Blog Archives

Business & Politics

NAWLA Members Approve Bylaws Amendments With Strong Support

By North American Wholesale Lumber Association
PR Log
March 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

CHICAGO — The North American Wholesale Lumber Association (NAWLA) announced that its wholesaler and manufacturer member companies have approved a set of recommended amendments to the association’s bylaws. …The amendments strengthen NAWLA’s ability to serve an increasingly diverse and interconnected distribution ecosystem. Key updates include:

  • Expanding the definition of “wholesaler” membership to reflect the range of distribution models operating in the industry today—including one‑step and two‑step distributors, buying groups and importers/exporters who take title to the products they sell and operate within the wholesale distribution model.
  • Broadening eligibility to participate on the NAWLA Board of Directors, including allowing affiliate members to serve on the Board and manufacturer members to serve as officers on the Executive Committee.
  • Preserving wholesalers as the majority representation on both the Board of Directors and the Executive Committee at all times.

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Tricky negotiations begin Monday to renew a trade pact between the United States, Mexico and Canada

By Paul Wiseman and Maria Verza
The Associated Press
March 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — Every day more than $4 billion worth of goods cross the United States’ borders with Canada and Mexico. …Much of this bustling cross-border commerce is duty-free, thanks to the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, that President Trump negotiated with America’s northern and southern neighbors during his first term. But the future of the USMCA , which took effect July 1, 2020, is cloudy as the three countries begin what could be a tempestuous attempt to renew the pact this year. The United States is demanding changes to the treaty. …Trump also suggested last fall that the United States could negotiate separate deals with Canada and Mexico, ending the three-country North American bloc that previous administrations saw as crucial to competing economically with China and the European Union. The talks kick off Monday between US and Mexican trade officials. …At stake is $1.6 trillion worth of annual trade in goods.

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When a major employer closes, the whole community feels it

By Shaimaa Yassin and Abigail Jackson
Policy Options
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

When a community’s major employer falters, the shock waves don’t stop at the plant gate. In small towns and regions across the country, mass layoffs and closures also affect contractors and suppliers, local services, municipal budgets and housing markets. The sector and location change, but the pattern is predictable. In Cape Breton, for example, industrial decline has contributed to out-migration. …The closure of a cornerstone pulp-and-paper mill in Chandler, Que., has been linked to mental health and family distress. …In Houston, B.C., the closure of the Canfor sawmill in 2023 left the district with a $1.2-million budget shortfall this year. Canada’s support systems focus primarily on the immediate needs of directly affected workers and employers, but communities themselves also need shoring up when workforce disruption suddenly alters the landscape. …Finding better ways to support communities susceptible to workforce disruption is an increasingly pressing policy challenge. 

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South Okanagan MP Helena Konanz says feds need to make deal with U.S. on softwood lumber

By Sarah Crookall
Castanet
March 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Helena Konanz

PENTICTON, BC — Similkameen-South Okanagan-West Kootenay MP Helena Konanz… said Canada needs to settle on a softwood lumber agreement with the US after a decade without one. “Forestry communities have the potential to thrive, but only if we knock down the Americans’ insulting tariff barriers,” she said. Last week, Konanz spoke in the House of Commons regarding Trans-Pacific trade agreements. “Softwood lumber is key in my riding, as many members know. Hundreds of jobs have already been lost in my riding during these tumultuous times,” she said. “Families who rely on lumber jobs in my region have now seen an entire year of the Liberal prime minister’s travels. He has travelled frequently to the United States and around the globe, promising deals but still not delivering for lumber.”

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Snuneymuxw First Nation sounds alarm on pollution at Nanaimo, B.C., industrial park

By Edzi’u Loverin
CBC News
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NANAIMO, BC — Snuneymuxw First Nation is calling for a temporary closure and environmental investigation of a hazardous waste services company following a January oil spill on Duke Point near Nanaimo, BC. City of Nanaimo staff were informed of oily residue near a storm drain close to the Duke Point Ferry Terminal on Jan. 5. Staff said the spill originated from a business in the nearby industrial park, and a BC Ministry of Environment spokesperson said there was an estimated 350 to 1,600 litres of oil sheen on the water between Duke Point and Mudge Island. …The First Nation, along with a Feb. 19 statement from the Ministry of Environment, said the industrial park business Environmental 360 Solutions was responsible for the spill. …Snuneymuxw Chief Michael Wyse Feb. 6 urged governments to take action to address polluting activities in their territory.b…Western Forest Products said the company has implemented multiple measures to manage “wood and wood particle water discharge.”

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New Contract at Domtar – Members Vote Overwhelmingly to Ratify Four-Year Agreement

United Steelworkers
March 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

USW members voted overwhelmingly this winter to ratify a new four-year master agreement that provides significant annual wage increases and additional benefits for about 2,400 members of nine local unions at Domtar paper facilities across the United States. The contract, which runs through December 2029, followed months of member preparations and bargaining during a period of major changes in the company and across the paper industry. It was the first time USW members bargained a new agreement since Paper Excellence acquired Domtar in 2021 and then Resolute in 2023. …“With new ownership and leadership at the table, we knew this round of bargaining would be challenging,” said International Vice President Luis Mendoza, who oversees the union’s paper sector. …The agreement… included a signing bonus, a boost in pension payments, wage increases of more than 12% over the life of the contract, and continued affordable health care coverage.

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How to Bring Starter Homes Back From Extinction

By Scott Lincicome, economist with the Cato Institute
Bloomberg Opinion
March 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

If you want to understand why the American starter home seems to have gone extinct, don’t look at greedy developers, rapacious investors or discriminating banks. Look at the government policies that make building these homes all but impossible. New research puts hard numbers on one part of the problem — and they’re staggering. …Federal, state and local governments have accelerated this decline by increasing construction costs through several channels. …In some cities, such as Los Angeles, the time it takes to get building permits amounts to almost half the construction time. …Land in many localities is made artificially expensive by regulations that dictate home sizes, yard sizes, building setbacks, parking and more. …Federal policies pile on more costs. …Canadian lumber, for example, is roughly 80% of all US imports and is currently subject to “trade remedy” taxes of more than 25%. Similar duties cover a wide range of products that US homebuilders use every day.

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US Senate passes major housing affordability

By Sahil Kapur, Melanie Zanona, Ryan Nobles and Julie Tsirkin
NBC News
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — The Senate passed a bill Thursday aimed at boosting the supply of housing and bringing down prices, marking a rare bipartisan breakthrough on a major issue. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, written by Sens. Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., won 89 votes. Ten senators voted against it. Scott is the chairman of the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, and Warren is the ranking member. The 303-page legislation creates a series of grants and pilot programs for housing construction, while revising federal definitions to encourage more housing units and prevent Wall Street from buying up tons of single-family homes. Such a big, bipartisan vote is increasingly unusual in Congress and the bill aims to tackle a major affordability issue for voters ahead of the midterm elections. But it is uncertain if it can pass the House as is, and President Donald Trump has signalled he wants voting legislation first.

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Senate Passes Major Housing Legislation Despite Serious Industry Concerns

The National Association of Home Builders
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The US Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act in an attempt to bolster the nation’s housing supply. NAHB has previously supported the bill, which had included many favorable positions for the housing industry. But a number of provisions from the House-passed Housing for the 21st Century Act — which NAHB had also supported — were weakened or removed entirely. …The most alarming change, is a mandate that would force the sale of private property based solely on the type of owner. Section 901(c) would force purpose-built single-family rental housing to be sold within seven years if the new owner is defined as a large institutional investor. This provision undermines the production of purpose-built single-family rental housing, which typically serves families seeking rental housing with three or more bedrooms. NAHB believes this requirement would severely curtail investment in single-family rental housing. …NAHB is urging a conference between the House and the Senate.

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Iranian war strands global timber shipments, but Arkansas impacts minimal

By University of Arkansas
Stuttgart Daily Leader
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

Matthew Pelkki

MONTICELLO, Arkansas — The conflict in the Strait of Hormuz is restricting imports to the rapidly growing timber markets in the Middle East and northern Africa, according to an industry outlet, but impacts on the Arkansas timber industry will likely be minimal, said Matthew Pelkki. Pelkki is a professor and George H. Clippert Chair of Forestry at the University of Arkansas at Monticello. …The Middle Eastern and North African Market — or MENA — region has become a growing market for timber exporters, especially Russia. …“While the Middle Eastern and North African Market has grown substantially, it is still a small component of US wood exports,” Pelkki said. …However, “any loss or reduction of US hardwood exports is going to cause prices for lumber to stagnate or drop, and as prices and quantity of those hardwoods decrease, it will have an effect on demand for hardwood timber,” Pelkki said. 

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Trump administration launches process to replace tariffs struck down by U.S. Supreme Court

The Associated Press in CBC News
March 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

US President Trump’s administration on Wednesday launched a trade investigation into excess industrial capacity in 16 major trading partners in a move to rebuild tariff pressure after the U.S. Supreme Court tore down the centerpiece of Trump’s trade policy last month. Canada is not named as one of the targets of the new probe. US ‌Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said the Section 301 unfair trade practices investigation could lead to new tariffs imposed against China, the European Union, India, Japan, Mexico and South Korea by this summer. Other trading partners subject to the excess capacity probe include Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Cambodia, Singapore, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Switzerland and Norway. Trump and his team have made clear they’re seeking to replace the hundreds of billions of dollars in lost revenues after the Supreme Court’s February ruling. In this case, the administration is starting investigations under Section 301 of the Trade Act.

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Plantation Pine Products invests $25 million, brings 100 jobs to mill

By Jill Holloway
The Thomasville Times-Enterprise
March 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

METCALFE, Georgia — Plantation Pine Products officially opened their doors at the former site of Hood Industries, signaling an exciting new chapter in a timber mill with a storied history. …The $25 million investment is set to provide 100 jobs, with the first mill employees reporting for duty in July, when it will once again come alive. Operated by Steve Conner, Plantation Pine Products will be one of the many “bread and butter businesses” of Thomasville. …“Forestry is woven into the fabric of rural Georgia in a way that no other industry can match,” Michelle Shaw said for the Georgia Department of Economic Development. …The reopening of the mill comes at a crucial time following the devastation of Hurricane Helene  in 2025 and reinforces the resiliency of timber producers across Georgia.

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Domtar begins trial to improve wastewater quality at Kingsport, Tennessee mill

By Jorgelina Manna-Rea
The Times News
March 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINGSPORT — Domtar’s Kingsport mill told the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation that it will try a method to improve wastewater quality at its wastewater lagoon this week. The mill said it will add an oxidant near the outlet of the lagoon’s settling zone for about 30 days to see if it would improve the effluent water quality. “It will be fed at a low rate of approximately 1 [part per million] with monitoring and testing being done at our effluent sample point before the discharge to the river,” the letter states. The mill has also tried chemical treatments and injecting liquid oxygen to address sulfuric odors attributed to the 25-acre wastewater lagoon.It is currently constructing a new wastewater treatment system, an anaerobic digester, to address wastewater odors attributed to the mill. Construction is expected to complete near the end of 2026.

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Ukraine’s forestry sector records strong financial performance

Wood & Panel Europe
March 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Ukraine’s state forestry sector has reported its strongest financial performance to date. Despite operating during wartime conditions, the industry delivered a significant increase in profitability last year. The results were announced during the annual public report presented by Viktor Smal, head of the State Forest Resources Agency of Ukraine. According to the report, the state enterprise Forests of Ukraine generated net profits of UAH 6.9 billion, equivalent to approximately US$167 million. The result represents a 2.76-fold increase compared with 2024. The achievement is considered a milestone for the country’s forestry management system. Industry leaders attribute the growth largely to procurement reforms introduced after 2020. These reforms were designed to improve transparency and reduce financial leakage within the sector. …Profitability within the forestry industry also improved considerably. The sector recorded an overall profitability rate of 22.8%. This figure increased by 12.3% points compared with earlier results.

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Fibre Excellence halts production at Saint-Gaudens plant for lack of wood

By Faustine Loison
Print Industry News
March 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — Another setback for Fibre Excellence. The Saint-Gaudens paper mill in the Haute-Garonne region of France will suspend pulp production for two weeks, from March 16 to 30, 2026. The paper group’s management indicates that the level of wood stock no longer enables it to maintain industrial activity under normal conditions. This decision, which comes after a five-week suspension of production last October due to the drop in activity on the European pulp market, is due to persistent tensions on the industrial wood market, with supply difficulties exacerbated by recent bad weather in south-west France. The shutdown period will be used for maintenance operations, cleaning work and training sessions for teams. However, certain activities will continue on site. Timber supply services, shipping and the city’s wastewater treatment plant will continue to operate. This latest shutdown comes at a time of uncertainty for Fibre Excellence’s two French paper mills.

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s housing starts edge up, but deeper strains unsettle builders

By Liezel Once
Canadian Mortgage Professional
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canadian housing starts posted a modest rebound in February, but economists and industry data pointed to a market still losing momentum beneath the surface. The latest figures suggest builders are working through earlier project decisions while facing weaker demand, higher costs and a darker macro outlook. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) reported that the seasonally adjusted annual rate of housing starts rose 4.5% month over month to 250,900 units in February. That’s up from a revised 240,148 in January. The six‑month trend – a moving average used to smooth volatility – inched up just 0.4% to 256,005 units, essentially flat. …“Looking ahead, we expect heightened levels of business uncertainty and construction costs to weigh on the rate and trend of housing starts in the near‑to‑medium term.” …Among Canada’s largest centres, Montreal posted an 18% increase in actual starts in February, and Vancouver recorded a 60% jump. 

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Lumber Futures Rebound past $600

Trading Economics
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures climbed past $600 per thousand board feet as stabilizing housing sentiment and tightening production capacity across North America reversed a two month downward trend. The NAHB Housing Market Index edged up to 38 in March with buyer traffic and future sales expectations showing marginal gains despite persistent economic uncertainty. While 37% of builders continue to offer price cuts to attract buyers the market is finding support from a 29.1% surge in multifamily housing starts and a 7.2% rise in total residential construction activity. On the supply side mill closures and elevated duties on Canadian imports are projected to remove over 1.3 billion board feet from the market this year. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East further pressure the outlook as rising energy costs inflate transport and shipping expenses for global timber. These factors suggest a shift toward a supply constrained environment that offsets the impact of high mortgage rates.

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CMHC reports February housing starts up 4.5% from January

By Kevin Hughes, Deputy Chief Economist
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The six-month trend in housing starts was virtually flat in February, with a slight increase of 0.4% to 256,005 units, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). The trend measure is a six-month moving average of the seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of total housing starts for all areas in Canada. Actual housing starts were up 10% year-over-year in centres with a population of 10,000 or greater.  The year-to-date total was 31,974 units, up 5% from the same period in 2025, driven by higher starts to begin the year in British Columbia and Ontario, as higher starts across the province have, so far, made up for decreases in Toronto. The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada increased 4.5% in February (250,900 units) compared to January (240,148 units).

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Canada’s unemployment rate rises to 6.7% as economy loses 84,000 jobs

By Jane Switzer
The Financial Post
March 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s unemployment rate rose to 6.7% in February as more people looked for work and the economy shed 84,000 jobs, according to the latest report from Statistics Canada, released Friday. The country’s employment rate fell 0.2 percentage points to 60.6%, the second consecutive monthly decline. …Nearly 23% of the 1.5 million people who were unemployed in February were in long-term unemployment and had been continuously searching for work for 27 weeks or more. Statistics Canada said that percentage was little changed from a year ago, but “significantly above” the pre-COVID-19 pandemic average of 17.1% recorded during 2017-19. Economists had been expecting a gain of 10,000 jobs in February but the numbers were “weaker than expected,” said Andrew Hencic, director and senior economist at TD Economics. “Looking forward, we are expecting the labour market to tread water in 2026, as a rapid slowdown in population growth drags on labour supply, and soft economic momentum limits hiring,” he said.

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Lumber Futures Hit 4-week High

Trading Economics
March 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber increased to 602.00 USD/1000 board feet, the highest since February 2026. Over the past 4 weeks, Lumber gained 1.1%, and in the last 12 months, it decreased 9.51%.

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US Consumer Expectations Worsen After Start of Military Conflict in Iran

The University of Michigan
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Consumer sentiment dipped about 2%, reaching its lowest reading of the year. Interviews completed prior to the military action in Iran showed an improvement in sentiment from last month, but lower readings seen during the nine days thereafter completely erased those initial gains. Gasoline prices have exerted the most immediate impact felt by consumers. …A broad swath of consumers across incomes, age, and political affiliation all reported declines in expectations for their personal finances, down 7.5% nationally. …This month, year-ahead inflation expectations ended six months of consecutive declines, stalling at 3.4%. The current reading exceeds those seen in 2024 and remains well above the 2.3-3.0% range seen in the two years pre-pandemic. Long-run inflation expectations inched down to 3.2%. In 2024, readings ranged between 2.8% and 3.2%, while in 2019 and 2020, they were consistently below 2.8%. 

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Best Year for Missing Middle Construction Since 2007

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

While not a huge jump, 2025 featured the highest construction volume for multifamily missing middle housing starts. The missing middle construction sector includes development of medium-density housing, such as townhouses, duplexes and other small multifamily properties. The multifamily segment of the missing middle (apartments in 2- to 4-unit properties) has generally disappointed since the Great Recession. For the fourth quarter of 2025, there were 5,000 2- to 4-unit housing unit construction starts. This was flat compared to the fourth quarter of 2024. Over the course of 2025, there were 19,000 such starts, up 6% compared to 2024 (18,000). Nonetheless, this subsector of residential construction continues to underperform relative to its potential, due in part to zoning restrictions.

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US Builder Sentiment Inches Higher but Affordability Concerns Persist

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Builder sentiment inched up in March even as builders continue to express affordability concerns stemming from elevated construction costs and shortages of buildable lots and labor. Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes rose one point to 38 in March, following a revised upward one-point revision in February. …All responses to the March survey were received after the conflict with Iran started. Affordability for buyers and builders remains a top concern. Many buyers remain on the fence waiting for lower interest rates and due to economic uncertainty. …All three of the major HMI indices posted gains in March. The HMI index gauging current sales conditions increased one point to 42 from February to March, the index measuring future sales gained two points to 49 and the index charting traffic of prospective buyers posted a three-point increase to 25.

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US economy expanded at sluggish 0.7% in fourth quarter, government says, downgrading first estimate

By Paul Wiseman
The Associated Press
March 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — The US economy, hobbled by last fall’s 43-day government shutdown, advanced at an unexpectedly sluggish 0.7% annual rate from October through December, the Commerce Department reported Friday in a big downgrade of its initial estimate. Growth in gross domestic product — the nation’s output of goods and services — was down sharply from 4.4% in last year’s third quarter and 3.8% in the second. And the fourth-quarter number was half the government’s first estimate of 1.4%; economists had expected the revision to go the other way — and show stronger growth. Federal government spending and investment, clobbered by the shutdown, plunged at a 16.7% rate, hacking 1.16 percentage points off fourth-quarter growth. For all of 2025, GDP grew 2.1%, solid but down from an initial estimate of 2.2% and from 2.8% in 2024 and 2.9% 2023.

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US Custom Home Building Expanded in 2025

By robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In a year that saw a more than 6% decline for overall single-family housing starts, custom home building posted a gain. The custom building market is less sensitive to the interest rate cycle than other forms of home building but is more sensitive to changes in household wealth and stock prices. With spec home building down and the stock market up, custom building expanded its market share. According to NAHB’s analysis of Census data from the Quarterly Starts and Completions by Purpose and Design survey, there were 45,000 total custom building starts during the fourth quarter of 2025. This is down 4% relative to the fourth quarter of 2024. However, for 2025 as a whole, custom single-family housing starts totaled 186,000 homes, a 3% increase compared to 2024 (181,000). Currently, the market share of custom home building, based on a one-year moving average, is almost 20% of total single-family starts. 

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US applications for unemployment benefits inch down to 213,000 as layoffs remain stable

By Matt Ott
The Associated Press
March 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US applications for unemployment benefits inched down modestly last week as layoffs remain at historically healthy levels despite a weakening job market. The number of Americans filing for jobless aid for the week ending March 7 fell by 1,000 to 213,000 the previous week, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Analysts surveyed by the data firm FactSet forecast 215,000 new benefit applications. Filings for unemployment benefits are viewed as a proxy for U.S. layoffs and are close to a real-time indicator of the health of the job market. While weekly layoffs have remained in a historically low range mostly between 200,000 and 250,000 for the past few years, a number of high-profile companies have announced job cuts recently, including Morgan Stanley,Block, UPSand Amazon in recent weeks. …For now, the U.S. job market appears stuck in what economists call a “low-hire, low-fire” state that has kept the unemployment rate historically low, but has left those out of work struggling to find a new job.

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UK Timber imports reach lowest level in over a decade

Wood & Panel Europe
March 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Timber imports into the United Kingdom declined to their lowest level in more than ten years during 2025. The data was reported by Timber Development UK (TDUK), the industry body representing the national timber supply chain. According to the organisation’s latest market review, total timber imports reached 9.1 million cubic metres in 2025. This figure represented a 2.2% decrease compared with the previous year. …Timber demand in the United Kingdom has now remained relatively flat for four consecutive years. …Softwood remains the dominant component of the UK timber market. The material accounts for approximately 61% of total timber imports. However, softwood imports declined by 4% during 2025. …Several traditional suppliers exported smaller volumes to the UK. Other suppliers partially offset these declines. Imports from Latvia and Finland increased during the same period. …Performance within the engineered wood category was uneven. Laminated veneer lumber and timber I-beams both recorded steady growth during the year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Bespoke Metrics Releases Finalized Mass Timber Project Scoring Methodology

By Bespoke Metrics
Cision Newswire
March 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

TORONTO — Bespoke Metrics announced the finalization of its Mass Timber Project Scoring Methodology, following the close of a public comment period. Bespoke Metrics was engaged by the Climate Smart Buildings Alliance and the Canadian Wood Council, through the Mass Timber Insurance Action Plan, to develop this methodology as part of broader efforts to enhance transparency, comparability, and insurability in the use of sustainable construction materials. By standardizing how mass timber experience and risk management practices are evaluated, the framework supports more informed decision-making among owners, insurers, and lenders. …Mass timber presents significant opportunities as a lower-carbon building material, but it also introduces unique risk factors–including combustibility considerations, moisture sensitivity, supply chain constraints, and a more limited pool of experienced subcontractors and suppliers. The finalized methodology is designed to ensure these factors are consistently and transparently reflected in contractor risk assessments. …The final methodology is available here.

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Facades+ returns to New York City on March 26 and 27

By the Editors
The Architect’s Newspaper
March 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

Lucas Epp

On March 26 and 27, Facades+ returns to New York City to deliver an outstanding program for the largest event of the year. Materiality is the theme of the first day’s symposium, which will feature a day of roundtables with co-chair BIG, StructureCraft, TYLin, Terreform ONE, Wildflower LTD, and others. A day of interactive workshops on March 27 will provide the opportunity to learn about material selection and custom software in facade development, among other topics. Click here to find more information and register. Kai-Uwe Bergmann, partner at BIG; and AN’s editor-in-chief Jack Murphy, will kick off Facades+ New York City’s day-long program. Bergmann and Murphy will begin the day’s thematic focus by weighing the virtues of materials past, present, and future and considering how they appear to us today. …Peter MacKeith, Lucas Epp, Amy Harrington, and Jason Wu, four leaders in mass timber design and engineering, will discuss strategies for the material’s widespread implementation.

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Timber, Trust, and What Sits Behind the Plasterboard: Why WoodSolutions Wants Builders to “Claim” Timber Framing

The Good Builder
March 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — When Aaron started The Good Builder, he expected the hard part would be building an audience. Instead, one of his first lessons came from a quiet meeting in a Brisbane café with someone who had spent decades inside Australia’s timber and forestry sector. That meeting was with Christine Briggs, a Queenslander and long time timber industry leader who now works with WoodSolutions, a national industry initiative focused on technical guidance, research and practical tools for designers and builders. In a recent episode of The Good Builder podcast, Ng spoke with Briggs about the future of timber framing, why sustainability messaging is still underused by builders, and how “what’s behind the walls” may become a bigger trust signal in a sector struggling with confidence. The conversation was part industry education, part marketing workshop, and part reality check for a building market that is increasingly shaped by social media scrutiny, shifting regulation, and clients who want proof, not polish.

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Wood Surface Treatment Shows Promise in Inhibiting Harmful Bacteria

Bioengineer
March 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

HELSINKI, Finland — A groundbreaking investigation by researchers at the University of Helsinki is shedding new light on the relationship between wood surface treatments and bacterial survival, revealing profound implications for both public health and material science. The study meticulously analyzed how untreated and chemically treated wood surfaces influence the adhesion, survival, and transmission of bacterial species commonly found in indoor environments. This research challenges conventional perspectives on surface hygiene and opens avenues for reconsidering material use in everyday settings ranging from homes to healthcare environments. The research primarily focused on two bacterial species: Staphylococcus epidermidis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. …By studying these organisms, the research team was able to capture a spectrum of bacterial behaviors and survival strategies on different wood substrates. …Although the study’s scope was limited, its findings offer valuable preliminary insights into the wider implications of material selection in construction and interior design.

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Embodied carbon data shows lower impact for UK sourced timber

Specification OnLine UK
March 11, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Timber Development UK (TDUK) has published the 2026 Embodied Carbon data for Timber Products. This provides the average carbon data for the 11 major timber product categories. A fully updated version of the 2025 information, the data allows designers to weigh up the carbon impacts of their material choices. The figures clearly show how selecting a particular timber product will affect the embodied carbon of a design, with many UK sourced timber products having a lower A1-A4 embodied carbon impact than their imported counterparts. This independently verified information calculates weighted average upfront A1-A4 embodied carbon data for all of the most common timber products used in the UK – both including and excluding biogenic carbon, and also includes a stored biogenic carbon figure for the product. The new publication now also includes end-of-life C1-C4 embodied carbon impacts.

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Forestry

Group rallies in Campbell River to protect old-growth forests

By Robin Grant
The Campbell River Mirror
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A small but passionate group rallied in front of the B.C. Timber Sales office in Campbell River at the end of February to show their frustration with the government’s failure to fulfill its 2020 promise to protect B.C.’s remaining old-growth forests. “We are sending the message to the people making decisions about logging B.C. forests that we need sustainable forestry, not clearcuts and the urgent need to protect our last remaining old-growth forest,” said Paula Fee, ”Save Our Forests Team – Comox Valley.” Since the 2020 Old-Growth Strategic Review was released, Fee pointed out, just two per cent of the proposed old-growth deferrals have been actually set aside, while logging in other areas proposed for deferral has increased fourfold. …The group is also championing the New Forest Act, a proposed legislative framework introduced by the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society.

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Cowichan Valley Regional District should acquire and run mill’s Crofton Pulp Mill’s water system

By Wayne MacDonald
Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

North Cowichan has a looming water crisis. A permanent closure of the Crofton Pulp Mill and the shutdown of the pulp mill supply system would result in the diversion of most of North Cowichan’s future development water to supply water to Crofton. As a former process engineering and environmental supervisor at the mill…. my solution would solve the looming Cowichan Valley water crisis regardless of the mill situation. First, the province should revoke the mill water licence and assign it to the CVRD. Second, the CVRD would purchase the pulp mill water supply system from Domtar with a contractual obligation with Domtar that the pulp mill would continue to be provided with water at the CVRD‘s cost of operation. Third, The CVRD/North Cowichan/Duncan/Ladysmith… would install a new water supply distribution system from Ladysmith to Cobble Hill using the old E&N railway grade and the Crofton pulp mill spur line.

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How to help stop the spread of spotted lanternflies: Find egg masses

By Emily Mills, Editor
Nursery Management Magazine
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The invasive spotted lanternfly, which can cause damage to many plants, has been detected in a few Tennessee counties. …The adult female spotted lanternfly lays egg masses in September through November on host plants and other smooth surfaces, such as railroad ties, rocks, lumber, downed limbs and logs. Egg masses survive cold winter temperatures, and the first instar nymphs begin emerging in the spring. The nymphs mature through the spring and early summer before becoming adults in the beginning of June. The first, second and third instars feed on a variety of host plants. The fourth instars and adults prefer tree of heaven, grapes, black walnut, silver maple, red maple and willow. …“The best way to control spotted lanternfly outbreaks is to prevent them,” said Midhula Gireesh, University of Tennessee Extension specialist in the Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology. For more, refer to the UT Extension publication Spotted Lanternfly.

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Harvesting Burned Trees May Seem a No-Brainer. But It Poses Big Risks

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, US West

From the moment he became BC’s forests minister, Ravi Parmar has been under pressure to increase logging rates in the province. One way he has decided to do that is by expediting the logging of forests burned in recent wildfires. He issued the Fort Nelson First Nation a new licence to log 100,000 cubic metres of trees in burned forests in BC’s remote northeast corner. …A number of industry associations, including the Council of Forest Industries, asked him to set “definitive, aggressive timelines for completion” of plans to accelerate logging in burned forests. …But increasing “wildfire salvage” of forests, Parmar is travelling down the same road that has seen BC’s logging rates plummet by more than half since the heyday of the 1980s. …Accelerated logging of burned trees may help bend the curve, but history shows that it is short-lived and comes at the cost of degraded ecosystems and even sharper declines ahead.

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Drone footage shows herculean effort to remove 60 acres of logs in Clackamas County

By Tatum Todd
Oregon Live
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — For months, the surface of a popular boating waterway in Clackamas County has been jammed with logs and branches, stretched across 60 acres of surface water. But that’s already starting to change. Portland General Electric, which manages the dam at one end of the log-choked North Fork Reservoir, said on Thursday that the company has started the painstaking process of removing the logs and debris, which washed into the waterway during December’s heavy flooding. PGE spokesperson Grace Boehm said that most of the logs ended up in the reservoir over the course of a short period that also dumped 62,000 cubic feet per second worth of water into the reservoir — notching a place as the 4th highest flow into the waterway on record. …PGE will be setting aside 800 logs from the recovery effort for the company to donate to stream restoration habitats.

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Alaskan Logging Case Dismissed in a Blow to the State’s Dwindling Lumber Industry

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A federal court in Anchorage has dismissed a case filed last year by an Alaska sawmill seeking to force the Forest Service to increase logging in the Tongass National Forest. …Log sales have slowed to a trickle in the forest that covers most of southeast Alaska, endangering the region’s remaining logging and lumber operations, Viking Lumber and its co-plaintiffs… said that without additional sales from the Tongass, it would run out of logs to saw. Without more it would have to close the mill it operates on remote Prince of Wales Island, where the biggest town, Craig, has about 1,000 residents and few other options for jobs. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins had been supportive of Viking… but in court her department argued successfully that a 2016 management plan for Tongass merely mapped out goals and doesn’t bind the Forest Service to offer specific quantities or types of timber for sale, contrary to Viking’s claims. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Alaska Court Ruling Halts Massive Old-Growth Rainforest Logging Plan

Sierra Club
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Sierra Club and our allies Southeast Alaska Conservation Council…  secured a major victory in our lawsuit challenging an enormous commercial timber harvest and road-building plan for Prince of Wales Island in the Tongass National Forest of Southeast Alaska.  A federal judge ruled that project approval violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which sets standards for public engagement on federal projects that will alter the environment, and the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), which requires federal agencies to evaluate how federal use of public lands will affect subsistence uses and needs. The court found that the Forest Service “presented local communities with vague, hypothetical, and over-inclusive representations of the Project’s effects over a 15-year period.” It’s not yet clear whether the Forest Service will have to abandon the project entirely, because the judge has not yet decided on a legal remedy. Read the court ruling

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Forest History & Archives

Weyerhaeuser’s shrine to wood was built to move as waterfront changed

By Jean Sherrard
The Seattle Times
March 12, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States, US West

Meant as a grand showcase for the Weyerhaeuser Lumber Company, the building in our “Then” photo provided an administrative headquarters in 1923 while offering a structural ode to timber itself. Weyerhaeuser’s timber-trade dominance at the time was legendary, rooted in the 1900 “neighborly deal” in which Frederick Weyerhaeuser purchased 900,000 acres of Washington timberland from railroader James J. Hill for $5.4 million. After the purchase, Everett quickly became the manufacturing heart of Weyerhaeuser’s empire, with waterfront mills producing wood products shipped globally. To manage this reach, the company commissioned a headquarters that doubled as architectural persuasion. Designed by the firm Bebb and Gould, its stylized English Gothic structure was built not only to impress but also to move — literally. Architect Carl F. Gould anticipated future evolutions on the waterfront and engineered the building onto four giant crossbeams, making portability a feature, not a bug. The structure was relocated at least three times.

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