Region Archives: Canada West

Opinion / EdiTOADial

The influence of Indigenous’ interests on BC’s natural resources sector is expanding at a rapid pace

By David Elstone, Managing Director
The Spar Tree Group
April 6, 2023
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

The influence of Indigenous’ interests on British Columbia’s natural resources sector is expanding at a rapid pace. …The BC government’s [2021] Modernizing Forest Policy intentions paper conveyed a goal “to increase the amount of ‘replaceable’ forest tenure held by Indigenous peoples to 20% from the current level of approximately 10%. …A March 2023 analysis by the Spar Tree Group, showed that the total amount of tenure held by First Nations organizations had decreased by 7% to 9.7 million m3, but the amount of replaceable tenure increased by 6% to 7.3 million m3. …With ongoing reductions to AAC in various regions of the province, comparing the absolute totals may not be the best way to monitor progress.

Over the last year and half there have been two significant developments in regard to industry agreeing to sell or dispose of tenure to First Nations. The first is Canfor’s announced intentions to sell its Mackenzie area tenure to two local First Nations. The second is due to Interfor’s potential tenure transactions with several First Nations. …If those pending tenure dispositions occur, it would mean that industry is moving ahead with tenure diversification without government intervention… and the estimate of replaceable tenure held by First Nations increases to 15.4%. …While the government’s vision for Indigenous held replaceable tenure has still to be fully achieved, it is apparent that the rising influence of First Nations extends well beyond that objective. As I have written many times before, if your business does not have a relationship with local First Nations, you may want to change that, because without such a relationship, your business’ supply chain may be at risk.

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A Hollow Paradigm Shift?

By Bob Brash, RPF, MBA, Executive Director, TLA
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
April 4, 2023
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Over the last few months, the BC forest sector has increasingly been the beneficiary of broad proclamations by many who work outside of the sector about an upcoming “paradigm shift” and “transformative future” in the management of BC’s forests. For some, these are apparently new and wise revelations worthy of our everlasting gratitude. The reality is that many of us have been around long enough to know that for decades, these terms have been bandied around repeatedly when each generation believes they have found the grand solution to the forestry issues of the day. These many decades have also seen the ebb and flow of the lobbying influence each faction in the debates can harness for their agendas dependent upon the government’s leanings in any particular election cycle. Today, many would say the pendulum is weighted towards environmental influences, while others will argue the industry’s influences were dominant in previous times. There is probably merit on both sides of the argument.

When was the last time all of those with a stake in our province’s forests collaborated on the development of a true vision for the future of BC’s forests? …Perhaps Pearse’s Royal Commission qualifies, but that was 47 years ago. I think it’s fair to say things have changed a bit since then. …What would those broader discussions and the development of a collaborative vision entail? …The question is whether all of those involved want to work on that solution to the broader benefit of all of us collectively or continue the current course of trying to outgun each other with lobbyists to Victoria.

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Business & Politics

Fire at pulp mill in Quesnel is now out

By Frank Peebles
Quesnel Cariboo Observer
April 10, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The fire is now out at West Fraser’s pulp mill in the 1000-block of Finning Road. Fire crews from Quesnel Fire Department were dispatched on Monday (April 10) at about 12:35 p.m. They had multiple sites to address with water, once they investigated. QFD announced their completion of the incident at 2:30 p.m. Fire was being actioned on the mill’s main floor, third floor, and roof. Initial indication is, the fire spread via ductwork. The potential cause of the fire is not yet disclosed. There were no reported injuries to QFD personnel, as of publication, but a full assessment of the incident and its consequences is being looked into.

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Repeat Client Highlight: Wood Co. Industries Ltd.

Metal Structure Concepts
April 4, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

At Metal Structure Concepts (MSC), we focus on building good working relationships with all our customers (who we fondly like to think of as partners on all our projects). We frequently have repeat customers. John Drew from Wood Co. Industries LTD proved that good things come in threes after hiring MSC for the third time in six years. The latest and greatest project was a 4,320 sq/ft building in 2022, but we also sold him a 7,776 sq/ft building in 2019 and a 9,264 sq/ft building in 2017. 

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Sustainability is Growing – The BC Council of Forest Industries 2023 Convention is SOLD OUT!

BC Council of Forest Industries
April 11, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sustainability is Growing is the theme of COFI’s sold-out 2023 Convention, taking place in Prince George, BC on April 12 – 14, 2023. The 2023 COFI Convention is one of the largest gatherings of the forest sector in Canada, bringing together industry, Indigenous, government, community and labour leaders to discuss key issues and opportunities facing BC’s forest industry. COFI is pleased to welcome Hon. David Eby, Premier of BC, who will be speaking at the 2023 convention, along with Hon. Bruce Ralston, BC Minister of Forests and Hon. Nathan Cullen, BC Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship.

Additional speakers and topics at the COFI 2023 Convention include:

  • Regional Chief Terry Teegee, BC Assembly of First Nations
  • A Reality Check session with David Elstone, Managing Director Spar Tree Group
  • David Coletto, CEO and Founding Partner, Abacus Data 
  • Supply Chain Reality Check: Building Sustainable, Resilient Networks
  • A discussion of The Future of Work and Sustainable Jobs
  • A session with industry CEOs
  • How BC can Win Market Share in a Carbon Constrained World
  • A discussion of Carbon and Timber: Competition or Collaboration?

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Interfor Provides Update on Director Succession Process

By Interfor Corporation
GlobeNewswire
April 6, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — Interfor provided an update on its ongoing director succession process. The Company has updated its diversity target for its board of directors and commits that at least 30% of its Board members will be women by its next annual general meeting of shareholders in 2024. The sole reason the Company could not revert to at least 30% women representation on its Board at the upcoming May 2023 AGM, was the unexpected unavailability of Ms. Hull for re-election, for personal reasons. For more information regarding the Company’s ongoing director succession process… please see our AGM information circular.

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Mill closure brings on period of uncertainty

By Rod Link
Houston Today
April 5, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The last log went through the Canfor mill March 31, resulting in the first layoffs and first of a series of operational closures at the mill which has been the community’s largest direct and indirect employer. …It also announced the closure of its Chetwynd sawmill and pellet plant the same day. Earlier, Canfor pulp workers in Prince George were also told they were losing their jobs. …And should Canfor decide to build a new mill better suited to processing logs and better able to withstand downturns in lumber demand, its construction is scheduled to take as long as two years. Canfor’s woodlands employees aren’t being affected as the company intends to keep logging wood under the licence it has and selling to other processing facilities. …With hundreds now about to be unemployed Skeena – Bulkley Valley NDP MP Taylor Bachrach has asked the federal government to step in with a job creation program.

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Kalesnikoff named Business of the Year by Nelson chamber

By the Nelson and District Chamber of Commerce
Nelson Star
April 4, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken and Elaine Kalesnikoff

…Last week’s District Chamber of Commerce Business Excellence Awards, held at the Prestige Convention venue were the first since the COVID-19 crisis started three years ago. The Business of the Year award came down to three local titans: Kootenay Co-op, Kalesnikoff and Whitewater Ski Resort. Noting the closure of 35 mills in the B.C. Interior since 2005, and the loss of close to 40,000 forestry jobs in the last 30 years, Kalesnikoff took top honours due to its $37-million investment in its innovative mass timber plant — amongst the first in Canada — and the creation of 100 new jobs, bolstering the company’s payroll to 250 positions. “This is like winning an Oscar,” laughed owner Ken Kalesnikoff when he took the podium mic, tearily speaking of the importance of family above all, and noting that his Uncle Koozma started the local mill with a horse and logging outfit in the 1930s.

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Hundreds lose jobs as northern B.C. mill closures come into effect

By Andrew Kurjata
CBC News
April 6, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hundreds of people will soon be off the job in northern B.C. as Canfor shutters operations at mills in Prince George, Chetwynd and Houston. …In Prince George, the pulp line of the Prince George Pulp and Paper Mill ended production on April 3. …In Houston the sawmill stopped operating on March 31. The kilns and planer facility will continue to run until mid-April. …And in Chetwynd, where the sawmill is permanently closing, operations are expected to wind down by the end of April. …Michelle Ward said that of the 440 employees being affected by the closures in Chetwynd and Houston, 80 have taken jobs with the company elsewhere, while 70 are retiring or applying for a bridging to retirement support program. In Prince George, there are 200 full-time positions being impacted, and roughly half of those job losses have been “mitigated,” Ward said.

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B.C. to spend billions on plan to build more homes to ease housing crisis

The Canadian Press in CTV News
April 3, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC government will invest billions of dollars to ease a housing “crisis that is touching people in every corner of the province,” Premier David Eby said. The province released its so-called Homes for People plan on Monday starting with a $4-billion investment over three years and commits to $12 billion over a decade. There are incentives to build and increase density, plans for supportive housing for those who are homeless, zoning changes that make basement suites legal across the province and a crackdown down on house flippers. …Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon said the government will introduce provincial legislation this fall to allow three to four homes on a traditional single-family detached lot with additional density permitted in areas well served by transit. …The Greater Vancouver Board of Trade said the move to enable more units on a single lot “is a positive step forward.”

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Taiga got through the pandemic thanks to “fortuitous” investment in technology, CEO says

By Steve Payne
Hardlines Home Improvement Quarterly
April 3, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Permann

It’s no secret that this industry got a boost from the pandemic. The CEO of Taiga Building Products, the giant national distributor, told Hardlines that his company’s investments in tech were especially well timed. Russ Permann says that Taiga’s “pretty significant investment” in its enterprise warehouse management system was “fortuitous,” coming to completion right before the pandemic began “We started the process of automating our facilities in 2015. We went live on our last system and completed that just before the pandemic.  …That [system] was an acquisition that we had made in 2018. “What Covid really did, was accelerate us on this curve of really leaning into these tools more. …If there was a ray of sunshine to come from the pandemic, that would be it for me.” [to access the full story a HHIQ subscription is required]

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Canfor’s PG Pulp and Paper Mill set to shutter permanently

By Caden Fanshaw
CKPG Today
March 31, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – Closing time has come for one of Prince George’s biggest landmarks. After more than 55 years in operation, Canfor’s PG Pulp and Paper Mill will permanently close its pulp line due to a lack in raw materials according to the company. “The turmoil within a family that a closure like this impacts is the big thing,” said Chuck Leblanc, of The Public and Private Workers of Canada. …The permanent closure will result in the loss of over 100 jobs after over 50 current employees took early retirement buy-outs and open positions were filled at other Canfor sites including the Intercon and Northwood Pulp Mills. The Prince George Pulp & Paper mill began operations in 1966 as a joint venture of Canfor and Reed Paper of the UK. Two years later, in 1968, its sister mill, Intercontinental Pulp, was built by Canfor, Reed, and Feldmuhle of Germany.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

‘Long overdue’: B.C. introducing new powers to limit emissions of new buildings

By Jake Romphf
Vernon Morning Star
April 4, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Municipalities across B.C. wanting more control over the pollution produced by new buildings are set to receive more authority through a long-awaited standard. The province confirmed that the Zero Carbon Step Code, originally called the Carbon Pollution Standard, will be added to the BC Building Code on May 1. The voluntary standard allows local governments to directly limit the carbon emissions that new buildings can produce. The new policy comes after an energy step code was added to the building code in 2017, allowing municipalities to create energy-efficiency mandates. However, that approach was not as ambitious as current timelines and the province said the original step code didn’t directly address greenhouse gas emissions. That’s because its focus on energy efficiency meant new construction could still use fossil fuel systems.

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Forestry

Comox Valley conservationists stand in solidarity with Kwatiutl First Nation regarding logging

By Terry Farrell
Comox Valley Record
April 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Four members of Save Our Forest Team – Comox Valley (SOFT-CV) hand-delivered a letter to Courtenay-Comox MLA Ronna-Rae Leonard’s office on April 5, citing the lack of public consultation regarding old-growth logging on the North Island. …“So what we are presenting to Ronna-Rae Leonard is the letter that the Kwakiutl First Nation (Port McNeill) has sent to Minister of Forests, Bruce Ralston, and we have a letter of support for them, as their friends, asking Ronna-Rae Leonard to deliver our letter to the minister as well,” said Megan Ardyche, of SOFT-CV. …The SOFT-CV representatives arrived at Leonard’s office to find the doors locked. An office employee eventually opened the door to explain that Leonard was not in, and accepted the letter on Leonard’s behalf.

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Panic on the Cutblock

By Madeline Dunnett
The Tyee
April 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

We were woken up shortly before midnight. I heard voices yelling, saw flashlights flickering across the mesh of my tent.  After fumbling to put on clothes, I stepped out into the darkness of the tree-planting camp in my sandals. A passing planter told me that we were having an emergency meeting in the central area.  The night air was hot. It was the summer of 2021, and we were planting near the town of Rocky Mountain House, Alberta, a few hours northwest of Calgary. …I made my way to the meeting place, where planters had gathered around in clusters.   …One of the supervisors told us there were multiple forest fires burning within five kilometres of us. A shift in the wind or a strike of lightning could put us in immediate danger.

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Logging in SongBird forest cancelled

By Connie Jordison
Coast Reporter
April 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sunshine Coast Community Forest (SCCF) cancelled plans to log two east ts’uk̲w’um (Wilson Creek) cutblocks adjacent to a proposed Mt. Elphinstone Provincial Park expansion area, operations manager Warren Hansen told Coast Reporter on April 5.  A day earlier, Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) stated in a press release that blocks EW 18A and B had been removed from SCCF’s logging schedule for 2025, after “public and scientific pressure produced evidence” that the area, which the group dubbed SongBird forest, “is of high ecological value” and identified for old growth recruitment.  “When we started our ecosystem based management (EBM) system we said that we would be looking at the best old growth recruitment areas within our tenure. We had all the candidate areas for old growth recruitment assessed and there was an overlap for cutblocks 18A and B, so we decided that they should not be harvested,” Hansen stated. 

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Sunshine Coast Regional District delays taking a position on logging near Joe Smith Creek

By Connie Jordison
Coast Reporter
April 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mid-day April 6, a change.org petition seeking public support to save “future old growth rainforest” in BC Timber Sales (BCTS) cutblock TA0521 (aka Joe Smith Creek) had more than 13,900 signatures.  At its regular meeting on that date, the Sunshine Coast Regional District board postponed consideration of a motion to forward a letter making a similar request to BCTS. The motion to postponed consideration was supported by all at the table, except Area D director Kelly Backs and Sechelt director Alton Toth.  Staff noted at the meeting that BCTS operating plans are routinely referred to the board for review and comment and that this year that is scheduled to occur in June. It was suggested that the letter be considered at that point, following established communications protocols with BCTS.

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A history of our Northeast B.C. forestry industry

By Evan Saugstad
Alaska Highway News
April 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In January, Canfor announced the impending closure of its Chetwynd Sawmill and Pellet Plant. In February, Canfor Pulp, a subsidiary, announced that the shuttered Taylor Pulp mill is not likely to reopen.  Canfor CEO Don Kayne gave two rationales for the closure of Chetwynd: “…to match our mill capacity with the economically available fibre for harvest,” and, “…that fibre currently processed at the Chetwynd facility is utilized to support other local and regional manufacturing facilities, helping them to be more sustainable.”  …In short, there’s insufficient wood fibre available to keep all mills operational, so they picked one for closure to make the others more viable.  …So, what happened? Are there really no trees left? Have all northeastern B.C. forests been logged? Why not take Canfor’s timber tenure and give it to someone else who will operate a manufacturing facility?

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Judge rules against B.C. logging company’s request to probe environmentalists’ social media info

By John Boivin
The Vancouver Sun
April 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NEW DENVER, BC — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has rejected a logging company’s request for a court order allowing them to probe into the social media of members of a Kootenay environmental group. Madam Justice Lindsay Lyster released her decision in favour of Last Stand West Kootenay last week, saying granting the request by Cooper Creek Cedar would “not be in the interests of justice” and would suppress legitimate, peaceful protest. The company had sought a so-called Norwich order requiring a third-party, such as a social media company, to provide information. …Cooper Creek Cedar said the social media activities of the protesters — including encouraging people to go to a protest camp near the logging site in contravention of a court injunction and asking for donations to support the cause — constituted real harm to the company.

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Fire officials warn of dry spring conditions in B.C. Interior

CTV News
April 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

While there are not currently any bans on open fires in the B.C. Interior, a dry spring following last fall’s drought has officials warning residents to be cautious with their burning this season. “Valley bottom areas continue to be very dry,” the BC Wildfire Service’s Kamloops Fire Centre warned in an update this week. “Those conducting any open fire should use caution and be aware of local conditions that might impact their ability to burn safely and control their open fires.” As of Friday, the province had seen a total of 33 wildfires in 2023, according to the BCWS wildfire dashboard. There were 11 active wildfires in the Kamloops Fire Centre. 

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‘Be fire aware’: Alberta wildfire season officially underway

By Amanda Anderson
CTV News
April 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

As the final snow disappears, the rising temperatures elevate the risk of wildfires, with officials asking Albertans to be cautious when enjoying the outdoors. To date, there are 16 wildfires already burning, including seven new wildfires that have been ignited in provincial Forest Protection Areas. Two of those blazes are listed as under control by Alberta Wildfire. At this time last year, there were 44 fires, explained Melissa Story, an Alberta Wildfire information officer. “Nothing too serious happening right now,” Story said. “But spring is high risk for us.” “With the weather conditions changing and the weather getting nicer, we will definitely see elevated fire dangers,” she added. …
Three hundred firefighters specializing in wildland blazes are finishing their training for the season and being moved to regions across the province to be ready to respond.

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University of Alberta researcher refutes claims about underground fungal networks in forest trees

By Peris Jones
The Gateway, U of Alberta’s Student Journalism Society
April 7, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Justine Karst, an associate professor in the department of renewable resources at the University of Alberta, doesn’t think that the vast array of interconnected fungal networks underground (wood-wide-web) are as beneficial to trees as other research has shown. …Karst … found that almost 50 per cent of papers that cite older studies are making an inaccurate statement. “We don’t want to be relying on misinformation to be making policy or management decisions on forests, so there’s that level of why there’s a concern.” She added that this research is useful for the management, policy creation, conservation, restoration, and protection of forests. To do these things correctly, Karst believes that “we want to have the most solid science available to us.” …Karst’s immediate plans involve focusing on reorienting the field of mycorrhizal research, and possibly giving talks and lectures to inform people about the impacts and importance of this research.

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Nk’Mip wildfire recovery project receiving praise

By Sebastian Kanally
Times Chronicle South Okanagan
April 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rising from the ashes of the Nk’Mip Creek wildfire of 2021 a unique partnership between the  Osoyoos Indian Band (OIB) and a forestry company is being heralded for its innovative and holistic approach to restoration. The OIB and Vaagen Fibre Canada are being praised for their collaboration which prioritizes cultural values, historical uses of the land, and ecological recovery, according to Peter Flett, a Registered Professional Forester (RPF) who works for both Vaagen and the OIB in their forestry venture. An estimated 20,000 hectares of forest were burned in the months-long fire, and because it also impacted the OIB’s traditional territory, “there was motivation to act quickly to give the land a better opportunity to recover,” Flett explained. … All phases of planning, operations, and restoration have provided full-time, part-time, and contract employment to OIB members, the Nk’Mip Forestry crew, and local contractors. 

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B.C. First Nations do what they can to protect their communities from this year’s wildfires

By Jackie McKay
CBC News
April 8, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dozens of people from Yunesit’in First Nation will burn lands this spring as a mitigation effort for the upcoming wildfire season.  The community, about 300 kilometres north of Vancouver, is revitalizing traditional fire keeping practices, burning dried grass and debris to protect the community from wildfire and foster regrowth of vegetation. “Fire is just a part of our landscape,” said Russell Myers Ross, community leader for the Yunesit’in fire stewardship program and member of the Yunesit’in First Nation, part of the Tŝilhqot’in Nation. Myers Ross’s community started the program after wildfires in 2017 scorched the forest surrounding the community, and forced an evacuation of Yunesit’in. There is a small window for the burns to take place: in April when the frost is lifting and in the fall as the air is cooling. “It’s different for Indigenous people because we’re going to be seeing the growth over the years,” said Myers Ross.

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2023 BC First Nations Forestry Conference

By Lennard Joe, CEO, First Nations Forestry Council
BC First Nations Forestry Council
April 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Registration for the BC First Nations Forestry Conference is now open! The forest sector is changing and we are uniquely positioned to ensure our legacy: a healthy forest ecosystem. Together, we can move towards a place where the land is central to the cultural, spiritual, environmental, economic and social lives of its caretakers. A program overview is also available, with more information on specific speakers, details of each session, and more information about the golf fundraiser to come. If you are interested in becoming a sponsor or exhibitor, please download the sponsorship information.

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Mission Municipal Forest celebrates 65th anniversary as part of city event

By Dillon White
The Mission City Record
April 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MISSION, BC — Hundreds of people endured unpredictable weather on Saturday to celebrate the 65th anniversary of Mission Municipal Forest… as part of the City of Mission’s “cutblock party”. According to a city release, roughly 300 people attended. “Despite the weather, Missionites showed their passion for the forest once again,” said Mission Mayor Paul Horn. “It was wonderful to experience an event in the Stave Falls area and to remind people of the beauty of our forests.” The event featured activities such as axe-throwing, hiking, sawing and an art table. “This fun community event was a great opportunity to educate our residents about our reforestation program,” Senior Forest Technologist Kelly Kitsch said.

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Province invests $90k in chronic wasting disease and meningeal worm research

The Star Phoenix
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

University of Saskatchewan research into the spread of chronic wasting disease and meningeal worm now has $90,000 in government backing. The provincial government announced the grant funding for the “groundbreaking” research Monday, which will allow the U of S team to look at the spread of the illnesses in woodland caribou and other boreal species in the province. According to a release from the Ministry of Environment, the presence of CWD in deer in the SK2 woodland caribou range, coupled with the northwesterly spread of meningeal worm, has heightened the urgency around better understanding transmission risks for caribou and other species. As woodland caribou are a species at risk, the spread of the two illnesses into the boreal forest “poses a significant threat to their survival,” as well as the survival of other cervids.

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Elphinstone Logging Focus questions BC Timber Sales Mt. Elphinstone watershed report

By Connie Jordison
Coast Reporter
April 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) has questions it wants addressed at the BC Timber Sales’ (BCTS) Mount Elphinstone Watershed Assessment report public review session on April 6.  The report authored by consulting firm Polar Geoscience and released March 9 by BCTS, is “a huge report with many, many assumptions,” ELF spokesperson Ross Muirhead said in an April 3 email to Coast Reporter.  …ELF wants BCTS to subject the report to a peer review by an independent hydrology consulting firm. Its points out that the report was paid for and its terms of reference were set by BCTS. “The public sees this arrangement as falling into ‘professional reliance’ with its perils of a perceived bias towards the outcome: logging,” Muirhead’s email read.  …Also missing from the report maps, in ELF’s view, is an overlay of sections identified by the Old Growth Technical Advisory Panel showing “recruitment forest” areas with the proposed cutblocks. 

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B.C., First Nations unite to boost support for Guardians

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
April 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With an investment of $8.9 million over three years, the Government of B.C. is partnering with First Nations representatives to develop the first training initiative that will support co-management of land and resources. This year, the Guardians and Stewardship Training Initiative will be co-developed with First Nations and will support the StrongerBC Future Ready plan to make post-secondary education and skills training more affordable and accessible. “Since time immemorial, First Nations have been stewards of the water, land and wildlife in B.C., and Guardians play a crucial and growing role in stewarding those lands and resources today,” said Nathan Cullen, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship. “We’ve heard from First Nations there is a need for more supports and access to training for Guardians, and we are taking action to make that happen.”  ‘‘Guardians” are trained members of First Nations who undertake stewardship activities on the land base.

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Northwest Territories’ Department of Environment and Climate Change launches with seamless service delivery for residents and organizations

Government of Northwest Territories
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Yellowknife — The Departments of Lands and Environment and Natural Resources have merged into the Department of Environment and Climate Change (ECC). The new department will bring all functions related to environment and climate change, including land, air, water, wildlife, and forest management under one roof, as well as the combined skills and expertise of staff from both departments. A new website has been launched, featuring all the programs, services, and information residents and organizations count on. The transition is designed to be seamless, so visitors to the new site will be able to continue to use their existing bookmarks and easily find anything they need.

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Bat fungus that causes white nose syndrome detected in B.C.

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The fungus that causes white nose syndrome in bats has been detected in bat guano in the Grand Forks area. Since the arrival of the fungus on the west coast of the United States in 2016, the Province has been monitoring for its arrival in B.C. The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship is working with multiple partners to implement enhanced surveillance for the disease, as well as reduce threats to bat habitat. Since bats eat a wide variety of insects and pests, they are essential for keeping B.C.’s ecosystems in balance. The public is asked to contact the BC Community Bat Program or the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship (see website below) with any information on the location of winter bat roosting sites, unusual behaviour, such as flying during the day, and observations of dead bats.

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B.C. Supreme Court throws out logging company’s request for protester’s social media identities

By Tyler Harper
Alberni Valley News
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

West Kootenay Cooper Creek Cedar has lost its bid to have protesters disclose the identities behind its social media accounts. They had requested a B.C. Supreme Court justice order Last Stand West Kootenay to provide author information of its social media posts. Both groups are in court after 17 people were arrested in May 2022 for allegedly blocking a forest service road to a contested logging area near Argenta. The company had previously won an injunction against interference in and around the Salisbury Creek area prior to the arrests. Cooper Creek Cedar had asked for first and last names linked with Last Stand West Kootenay’s Facebook group, as well as their contact information and IP addresses of a number of individual Facebook and Instagram accounts, information from the domain provider GoDaddy.com and ConnectionPoint Systems Inc. The type of disclosure is known as a Norwich order, used during pre-trial discoveries to identify anonymous wrongdoers.

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Eby’s action on old-growth disappointing

Letter by Rob Mercereau, Dunster, BC
The Rocky Mountain Goat
April 2, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In November Premier David Eby promised “accelerated action” on implementing the Old Growth Strategic Review’s recommendations. I had high hopes the decades of overcutting primary forests were nearing their end. Just lip service? Well, the B.C. NDP commissioned it and has failed to act meaningfully 100+ days into his leadership and 2.5+ years into the Review’s recommended timeline. Weren’t old growth deferrals meaningful? Yes, mostly. Problem is, many indigenous nations were displeased about being asked after the fact, so the laying down of the plan was flawed before it started. …The ecosystems contained in the Walker, the Goat, Raush watersheds-each with at-risk species-should be protected. By pressuring the province and feds to immediately provide local indigenous nations and communities economic incentives to protect these valleys, we locals can at least lead here, providing some degree of certainty for the unborn generations to come. 

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John Horgan wasted no time showing his true stripes

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray
The Prince George Citizen
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

No sooner had he resigned his seat as a politician, former premier John Horgan announced he will be joining the board of a coal company. …When our leaders and bureaucrats leave the public service to immediately take plum jobs with large multinational corporations they had influence over, it makes me wonder who they were working for while they were in office. …I had the same concerns when former chief forester Dianne Nichols left to work for Drax, a multinational pellet company whose industry Nichols advocated for while a public servant. It’s a clear conflict of interest, it’s unethical, and it should be illegal. If Dianne Nichols actually managed our forests for our communities and the health of our forests and wildlife, she would be a pariah down at the Council of Forest Industries.

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New Island pre-health science program touted to potential students at NIC Fest

By Susie Quinn
Alberni Valley News
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Diane Gallant and Maia Mercure

Hundreds of people got a glimpse of what North Island College has to offer during NIC Fest at the Port Alberni campus on Wednesday, March 29. …Post-secondary education isn’t just for students graduating high school anymore, Diane Naugler, executive director of community engagement said. …Other tables offered funding solutions for students. First Nations Forestry Council representatives Denise Gallant, forestry workforce advisor, and Maia Mercure, work force development specialist, were on hand to explain scholarship opportunities for Indigenous forestry workers. Tuition, a living allowance and supply costs are available as well as work placements. One person at the NIC Foundation table said they had the happiest job, offering money to students.

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Rare inland rainforest in B.C. declared Indigenous protected area

By Sarah Cox
The Narwhal
March 31, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In the heart of B.C.’s Cariboo region lies an old-growth rainforest valley untouched by industrial logging or road building. …This week, two years after local ranchers and loggers objected to clear-cutting plans for the valley, the Simpcw First Nation declared the Raush River watershed an Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area, signalling their intention to protect the valley and exercise their right to control what happens there. “The area has had little resource development, and we intend to conserve it,” George Lampreau, Kúkwpi7 (Chief) for Simpcw stated. …The Raush is the largest undeveloped, unprotected watershed in southern B.C. It’s part of the province’s vanishing inland temperate rainforest that scientists warn is nearing a state of ecological collapse following decades of industrial logging. …Carrier Forest Products Ltd., a B.C.-based company with mills in Prince George and Saskatchewan, holds logging rights to the Raush.

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Registration Available to Watch 2023 ABCFP Conference Recordings

By Forest Professionals British Columbia
The Increment
April 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

If you were unable to attend the 2023 ABCFP conference  you can still register and gain access to recordings of all 13 conference sessions — each of which qualifies for (CPD) hours. Watching all conference sessions, plus the ABCFP , is worth 17 hours of continuing professional development. Cost for a post-conference access pass is $150, plus GST. Delegates can access all sessions until May 10 with your conference access code. Some of the most popular conference sessions include:

  • What Have We Learned in an Era of Mega Fires?
  • Climate Smart Forestry: Managing Forests for a Changing Climate
  • Indigenous Leadership and Co-managing BC’s Forests
  • Flexibility in Approaches to Forest Landscape Planning
  • Sink or Source? Forest Carbon Dynamics and the Role of Forest Management and Wood Products in Climate Change Mitigation

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

BC carbon tax exemption improves greenhouse grower cash flow

By BC Ministry of Agriculture and Food
The Government of British Columbia
March 31, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Eligible B.C. greenhouse growers will soon be able to obtain a point-of-sale carbon tax reduction to help them preserve their cash flow and continue growing the vegetables and plants British Columbians enjoy. The new greenhouse carbon tax exemption will replace the Greenhouse Carbon Tax Relief Grant on April 1, 2023. It will offer eligible greenhouses an 80% carbon tax reduction on the propane or natural gas sales at the point-of-sale rather than having growers recoup those expenses through the relief grant program. To be eligible for the reduction, commercial producers must use more than 90% of the greenhouse for growing… forest seedlings or nursery plants, providing… they will use natural gas or propane to heat their greenhouses or to produce carbon dioxide.

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Privilege, agency, and the climate scientist’s role in the global warming debate

By Andrew Weaver, University of Victoria
A Climate for Hope Blog
January 1, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Andrew Weaver

One of the biggest surprises I found upon my return to the University of Victoria after spending 7 1/2 years in the BC Legislature was the overall increase in underlying climate anxiety being experienced by students in my classes. …It was always a problem that others, somewhere else in the world, might have to deal with sometime down the road – but not any more. My experience with this new generation of undergraduates is that they are both very aware of, and deeply troubled by, the threat of global warming. …The 2018 IPCC Special Report outlining greenhouse gas emission pathways to limit warming to 1.5°C above preindustrial levels almost certainly contributed to an escalation of overall climate anxiety in recent years. …While ambitious goal-setting can in theory be an effective motivator of action, in practice, alarmist media reframing of failure to remain below the 1.5°C goal into a scenario of impending doom has become quintessential fuel for personal climate anxiety. 

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Health & Safety

With pulp mill closure, will Prince George still be marked by ‘the smell of money’?

By Andrew Kurjata
CBC News
April 7, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

As visitors drive into the city of Prince George, they are often greeted by a distinct aroma resembling sulfur and rotten eggs.  Locally, it’s referred to as “the smell of money” due to the longstanding understanding that the scent is generated by pulp mills.  But this week, pulp production at one of those mills is coming to a close.  That has some in the city wondering whether the “smell of money” will stop. …Meteorologist Peter Jackson said the smell most people notice is caused by a group of compounds known as total reduced sulphur, which come from the mills as well as other sources. …The air is frequently trapped in the city due to a geographical feature known as “the bowl” — the river valley of the Nechako and Fraser Rivers. …Jackson said stinky air isn’t necessarily unhealthy… we can detect the scent of total reduced sulphur at “a thousandfold less than what the health impact would be.”

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