Region Archives: Canada West

Business & Politics

Premiers call for federal role in ending ongoing B.C. port strike

CBC News
July 11, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Multiple premiers called for the federal government to play a bigger role in ending the strike at B.C.’s ports on Tuesday, as the job action affecting billions of dollars in goods reaches its 10th day. …While business groups have loudly asked for back-to-work legislation to get goods flowing from Canada’s busiest port in Vancouver, the federal government has remained steadfast in allowing negotiations to continue with the assistance of mediators. At a premiers’ meeting in Winnipeg on Tuesday, some provincial leaders said the feds should take a more active role in proceedings — including through legislation, if necessary. Scott Moe, the premier of Saskatchewan… credited the federal government for putting mediators in place but said they had to consider back-to-work legislation. …However, ILWU and other unions have warned against the idea of back-to-work legislation, saying it would go against labour freedoms and the Charter.

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Federal labour minister asks mediator for terms to end B.C. port strike

The Canadian Press in the Province
July 11, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Seamus O’Regan

Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan has given a federal mediator 24 hours to send him recommended terms to end the B.C. port strike that has snarled cargo in about 30 ports and spurred fears of supply chain chaos across Canada. O’Regan said late Tuesday that the gap between the positions of employers and the port workers union in the 11-day-old strike is “not sufficient to justify a continued work stoppage.” He said that once he has received the terms from the mediator, he will forward them to both sides and they will have another 24 hours to decide whether to ratify the principles of the deal. O’Regan said a good deal is “within reach” for both the union and the BC Maritime Employers Association. …“It is in the interest of everyone — the employer, the union, and all Canadians — that they agree to that deal as soon as possible,” he said.

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Port Alberni poised to switch economic base from forests to ocean

By Elena Rardon
The Vancouver Island Free Daily
July 10, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Port Alberni was home to the first export sawmill in the province, and for a long time forestry was the main employer in the Alberni Valley. However, a decline in the forest industry that started in the 1980s has led to a decline in the city’s overall economy. Over the past few years, ocean-based industry leaders have been shifting from an extraction-based model to a regeneration-based model. The “blue economy” strategy aims to create middle-class jobs in ocean-based communities, while pushing for healthier oceans and sustainable ocean industries. Port Alberni has seen an increase in these ocean-based industries, from ship-building to seaweed aquaculture to a food processing hub on the community’s waterfront. …Coastal Restoration Society also sees an opportunity in Port Alberni, as it selected the city last year as its Vancouver Island hub.

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In memoriam: Verne Roberts

The Powell River Peak
July 11, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Verne and Madeleine Roberts

Verne Roberts passed away peacefully on June 25, 2023, at 95 years of age in Powell River. …From boom man to high rigger to manager and owner of Greenwood Contracting, Verne and his “girls” lived in camps from Moresby to Port Alberni with many stops and adventures in-between. He was a longtime member, and former director, of the Truck Loggers Association as well as a big supporter of the Forestry Museum in Duncan. Dad was a staunch advocate for education and sat on the board for North Island College. … For those that knew the “Colonel” or ever attempted to keep up with him, it was hard to imagine him ever slowing down. …His quick wit and dark humour endeared him to many as evidenced by his long-lasting friendships that he cherished. A celebration in Verne’s honour will take place at 2 pm, Sunday, July 23, at Crown Isle Resort in Courtenay, BC. Hail to our Chief!

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In memoriam: Allen Donald Coombes

Dignity Memorial
July 11, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Al Coombes

It is with great sadness that the family of Al Coombes announces his passing on July 3, 2023. …He graduated from the University of Idaho in 1956 with a degree in Forestry and obtained a Master’s in Engineering from Oregon State in 1958. His career in Forestry took him from his home in the Kootenays to Prince George, Kamloops, Bathurst NB, Williams Lake, and finally, as a Vice President with Weldwood Canada, to Vancouver. He loved logging equipment, timber cruising, estimating the AAC, and talking lumber or plywood. He never lost interest in the issues facing the industry or tired of meeting old companions. …Allen requested that his ashes be scattered under a Douglas Fir (not a Hemlock) in Lighthouse Park. A Farewell celebration will take place at 3:00 pm on September 16 at Westerleigh Parc Retirement Residence, West Vancouver, BC.

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B.C. port strike Day 7: Union, employers association trade barbs

Canadian Press in the Edmontol Journal
July 7, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Opposition members of the B.C. legislature have added their voices to business and political groups demanding action to end a week-old strike at more than 30 west coast ports. A statement issued Friday by B.C. United members said NDP Premier David Eby must call on the federal government to intervene… The B.C. Council of Forest Industries was also calling for federal intervention or for dock workers and port employers to reach a quick resolution. The organization’s chief economist, Kurt Niquidet, said some forest companies were mulling shipments by rail or truck to get their lumber to the United States, but that was not an option for companies needing access to Asian markets, he said. Federal Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan has urged the two sides to use mediators and resume talks, while officials in Alberta and Saskatchewan agree with the B.C. United members, Council of Forest Industries and others demanding federal legislation to end the strike.

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Week-long BC port strike putting strain on provincial forest sector

By Paul James
Radio NL 610 AM
July 7, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC forest industry is adding its voice to those calling for an immediate end to the BC port strike, now that’s its entered a full week of shutdowns along the coast. The BC Council of Forest Industries says some companies have begun looking at alternative methods to ship their products. However, COFI Chief Economist Kurt Niquidet says that comes with its own challenges. “Our companies are always in close contact with the rail companies,” said Niquidet. “But there’s certainly a concern just about how flexible some of those systems can be. There’s only so much capacity.” While companies which supply the United States market can find alternative modes of delivery, the port strike makes that impossible for companies servicing the Asian markets. Niquidet warns that as the strike drags on, BC companies shipping to Asia run the risk of losing their clients to others in the global market.

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Hundreds rally in Vancouver to support striking B.C. port workers

The Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
July 9, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hundreds of people gathered in Vancouver for a rally to support striking B.C. port workers as their job action stretches into its second week. Representatives from labour groups as far away as Australia and New Zealand spoke at the event, who continue to push for improved wages as well as protection from what they see as an overuse of contractors for maintenance work. …ILWU Canada VP Pat Bolen told the crowd the collective agreement lays out “very clearly” that anything to do with the movement of cargo on docks or ships is the jurisdiction of the union. …The Employers Association has accused the union of trying to “aggressively expand” its control of maintenance duties. ILWU president Willie Adams encouraged workers from around the world to meet ships coming to their docks and let them know that workers are united with Canadian strikers. “They think they can take the ships to Tacoma, Seattle, Oakland, L.A.

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B.C. forestry sector calls for end to port strike

By Richard Zussman
Global News
July 8, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Another industry critical to B.C.’s economy is joining the chorus calling for an end to the port strike. As workers ready to hit the picket lines for an eighth day, the forestry sector fears losing billions of dollars of product and damaging its international export relationships. 

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Day six of B.C. port strike as management calls for binding arbitration

The Canadian Press in Nanaimo News Now
July 6, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — The organization that represents employers at roughly 30 strikebound ports in BC says binding arbitration could end the six-day-old dispute. More than 7,000 members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union walked off the job on Canada Day. Talks stalled and business groups are increasingly demanding federal legislation to end the disruption, while CP Rail, now known as CPCK, says it has issued temporary embargoes on rail traffic to the Port of Vancouver. The latest statement from the employers association says binding arbitration could bring the dispute to a swift close, something it first proposed in mid-June. Federal Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan has so far resisted calls to legislate the strikers back to work. A key sticking point for the union is the classification of maintenance work and the use of outside contractors.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada Provides $8.5 Million for New, State-of-the-Art Woodroom Launched in Alberta

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
July 10, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

PEACE RIVER, AB – In every sector of the economy, the fight against climate change is both an economic as well as an environmental imperative. …Canada has continued to support initiatives that enhance the competitiveness of the forest sector, its contribution to the bioeconomy and the resilience of the communities that rely on it. In 2021, Natural Resources Canada contributed $8.5 million through the Investments in Forest Industry Transformation program to Mercer Peace River Pulp Ltd. Natural Resources Canada announced that this contribution has resulted in a new, state-of-the-art woodroom. The equipment installed in the new woodroom includes innovative and first-in-kind debarking, chipping and monitoring technologies. These new processes are improving how wood fibre is procured and processed at the mill, resulting in a more optimized use of wood fibre. …By using advanced equipment and processes, Mercer’s new woodroom represents a step forward in promoting sustainable resource management and business practices. 

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Forestry

Nakusp logger reflects on days past, and what’s to come

By Skye Cunningham
Trail Times
July 11, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Herald Friedenberger, a long-time Nakusp local, wasn’t always privy to logging.  But he and his son Daniel Friedenberger have seen many changes over the years in the Nakusp forestry operations.  Originally from Manitoba, Herald moved to Nakusp in the 1960s when he was 21, looking for work.  His plan was to earn money (at the time, $2 per hour) to buy a new combine for his family farm back home.  Growing up on his family farm is where his knowledge of trapping started. Gophers and other prairie animals earned the young man two cents per tail.  Today, in Nakusp he owns three trap lines with his son and wife. And, has retired as a successful independent logging contractor.  …The work here was different.

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Mosaic Forest Management Proud Sponsor of the BC Bike Race

Mosaic Forest Management
July 11, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Courtney Brown & Digger Pond

The 17th edition of the BC Bike Race returned to Vancouver Island last week, with nearly 700 mountain bike riders from 35 countries competing on some of the most exceptional trails in the world. Mosaic Forest Management provided sponsorship and an access agreement to support the world-class event that has been welcoming riders to Vancouver Island and Coastal BC since 2007. Mosaic and the BC Bike Race signed a memorandum of understanding to share commitments to public safety and environmental values on the land base. The BC Bike Race competitors completed 25-50 km a day on trails in Duncan, North Cowichan, and Campbell River, along with race days in Nanaimo and Cumberland that featured trails on Mosaic’s managed forest lands. “We are pleased to support this world-class event that brings racers and visitors to Vancouver Island to experience some of the most scenic and challenging trails,” said Rob Gough, President and CEO at Mosaic Forest Management. 

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New forestry management engagement practices in play, local workers seeking timeline on permits

By Kerstin Auer
The Merritt Herald
July 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The provincial government announced in a recent press release that immediate steps are being taken to help protect rare forest habitats, as well as expand forest management and planning through public engagement. …Most notably, forest licence holders will be required to publish forest operations maps the public has access to. …Whether these new measures and regulations will have an impact on the ongoing local issues with cutting permits and employment in the forestry sector, remains to be seen. Aspen Planers continues to struggle with obtaining cutting permits. Both AP Group and mill union leadership have said the issue behind the Merritt mill’s recent closures is a lack of cutting permits… due to concerns by local First Nations with the applications. …It remains unclear if this will remove the barriers in the licensing process. 

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B.C. forest practices further fuel massive fires

Letter by Bruce Uzelman
The Terrace Standard
July 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

“Fire prevention and suppression polices over the last century have led to a buildup of fuels in our forests, and have contributed to the loss of natural firebreaks in places.” – Keith Atkinson, Chair, BC Forest Practices Board. …Forestry experts have long warned that forest practices and government policies are intensifying wildfire risk. But industry and government have disregarded numerous studies and persistent calls for action. …Mike Flannigan, a professor of fire science at Thompson River University, told the CBC that without climate change this fire season would have been impossible. …Promisingly, techniques to mitigate risks in forests and reduce wildfire events exist. Governments need only adopt them, and of course pay for them. 

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Environmentalists raise alarm over Northwest conservation lands cancellations

By Thom Barker
Terrace Standard
July 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Northwest B.C. environmental group is raising the alarm about the provincial government cancelling more than 1.35 million acres of land designated for conservation and recreational use. SkeenaWild says this was done despite warnings from government personnel and with no consultation with land and resource planning committees including the Bulkley Valley Community Resources Board (BVCRB), Kalum Plan Implementation Committee (KPIC), Indigenous nations, municipalities, regional districts and the public at large. “These cancellations put valued habitats at risk of being removed from public lands, logged or impacted by industrial development, including popular recreational areas such as Klinger Lake, Tyee Mountain, Atlin, and the Stewart estuaries, the non-profit said in a release. The Ministry of Water, Lands and Resource Stewardship, however, said extensive consultation was conducted and the move is progress toward reconciliation and modernizing land use.

Follow-up coverage, letter by Anne Hetherington, Smithers, BC: Province wrong in conservation land cancellations

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Whistler residents speak out about impacts of fire mitigation work

By Robert Wisla
Whistler Pique Magazine
July 9, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kristina Swerhun… who sits on the board of directors of the Whistler Naturalists, is concerned that the way the Resort Municipality of Whistler (RMOW) and its contractors are undertaking fuel-thinning prescriptions is resulting in ecological harm to the forest, particularly to the forest floor, by using logging machines. She wants to see more thought put into potential ecological outcomes while thinning is taking place, and a reassessment of the use of thinning by hand. …In 2022, the RMOW received $10.1 million from the federal government to undertake fuel mitigation in several areas across the municipality. …Forest ecologist Rhonda Millikin… argues the RMOW’s current practices are having adverse effects on the ecology of the forest, increasing the rate at which the forest floor is drying out. The RMOW has long enlisted forester and biologist Bruce Blackwell, of B.A. Blackwell and Associates, to build its fire mitigation plans.

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A First Nation’s Aggressive Logging Leaves Some Members ‘Heartbroken’

By Ben Parfitt, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
The Tyee
July 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MCLEOD LAKE, BC — In just three years, much of the McLeod Lake Indian Band’s treaty lands were stripped of their bountiful and valuable trees in a surge of logging that included one clearcut almost 3,000 hectares in size. The extensive logging by the band of its own treaty lands has left two former band councillors questioning why so much forest vanished so quickly. Defenders of the logging say that beetle infestations made the speed and scale of the logging necessary. But it’s not clear how much of the timber removed had been degraded by beetles, and some scientists say that not immediately clearcutting such forests will allow them to recover, while still maintaining healthy habitat for plants and animals. …Just how much of a threat this posed is unknown. Neither the band nor the provincial government have posted any information quantifying the alleged damage done by the insects, and with those forests now all logged it’s impossible to tell.

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Are ‘mother trees’ real? Evidence of this fairy tale-like effect is sparse

By Zayna Syed
Popular Science
July 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In the forests of BC a series of studies from the past 30 years contends that large, old trees send resources and messages to the seedlings around them. The “mothering” can, hypothetically, help burned landscapes recover faster, boost the amount of carbon dioxide stores in soil, and improve the resiliency of natural systems overall. The idea seems to borrow from bedtime tales about ancient trees and the enchanted forests they foster. …But two papers have recently called into question the evidence. …A paper published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution in February reviewed 26 studies that look at the ability of underground fungal networks to transfer resources and if mother trees send resources to young plants. …Justine Karst, a professor at the University of Alberta… “This sort of popularized idea of their role and how they work with these fungi as these passive conduits in the soil doing things under the direction of trees, there’s just not really evidence for that.”

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New forestry management engagement practices in play, local workers seeking timeline on permits

By Kerstin Auer
The Merritt Herald
July 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jennifer Gunter

The provincial government recently announced that immediate steps are being taken to help protect rare forest habitats, as well as expand forest management and planning through public engagement. The changes come after extensive consultation with First Nations, professional associations, and other stakeholders. Most notably, forest licence holders will be required to publish forest operations maps the public has access to. A digital version is currently being tested, with full functionality expected by 2024. “Providing people with an easy, user-friendly tool to view maps of local forest operations will help to promote transparency and information sharing,” said Jennifer Gunter, executive director of the BC Community Forest Association. “Forest operations maps have the potential to improve public confidence in our sector across the province.” While no date has been given, the requirement for licence holders to publish forest operations maps will go into effect soon, giving the public insight into proposed cutblocks and roads.

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RCMP suspect series of recent Vancouver Island wildfires intentionally lit

Victoria News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

RCMP suspect a series of wildfires near Sayward on northern Vancouver Island were intentionally lit and investigators are seeking public assistance. Sayward RCMP said they became aware in June that a series of wildfires near Sayward were human-caused and may have been intentionally lit. The most significant of these fires are the Newcastle Creek Fire, which is currently 230 hectares but is being held, and the recently-discovered Browning Creek Fire, which is much closer to town and, as of 4 p.m. on July 4, is out of control. Other fires, since suppressed, were along the Memekay, White River and Big Tree Mainlines logging roads. RCMP Island District General Investigations Section has taken conduct of the investigation. …Anyone with any information about any of the burning or suppressed wildfires in the Sayward area are asked to call the Island District General Investigations Section at 250-331-6010.

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Biodiversity, better forest management key to combat wildfire: experts

By Cindy Tran
Edmonton Journal
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…As wildfire season persists, ongoing debates about the leading cause of the fires is sparking tension among the already embattled Alberta, with some claiming arson while others saying climate change, researchers are pointing to weather and sharpening forestry management as a key to combating future wildfires. …Devon Earl, a conservation specialist at Alberta Wilderness Association said that the provincial government and forestry companies have said the solution to managing wildfires is to cut down older forests because they are more susceptible to burning, but she disagrees. “Old forests and mature forests are actually more resilient to wildfires than younger forests,” Earl said. …But with the amount of industrial clear cutting that is happening, there are more young forests regenerating that tend to be more dry than older forests, making them more susceptible to an intense wildfire. …She said more prescribed burns would help mitigate the intensity of the wildfire seasons.

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High fire danger throughout Kamloops Fire Centre as campfire ban begins

By Michael Reeve
CFJC Today Kamloops
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

KAMLOOPS — With the two hottest months of the year still ahead, British Columbia has already lost more than 1-million hectares of forests to wildfires this year. That figure puts BC in the third worst wildfire season to date in terms of land lost. Despite the loss of forest, the fire season has not been as devastating for properties and communities as those prior. The fire danger rating in the Kamloops Fire Centre is currently listed at high, as temperatures across the region are expecting to rise through the weekend. …To assist with the fire danger, 160 firefighters from the United States and Mexico are expected to arrive in B.C. this week and be deployed to the Prince George Fire Centre. The units will be sent elsewhere in the province if the need arises. With the anticipation of fire starts, the Kamloops and Cariboo Fire Centres are re-enacting a campfire bans.

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UNESCO report on Wood Buffalo park shows urgency of problems, First Nation says

By Bob Weber
The Canadian Press in the Prince George Citizen
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A report from a United Nations body on environmental threats to Canada’s largest national park shows the urgency of the problems, says a spokesman for the First Nation that originally brought concerns about Wood Buffalo National Park to UNESCO. The document, released last week and the latest in series of examinations of the park on the Alberta-Northwest Territories boundary, reaffirms threats from dams, oilsands development and climate change. …The Mikisew Cree brought concerns about the World Heritage site, before UNESCO almost a decade ago. The park’s traditional users saw water levels dropping year after year because, they felt,of British Columbia’s upstream Bennett Dam. They also feared growing oilsands tailing ponds posed a risk to water quality. UNESCO responded in 2016, finding those fears well grounded. Ottawa developed an $87-million plan to better manage and monitor water in the park. The new report is an assessment of how well that plan is working. 

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City of Port Alberni supports request for second access road

By Elena Rardon
Alberni Valley News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Port Alberni has agreed to support a letter asking for the provincial and federal governments to create an official alternative access road into the community. The West Coast of Vancouver Island was mostly cut off after a wildfire forced the closure of Highway 4. A detour was opened up via Bamfield Main to Lake Cowichan, but this route was lengthy, with limited visibility, slow-moving traffic and lack of amenities. In response, Nuu-chah-nulth nations… drafted a letter calling on the Governments of Canada and B.C. to “make immediate investments” in securing a permanent second access road. …The letter also asks for more investments in wildfire resources, including a contract with the Port Alberni-based Coulson Aviation. …“Two large corporations not only control our access out into the forest, but now they control access in and out of our community,” said Douglas, referring to Mosaic Forest Management.

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In the line of fire: Nelson’s wildland urban interface still needs attention: Blackwell

By Timothy Schafer
The Nelson Daily
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NELSON, BC — A significant piece of Nelson’s wildland urban interface has a moderate wildfire behaviour threat or higher, according to a new community wildfire resiliency plan written for the Heritage city. Around 15 per cent of the wildland — a one-kilometre wide section of the forest around the city — is subject to the threat of wildfire behaviour, the report by Bruce Blackwell and Associates and John Cathro warned. “This, along with other analyses presented and discussed throughout the document, indicate that wildfire is a real threat to Nelson and its wildland urban interface,” Blackwell wrote. Nelson has begun planning and preparing for a wildfire emergency, he added, but should refer to the community wildland resiliency plan (CWRP) on how to continue this process effectively. …Last year, changes to the format of the CWPP places more emphasis on resilience and preparedness.

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B.C. must urgently change forest strategies or face more wildfire disasters: report

By Dirk Meissner
Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
June 30, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — Strategy shifts are urgently needed to cut the risk of catastrophic wildfires in B.C. forests that threaten to decimate ecosystems and communities, says the B.C. Forests Practices Board. The board is calling on the provincial government to undertake a “paradigm shift” in how it manages forests, saying wildfire risk mitigation currently focuses on areas near communities, but leaves the wider forest landscape severely vulnerable. The report comes as the largest wildfire in the province’s history, the Donnie Creek wildfire, continues to burn out of control in the remote northeast. “The key is there’s an urgency to this,” board chair Keith Atkinson said. “We’re obviously experiencing, maybe, our most severe year in front of us.” The Donnie Creek fire, about 150 kilometres southeast of Fort Nelson, is an example of a catastrophic wildfire that impacts few people but will cause lasting damage, he said. …Forests Minister Bruce Ralston said in a statement the report was a call to action to prevent wildfires.

Additional coverage in Castanet by Colin Dacre: ‘No short-term fix’: B.C. forestry watchdog urges wildfire mitigation

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Stanley Park’s dead trees lead to serious wildfire concern

By Kamil Karamali and Darrian Matassa-Fung
Global News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stanley Park’s trees are struggling as drought conditions and a looper moth outbreak have combined to wreak havoc on the population. The dead trees are spurring calls for the park board to start preparing for the worst. Even more concerning, the Vancouver Park Board hasn’t updated its forest fire risk mitigation plan for the park since 2009. The 2009 report predicted that the hemlock looper moth posed a substantial risk to the forest — a risk that has become a reality in the past three years. “About 20 per cent of the standing tree canopy is dead trees,” said Tom Digby, a Vancouver Park Board commissioner. “The whole city is anxious about what that could mean for possible combustibility and fire in the park.”

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B.C. drought conditions expected to get worse: BC Wildfire Service

By Emily Marsten
Vancouver CityNews
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Wildfire Service says drought conditions in the province are expected to get worse this summer as the weather continues to heat up. This week, temperatures in the Lower Mainland are expected to reach upward of the 30° C mark, with temperatures feeling like 35° in parts Wednesday. Unsurprisingly, the service notes that several regions in the province broke new records for “their driest Junes.” “Average temperatures were one-to-two degrees warmer than normal for the Interior of B.C., while coastal conditions were close to average,” the service says. “Not only was it warm, but it was dry,” Matt MacDonald, the lead forecaster with the BC Wildfire Service, added. …It’s unlikely that people will be able to have an open campfire anytime soon, as the service adds more widespread fire prohibitions will be coming. There are various bans in place, including a campfire ban that covers most of the Coastal Fire Centre.

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Government of Canada announces National Fire Equipment Cache in Banff National Park

By Parks Canada
Cision Newswire
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BANFF NATIONAL PARK, AB – Climate change is causing wildfires to become more frequent and more severe across Canada, threatening our health, economies, and wildlife. Parks Canada announced the upgrading of a National Fire Equipment Cache in Banff National Park, through the construction of a new facility that will act as a central equipment storage location and augment equipment reserves across the country. Specialized fire management equipment will be maintained in a state of readiness where it can be quickly deployed to Parks Canada administered places across Canada or shared with provincial and territorial partners through the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre (CIFFC).

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Feds funding new state-of-the-art biorefinery for forest sector in Carrot River

By Jaryn Vecchio
The Northeast Now
July 7, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Saskatchewan — The federal government is allocating $10 million to set up a state-of-the-art biorefinery in Carrot River to help the forest sector become more efficient and reduce emissions. The funding is part of the Investments in Forest Industry Transformation (IFIT) and is being given to BioLesna Carbon Technologies LP, a joint venture between BC Biocarbon and Dunkley Lumber Ltd. The refinery will convert residual biomass, such as bark and sawdust, from forest operations into products like biochar. “If you add this char process to the soil, it acts as a water-holding medium,” said Kris Hayman, Vice President of Finance and Eastern Operations with Dunkley Lumber. “So, you can take very sandy soil and create the ability for it to hold moisture for a longer period of time, adding to the soil’s ability to grow.” …Hayman added the entire process is environmentally friendly. Right now, most residual biomasses are burned for power generation which creates emissions.

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Health & Safety

‘Consequences could be deadly: BC Wildfire Service issues a warning about drone usage near fires

By Cheyanna Lorraine
Kelowna Now
July 10, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) has sent out an urgent warning to all British Columbians regarding drone usage near active wildfires. Over the weekend, a fire started in Ellison Provincial Park, between Vernon and Kelowna. The blaze was held quickly thanks to the work of Vernon firefighters and crews from the BCWS. However, crews noted a drone buzzing in the area where they were trying to work. Transport Canada and the BCWS says the use of drones near a wildfire is “explicitly prohibited.” The BCWS says the operation of any aircraft not associated with the firefighting effort can not only hamper or shut down operations, but it puts hardworking firefighters at risk. “If a drone collides with firefighting aircraft, the consequences could be deadly. In the interest of air crew and public safety, British Columbians are asked to keep their drones well away from wildfires,” says the agency.

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Tree planter airlifted to hospital after bear attack near Tumbler Ridge, B.C.

Canadian Press in Powell River Peak
July 7, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — A tree planter has been attacked by a bear in northeastern British Columbia. Few details have been released, but a statement from the Conservation Officer Service says it happened Thursday near Tumbler Ridge. The statement says the victim has been airlifted to hospital in Prince George. The service has not said if the attack involved a grizzly or a black bear. It says four officers have been assigned to investigate what happened. They will determine next steps if they can track and identify the bear to determine why it might have charged. [END]

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Minister Dix’s statement on National Injury Prevention Day

By Ministry of Health
The Province of BC
July 5, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Adrian Dix

Adrian Dix, Minister of Health, has issued the following statement in recognition of National Injury Prevention Day, July 5, 2023: “Today, we pause to reflect on the significance of promoting safety to prevent injuries in our everyday lives. …“Preventable injury kills more children than any disease, and more youth than all other causes combined. Falls are the leading cause of injury, deaths, hospitalizations, emergency department visits and disabilities. Overall, preventable injuries cost the B.C. economy $4.3 billion in 2018, including $2.7 billion in direct health-care costs. …“Today, I encourage everyone in B.C. to visit the sites below for greater awareness, to promote safety and prevent injuries in their homes, workplaces and communities. Together, we will build a safer future for all of us.”

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Forest Fires

B.C. declares state of emergency for Stikine region

By Ministry of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness
The Province of BC
July 10, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Province of BC is declaring a state of emergency for the unincorporated Stikine region in response to the ongoing wildfire situation and is expanding campfire bans throughout the province. An evacuation order is in place for specific areas in the region affected by the Little Blue River wildfire. The Stikine region is B.C.’s only unincorporated region. The Province is responsible for implementing evacuation orders for the region, which requires the Province to issue a state of emergency for the region. The declaration is in effect as of Monday, July 10, 2023. Once issued, the state of emergency is initially in effect for 14 days and may be extended or rescinded as necessary. Effective July 10, category 1 campfires will be prohibited throughout B.C. with the exception of Haida Gwaii. Campfires have already been prohibited in many regions of B.C. …There are 311 active wildfires burning in the province.

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Evacuation orders issued for regions in B.C’s Prince George Fire Centre

The Canadian Press in the Times Colonist
July 9, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako and the Regional District of Cariboo have issued evacuation orders this weekend due to wildfires in British Columbia. The Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako says the danger posed by the Tsah Creek wildfire has prompted an evacuation order for all properties on either side of Highway 27 in the vicinity of Echo Lake and Bearcub FSR. …The district, along with the Saik’uz First Nation, has also ordered evacuation for all properties to the south of the Bobtail Connector and Kluskus Forest Service Roads. And on Sunday afternoon, the district issued an evacuation order due to the Parrot Lookout wildfire. …In the Cariboo Regional District, emergency alerts were issued due to wildfire risks in the Townsend Creek and Branch Road area, and one of those alerts was upgraded to an evacuation order on Sunday.

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Evacuation alert issued in Yukon for the Ibex Valley east of the Takhini River

By Chris MacIntyre
CBC News
July 9, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Residents living in the Ibex Valley area, east of the Takhini River, are now under an evacuation alert due to a wildfire burning near the Takhini River bridge. The Yukon’s Emergency Measures Organization issued the alert late Saturday night. The fire, which was reported at 5 p.m. Saturday, is burning about two kilometres south of the bridge, along the Alaska Highway. A helicopter, two air tankers, the Yukon Fire Marshall SHOT (Special Heavy Operations Team) group and crews from Wildland Fire Management and the Hootalinqua and Ibex Valley Volunteer Fire Departments were dispatched to respond. …As of 1 a.m. on Sunday, the fire had grown to approximately 73 hectares. It was highly visible, with smoke affecting the Ibex Valley and Whitehorse. According to the Department of Community Services, winds were favourable and did not push the fire directly toward the Alaska Highway and residences.

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Dozens of Lightning Sparked Wildfires Prompt a Number of Evacuation Orders and Alerts in the Bulkley Nechako

By Jeff Blagden
Canada’s First Nations Radio (CFNR) Network
July 9, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dozens of lightning-sparked wildfires in the northwest over the weekend have prompted a slew of new evacuation orders and alerts. In Telkwa, properties west of the river accessed off Tatlow Road are being evacuated due to the 23 hectare Powers Creek blaze. South of Houston, on the far west edge of Francois Lake, the 130 hectare Parrot Lookout fire is also prompting an evacuation order. A pair of fires at Sheraton Creek and Stearns Creek in Tintagel are covering a combined 360 hectares. They have evacuation orders in place for the Kager Lake campsite and Boer Mountain Trails, and alerts covering the area between the fires. Now covering 300 hectares, the Tsah Creek fire is also leading to orders for properties on either side of Highway 27 near Echo Lake. More orders are in place for the area around Finger Lake, north of the Provincial Park, due to a 165 hectare blaze.

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Gender reveal party ‘explodes’ into wildfire near Oliver

By Jacqueline Gelineau
The Summerland Review
July 5, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

A gender reveal party gone wrong at Mount Baldy, near Oliver sparked a wildfire that was quickly extinguished by a group of locals. …Rob Iezzi and his friends were alerted to a rapidly-spreading blaze and immediately jumped into action on the afternoon of July 3. …Ironically, Iezzi and his wife, who run the Pink Palace Bed and Breakfast at the Mt. Baldy resort, were hosting their annual Firesmart event on the weekend of the incident. …Iezzi suspects that the fire was started when an explosive target called tannerite was shot during the gender reveal party. “Judging by all the pink powder, it was girl.” …The explosive is considered a Binary Exploding Target …The location of the fire is considered to be a “high” fire danger area. …Iezzi said “I thought it was just common sense not to blow things up in the woods during fire season.”

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Donnie Creek wildfire burns through cultural heritage of three First Nations

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
July 6, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Blueberry River First Nations had just started working to rehabilitate swaths of their territory north of Fort St. John from decades of industrial development before the Donnie Creek wildfire sparked by lightning sometime around May 12. Now, Blueberry River Chief Judy Desjarlais is unsure exactly how much of that land is engulfed by a fire that has grown to more than 5,700 square kilometres, almost twice the size of Metro Vancouver. “It felt like this was just kicking us while we were down,” Desjarlais said. “We were just going to get up, and then we were hit again.” The Donnie Creek blaze is officially B.C.’s biggest-ever forest fire and is consuming more than industry-altering amounts of timber. The land is also the traditional territory of the Blueberry River, Prophet River and Doig River First Nations. Desjarlais said elders are watching nervously as important cultural resources are being burned over.

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