Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature – COFI Convention

Mayors Panel Calls for Champions, Civic Engagement and a Return to Honest Dialogue on Forestry

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three BC mayors brought a community perspective to the 2026 COFI Convention in a panel moderated by Karen Brandt, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs and Partnerships at Mosaic Forest Management. The panelists were Leonard Krog, Mayor of Nanaimo; Brad West, Mayor of Port Coquitlam; and Maria McFadden, Mayor of Castlegar. The session ranged across polarization, public communications, civic engagement, land use, and what local governments need from the forestry sector to be effective advocates. Each mayor was asked to open with their biggest concern about the state of the sector and their hopes for it a decade out. West said his primary concern is that residents of Metro Vancouver are entirely unaware that mill closures have any material impact on their lives — that they do not connect the health care, education, and public services they rely on to the forestry workers who help fund them. Without that awareness, he said, the political conditions for meaningful action will not develop.

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Next Generation Panel Sees Opportunity Amid Complexity at COFI 2026

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

A panel of three emerging forestry leaders offered a ground-level perspective on the sector’s challenges and opportunities at the 2026 COFI Convention, in a session moderated by Natalie McGladrey, Strategic Business Advisor at Canfor. The panelists were Anna McNally, Manager of Cedar Sales at Western Forest Products; Georgina Clarke-Magnus, RPF and Planning Forester at A&A Trading Ltd.; and Mark Roller, RPF and General Manager of Woodlands at Sinclar Group Forest Products. Each described arriving in forestry by a non-linear path — Clarke-Magnus through urban roots and a pivot from psychology, Roller after a carpentry career in Alberta and a formative canoe trip with a forester father-in-law, and McNally after arriving from Ireland and taking a reception position at Western Forest Products that turned into a decade-long career. All three cited the people in the sector and the complexity of the work as what keeps them engaged.

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COFI 2026 Opens with Call to Reframe Forestry’s Public Narrative

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries launched its 2026 annual convention Wednesday evening with an opening reception at the JW Marriott Parq Vancouver, drawing what COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad described as 650 delegates expected over the three-day event — making it Western Canada’s largest gathering of forestry sector leaders. Haakstad and Andrew James, Partner at KPMG and sponsor representative for the evening, both took to the podium to welcome attendees and frame the days ahead around the conference theme: “Forestry is a Solution.” Haakstad welcomed delegates and acknowledged the sponsors supporting the convention, with particular recognition of KPMG as the sponsor of the opening reception.

James developed the theme at greater length, describing it as both a statement of fact and a strategic assertion — a necessary counterpoint to public narratives that tend to focus on the sector’s constraints rather than its contributions. Speaking to an audience that included forestry professionals, industry executives and government representatives, he argued that forestry functions as a solution across several distinct dimensions. For rural and Indigenous communities in BC, he said, the sector provides a foundation for sustainable economic development, skilled employment and long-term community resilience. On climate, he pointed to renewable materials, carbon storage and responsible forest management as areas where forestry contributes directly to environmental objectives. And on innovation, he noted ongoing industry investment in new technologies, products and operating models as evidence of the sector’s capacity for adaptation.

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

Share Your Voice: How You Can Support BC’s Forest Workers and Communities

Forestry is a Solution
April 2, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada West

In the face of significant challenges—from mill closures to tariffs and shifting global markets—one question we hear more than any other from people: “What can I actually do to help?” When the headlines are dominated by uncertainty, it can feel like the hurdles facing the forest industry are too large for any one person to influence. But there is a powerful way to make your voice heard and tell the provincial government it isn’t just an industry priority but a priority for every British Columbian that wants a resilient future.

That way is Forestry is a Solution. Forestry is a Solution is a province-wide initiative led by a broad coalition of workers, community leaders, and industry advocates. Every name added to the list strengthens our collective message of support for communities, workers and families who depend on BC forestry. It has never been easier:

  • Visit forestryisasolution.com
  • Sign the petition to show our collective strength.
  • Send a letter using the simple, automated tool to tell your MLA why this sector matters to you.

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Business & Politics

Latest U.S. softwood ruling exposes broken trade process, underscores need for negotiated resolution

By Brian Menzies, executive director
Independent Wood Processors Association
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

North Vancouver – The Independent Wood Processors Association (IWPA) says today’s preliminary U.S. softwood lumber duty ruling under Administrative Review 7 (AR7) is further evidence that the softwood lumber dispute has become a broken process that continues to punish businesses and consumers on both sides of the border without bringing either side closer to resolution. The U.S. Department of Commerce has posted a preliminary tariff determination expected to be finalized in August. The preliminary combined duty rate includes a countervailing duty (CVD) of 14.17 per cent and an anti-dumping duty (AD) of 10.66 per cent, for a total combined rate of 24.83 per cent. The current duty rate of 35.16 per cent will remain in effect until a final determination is issued. …The Independent Wood Processors Association says the ongoing dispute continues to unfairly harm companies that should never have been included in the first place. … “This ongoing cycle is creating uncertainty for businesses, workers, and consumers across North America and highlights the urgent need for a negotiated solution,” said Andy Rielly, Chair of the IWPA.

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Minister’s statement about administrative review results on Canadian softwood lumber duty

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, issued the following statement in response to the US Department of Commerce’s release of preliminary results of the seventh administrative review of its anti-dumping and countervailing duty orders on Canadian softwood lumber: “BC stands with all those across Canada in our disappointment that the US has signalled that it will continue to impose unwarranted and unfair duties on Canadian softwood lumber products. “These duties serve only to damage both of our economies by harming BC and Canadian communities, and increasing the cost of housing and renovations for American families.  “Duties on Canadian softwood lumber needlessly favour offshore imports that endanger North American jobs across the supply chain. Workers in BC, in Canada and in the US are worse off from duties on softwood lumber.

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B.C. forestry conference deals with Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act amid industry struggles

By Amy Judd & Paul Johnson
Global News
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Terry Teegee

[The Council of Forest Industries event] is underway in B.C. and perhaps, not surprisingly, Aboriginal title and the Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, or DRIPA, are top of mind for many. More than 600 industry, government and First Nations representatives are discussing the issues facing B.C.’s struggling forest industry. Terry Teegee, the Regional Chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations, gave the keynote speech at the conference. He once again offered reassurances that, while First Nations leaders reject any changes to DRIPA, this does not threaten private property. “Private property is private property,” Teegee said. “No First Nations want anything to do with private property. Rather, negotiations need to be had with this provincial government in regard to title. At the core of this commitment is free, prior, and informed consent. Teegee said that DRIPA should be fully implemented to allow for predictability and sustainability of forestry, mining and other resource industries.

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B.C. forest industry opens convention still looking for action on streamlining permits

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Makenzie Leine, Ravi Parmar & Kim Haastad

BC Forest Minister Ravi Parmar arrived at the Council of Forest Industries’ annual convention in Vancouver holding out the promise that policy changes at government-run BC Timber Sales will free-up some new timber for an industry that can’t get enough of its raw material. For the industry, however, changes that Parmar heralded in Bill 14 won’t come quickly enough to help and don’t get at their core problem with a permitting process that takes companies years to navigate before receiving permission to harvest trees. “It’s now taking two to three years, in many cases, to get a forestry permit,” Council of Forest Industries CEO Kim Haakstad said. “But we’ve seen mines approved in 10 months.” Haakstad said: “We’d just love to see the same in forestry.” …“I think that unless we see some more urgent action from the provincial government, it’s likely that we’ll see more closures this year,” she added.

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Four B.C. companies divvy $6.75 million in provincial funding to expand their work

Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

KELOWNA — Four manufacturing businesses in British Columbia are being given a total of $6.75 million to help expand their production, while creating more than 100 jobs. B.C. Premier David Eby was in Kelowna to make the announcement on Wednesday, and says the funding will facilitate another $60 million or more in private capital investment by the firms. Recipients include Mako Wood Furniture to build a new facility in Merritt and Goodway Homes for a new manufacturing site in Malakwa…

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Economic impact report on forestry grim

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG News Prince George
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – “Every day I get a phone call from an employer, and the first thing that comes to my mind is, ‘Oh, we’re going to lose another operation.’ And right now we’re probably down to about half the membership we were, a number of years ago.” That’s the sentiment of the president of the United Steelworkers – the union representing forestry workers in northern and central B.C, Brian O’Rourke. And the numbers are startling. Comparing data compiled from 2024 to 2026, the amount of money invested in forestry in British Columbia dropped from $15.8 billion to $14.4 billion, while the number of people employed in the sector dropped by 5,000. First Nations are acutely impacted, with 4,800 directly employed in forestry leading up to 2024. That dropped to 2,600. Meanwhile, the amount of money the industry generates for the provincial coffers dropped dramatically from $17.4 billion to just $12.8 billion. …But the Council of Forest Industries is infinitely optimistic because – in the words of Kim Haakstad – everyone uses forestry is some fashion.

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COFI 2026: Looking to forestry to build a stronger B.C.

Global News
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

As forestry representatives gather in Vancouver for the annual COPI convention Global News Morning speaks with Kurt Niquidet of the BC Council of Forest Industries about the importance of the sector in B.C.’s overall fiscal health.

Additional video coverage from the CBC: B.C.’s forestry sector ‘in crisis’ amid 45% U.S. tariffs: economist As the B.C. softwood lumber sector continues to face struggles on two fronts — punishing U.S. duties and a complex regulatory regime in the province — a convention in Vancouver is looking at what the province can control to prevent more job losses in the sector. Kurt Niquidet, vice-president and chief economist at the Council of Forest Industries, said there’s a push to diversify products and exports.

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Employee of national non profit accused of $6M-plus fraud involving First Nations Guardians money

By Clare McFarlane
The Tofino-Ucluelet Westerly News
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

An employee at a national non-profit is accused of fraud involving more than $6 million in public funds earmarked for Indigenous Guardians programming. The First Nations National Guardians Network, or NGN, provides funding, networking, training and education opportunities that support First Nations-led stewardship and sovereignty. In an email, the non-profit – which administers funds from the federal Department of Environment and Climate Change – told operators of Guardians programs it had found “evidence of a sustained pattern of unauthorized financial transactions that appear to have been made by a member of staff.” An investigation identified suspicious transactions over a period of months… 90 Indigenous Guardians projects were funded through NGN in the 2023-24 fiscal year. In the North Island, they include Campbell River-based Homalco First Nation, which received $100,000, and Nanwakolas Council Society, an alliance headquartered in Campbell River that represents First Nations on the South Central Coast and northern Vancouver Island, which received $150,000.

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Industry-Driven Training: Shaping the Future of Sawmilling

British Columbia Institute of Technology
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Professionals in the lumber and sawmilling sector who are ready to take the next step in their careers can elevate their business acumen and leadership potential through BCIT’s Associate Certificate in the Business of Sawmilling. Developed with guidance from industry leaders, this flexible, part-time program empowers learners to build the strategic insight, confidence, and applied skills needed to move into supervisory and management roles. Delivered fully online and taught by experts from across North America, the program equips students with a clear understanding of how economic trends, market forces, financial decisions, and operational strategies shape modern sawmill performance. Graduates leave with the practical knowledge and industry-relevant perspective to contribute at a higher level, drive improvements, and make meaningful business decisions within their organizations. What sets this program apart is the calibre of instructors behind it: professionals with decades of combined experience in economics, finance, manufacturing optimization, fibre strategy, and global wood products markets.

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Forestry is a Solution: COFI 2026 Convention to tackle industry crisis and what BC can control

By Travis Joern, Director of Communications & Events
The BC Council of Forest Industries
April 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — This week, the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) will convene its Annual Convention, bringing together more than 600 industry delegates, community and First Nations leaders, and government representatives. The gathering comes at a critical turning point as the sector navigates a perfect storm of mill closures, volatile global markets, and ongoing trade disputes. To weather the storm, focus must be on the factors within BC’s control. Action on critical policies has been too slow. As mills close and communities face the impact, the COFI Convention serves as a vital platform to align on practical solutions such as improving timber supply, streamlining regulations, and fixing the business environment to improve global competitiveness. This year’s convention theme, Forestry is a Solution, mirrors a province-wide initiative highlighting the deep-rooted support British Columbians have for the workers and families that depend on a vibrant forest economy. …COFI today released its updated study, Rooted in BC: Economic Impact of Forestry

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New Study Confirms Forestry Remains a Foundational Pillar of B.C.’s Economy

The BC Council of Forest Industries
April 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) today released its latest economic impact study, Rooted in BC: Economic Impact of Forestry. The report uses the latest Statistics Canada data up to December 2024 to provide a localized look at the sector’s vital role across all eight of BC’s economic regions. Despite significant global trade volatility and shifting land-use priorities, the findings underscore that the forest sector remains an indispensable pillar of the provincial economy. From sustaining high-wage jobs to funding the essential public services British Columbians rely on, the industry’s footprint remains significant.

By the numbers:

  • Total Investment: $14.4 Billion invested in BC operations (2015-2024)
  • Employment: 95,000 jobs (direct, indirect, and induced)
  • Government Revenue: $3.4 Billion to support healthcare, education and infrastructure
  • Manufacturing: Forestry represents 1 in 5 BC manufacturing jobs
  • Exports: 21% of BC’s merchandise exports

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Weyerhaeuser transfers to Gorman, Osoyoos Indian Band partnership continues

By Don Urquhart
Victoria Times Colonist
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

West Kelowna family-owned forestry company – Gorman Group – has completed a $120 million deal to transfer harvesting tenures from Seattle-based Weyerhaeuser, with the move continuing the strategic partnership with the Osoyoos Indian Band’s Nk’Mip Forestry division. …Dan Macmaster, Head of Forestry at Nk’Mip Forestry, told the Times Chronicle that this agreement continues with the transfer of TFL 59 to Gorman and “We meet regularly to review and update all land use activity on the tenure. This agreement was put in motion with Weyerhaeuser last year and has improved and evolved since the transfer of the licence to Gorman.” …Nick Arkle, CEO, Gorman Group added, “We recognize that any Crown tenure transfer comes with important responsibilities and obligations to First Nations, communities and employees who depend on the long-term stewardship of the land and the careful use of the fibre.” …Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests said: “Gorman Group is investing in the future of forestry…”

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‘We got it all’: Nuchatlaht First Nation wins title over entire 210 sq. km claim

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
April 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

A First Nation has been granted a title over 210 square kilometres of territory off the west coast of Vancouver Island—a landmark decision that represents the first time in Canadian history a nation has won full Aboriginal title over its entire claim. B.C. Supreme Court judge had previously granted the Nuchatlaht Nation title over an 11-kilometre sliver of land on Nootka Island in 2024. The latest ruling, handed down by a three-judge Court of Appeal panel Thursday, massively expands that territory to cover more than 40 per cent of the island. “They’re jubilant,” said lead lawyer Jack Woodward. “I mean they’ve got their land back, the ancient territory that their ancestors owned.” The appeal court found the trial judge had erred when he drew an “arbitrary boundary” to delineate the Nuchatlaht territory and restrict Aboriginal title to areas of “site-specific use.”

Additional coverage in Black Press by Mark Page: Nuchatlaht win appeal against B.C., granted title over 210 sq. km of Nootka Island

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Finance & Economics

Energy, mining exports lift B.C. trade in February

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
April 9, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

B.C. saw a significant increase in energy and mineral exports in February compared with a year earlier, while wood exports continued to decline. The province exported more than $4.8 billion worth of products in February, a 16.3 per cent monthly increase and a 2.8 per cent year-to-date increase compared with the same period last year. …However, exports in the wood sector continued to decline. About $479 million worth of products were exported in February, an 18.1 per cent decline from January. Lumber saw the sharpest drop, down 27.7 per cent, followed by other panel products (-23.4 per cent) and plywood and veneer (-19.1 per cent). As a result, year-to-date wood exports fell by more than 30 per cent compared with the same period in 2025. Machinery and equipment exports also declined, down 17.9 per cent month-over-month and 27.6 per cent year-to-date.

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B.C. payroll counts pick up slightly in January but labour market still lacks momentum

By Bryan Yu, chief economist, Central 1.
Business in Vancouver
April 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

Brian Yu

Payroll counts in B.C. rebounded in January by a robust 0.3 per cent (8,600 positions) after a slight decline in December, according to the latest Statistics Canada Survey of Employment, Payroll and Hours (SEPH). That said, patterns have generally remained tepid with levels largely flat since 2023 as firms remain hesitant to hire amid trade uncertainty, and what has been a sluggish economic environment. …Positions in the construction sector increased by 0.6 per cent (+1,100 positions) while manufacturing posted a modest gain of 0.1 per cent (+159 positions). Forestry, logging and support, which had seen a sustained reduction in positions since early 2025, also saw positions grow for a second month, up by 0.8 per cent (+104 positions) in January. A multi-year downtrend in forestry has further been upended by tariffs.

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Deloitte downgrades B.C.’s economic outlook amid declining forestry sector, population decrease

By Alec Lazenby
Vancouver Sun
April 2, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

The economic headwinds facing B.C. are expected to have an even greater impact than originally expected, with accounting firm Deloitte Canada downgrading its economic forecast for the province in its most recent update. Originally projecting 1.6 per cent GDP growth in 2026 in its January report, the financial consulting giant now predicts B.C. will have “muted” growth of only 1.2 per cent. Dawn Desjardins, chief economist at Deloitte Canada, said some of the main culprits are the declining forestry sector, which continues to face mill closures and thousands of job losses due to a lack of fibre, as well as crippling U.S. duties, a population decrease, and uncertainty surrounding the future of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement.

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Forestry

UBC reshapes forestry research to connect nature and human health

By the UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
Globe and Mail
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The University of British Columbia’s (UBC’s) Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) – formerly known as the Faculty of Forestry – is advancing research that links forests and nature-based solutions to human health and sustainable forestry. It’s training the next generation of environmental stewards to think beyond traditional forestry and toward solutions for people and the planet. “Foundationally, our focus is on forests and forestry, but it goes well beyond that,” says Dr. Robert Kozak, professor and dean of FES, which recently rebranded to better represent its expanding scope. “We wanted a name that reflected what we do, and that’s thinking about environmental issues in big, holistic, interdisciplinary ways.” The faculty’s name change is part of its evolution. “We’re just beginning to fully understand the impacts that nature and natural elements can have on human health,” Dr. Kozak says.

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Province upset because feds aren’t classifying all Alberta Crown land as ‘protected’

By Zoe Mason
Medicine Hat News
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The government of Alberta is contesting new federal environmental strategy on the grounds it has already met the benchmark outlined, a claim environmental groups describe as misleading. … Alberta Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Grant Hunter released a statement Tuesday criticizing the strategy for using what he considers a needlessly restricting definition of protected land. …However, Hunter argues that the nearly 60 per cent of tAlberta’s land base that is publicly managed Crown land should be considered protected. …According to the federal definition, only about 15 per cent of Alberta’s land is classified as protected. …The new federal nature strategy proposes funding up to 14 new marine protected and conserved areas and at least 10 new national parks and fresh water national marine conservation areas, adding at least 1.6 million square kilometres of protected lands and up to 700,000 sq. km of protected ocean over the next four years.

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BC’s forests are being reviewed to death

By Sarah Korpan, government relations, Ecojustice
National Observer
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If reviews could save old growth, British Columbia would have the healthiest forests on Earth. Instead, the province has produced a stack of reports as tall as an ancient Douglas fir. Their wording may differ, but their conclusion does not: BC’s forestry system is broken. Fixing it will not be easy or quick, but instead of acting, the government continues to produce new reports to delay tough decisions — especially when those decisions mean standing up to large logging companies that profit most from the status quo. Rather than using the reports to inspire action, the BC government is hiding behind them. …Nearly six years into BC’s OGSR commitment, we now have a sixth report by the Provincial Forest Advisory Council called From Conflict to Care. It again concluded that systemic reform is needed in the province’s forestry regime. Each report acknowledges the same truth: what we’re doing isn’t working.

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Forestry company secures five years of wood, adding stability to sector

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A non-replaceable forest licence has been awarded to Box Lake Lumber Products, enhancing its operations and the sustainable use of local timber. The opportunity is targeted to boost B.C.’s value‑added wood sector, putting to work unlogged timber. “A stable supply of wood to small-town forestry companies is a win for everyone in the community,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “This means more wood … for manufacturing companies, logging contracts for haulers and another boost to our value-added wood manufacturing sector. Our independent wood manufacturers put B.C. on the map as the global leader in high-quality wood products, and this licence is one more way to support that work.” A competitive opportunity provided specifically to value-added wood manufacturing companies, the non-replaceable forest licence will provide a consistent and stable supply of wood to Box Lake Lumber Products in the Kootenays.

Additional coverage in Castlegar News: Nakusp wood company granted logging licence near Slocan

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The Walking Dead actress opposes zoning proposed near Cable Bay

By Jessica Durlin
The Nanaimo News Bulletin
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sarah Wayne Callies, from AMC’s The Walking Dead, has urged her fans to oppose a Nanaimo zoning change west of Cable Bay trail. On April 16, a hearing will be held in Nanaimo, for the possible rezoning of 74.71 hectares of the total 86-hectare property at from rural resource to industrial, with site-specific provisions over its use, allowed density and lot coverage. Included in the application for rezoning is a provision of an average 100-metre buffer zone around Cable Bay trail, about 13 per cent of the property. The zoning application was submitted by Harmac Pacific. During an information session in 2024, the company shared it would like to turn the land into a private industrial park. At the time, a representative with Harmac told the News Bulletin that the process to lease out the land would be phased over many years, and it would be marketed to businesses that “might have synergies” with Harmac’s existing business. 

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When a Provincial Park Is Open for Private Business

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A private company is seeking exclusive rights to part of a coastal park near Victoria, sparking concerns about the B.C. government’s priorities for public wilderness areas. One With Nature Corp. aims to use 72 hectares of East Sooke Regional Park, …for an outdoor education and wilderness survival skills school. Five hectares near a hiking trail would be used for overnight accommodation and would be off limits to the public if approved. …The school would include an archery range, an outbuilding to process animals, a learning centre, a camping area, bathrooms, a boat dock and cabins built with trees the company would cut down in its exclusive use area, according to One With Nature’s application to the B.C. government. …A spokesperson for the B.C. Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said the land is available because it was never transferred to the regional district or dedicated as park land when the East Sooke protected area was created in 1970.

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Wildfires play major role in boreal forest biodiversity: report

By Derek Cornet
Laronge Now
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

LA RONGE, Saskatchewan — With Canada aiming to protect 30 per cent of land and water by 2030, a new study shows the federal government should pursue a conservation method which takes wildfires into account. That’s according to La Ronge’s Aaron Bell, who recently had a research paper published by the Ecological Society of America on March 30 as part of his PhD in Biology. The project, which includes experiments on 42 islands in the Lac La Ronge region, focused on testing competing ideas on how government’s design protected areas such as nature reserves, or provincial and national parks. …Bell proposing government’s use a pyrodiversity-biodiversity method, which promotes and maintains diverse plants and fauna and thereby generating diversity. …“I’m hoping it enables people in the North to say we’re not managing fires at all for biodiversity and maybe this is something we should think about moving forward,” he said. 

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Wildfire-risk reduction harvesting in Mule Deer Winter Range near Alkali Lake largely compliant

By Tanner Senko, Communications Manager
BC Forest Practices Board
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

WILLIAMS LAKE – The Forest Practices Board has completed an investigation into wildfire risk reduction harvesting in wildlife habitat areas near Alkali Lake in the Cariboo, following a complaint that activities did not meet legal requirements. The board found that most activities met those requirements, with one administrative error resulting in two non-compliances. The board received a complaint in July 2024 alleging that harvesting in mule deer winter range and old-growth management areas did not meet legal requirements and commitments set out in forest plans. Investigators reviewed five cutblocks harvested since 2020 within these areas as part of wildfire risk reduction treatments. Four cutblocks met requirements. In one case, harvesting proceeded without a required exemption, resulting in non-compliance with both forest stewardship plan commitments and general wildlife measures. While the exemption was not obtained, the board observed that the work on the ground reduced wildfire risk and maintained mature forest cover important for mule deer winter habitat.

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Watchdog’s report on controversial RCMP unit delayed due to lack of chairperson

By Chantelle Bellrichard
CBC News
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A years-long investigation into a special RCMP unit that polices protests against resource extraction in BC is finished but can’t be finalized because the RCMP’s oversight body has been without a chairperson for more than a year. The Civilian Review and Complaints Commission (CRCC) receives and oversees public complaints against the Mounties. It recently announced the completion of a systemic investigation into the Community-Industry Response Group (C-IRG), which drew national attention in 2019. …It’s unclear why the CRCC has been without a chairperson since January 2025. …At the top level of the agency there is meant to be a chairperson and up to four other members. According to the CRCC, all of those positions are currently vacant. …The majority of complaints against C-IRG came in response to civil court injunction enforcements and arrests in relation to Wet’suwet’en-led opposition to Coastal GasLink pipeline and protests against old-growth logging in the Fairy Creek area.

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Wildfire strategy reshapes logging plans in Bragg Creek

By Izaiah Louis Reyes
Airdrie City View
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The widely discussed West Fraser forest management plan for West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain has been updated to incorporate a new provincial wildfire mitigation program. West Fraser outlined the changes during its annual spring open house April 1 at the Cochrane RancheHouse, including a new supplementary harvest area in West Bragg Creek and a delayed timeline for Moose Mountain operations. The updates align with Alberta’s Community Hazardous Fuels Reduction (CHFR) program, introduced last year to reduce wildfire risk near vulnerable communities. “Working with forest companies, the program prioritizes the harvest of hazardous fuels within five kilometres of surrounding vulnerable communities,” the province said in an information package. “The CHFR program leverages existing forest tenure holders to adjust harvesting plans to make an immediate impact.” …“They’ve asked us as industry to prioritize our operations in that area,” said Tyler Steneker, woodlands manager for West Fraser Cochrane. 

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NDP must lead on forests says MLA for Saanich North and the Islands

By Rob Botterell
Gulf Islands Driftwood
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Rob Botterell

“Talk and log” old growth, mill closures, drought, wildfires, lack of value-added products from second-growth forests and climate change have shaken the very foundations of the forest sector in our province. Key NDP forestry initiatives such as the Old Growth Strategic Review have stalled. Nor is the province any closer to protecting 30 per cent of the B.C. land base by 2030, implementing the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, local watershed governance and a paradigm shift to a sustainable industry that protects workers and communities. Following the money tells the same story: the Ministry of Forests’ 2026 budget is $910 million, essentially unchanged from last year. No new money means no new effort to deliver on previous NDP forestry promises. …as the Green Caucus forests critic, I will continue to press for immediate implementation of the PFAC report, as well as full implementation of the Old Growth Strategic Review, 30X30, the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, and local watershed governance.

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Save Okanagan & Peachland Old Growth Forests & Water

Letter by Taryn Skalbania
Kelowna Capital News
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Do you know the Okanagan is home to some of the very last remnants of interior old growth fir and spruce forests, specifically Peachland’s watershed, near Glen Lake? Do you know Glen Lake is a major source of our community drinking water, as it joins Peachland Creek before supplying our brand-new $35M water treatment plant? …Tell your government, Peachland’s trees are not destined for mills, ships to Asia or a flailing forestry industry safety-net. Peachland watershed’s forests are worth more standing, they store 83 per cent more carbon than pine plantations and mono-culture conifer farms. Most importantly we rely on their free infrastructure services and natural ecosystem benefits. …Act now before your back country is compromised. Four ways to make a stand! Write, call, online submissions and a petition…

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Nakusp wood company granted logging licence near Slocan

The Nelson Star
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NAKUSP, BC — A Nakusp company has been awarded a five-year licence to log in an area west of Slocan. Box Lake Lumber Products will be allowed to harvest approximately 445 truckloads of logs per year, according an April 8 announcement by the Ministry of Forests. The accepted bid allows the company to access Interfor’s Tree Farm Licence 3, located south of Valhalla Provincial Park on what the ministry describes as steep mountain slopes where wood has been damaged by wildfires and pests. “This licence will help us secure logs to keep our mill operating,” said Box Lake Lumber Products president Daniel Wiebe. “We look forward to working with the ministry and Interfor, and are very appreciative of their support.” Box Lake Lumber Products, located southeast of Nakusp, specializes in split-rail fencing that it ships to North American and European markets. The licence is part of the province’s Value-Added Accelerators program.

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Tla’amin Nation, B.C. enhance collaborative stewardship

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
April 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Government of British Columbia and Tla’amin Nation have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to enhance collaborative stewardship actions in Tla’amin Nation territory, focusing on advancing key treaty commitments through a shared stewardship framework. The MOU, or the yiχmɛtštəm ʔəms gɩǰɛ Territorial Stewardship Action Plan, sets out how the B.C. government and Tla’amin Nation will work together to care for land and water, heritage resources, and Tla’amin wildlife harvesting rights in the region. In the Tla’amin language, yiχmɛtštəm ʔəms gɩǰɛ means “together we are taking care of the land.” “With the signing of this memorandum of understanding, the Province and Tla’amin Nation have taken a significant step forward to implement key commitments of the Tla’amin Treaty,” said Randene Neill, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship.

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Still hope for BC forestry — But the clock is running

By Jim Rushton
Resource Works
April 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

After roughly 100 sawmills, pulp mills, and engineered wood plants closed down or cut shifts since 2000, and thousands of loggers lost their jobs, the trade union representing those workers has its hands full. The consensus is: this is do-or-die time to stabilize the forest industry in British Columbia. USW Canada – District 3 represents workers across Western Canada, including BC’s unionized forestry workforce. Recently, District 3 Director Scott Lunny offered a forward-looking view of the industry on a podcast, despite the challenges it faces. Jeff Bromley, the union’s Wood Council Chair, put it this way: “What’s the alternative—giving up on rural communities throughout the province? We accept the responsibility to manage a transition in the best interest of our members.” …The Provincial Forest Advisory Council’s report, From Conflict to Care, has tabled a set of recommendations — and the Steelworkers Union agrees with its main thrust.

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Conservation North slams changes to Forests and Range Practices Act

Prince George Daily News
April 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Textbook disaster capitalism. That’s how a forest advocacy group describes the Ministry of Forests’ Forest Statutes Amendment Act, a set of legislative changes to the Forests and Range Practices Act. “As social license for continuing to log primary forests dries up, the Ministry of Forests doubles down, accelerating logging while claiming that BC is a global leader in sustainable forest practices,” said Jenn Matthews, in a Conservation North news release. …The proposed changes would also expand ‘salvage’ logging, a controversial practice where trees are harvested following a natural disturbance. “Salvage logging – especially in forests that have never been logged – damages soils, wildlife habitat, and water flows,” said Conservation North’s director, ecologist Michelle Connolly. “Moreover, when you log after natural disturbance, you’re robbing the forest of key building blocks (including still-living trees) for the forest that will follow. The Ministry’s claim that this is forest stewardship is garbage.”

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Celebrating the 2026 Silver Ring recipients

By the Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Each year, the Canadian Institute of Forestry (CIF-IFC) Silver Rings are presented to new graduates to welcome them as forestry professionals. The Silver Ring is a symbol of achievement, presented to those who have completed a CIF-IFC recognized program. The ring signifies a national bond among forestry professionals and a commitment to sustainable forest stewardship. The first Silver Ring ceremony was hosted in 1953 at UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship. It has since become a growing tradition at forestry schools across Canada. The ring is typically worn on the little finger of the recipient’s dominant hand. The maple leaf engraved on the ring is to be pointed towards the tip of the finger, representing a growing professional responsibility. The Silver Ring unites graduates from forestry programs across Canada in a shared promise to uphold the values and responsibilities of the forestry profession.

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If a tree falls

By Jesse Winter
The Globe and Mail
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

High in a tree in Vancouver’s Stanley Park, an arborist dangles from a climbing harness with a chainsaw… The work is part of a significant – and, to some, distressing – intervention to address the Hemlock looper moth outbreak that killed almost a third of the public park’s 600,000 trees between 2020 and 2023. …what’s happening in the park underscores the broader challenges of managing city green spaces in the era of climate change. …The city says those dead trees pose many risks, and the only way to deal with them is with saws. Joe McLeod, the city’s associate director of urban forestry, called it a “risk mitigation project for public safety.” …To better understand the twin risks of wildfire and falling trees, the city hired veteran wildfire ecologist and forester Bruce Blackwell. …None of this has sat well with Stanley Park Preservation Society founder, Michael Robert Caditz. …But fuel mitigation isn’t about preventing the most common fires; it’s about protecting against the worst possible ones, the kind of fires that occur on the most extreme weather days, when high temperatures, low humidity and strong winds combine to drive the wildfire risk into the red. [A Globe and Mail subscription is required for full story access]

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Cattle Were Poisoned by BC’s Forest Fertilizer. Now Someone Will Pay

By Amanda Follett Hosgood
The Tyee
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The B.C. government is recommending a fine against those responsible for the deaths of more than a dozen cattle last fall, but the Ministry of Environment and Parks won’t say who, exactly, investigators believe is to blame for poisoning in the Quesnel area. The October incident prompted public outcry… The cattle … were believed to have been poisoned when they consumed nitrogen fertilizer meant to accelerate timber growth. B.C.’s Ministry of Forests said that laboratory analyses of the fertilizer and animal tissues are still being completed. …Meanwhile, the investigation under the Environmental Management Act has concluded with investigators recommending an administrative penalty — a fine imposed on a person or business alleged to have violated a regulatory requirement. …James Steidle, of Stop the Spray BC, worries that the poisonings did not result from a mishap but from standard forestry practices.

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Health & Safety

Register Now for Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s 2026 Wood Pellet and Bioenergy Safety Summit

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
April 9, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Save the Date: June 9-10, 2026, Prince George, BC. Join industry leaders, safety professionals, and regulators at the 2026 Wood Pellet and Bioenergy Safety Summit, hosted by the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) Safety Committee, in partnership with the BC Forest Safety Council, WorkSafeBC, and media partner Canadian Biomass. The Summit gathers experts from the pellet and bioenergy sectors for two days of practical learning, discussion and collaboration focused on enhancing workplace safety.

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