change website describes the blaze as a “camp fire escaped.” The government says it is also fighting an out-of-control overwintering fire, scorching about 0.05 square kilometres in the South Slave region that began on May 9. An overwinter fire is one that remains dormant or undetected for a considerable amount of time after it starts. The government says the overwinter fire was found using infrared scanning along the perimeter of the Fort Providence wildfire last year. It says firefighters will attack hotspots found by scanning and get rid of the “remaining heat” using heavy equipment.

Read More

Forest History & Archives

Dease Lake and Cassiar Lodgepole Pine Collections in 1984

By Don Pigott
The Tree Frog Forestry News
May 25, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada West

In this latest installment of his memoirs from the seed collection camps of northern BC, veteran cone collector Don Pigott recounts an unforgettable 1984 expedition through the Dease Lake and Cassiar region in search of lodgepole pine cones destined for Sweden’s forestry program. What begins as a straightforward collection job quickly becomes a vivid portrait of life in the north — from remote campsites, mining towns and ghost settlements to colourful characters, First Nations communities, and the ingenious habits of squirrels whose cone caches supplied much of the harvest.

Filled with humour, hardship and rich historical detail, Pigott’s story captures a fascinating era in BC forestry when cone collection was part adventure, part entrepreneurship, and entirely dependent on relationships, trust and resilience. Along the way are tales of cash deals, bush cooking, CBC interviews, roadside encounters, and “Mighty Moe,” one of the memorable personalities of the Stewart-Cassiar Highway.

Read More