Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

2024 Canadian Wood Council Annual Report

Canadian Wood Council
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

We are pleased to share the Canadian Wood Council’s 2024 Annual Report, offering a clear view of the progress, resilience, and impact achieved over the past year. In his message, Chairman Kevin Pankratz reflects on the Council’s strategic leadership during a year marked by economic pressures and shifting market conditions. Emphasis is placed on the value of collaboration, strong governance, and industry alignment as essential to maintaining momentum and ensuring long-term competitiveness. The report reinforces the importance of maintaining a united voice across our membership and fostering clarity in our purpose as a national federation. From the President & CEO’s perspective, Rick Jeffery outlines how the organization navigated 2024 with focus and adaptability—delivering trusted technical guidance, growing influence in codes and standards, and expanding national education and outreach efforts. With renewed government investment and increased awareness of low-carbon construction, the Council is well-positioned to lead the next chapter of growth for Canada’s wood sector.

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6 top issues to review in US-Mexico-Canada trade

By Duncan Wood, Hurst International CEO
The Hill
June 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The second Trump administration has come out swinging on trade. New tariffs have reignited uncertainty across global supply chains and forced America’s economic allies to find ways of placating the White House. For Canada and Mexico, Washington’s partners in Trump’s U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, this has been a stark reminder of how easily trust can erode, even in the most integrated trade relationship in the world. …In terms of trade, the stakes could not be higher: Mexico and Canada are the United States’ no.1 and no. 2 trading partners. But the partners don’t just trade enormous amounts with each other; they build things together. Therefore, the review process is also a chance to modernize North America’s trade architecture, reinforce strategic industries, and rebuild the foundations of regional trust and cooperation. America’s competitiveness depends heavily on the integrated North American manufacturing platform, and thus on the success of Mexico and Canada, its partners.

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Powell River mill property sales agreement reached

Powell River Peak
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Domtar (formerly Paper Excellence) has signed a purchase agreement with Cranberry Business Park Ltd. for the sale of the remaining half of its lands at the former Tis’kwat paper mill site in Powell River. “We are looking forward to contributing to the economic future of Powell River and the region,” stated Craig Austin and Thomas Ligocki, from Cranberry Business Park Ltd., in a media release. “With waterfront access and abundant energy sources, this site has so much potential. We are proud to be part of the revitalization of the city’s Historic Townsite, alongside our neighbour at Tis’kwat, the Tla’amin Nation.” “It was a priority for Domtar to find a buyer who would ensure that the lands continue to generate jobs and economic benefit for the broader community well into the future,” stated Carlo Dal Monte, vice-president, Domtar Legacy Assets.

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Local governments discuss the future in the forestry sector on Vancouver Island

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH COWICHAN, BC — Dignitaries from the region gathered to discuss the key challenges around forestry and how the recent curtailments at the Chemainus Sawmill have impacted the region. North Cowichan mayor Rob Douglas says discussions were centered specifically on how to turn the challenges being faced in the forestry sector into opportunities in the future. “We discussed opportunities in the forestry sector, including mill curtailments, fibre access, updates to the Private Managed Forest land regulations, watershed health, and the success of the community fields,” he says. Western Forest Products started curtailments on Jun. 18 due to what Douglas says was an inability to find a viable supply of fibre, which affected 150 workers at the mill, and he says the community is uncertain about the future. “In North Cowichan, we remain deeply concerned about the future of the Crofton pulp mill and Western Forest Products facility,” he says.

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First Nations forestry, diversification having big impact on Mackenzie

By Colin Slark
The Prince George Citizen
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

MACKENZIE — The District of Mackenzie has seen challenges in recent years with a downturn in British Columbia’s forestry industry, but Mayor Joan Atkinson said that diversifying into other industries has made a big impact on her community. … “We suffered a huge loss in taxation from 2024 to 2025 as a result of the closure of two large industrial facilities, but this community has always been resilient,” said Atkinson. …Canfor said it was indefinitely curtailing activity at its Mackenzie sawmill in July 2019.  Paper Excellence permanently shuttered its Mackenzie pulp mill in April 2021. Atkinson noted two factors that have helped the local forestry industry. The first was Forests Minister Ravi Parmar announcing a change in an appraisal system that makes it more economically viable for companies to operate in Northern BC. The second is ownership of nearby timber supply areas by First Nations.

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Michael Westrum of Westrum Lumber dies at 79

Moose Jaw Funeral Home
June 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Michael Westrum

Michael Glenn Westrum, late of Rouleau, SK, passed away peacefully on Tuesday, June 24th, 2025. He and partner, Ken Roney, purchased Westrum Lumber from Michael’s father and grew the company to what it is today. He worked closely with Maureen, Mark, and Scott until he retired in 2020. Michael actively participated in various lumber associations and boards including the Western Retail Lumber Association and Timbermart as both a Director and Chairman. His board experience also extended to the Plain’s/Pasqua hospital board in the 1980s and 1990s. Michael was also elected Mayor of Rouleau in 1989 and served the community until 1991.

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BC First Nations look to strengthen partnerships to expand forest economy

By Chris Bush
Nanaimo News Bulletin
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NANAIMO, BC — BC First Nations building their forest economies are facing foreign and domestic challenges that must be met for the resource to provide wealth and employment in the coming decades. During a keynote address and panel discussion Friday, June 20, at the Indigenous Resource Opportunities Conference in Nanaimo, Ravi Parmar, BC minister of forests, discussed those challenges with John Jack, chief councillor of the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, Kim Haakstad, president and CEO of the B.C. Council of Forest Industries, and panel moderator Dallas Smith, council president of the Nanwakolas First Nation. …The forests minister acknowledged “dark days ahead” for the industry, but also a time of “opportunity to move us away from the boom and bust, towards stability.” …Haakstad said collaboration with First Nations is important for the industry’s long-term success, but among the biggest problems hindering the industry is getting cut permits.

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B.C. judge rejects class-action bid over RCMP tactics at Fairy Creek protests

By Jeff Lawrence
CHEK News
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has dismissed an attempt to certify a class-action lawsuit that alleged police misconduct during old-growth logging protests in the Fairy Creek watershed on Vancouver Island. In a ruling released Friday, June 20, Justice F. Matthew Kirchner found the proposed class action lacked the common issues needed for certification under B.C.’s Class Proceedings Act. The lawsuit was launched by two protesters who sought to represent hundreds of people arrested or detained while RCMP enforced a 2021 injunction obtained by Teal Cedar Products Ltd. to keep access roads clear for logging. …“The evidence before me presented by the plaintiffs does little more than establish that there were searches, seizures, arrests and detentions at different dates and locations and under different circumstances,” wrote Kirchner in his decision. …The ruling means the case cannot proceed as a class action, though plaintiffs or others can still pursue individual claims.

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Update: Cause of Quesnel mill fire under investigation, crews spent hours on scene

Quesnel Cariboo Observer
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The East Fraser Fibre mill in Quesnel was on fire Saturday, June 21, closing a stretch of Highway 97 at the intersection with Quesnel-Hixon Road. Firefighters from multiple departments including Quesnel Volunteer Fire Department (QVFD), Ten Mile Volunteer Fire Department and Barlow Creek Volunteer Fire Department responded to the blaze. “On arrival we had heavy smoke and flames exiting the roof of the building,” said QVFD chief Ron Richert. “Crews were on scene for almost 12 hours, until seven o’clock in the morning.” Crews were also called back to the East Fraser Fibre building to manage hot spots, where small fires in some areas of the building or grass outside flared up. Richert said the building is now clear of fibre but it is still under investigation.

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San Group’s Port Alberni holdings sold after bankruptcy

By Susie Quinn
Tofino-Ucluelet Westerly News
June 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two industrial properties in the Alberni Valley that were shuttered when San Group declared bankruptcy last year have been sold. The Coulson Mill, located a few kilometres up the Alberni Inlet, has been purchased for an undisclosed amount by Fraserview, a Surrey company that has been producing manufactured wood products since 1994. The remanufacturing plant on Stamp Avenue has been sold to a numbered company, 037BC, which will in turn lease the premises to IGV Housing Ltd. This company, from Ucluelet, specializes in manufacturing scalable and sustainable housing using a hybrid construction system, according to court documents. The company intends to “revitalize the…plant as a central hub for prefabrication and production of affordable housing.” Again, the purchase price was not disclosed. The closing date for the reman plant purchase will be before June 30, 2025.

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Indigenous interests won’t be trampled under B.C.’s economic fast-track plan: Eby

By Jessica Durling
Campbell River Mirror
June 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Premier David Eby is aware that legislation fast-tracking energy and infrastructure projects has caused a “significant amount of anxiety” among B.C.’s Indigenous communities, but promises projects will not go through on Crown land without First Nations consent. The premier gave a keynote address on Thursday, June 19, during the Indigenous Resource Opportunities Conference at Nanaimo’s Vancouver Island Conference Centre. “I don’t believe practically in British Columbia in the year 2025 that we can fast-track without full Indigenous co-operation and support on the project, because we made commitments under the Declaration of Rights of Indigenous People that we passed,” Eby said. …Also during his address, the premier applauded Nak’azdli Development Corporation’s Deadwood Innovations, which turns traditionally low-value timber into premium high-quality lumber products, and credited project partners on B.C. Hydro’s “call for power” procurement process for clean and renewable energy.

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Northwestern Ontario Municipal Association demands action on softwood lumber tariffs

By Tim Davidson
CKDR 92.7 FM Dryden
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Northwestern Ontario Municipal Association is worried about the impact of new tariffs on the softwood lumber industry by the US. Starting next month, the U.S. Department of Commerce is proposing a preliminary combined countervailing and anti-dumping duty rate of 34.45 percent on Canadian softwood lumber. That’s more than double the current rate. NOMA has written an open letter to Premier Doug Ford and Prime Minister Mark Carney asking them to take action. It’s also asking that the governments of Ontario and Canada public acknowledge the urgency of the issue. …NOMA, which represents 37 municipalities in the region says any further erosion of our access to U.S. markets will have immediate and long-lasting impacts on families, First Nations, and municipalities throughout Northwestern Ontario.

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Judge signals that New Brunswick private property is off the table in big title claim

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
June 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Justice Ernest Drapeau is one of three judges hearing an appeal launched by three timber firms that fear the Wolastoqey will get a toehold on their vast woodlands where they do business. The case before New Brunswick’s Court of Appeal centres around a lower-court ruling in which the judge agreed to remove the big private owners from the claim but left their land in the lawsuit, opening the door, they fear, to future expropriation by the provincial government. …Drapeau wanted to know how a court could direct a provincial government to take away property from private owners, who both sides agree are “innocents” in the claim because they had nothing to do with awarding land grants. …The justice said he couldn’t imagine a court would order what the provincial government should do with its land because it is not allowed to do so per the Crown Lands and Forests Act.

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Wolastoqey say as they fight to keep New Brunswick forestry parcels in claim

CBC News
June 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Wolastoqey Nation’s title claim over more than half of New Brunswick has been the subject of two days of arguments about whether land privately owned by forestry companies should be excluded from the litigation. The Wolastoqey say exclusion would amount to putting the property interests of private industry over the constitutional rights of the First Nation. The matter is before the New Brunswick Court of Appeal this week after a judgment last year that removed the industrial defendants from the lawsuit. …Renée Pelletier, lawyer for the Wolastoqey, says just because the companies were removed from the lawsuit doesn’t mean their land can’t be touched. “If the effect is that once the Crown gives the land away it can never be returned to the First Nation, there’s an injustice there,” Pelletier said. The Wolastoqey seek the return of the land owned by the industrial defendants — mainly the forestry companies.

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No decision about us, without us, say New Brunswick forestry companies

By Rachel Cave
CBC News
June 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Three New Brunswick timber companies are seeking to have their forestry lands excluded from the Wolastoqey Nation’s Indigenous title claim that’s working its way through the courts. J.D. Irving, H.J. Crabbe and Sons, and Acadian Timber say the land they harvest and privately own should be excluded from the claim because a lower court last year removed them as defendants in the lawsuit, filed by the First Nation. Lawyer Paul Steep, counsel for JDI, said his client has the right to respond in a case that puts the company’s land at risk. So either JDI is restored as a defendant with standing, he said, or JDI land is no longer targeted by the claim. …The Wolastoqey say they never surrendered their traditional territory. Last November, Justice Kathryn Gregory ruled that landowners can’t be directly sued for the return of land. She placed the issue squarely between the Wolastoqey and the Crown and dismissed the “industrial defendants.”

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International Paper Plans to Exit Molded Fiber Business, Close and Sell Other Facilities

By International Paper
PR Newswire
June 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper announced a series of strategic changes to strengthen its North American operations. As part of this initiative, the company will: Exit the molded fiber business and convert the Reno, Nev. facility to support its packaging business; Close its packaging facility in Marion, Ohio; Close its recycling facility in Wichita, Kansas; and Sell its containerboard mill in Xalapa, Mexico and its recycling plants in Xalapa and Apodaca, Mexico to Acabados de Papeles Santinados y Absorbentes (APSA). In the U.S., these changes will impact approximately 110 hourly and 24 salaried employees. In Mexico, APSA intends to retain current onsite team members at each location. …These actions are intended to support International Paper’s ongoing transformation initiatives to become a more focused and agile provider of sustainable packaging solutions. 

In Related News: IP Completes Divestiture of Five European Corrugated Box Plants to Satisfy Regulatory Commitments from the Acquisition of DS Smith

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A public lands sell-off is struck from the GOP policy bill

By Maxine Joselow
New York Times in The Denver Post
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said late Saturday that he had dropped his contentious plan to sell millions of acres of public lands from the sweeping domestic policy package that the Senate will soon begin debating. Lee made the announcement on social media after it became clear that the plan faced insurmountable opposition from within his own party. At least four Republican senators from Western states had said they planned to vote for an amendment to strike the proposal from the bill. The plan had also triggered intense pushback from conservative hunters and outdoorsmen across the American West, who had warned that it threatened the lands where they hunted and fished. …Lee said that, because of the strict rules governing the budgetary process … he was “unable to secure clear, enforceable safeguards to guarantee that these lands would be sold only to American families — not to any foreign interests.”

Additional coverage in the Utah Dispatch: Battles over public lands loom even after sell-off proposal fails

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Department Of Commerce Investigates Hardwood Plywood Trade

By Keith Christman, President
The Decorative Hardwoods Association
June 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

On June 12, the U.S. Department of Commerce initiated antidumping and countervailing duty investigations into hardwood and decorative plywood imported to the U.S. from China, Indonesia, and Vietnam. Importantly, Commerce rejected importers’ request to extend the deadline and poll the industry to determine whether the Coalition for Fair Trade in Hardwood Plywood had standing to bring the case. Commerce initiated the investigations based on alleged antidumping duty margins of 504% for China, 85% for Indonesia, and 138–152% for Vietnam. Commerce also began investigations into nearly all subsidy programs named in the Coalition’s petition, a total of 33 subsidy programs in China, 12 in Indonesia, and 26 in Vietnam.

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The Softwood Lumber Board Q1 Report Highlights Accelerating Efforts to Expand the Use of Lumber

The Softwood Lumber Board
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Softwood Lumber Board published its Q1 2025 Report, highlighting how the SLB and its funded programs are accelerating efforts to expand the use of lumber—capturing market share in high-potential segments like K-12 schools and multifamily housing while pushing beyond early adopters of wood construction to engage general contractors, developers, and community stakeholders through targeted training, education, media partnerships, and project competitions nationwide.

Key highlights include:

  • 315 MM BF of incremental demand generated
  • accelerator program initiative exploring collaborations with cities in Colorado, Pennsylvania, Oregon, and California, and in Washington, D.C.
  • SLB Education’s faculty development initiative a powerful driver of wood design education. 
  • Think Wood video featuring Founders Hall at the University of Washington…
  • WoodWorks continues to expand the possibilities for light-frame construction…
  • The AWC moved quickly to defeat an aggressive proposal by the concrete, masonry, and steel industries to roll back the allowance for 100% exposed mass timber ceilings

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Trump to rescind ‘Roadless Rule’ which protects 58 million acres of forest land

By Kirk Siegler
NPR National Public Radio
June 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Brooke Rollins

The Trump administration is rolling back a landmark conservation rule from the Clinton era that prevents roadbuilding and logging on roughly 58 million acres of federal forest and wildlands. The announcement rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule comes as the Forest Service is under orders by President Trump to increase logging and thinning in forests to address the wildfire threat. Environmentalists have already indicated they’ll sue to prevent its reversal, however. After Clinton enacted the rule at the end of his term in 2001, it effectively created de facto wilderness protections for scores of forests in the West and Alaska. …Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said, “This misguided rule prohibits the Forest Service from thinning and cutting trees to prevent wildfires and when fires start, the rule limits our firefighters’ access to quickly put them out.” Environmentalists counter that wildfires are more likely to occur in forests that have been developed with roads and other infrastructure.

Related coverage in:

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Trump rescinds protections on 59m acres of national forest to allow logging

By Cecilia Nowell
The Guardian
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Trump administration will rescind protections that prevent logging on nearly a third of national forest lands, including the largest old growth forest in the country, the agriculture secretary, Brooke Rollins, announced on Monday. …Republican lawmakers from western states celebrated the announcement while environmental groups expressed dismay. On social media, the Republican representative for Alaska, Nick Begich, said: “…the ‘Roadless Rule’ has long stifled responsible forest management, blocked access to critical resources, and halted economic opportunity.” Meanwhile, the Sierra Club’s Alex Craven, said: “Once again, the Trump administration is ignoring the voices of millions of Americans to pursue a corporate giveaway for his billionaire buddies. Stripping our national forests of roadless rule protections will put close to 60m acres of wildlands across the country on the chopping block.”

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America’s Top Logger Bets It Can Make Money Off Small, Crooked Trees

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
June 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Weyerhaeuser has broken ground on a $500 million plant in Arkansas to produce engineered lumber from the small trees that have piled up across the pine belt after the closure of many pulp and paper mills. It is a big bet on one of the most depressed commodities in America: pine trees that are too small, crooked or otherwise unfit for making lumber. The decline of pulp and paper mills has left some timberland owners with wood they can’t sell. Several ventures have sought to capitalize on the pulpwood glut, including burning it to generate electricity and manufacturing oriented strand board. Weyerhaeuser’s plant will be largely heated and powered by burning bark, branches and sawdust, but its gambit is more like making OSB. …Chief Executive Devin Stockfish expects the Arkansas plant to sell out its 10 million cubic feet of annual production once it opens in 2027. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Western Forest Products Announces Fire Damages Columbia Vista Division Sawmill

Western Forest Products Inc.
June 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Western Forest Products announced today that the sawmill at its Columbia Vista Division, located in Vancouver, Washington, sustained extensive damage in a fire, rendering the mill inoperable. “On behalf of Western, I want to extend my sincere gratitude to the firefighters and first responders who attended the fire at our site,” said Steven Hofer, Western’s President and CEO. “While we are shocked by the damage to the mill, we feel incredibly fortunate that no employees or emergency personnel were injured. We are focused on supporting our team members and completing an incident investigation and assessment.” The Columbia Vista Division produced approximately 53 million board feet of lumber in 2024, with production focused on Douglas Fir specialty products for Japan and U.S. markets.

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Oregon Legislature approves tax for wildfires as survivor bill fails

By Zach Urness
Statesman Journal
July 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

It was a mixed bag for wildfire funding this session in the Oregon Legislature. Lawmakers came in with lofty ambitions — to create more stable funding to fight and prevent wildfires, to repeal an unpopular wildfire risk map and to get relief for 2020 wildfire survivors still waiting to be paid lawsuit awards. …The biggest wildfire funding bill that passed was House Bill 3940 — which includes a tax on oral nicotine products, taps the state’s rainy day fund and uses a very small increase to the timber tax. The bill should raise about $40 million per year to pay primarily for wildfire mitigation. …Ultimately, the legislature approved more than $200 million from the budget that can be used for wildfire suppression for the 2025-27 biennium. However, it didn’t come up with any new or longer-lasting funding source, Golden said. That means for now, money for suppression will come from Oregon’s general fund.

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Northeast Oregon sawmill Woodgrain Inc. is closing

East Oregonian
July 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

PILOT ROCK, Oregon —  Woodgrain Inc. is closing its sawmill in Pilot Rock on or after Sept. 1. The Dislocated Worker Unit of the Oregon Higher Education Coordinating Commission’s Office of Workforce Investments on Tuesday, July 1, issued a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification — or WARN notice — about the pending closure. According to the notice, Woodgrain will layoff all 62 workers at the plant. Tracy Hayes, the director of Human Resources for Woodgrain Lumber and Millwork Division, sent a letter July 1 to Michael Welter, the rapid response coordinator for the Office of Workforce Investments, and to Pilot Rock Mayor Randy Gawith telling them about the coming shutdown. …Affected employees do not have bumping rights, as they are not represented by a union.

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Hampton Lumber to build new sawmill in Fairfax, South Carolina

Hampton Lumber
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West, US East

Hampton Lumber announced it selected Allendale County to establish the company’s first sawmill on the East Coast. The company’s $225 million investment will create at least 125 new jobs. Headquartered in Oregon, Hampton Lumber is a fourth-generation, family-owned producer, operating nine sawmills in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. Hampton Lumber will construct a state-of-the-art, 375,000-square-foot lumber mill located at Highway 321 and Barker Mill Pond Road in Fairfax. The new operation will specialize in producing quality Southern Yellow Pine framing lumber. Operations are expected to be online in 2027. Individuals interested in joining the Hampton Lumber can learn more about employment opportunities on the company’s careers page. The Coordinating Council for Economic Development approved job development credits related to the project. “We are proud the company recognized South Carolina as the ideal home for its first East Coast mill,” said Governor Henry McMaster.

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A historic Garfield industry rises from the ashes

By Savannah Beth Withers Taylor
Utah Business
June 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

…In August 2024, a lumber mill owned by K & D Products and nestled in Panguitch, Garfield County’s largest city, went up in flames. Reports stated that, while the blaze didn’t get to the timber, the site’s machinery was severely damaged. The destruction landed a heavy blow to the community and the Frandsen family, who have owned and operated the mill for generations. …Between the area’s lumber heritage and the need to balance out tourism’s seasonal employment waves, Fiala gained enthusiastic support from state and local governments to build another sawmill. With his business partner, Barco — a logging company — Fiala acquired 25 acres north of Panguitch and began clearing space and bringing in power, water and gas. When the K & D Products sawmill burned during Fiala’s development, he spoke to the Frandsens and together they worked out a way for Fiala to take over what was left of the old mill and utilize it for his new business.

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U.S. Senate passes bill to reauthorize funding for rural Oregon, Idaho schools

By Mia Maldonado
Herald and News
June 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Senate unanimously passed a bill to reauthorize a program that has provided billions to schools, roads and other services in rural Oregon and Idaho. The U.S. Forest Service’s “Secure Rural Schools and Self-Determination Program,” was initially crafted in 2000 to help offset the loss of timber revenue in rural counties. The program expired at the end of 2023, but the recently passed “Secure Rural Schools Reauthorization Act of 2025” would reauthorize the funding for more than 4,000 school districts and 700 counties across the country through the 2026 fiscal year. The bill’s lead sponsors include U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both Oregon Democrats, and U.S. Sens. Jim Risch and Mike Crapo, both Idaho Republicans. …This year, bill sponsors are urging the U.S. House to reauthorize the program. Without its passage in the House, rural counties in Oregon, Idaho and across the country will fall short of funds that support local services.

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Idaho Sens. Risch and Crapo come out against public land-sale provision

By Rose Evans
Idaho Statesman
June 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Idaho Sens. Jim Risch and Mike Crapo made statements Friday opposing the sale of more than 3 million acres of public land as part of the federal budget reconciliation bill. The Republican senators had not previously spoken out on the controversial provision, proposed by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, that would fold the land-sale into the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” …If passed, Lee’s provision would require BLM and Forest Service officials to publish a list of tracts of land nominated or considered for sale every 60 days. It would cap the amount of land that could be sold at 0.75% of each agency’s land — up to 3.2 million acres, the Statesman previously reported. …Lee said the legislation — which requires land sold be used for housing or “associated community needs” — would make “housing more affordable for hardworking American families,” according to a news release announcing the draft language.

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Louisiana Pacific names Tony Hamill as Chief Operating Officer

By LP Building Solutions
Businesswire
June 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Tony Hamill

NASHVILLE, Tennessee — LP Building Solutions announced the appointment of Tony Hamill as Senior Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, effective June 30, 2025. “I am pleased to appoint Tony to the newly created role of Chief Operating Officer,” said LP President Jason Ringblom. “With over 30 years of leadership experience in engineering and manufacturing—much of it within our own organization—Tony brings comprehensive expertise across our North and South American operations.” In this role, Hamill will oversee LP’s North American manufacturing footprint, which includes 18 facilities and a workforce of over 3,000 team members. …Prior to joining LP, Hamill served as Chief Operations Officer at Roseburg Forest Products, where he directed manufacturing operations, engineering, and sales and marketing. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of New Brunswick.

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Matt Holt and Alexandre Ouellette Earn Manufacturing Leadership Promotions at Roseburg Forest Products

Roseburg Forest Products
June 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Matt Holt & Alexandre Ouellette

Roseburg Forest Products announced that company veterans Matt Holt and Alexandre Ouellette will assume new, expanded manufacturing leadership roles with the departure of Chief Operations Officer Tony Hamill. “Promoting Matt and Alexandre acknowledges their expanding influence directing a manufacturing transformation underway at Roseburg that is generating performance and product quality gains benefitting our business and our customers,’’ said Roseburg President and CEO Stuart Gray. As Vice President of Manufacturing and Services, Holt will now be responsible for Roseburg’s structural operations, veneer and wood fiber procurement, and manufacturing services. …Ouellette, in his new role as Vice President of Manufacturing and Engineering, will oversee Roseburg’s composite operations, power generation operations and engineering.

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Domtar receives Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation permit for anaerobic digester

By Allison Winters
The Times News
June 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINGSPORT, Tennessee — Domtar’s Kingsport mill received a long-awaited permit last week leading to the start of the anaerobic digester project. The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation issued the 142-page permit Wednesday. …“Receiving this permit is an important milestone in our efforts to advance the anaerobic digester project at the Kingsport Mill,” Charlie Floyd, VP of strategic capital projects, said. “This investment underscores Domtar’s commitment to sustainable innovation and environmental stewardship, while supporting good jobs and economic vitality here in Kingsport.” …Start-up of the new wastewater treatment system is expected by the third or fourth quarter of 2026, according to Domtar’s latest timeline. Around 150 contractors are expected to be on site to build the digester and associated equipment, Floyd said. Domtar estimates a $12.8 million economic impact from the project — including labor, hotel and dining within the community.

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Canfor Announces Closure of Darlington and Estill Sawmills in South Carolina

Canfor Corporation
June 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, US East

VANCOUVER, BC – Canfor announced today its decision to permanently close the Estill and Darlington sawmills in South Carolina, effective August 2025. These closures follow an extended period of persistently weak market conditions and sustained financial losses, which have made continued operations at these facilities no longer viable. “We understand the significant impact this difficult decision will have on our employees,” said Lee Goodloe, President, Canfor Southern Pine. “This outcome is in no way a reflection of the dedication and hard work of our teams. We are committed to supporting our employees through this transition, including providing severance payments and exploring opportunities for redeployment within our other operations where possible.” Approximately 290 employees will be affected by the closures, which will also reduce Canfor’s U.S. lumber production capacity by 350 million board feet annually.

Related coverage in ABC15 News Darlington: Lumber losses loom: Darlington sawmill closes, furthers threat to $23B industry

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Indiana’s Hardwoods and Lumber Industry Plays Huge Role in State’s Economy

By C.J. Miller
Hoosier AG Today
June 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

When you think about Indiana’s ag industry, you might not think about hardwoods and lumber, which play a huge role in the state’s economy. Indiana’s hardwood industry has an annual economic impact of over $10 billion to the state’s economy. In fact, Indiana is the number one producer of wooden hardwood and office furniture in the US. Indiana’s hardwood sector also ranks: 2nd in wood kitchen cabinets and countertops, manufactured homes, 3rd in engineered wood products, 4th in pre-fabricated wood buildings, and 5th in upholstered household furniture. Much of the lumber that is harvested and used here in Indiana comes from private woodland owners. “There’s over 4.5 million acres of forest land in Indiana, and of that 85 percent of that is privately owned, so there are a lot of farmers and families who own forest land,” says Tyler Smith, Sales Manager of Cole Hardwood in Logansport.

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Domtar to clean up decades of PFAS contamination under Michigan settlement

By Fuad Shalhout
Michigan Live
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Dana Nessel

PORT HURON – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has finalized a settlement agreement with Domtar Industries to clean up PFAS-contaminated materials at the Techni-Comp composting site near Port Huron. The agreement follows a lawsuit filed by the attorney general against the paper manufacturer in December 2022. As part of the settlement, Domtar will remove compost piles containing PFAS-contaminated sludge from the site and dispose of the waste at a licensed landfill. The company will also investigate the presence of PFAS in sediment and surface water at the location. …The mill began using PFAS chemicals to make specialty paper in the 1980s. Domtar acquired E.B. Eddy and the Port Huron mill in 1998. …Nessel’s office said the waste was “fraudulently” declared inert… and that Domtar continued to maintain that representation until the mill closed a few years ago. Under the decree, Domtar will pay $300,000 to support further response efforts at the site. 

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Logs from overturned truck collide with train in northern Ontario

By Chelsea Papineau
CTV NewsBy
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US East

ONTARIO — A northern Ontario forestry company says a train crossing Highway 560 collided Wednesday morning with logs that were spilled by an overturned contractor’s trailer. It happened at the railroad crossing near Interfor’s Gogama Division and resulted in the road being closed between highways 144 and 560A. “There are no injuries or derailment,” Ontario Provincial Police said in a social media post at 8:40 a.m. “A train stop order is in place.” Interfor also confirmed this. …“At Interfor, the safety of our people and the communities where we operate is our highest priority. We are focused on supporting those affected and are actively monitoring the situation.” There is no estimated time of reopening, said OPP Const. Michelle Simard. “The officers are still investigating,” Simard said.

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SmartLam North America, in Dothan, featured in Business Alabama

By Debora Storey
Business Alabama
June 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SmartLam makes wood construction products at two locations — Dothan and Columbia Falls, Montana. The company just invested $60 million in a new manufacturing facility in Dothan adjacent to the existing cross-laminated timber, or CLT, plant. The new facility spans 144,000 square feet and is designed to produce 84 million board feet of glulam beams and columns each year. …A total of 113 people work in manufacturing and another 10 in management. The Montana division employs roughly 100. SmartLam is the largest mass timber producer in North America. The company started in Montana in 2012. In 2019, they acquired IB X-Lam in Dothan, a CLT and glulam plant that had been operating since 2018. …The Dothan location works with mostly yellow pine but can process spruce and Douglas fir, too. The Montana operation gets about half of its wood from Montana and the remainder from Oregon, Washington and Canada.

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Forestry turmoil: Mill closures threaten $23B industry and jobs

By Caitlin Richards
ABC News 15
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The timber industry in South Carolina is grappling with significant challenges following the closure of major mills, including the International Paper mill in Georgetown and the WestRock plant in Charleston. These shutdowns have left local loggers scrambling to find new markets for their products. The forestry sector is a crucial part of South Carolina’s economy, contributing over $23 billion and being the top job provider in the state, according to the Forestry Commission. However, the loss of pulpwood markets due to mill closures has raised concerns among industry leaders. …Chip Campsen, chairman of the Senate Fish, Game, and Forestry Committee said when you have logging crews and timber owners who can’t bring their product to market, they’re going to have to just shut down, and he said they’re not going to come back. Industry leaders emphasize the need to find new markets for pulpwood quickly to sustain the state’s timber industry.

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US trade faces pressure in Middle Eastern markets amid recent Israel-Iran conflict and Trump tariffs

By Asher Redd
Fox Business News
June 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SOUTH PITTSBURG, Tennessee – Recent missile attacks put global trade on alert as the Baltic and International Maritime Council warned the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf could face disruption. …Mike Cardin, Cardin Forest Products Chief Manager, said the conflict could hurt the American lumber industry as well. Cardin’s hardwood sawmill reported fewer orders coming out of the Middle East. Uncertainties about President Trump’s future tariff policies forced Cardin to change how his sawmill operates. Before Trump took office, Cardin said his sawmill shipped wood products across the globe. He said foreign buyers proactively stopped buying American wood because they expect Trump to slap new tariffs on timber imports by the end of the year. Most of Cardin’s sales now come from Mexico and within the U.S. …”Right now, no one knows what’s going to happen,” Jarrod Cardin, Cardin’s Controlling Member, said.

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Weyerhaeuser Breaks Ground on New TimberStrand® Facility in South Arkansas

Arkansas Economic Development Commission
June 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MONTICELLO and WARREN, Arkansas – Weyerhaeuser has broken ground on its new TimberStrand® facility near Monticello and Warren, Arkansas. The company is investing an estimated $500 million in the facility, which is expected to create 200 high-quality jobs in the region once fully operational. …The facility is expected to add approximately 10 million cubic feet of annual production capacity and help Weyerhaeuser meet growing demand for TimberStrand® and better serve its customers across the US South. Weyerhaeuser plans to source fiber logs from company-owned timberlands in south Arkansas and surrounding regions. …The Monticello/Warren facility will be Weyerhaeuser’s fourth manufacturing facility in Arkansas. Weyerhaeuser currently operates a lumber mill in Dierks, a plywood and veneer plant in Emerson, and a seedling nursery in Magnolia. …Weyerhaeuser announced plans for the new facility in November 2024 with the goal of starting operations in 2027.

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