Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Increasing wildfire risk requires new thinking on conservation

By David Elstone, Managing Director
The Spar Tree Group
July 18, 2024
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West
 

Lately, I have been reflecting on the practice of forestry and how some long-held beliefs that influence it have changed over time. For instance, look at how the industry has historically viewed red alder as a weed species. …Another example is the perspective that  commercial thinning is an uneconomic practice in BC. Last May, I visited recently thinned sites near Prince George which were cash positive. Other treatment objectives for thinning such as for wildfire mitigation are now becoming just as important or more so than financial returns. As I have learnt more about wildfire resiliency of late, my perspectives on other conventional standards are changing as well. …Indeed, almost one hundred years of active fire suppression in BC’s forests has led to more conifers. We are also learning that exclusion of fire from our provincial forests has ironically actually made them more vulnerable to fire.

Now as we are adding old growth deferrals, 30×30 protected areas, Indigenous Protected Conservation Areas and other areas set aside for protecting biodiversity by excluding human activity, are we proliferating yet another belief that needs to be challenged? Many of these areas are just as likely to succumb to wildfire, defeating the purpose of their original protection. The Forest Practices Board said in their June 2023 special report on wildfire that “…unmanaged reserves are especially vulnerable to burning because of the amount of forest fuels that have accumulated over time.” Given the reality of an increasing wildfire threat, traditional beliefs on conservation need to shift from “preserve and walk away” to one which embraces active forest management in these areas. A new vision could be one where a sustainable forest industry consumes fibre collected from fuel reduction treatments to ensure enduring conservation values across the landscape, no matter the designated land use.

Read More

Business & Politics

Canfor CEO Don Kayne to step down at end of 2024. Susan Yurkovich named next CEO.

By Canfor Corporation
Cision Newswire
July 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Don Kayne

Susan Yurkovich

VANCOUVER, BC — John Baird, Canfor Chairman announced that Don Kayne, President and CEO, plans to retire at the end of the year. Mr. Kayne has been with Canfor for 46 years and has held the position of CEO since 2011. Under his leadership, the Company has grown and transformed from its BC roots into a global entity with operations in Alberta, the US and Sweden. As a respected industry leader, he has served in a variety of industry roles including Chair of the Forest Products Association of Canada, the BC Council of Forest Industries and the Bi-national Softwood Lumber Board. Canfor is also announcing the appointment of Susan Yurkovich as the Company’s next CEO. Currently serving as Canfor’s Senior VP of Global Business Development, Ms. Yurkovich brings three decades of experience working in the natural resources sector to the role, 12 of those years with Canfor. …Ms. Yurkovich’s appointment will take effect January 1, 2025. Mr. Kayne will continue in an advisory capacity through 2025.

Read More

David Eby talks lumber tariffs with U.S. ambassador, avoids (mostly) wading into American politics

By Alec Lazenby
The Vancouver Sun
July 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West, United States

David Cohen

WHISTLER, BC — Premier David Eby spoke to U.S. Ambassador David Cohen to lobby for the lifting of tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber imports, while also being careful to avoid contentious discussions around the current state of political discourse south of the border. In February, the U.S. Department of Commerce announced it would be raising tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber from 8.05% to 13.86%. …“We’re coming up into setting new tariffs again on Canadian lumber producers, and the sector’s already under significant pressure due to record-low lumber prices. My hope was that his team could have a look at it and address the balance in our trade account.” …He told reporters at an unrelated news conference that the goal was to strengthen relationships with cross-border partners… and ensure that B.C.’s trade relationship with the U.S. remains in place regardless of the outcome of this November’s American election.

Related in CBC News (video): B.C. objects to U.S. plans to hike tariffs on Canadian lumber

Read More

Jason Fisher named new executive director of the Forest Enhancement Society of BC

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
July 23, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jason Fisher

Kamloops, B.C. – The Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) is pleased to announce Jason Fisher, RPF, will replace retiring executive director Steve Kozuki. “I am thrilled that Jason will be joining our FESBC team; he will be taking on the role officially as of September 4, 2024,” shared Dave Peterson, board chair of FESBC. Fisher is no stranger to forestry or FESBC. Seven years ago, he worked within the Ministry of Forests and was a part of the team that helped develop FESBC’s structure. “This opportunity is like a homecoming for me,” remarked Fisher, a Registered Professional Forester who was born, raised, and still resides in Prince George. “To be involved with FESBC at the beginning, to watch it create a foundation of respect, funding essential forest enhancement projects throughout the province, to now having the good fortune of being the incoming executive director, it is an exciting time, and I’m looking forward to starting this September.

Read More

Mercer Mass Timber to receive $7M to modernize, grow its glulam production by 25%

By Chelsea Powrie
Business in Vancouver
July 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

OKANAGAN FALLS, BC — A mass timber manufacturer in Okanagan Falls has received a huge boost from the provincial government aimed at expanding their facilities and creating more jobs. Mercer Mass Timber, which purchased Penticton-based mass timber manufacturer Structurlam in 2023, will receive as much as $7 million through the B.C. Manufacturing Jobs Fund to “invest in the future of their Okanagan Falls facilities.” Mercer will be rehiring employees that were laid off when Structurlam shuttered, purchasing new advanced manufacturing equipment, modernizing the facilities, and scaling up on varieties of mass-timber projects. …“We’re happy to have the opportunity to support businesses like Mercer Mass Timber in their drive to expand local mass timber operations and create new jobs in the Okanagan: this is great news,” said Boundary-Similkameen MLA Roly Russell.

For additional coverage see BC Government News Release: Mass-timber manufacturing jobs coming to Okanagan Falls

For more information see BC’s Mass Timber Program Update and BC’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program

Read More

Steelworkers’ union calls for urgent meeting with Doug Ford to save Terrace Bay’s largest employer

By United Steelworkers
GlobeNewswire
July 18, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The leader of the United Steelworkers (USW) union in Ontario is calling for an urgent meeting with Premier Doug Ford to ramp up efforts to re-open the AV Terrace Bay pulp mill, the northwestern Ontario community’s largest employer before it closed six months ago. The pulp mill, owned by the India-based Aditya Birla conglomerate, was indefinitely idled in early January. The mill employed 400 workers, including 270 USW members, and was the economic engine of Terrace Bay and nearby communities. …Renewed efforts are needed from all stakeholders, in particular the Ford government, to re-open the mill, says Myles Sullivan, Director of USW District 6, which covers Ontario and Atlantic Canada. Sullivan has sent a letter to the Premier and to the government’s Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry, Graydon Smith, requesting a meeting “to discuss how we can revive the pulp mill, get 400 people working again and give their communities hope.”

Read More

Union blasts company, provincial governments over layoffs at plant near North Bay

By Eric Taschner
CTV News Northern Ontario
July 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TEMISCAMING, Quebec — It’s been a devastating week for Temiscaming, a town in northwestern Quebec located on the Ontario-Quebec border. Rayonier Advanced Materials shut down the high-purity cellulose plant operations indefinitely Monday morning, laying off 275 employees. “The final sheet came off the dry machine in the specialty cellulose mill at around 6:30 a.m.,” said UNIFOR Local 233 president Stephane Lefebvre. …The company that owns the plant, Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM) headquartered out of Jacksonville, Florid, announced the layoffs in late April, citing sluggish sales. …“I don’t know what RYAM’s plans are. They won’t share anything with me and they won’t share anything with me about a sale,” Lefebvre told CTV News. The plant has an annual production capacity of 150,000 metric tons, with 30 per cent historically dedicated to specialty cellulose materials. High purity cellulose is used in a variety of products, from construction materials to food and pharmaceutical products. 

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

2024 Mass Timber Roadmap

Forestry for the Future
July 23, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Unlocking the potential of Mass Timber across Canada will significantly address many key challenges of building taller with wood given its ability to accelerate housing construction time by as much as 20%; drive economic activities and create jobs in rural and Indigenous communities; and reduce carbon intensity of construction and providing long term carbon storage. Canada’s forest sector is ready to scale efforts around mass timber to maximize those benefits and compete globally. In June, Canada’s Transition Accelerator launched its 2024 Mass Timber Roadmap, making the case and outlining the need for mass timber in Canada. This report was a collaborative effort of over 50 participants from Canada’s mass timber value chain — including business, government, research institutions, Indigenous communities, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). …The roadmap proposes an ambitious vision and calls on industry, business, stakeholders, and government to come together to advance and implement this vision.

Read More

Summit 2024 – Assembling Tomorrow

Canadian Wood Council, WoodWorks
July 24, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Global Innovations in Sustainable, Affordable Cityscapes inspired by Renowned Leaders and Visionaries. Hosted in Toronto, Canada, from October 21-25, this premier event will share the latest advancements and applications in wood design and construction, with a focus on city building and market transformation. Discover sustainable, practical, and innovative solutions that can improve how we build our cities, delivering housing and other critical infrastructure efficiently and responsibly. Don’t miss this opportunity to engage with cutting-edge ideas and network with international experts and industry leaders in Canada. Tickets for the WoodWorks Summit 2024 are on sale now! Join us for this premier industry event and network with industry leaders, explore cutting-edge mass timber buildings, and hear from over 20 expert speakers. Don’t miss out on the Early Bird Discount of 20% – offer ends August 24th!

Read More

B.C. puts $152M toward Camosun College’s first student housing building

By Jake Romphf
Victoria News
July 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA, BC — With an aim to ease the strain on students seeking housing while also freeing up homes for others in Greater Victoria, the province on Wednesday announced Camosun College will get its first student housing building. The 423-bed “state-of-the-art” facility is expected to open in the fall of 2027. …The B.C. government is putting just shy of $152 million toward the project, with the remaining $3 million coming from Camosun College. …The six-storey building will have single, studio and quad units. It will strive to be a sustainable structure by using mass timber and meeting Step 4 of the provincial energy code, meaning it will be a lower-emisison building. The province is also looking to make the student residence a LEED platinum building, meaning it will meet high standards in areas like energy use, waste systems, building materials and indoor air quality.

Read More

Forestry

Forestry fire specialists answer the call in Canada

By Matt Deans
Forestry Corporation of New South Wales, Australia
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Four fire specialists from Forestry Corporation will serve as part of a New South Wales deployment of firefighters assisting authorities in Canada to tackle the country’s wildfires. A contingent of 31 incident management, aviation and heavy machinery specialists will depart for Canada after receiving a request for assistance from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. Canada is experiencing significant fire activity with 650 active fires burning. Forestry Corporation’s Bombala-based Silviculture and Fire Coordinator Tim Gillespie-Jones and South Coast Fire and Operations Team Leader Peter Carstairs, who also deployed to Canada last fire season, will fly to British Columbia. Forestry Corporation’s Senior Manager Environment and Sustainability Dean Kearney and Lead Forestry Officer Daniel Macaree will also deploy to Canada. Gillespie-Jones said, “I’m looking forward to repaying the favour to the Canadian firefighters who assisted our crews in 2019 and 2020″.

Read More

The Government of Canada invests in nature-based solutions to help fight climate change and protect biodiversity across the country

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
The Government of Canada
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

On July 18, 2024, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, announced $89.1 million for 10 greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects funded through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund.

  • Alberta: Métis Nation of Alberta – $4,831,200
  • British Columbia: BC Parks Foundation – $37,000,000
  • British Columbia: Nature Trust of BC – $8,365,375
  • British Columbia: Nuxalk Nation – $4,455,000
  • Manitoba: Fisher River Cree Nation – $5,192,700
  • Manitoba: Manitoba Habitat Conservancy – $6,152,640 
  • New Brunswick: Community Forests International – $9,000,000
  • Ontario: Kawartha Land Trust – $7,000,000
  • Ontario: Conservation Ontario – $1,586,343
  • Quebec: Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society – Quebec Chapter – $5,535,577

 

Read More

Conservation North conference talks negative impacts of salvage forestry

Prince George Citizen
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Some scientists are calling for a drastic change to the way B.C. deals with forests burned by fire and affected by insects. The remarks came as the scientists took part in a webinar organized by the volunteer group Conservation North on July 22. During the meeting, they said “salvage” logging after a fire usually causes more damage to a forest than the fire itself, and explained that logging reduces biodiversity, contributes to climate change, increases the vulnerability of the forest to further fires, and often causes soil degradation and erosion. They said the only reason for “salvage logging” is to create revenue and jobs, but these benefits aren’t worth the costs [and] little of the revenue benefits the public because forest companies obtain the rights to the wood for a pittance. …“The lesson is that leaving primary forests alone contributes to resilience of both communities and nature,” explains Conservation North spokesperson Michelle Connolly.

Read More

BC’s latest ‘old growth’ conservation announcement is mostly not about old growth

By Jimmy Thomson
Canada’s National Observer
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In late June, British Columbia and the federal government announced that they’ve helped non-profit foundations and trusts buy eight parcels of land from private owners for old-growth conservation, largely on and around Vancouver Island. But all but one of the forests included in this purchase announcement do not contain old-growth trees defined by the B.C. government. …Instead, seven of the eight purchased properties contain what’s called “recruitment” old-growth — that is, forests that have been logged. For Torrance Coste (Wilderness Committee) buying these lands to protect them from future threats of logging and development is important, both ecologically and for reconciliation. But it’s dishonest to announce this as a win, particularly as old-growth logging continues. A spokesperson for the B.C. Ministry said… “These recruitment old growth trees are technically second growth [are] important because “they are expected to develop old forest characteristics sooner than other second growth forests.”

Read More

B.C. to get about $50M in new federal climate solutions funding

The Canadian Press in Victoria News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Steven Guilbeault

The federal government is spending $89 million to fund 10 greenhouse gas emission reduction projects as the government works toward the goal of conserving 30 per cent of the country’s land and water by 2030. Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault made the announcement in British Columbia on Thursday, where he said the “evidence of climate change is striking,” referencing extreme weather events including flooding, drought and “devastating” wildfire seasons. “With the goal of reversing biodiversity loss across the country, bit by bit, we’re getting there, protecting prime lands and waters that serve up some of the most important habitats for imperilled species.” He added that the projects are also aiding in the fight against climate change. Guilbeault said about $50 million of the funding is slated for major projects in the province. …Other projects being funded through the federal Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund will take place in Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario, and Quebec.

Read More

New harvest level set for Slocan Valley and Arrow Lake areas

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s deputy chief forester has set the new allowable annual cut (AAC) level for Tree Farm Licence 3 (TFL) located north of Castlegar. The new AAC for the TFL is 56,100 cubic metres. This is a 30% reduction from the previous AAC, while remaining in line with the average harvest level in the past 12 years. The new level reflects adjustments made to account for lower harvest performance on slopes greater than 50%. New AAC levels have also been set for Tree Farm Licence 23 (TFL), located northwest of Castlegar, near Arrow Lake. The new AAC for the TFL is 382,800 cubic metres. This is a 7% reduction from the previous AAC, while remaining above the average annual harvest level of the past 12 years. The Province and First Nations have worked with industry to defer harvest of at-risk old-growth forest while work progresses on long-term approaches to old-growth management in the Kootenay-Boundary region. [Tree Frog has combined two government press releases into this single story – links to each are provided in the text above]

Read More

Wildlife group concerned over 603 B.C. black bears put down in 2023

By Jane Skrypnek
Penticton Western News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Fur-Bearers, a B.C.-based wildlife charity says it continues to be concerned about the number of black bears killed by conservation officers in the province. Last year 603 black bears were put down, according to data obtained by the Fur-Bearers through a Freedom of Information request. That’s 68 more than the annual average of 535 since 2015, when the Fur-Bearers began tracking the numbers. Executive director, Lesley Fox, said part of the sudden jump may be attributable to 2023’s record-breaking wildfire season, which would have displaced wildlife and possibly reduced their natural food sources, sending them to urban areas to look for alternatives. There, attractants are a constant issue … increasing the likelihood of some kind of conflict or the bear become too habituated. If the BC Conservation Officer Service then determines the bear poses some kind of threat to public safety, it may decide to put it down.

Read More

Protecting nature in Manitoba to help fight climate change and protect biodiversity

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WINNIPEG, MB – Conserving and restoring nature is fundamental for capturing harmful greenhouse gas emissions by pulling more carbon dioxide out of the air, while also safeguarding the places and species that are part of who we are as Canadians. The Government of Canada has launched the largest conservation campaign in the country’s history in order to meet its emissions reduction targets and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030. The government of Canada announced over $11 million for two major greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects funded through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund. These projects will aim to fight climate change in Manitoba while benefiting biodiversity by safeguarding carbon-rich ecosystems from destruction to keep carbon in the ground… Canada is investing heavily in nature-based climate solutions that restore degraded ecosystems, create new protected areas, improve land management practices, and plant two billion new trees. 

Read More

Calling forest fire workers ‘heroes’ while not changing job conditions adds insult to injury

Letter by Lise Vaugeois MPP, Thunder Bay – Superior North
The Thunder Bay News Watch
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Lise Vaugeois

In response to the comments made in the July 18 Trillium article “Ontario proposes new ministerial powers to prepare for wildfires, steeper penalties for offenders“, I’m disappointed and puzzled to hear that Minister Graydon Smith’s proposals on Wildfire Management once again ignore the key issue of firefighter recruitment and retention. Wildland firefighters have repeatedly made the case that they need to be classified as “firefighters” in order receive the appropriate level of pay and benefits. Without this, the service cannot keep experienced firefighters and … fully staff their crews. On June 24, the Ford government made a promise to my colleague, Guy Bourgouin, and committed to reclassification… And yet, here we are again, with the Ministry now “studying” the reclassification issue instead of making the change they committed to make on June 24. …Calling people heroes, while enforcing unacceptable job conditions, is adding insult to injury.

Read More

Climate change likely influenced forest fires in Labrador, says ecologist

By Abby Cole
CBC News
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Anthony Taylor

LABRADOR — A forest ecologist says abnormal weather is becoming more common and will likely cause more wildfires like the ones that threatened Labrador towns in recent weeks. Anthony Taylor of the University of New Brunswick told CBC News in a recent interview that climate change is a factor in the number and severity of forest fires this summer in Labrador. “You’ll see an increase in the frequency of years where you have big fires, and it’s directly related to the fact that you’re going to have an increase in the frequency of weather that’s more conducive to fires,” said Taylor, who researches how climate change affects forests. …Although there has been close to normal amounts of rainfall in Labrador, he said, higher temperatures cause increased evaporation and drier forests, likely contributing to conditions that are conducive to fire.

Read More

Guilbeault goes to battle with another province. This time Quebec, and it’s over caribou

By Antoine Trépanier
Canadian Press in the National Post
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has found himself in another spat with a province. For months, Guilbeault has been demanding Quebec adopt a new plan to protect the province’s woodland caribou from the impact of logging for industrial activities and road-network expansions, as herd numbers in the province appear to be dwindling. Now the federal minister is going over the province’s head, with an emergency decree ordering his own plan, outraging Quebec’s provincial government and the Bloc Québécois. …The emergency order, which could be implemented in August, is still at the consultation stage. If Quebec presents a new plan soon, Guilbeault says he will back down. …“Considering all the efforts made in recent years, the Quebec government considers the adoption of an emergency decree unjustified,” said a statement from Charette’s office. Quebec’s Forest Industry Council’s Jean-François Samray, said that if the decree is adopted, the industry could lose 6,500 jobs.

Read More

Canada and New Brunswick to Plant Over 52 Million Climate-Resilient Trees

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONCTON, NB – Forests and trees capturing and storing carbon, offer habitats for wildlife, mitigate hot weather in cities and towns, ensure clean water and soil, and deliver essential spiritual, cultural and recreational benefits to Canadians from coast to coast. By planting two billion trees over a decade, the Government of Canada is taking a significant step forward in our country’s approach to tackling the dual crises of climate change and biodiversity decline. …Together, the Government of Canada and the Government of New Brunswick will provide more than $71 million to support progressive tree planting in New Brunswick, ensuring the right trees are planted in the right places so that the province’s forests can thrive in a changing climate. With this investment, the Province of New Brunswick aims to plant over 52 million climate-resilient trees on publicly managed land: the equivalent of planting over 60 trees for each resident of New Brunswick.

Read More

Health & Safety

Edmonton: Dangerous wildfire smoke to loom for days in heat wave

By Nicole Bergot
The Edmonton Journal
July 21, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

A look at Sunday’s Edmonton weather by Environment Canada. …You feel like Pig-Pen, smell like Smokey Bear, wonder if maybe you are becoming a dragon, puffs of smoke infiltrating your snout, finally putting those filtering nose hairs to a bit of good use. You just can’t seem to get clean in this suffocating cloak of wildfire smoke during an extended heat wave. You feel oily. Sputtering. Machine like. The widespread smoke from northern Alberta and B.C.’s burning interior that’s triggered an air quality advisory alongside a heat warning will cling to the Edmonton region through Monday. Sunday’s air quality health index remains locked at 10+ or ‘very high risk,’ where activity outside should be avoided. The mercury will climb to 32 C, reaching for 33 C Monday before the smoke clears. And then more relief with a big heat drop to 23 C expected Thursday with rains to stretch into the weekend. Hallelujah. That’s how nature works.

Read More

WorkSafeBC Health and Safety News

WorkSafeBC
July 18, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Check out the July newsletter for these stories and more from WorkSafeBC:

  • New workplace first aid curriculum now available: Training for workplace first aid is changing to align with standards from the Canadian Standards Association (CSA). The new CSA-aligned curriculum is now open to approved training providers, who will be offering the new courses to first aid attendants starting this summer.
  • Protecting workers from wildfire smoke and heat stress: Summers are becoming hotter and drier in much of B.C., increasing the frequency and intensity of wildfires as well as the risk of heat stress. Learn how to protect workers from these risks — whether they work indoors or outside.
  • Regulatory updates: On July 10, OHS Policies and OHS Guidelines were updated to reflect the current exposure limits for chemical and biological agents.

Read More

These are the top diseases for Ontario forestry, mining, pulp and paper workers

The Timmins Daily Press
January 2, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Workplace Safety North and the Occupational Cancer Research Centre released the top occupational disease risks for 2023 in the forestry, mining, and pulp and paper sectors. Rankings were based on data from the Occupational Disease Surveillance System, which monitors disease outcomes among over two million workers in Ontario. …In the forestry sector, workers face unique health risks related to outdoor work and specific industry processes. Here are the top occupational disease risks in the forestry, logging, and wood industries: Carpal Tunnel Syndrome… Laryngeal Cancer… Asthma… Oral Cancer… Acute Myocardial Infarction… Lung Cancer… COPD… and Raynaud’s Syndrome. …In the pulp and paper sector, specific risks are associated with the materials and processes involved. Noise-induced hearing loss is also a top disease based on approved WSIB claims. Here are the top occupational disease risks for pulp and paper mills, paper box and bag manufacturers, and miscellaneous paper converters: Asbestosis… Carpal Tunnel Syndrome… Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis… COPD… Acute Myocardial Infarction… Raynaud’s Syndrome… and Colorectal Cancer.

Read More

Forest Fires

Jasper wildfire evacuees told to U-turn away from B.C., head to Alberta

The Canadian Press in The Northern View
July 23, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Thousands of wildfire evacuees forced from Jasper National Park into British Columbia along smoke-choked mountain roads Monday night were directed Tuesday to make a wide U-turn and head home if they needed a place to stay. Alberta fire officials said B.C. has its hands full with its own wildfires and evacuations. “The issue is the severity of wildfire activity and evacuations in B.C. proper,” Stephen Lacroix, managing director of the Alberta Emergency Management Agency, told reporters during a video conference. “They had no capacity to house Albertans.” …Everyone in Jasper National Park — tourists, hikers, campers, boaters — along with 4,700 residents of the Jasper townsite were ordered out late Monday night as wildfires pinched off escape routes to the east and south. The result was a long, slow-moving line of cars and trucks heading west through the mountains to B.C. in darkness, swirling smoke, soot and ash.

Read More

Wildfire near Pemberton now ‘being held’

By Roisin Cullen
Pique News Magazine
July 23, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

UPDATE: The wildfire on the In-Shuck-Ch FSR is now “being held,” according to the BC Wildfire Service’s map. A “human-caused” forest fire is now burning 2.5 hectares near Pemberton, and is classed as “out of control.” An out-of-control wildfire is a fire that is “spreading or is anticipated to spread beyond the current perimeter or control line.” The fire is located on the In-Shuck-Ch FSR near Driftwood Bay at Lillooet Lake, approximately a 40-minute drive from Pemberton. The fire was discovered July 22 at about 1:30 p.m. Crews initially had the fire under control before it grew substantially overnight and regained its “out of control” status. Two crews from Lil’wat Forestry Ventures have rushed to the wildfire. Chief Cameron Adams of Pemberton Fire Rescue said at a Pemberton council meeting on Tuesday, July 23 that the blaze is suspected to be caused by campfire. His crew is ready to jump in and help if needed.

Read More

Williams Lake River Valley wildfire now considered being held

By Angie Mindus
Williams Lake Tribune
July 23, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

As the smoke cleared Tuesday morning, July 23, things were looking up for the city of Williams Lake: the BC Wildfire Service now considers the Williams Lake River Valley wildfire as being held. The view Tuesday is a stark change from Sunday evening (July 21) when the fire erupted, and even Monday morning as crews battled to gain control of the blaze which took a run at the city Sunday evening along Mackenzie Avenue. The city is expected to update residents in the coming hours regarding the reopening of Mackenzie Avenue, and access to the lake and boat launch. An evacuation alert remains in place, although that could change today. A storm Monday evening brought lightning, but also cooler weather which is a relief from a long stretch of hot, dry temperatures.

Read More

Progress made on Williams Lake River Valley wildfire

By Angie Mindus
The Williams Lake Tribune
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

An aerial image taken by the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) Monday, July 22 shows the extent of damage caused by the Williams Lake River Valley wildfire that continues to threaten the city. The fire is estimated at 40 hectares and is still considered out of control by the BCWS. The city is reporting, however, that crews are making significant progress on the fire. Evan Dean, director of protective services, said the Williams Lake Fire Department (WLFD), in coordination with the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), as well as support from numerous other structural and wildland crews, gained ground containing Sunday’s fire. “Currently, crews are working on securing perimeter lines, as well as extinguishing hot spots,” Dean said. “Out of an abundance of caution, alerts remain in effect for the Mackenzie Avenue, Woodland, Westridge and Country Club areas, due to potential spotting or reignition cause by extreme weather.”

Additional coverage in the Castanet by Madison Reeve: B.C Wildfire Service reports the wildfire is classified as out of control

Victoria Times Colonist, by Canadian Press: Tactical evacuations, water use warnings issued as wildfire threatens Williams Lake

Black Press, by Angie Mindus: ‘We’re hitting it hard’: Crews fight Williams Lake wildfire from air, ground

Read More

Dry Creek fire out of control near Revelstoke

By Lauren McNeil
Revelstoke Review
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

A wildfire in Dry Creek is out of control and an evacuation alert has been put in place for the area. The fire was first discovered on July 18. BC Wildfire Services has updated the status of the fire as of July 22, stating that it has grown to 150 hectares. An evacuation alert is issued for the following areas, Highway 23 South from Cranberry Creek to Shelter Bay, and Shelter Bay to 12km on the Shelter Bay Forest Service Road. This evacuation alert is issued to prepare you to evacuate your premises or property should an evacuation order be made. Dry Creek is approximately 35 kilometres south of the City of Revelstoke.

Additional coverage in Revelstoke Review: Evacuation alert for Shelter Bay to Cranberry Creek

Read More

No crews fighting Mara Mountain fire on Monday, BC Wildfire Service says, due to steep terrain

By Chelsey Mutter
Castanet
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

A wildfire burning on Mara Mountain has grown to 220 hectares, and access to the fire remains an issue, prompting firefighters in nearby Sicamous to prepare to defend the community. Inaccessible terrain kept BC Wildfire Service crews from working a 220-hectare fire burning near Sicamous on Monday. BCWS Information Officer Ayden Coray said no bucketing of the fire took place Monday, and steep terrain has made the fire inaccessible for ground crews. An update from the Columbia Shuswap Regional District advises the public that BCWS continues to monitor the wildfire.

Other BC evacuation news from Castanet: Sitkum Creek wildfire balloons to 350 hectares, evacuation alerts in place

Read More

Thousands flee Jasper National Park as wildfire threatens township, prompts highway closures

By Dean Bennett & David Boles
The Canadian Press in CBC News
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

About 4,700 residents of the Alberta mountain town of Jasper and visitors to Jasper National Park have been forced to evacuate after a wildfire roared into the area late Monday night. People were forced to flee west into British Columbia with little notice over mountain roads through darkness, soot and ash. Photos and video shared on social media depicted a long line of cars and trucks, headlights on, red tail lights blinking, heading out bumper-to bumper as the deep blue night sky darkened. …The Jasper townsite — and the park’s main east-west artery Highway 16 — were caught in a fiery pincer. Fires threatening from the northeast cut off highway access east to Edmonton. Another fire roaring up from the south forced the closure of the north-south Icefields Parkway. That left one route open — west to B.C. …The evacuation alert was sent just after 10 p.m. MT. The Municipality of Jasper declared a state of emergency shortly after.

 

Read More

Wildfires erupt in B.C. with lightning, heat fuelling fire behaviour across province

The Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
July 20, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Barbara Roden, mayor of Ashcroft, BC, says the area’s long-term care residents have been moved out as a fast-moving wildfire looms nearby. Ashcroft is about 360 kilometres northeast of Vancouver. Roden said Saturday that the community remains under an alert to be ready to evacuate on short notice. Roden said the anxiety among residents is “settling down a little bit” as the nearby Shetland Creek wildfire appeared to push northward Saturday. …Roden’s comments came as the Thompson-Nicola Regional District confirmed Venables Valley — just a few kilometres southwest of Ashcroft — has seen a number of structures destroyed by the Shetland Creek fire as of Saturday. …Meanwhile, the number of wildfires in British Columbia has flared up to more than 300, with more than half of those classified as out of control and about 70 started in the last 24 hours. The B.C. Wildfire Service said one of the primary drivers in the latest spike has been lightning.

Read More

Several wildfires have forced authorities in B.C. to issue evacuation orders as heat wave intensifies

CBC News
July 21, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Cariboo Regional District Emergency Operations Centre issued an evacuation order Sunday afternoon citing the rapid growth over the weekend of the Antler Creek wildfire in B.C.’s central Interior. The emergency order encompasses 431 parcels in the Barkerville Area, covering 62,488 hectares, including the historic Barkerville town — the largest living history museum in western North America. The EOC has also extended the order for 33 parcels in the Bowron area, covering about 30,567 hectares to the east of Wells and part of the Bowron Lake Provincial Park. Earlier on Sunday, the District of Wells also declared a state of local emergency for the entire district, which is about 180 kilometres southeast of Prince George. …In the order signed by Mayor Ed Colemon, the wildfire is described as a “significant threat” to the health, safety and welfare of the community. Coleman told CBC News that about 1,000 people are impacted by the order.

Read More

Alberta wildfire evacuees now number 7,500, Little Red River Cree Nation fully evacuated

By Nicholas Frew and Sam Samson
CBC News
July 21, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

EDMONTON, Alberta — Jason Saovord, his girlfriend, their kids and his girlfriend’s sister rolled into Edmonton early Sunday morning, having travelled hundreds of kilometres from northern Alberta to stay in a hotel for shelter. They are among thousands of people from Little Red River Cree Nation fleeing the Semo Complex wildfire, a group of out-of-control wildfires in the High Level forest area. An evacuation order was issued Saturday afternoon, as one of the fires encroached about two kilometres from Highway 58 — the one thoroughfare in the area. …Little Red River Cree Nation, which has about 5,500 members, is made up of three communities: Fox Lake, Garden River and John D’Or Prairie. Garden River was evacuated last week due to the wildfire, but the Alberta Emergency Management Agency issued an evacuation order for Fox Lake and John D’Or Prairie around 12:30 p.m. Saturday. …There are about 7,500 wildfire evacuees in Alberta. 

Read More

Local state of emergency declared in Williams Lake, BC

The Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
July 21, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

WILLIAMS LAKE, BC — Lightning-triggered wildfires over the weekend have prompted a number of evacuation orders and alerts across B.C., a situation that has been exacerbated the ongoing heat wave. The B.C. Wildfire Service said Sunday that crews are battling more than 300 blazes, with several evacuation orders in effect in both Central and East Kootenay as well as in Thompson-Nicola, Cariboo and Bulkley — Nechako in the northwest. …A local state of emergency was declared on Sunday night in Williams Lake, where the River Valley wildfire is burning within city limits. An evacuation alert has been issued for properties from the intersection of Highway 20 and Mackenzie Avenue to the Jackpine Sawmill Access Road on Mackenzie Avenue near Atlantic Power’s Williams Lake plant. …In the Central Kootenay, the community of Silverton also remained on alert Sunday while 107 properties south of the village were under an evacuation order due to the nearby Aylwin Creek wildfire.

Read More

Wildfire prompts evacuation orders near Spences Bridge, B.C., as hot spell continues

Canadian Press in CTV News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District has issued an evacuation order for 76 properties in the Venables Valley area north of Spences Bridge, B.C., due to the out-of-control Shetland Creek wildfire. The order issued at 10 p.m. last night says residents are to report to the emergency services reception centre at the community hall in nearby Cache Creek. Cook’s Ferry Indian Band has also expanded an evacuation order related to the same fire to include additional reserves along the Thompson River south of Ashcroft. The BC Wildfire Service says the Shetland Creek blaze has grown to more than 41 square kilometres in size, while the nearby Teit Creek blaze spans 249 hectares. …The forecast for Cache Creek, north of the Shetland Creek wildfire, shows a daily high of 40 C on Thursday, 38 C on Friday and 40 C over the weekend. The wildfire service says Wednesday’s storm sparked high-elevation fires through the Arrow and Kootenay Lake fire zones.

Read More

Evacuations end for Labrador City a week after wildfire forced out thousands

The Canadian Press in CTV News
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Labrador City residents will soon be returning home after a wildfire forced an evacuation last week. Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey has said the evacuation order officially lifts at noon Monday, though essential workers and their families were allowed to return over the weekend. Furey said in a statement Saturday the gradual return would “allow residents of Labrador City to return home in a safe and orderly manner.” More than 7,000 residents of Labrador City were ordered to evacuate last week after a sudden shift in conditions reignited the once-smouldering fire and it moved toward the town. Labrador City Mayor Belinda Adams said the fire that had threatened the city is now “very low risk,” and rain was helping crews who are working to put out hot spots.

Read More

Ground assault begins on Labrador City wildfire that forced thousands to evacuate

The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
July 18, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

LABRADOR CITY, N.L. — Firefighters began attacking a fire near Labrador City from the ground Thursday, marking a new stage in the effort to get the roaring wildfire under control. Crews have been dousing the flames from above using water bombers and helicopters, but Jeff Motty, the province’s forest fire duty officer, said adding a ground attack is an important step forward in the battle against any forest fire. “Once it’s safe for us to put firefighters on the ground, that’s how a fire actually gets put out,” he said in an interview. “It’s the boots on the ground that ultimately put the fires out.” Labrador City is home to more than 7,000 people and they were ordered to evacuate last week after a sudden shift in conditions sent the once-smouldering fire roaring back to life and moving quickly toward the town. 

Read More

Forest History & Archives

2 residents reflect on how life in Port Alice has changed ‘since the beginning’

By Debra Lynn
North Island Gazette
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada West

Not many people alive today can say that they were around when their community was founded. Because Port Alice was B.C.’s first “instant municipality” that emerged abruptly in the late 60s, early 70s to house pulp mill workers, there are many who can make that claim. Two of those Port Alice residents, Arlyn Lind and Audrey Clark-Surtees, shared with the Gazette their reflections on how their community has changed over the years. Arlyn Lind, 86, was born at the hospital in Old Port Alice located at the mill site. She grew up on a floating house that was docked wherever her father’s latest logging claim was. When she seven years old, the family pulled their floating home to a piece of land in Quatsino so that she could attend elementary school. Lind then moved to Port Alice for high school, staying with friends during the week. After graduating, she went to work at a logging camp.

Read More