Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

10 Top post-grad job placement schools for Forestry in North America

The Working Forest
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Why consider education in forestry? Simple answer is – there is an enormous demand for qualified workers in the forestry field. This may not seem significant at a glance but consider this. …the probability of finding a job in your field after your graduation is an important thing to consider before you start applying to schools. Since the probability of post-grad job placement is so high in forestry (some estimates say between 95-98%), applying to schools that have forestry programs is a better choice. We created a list of 10 Schools in Canada and USA with forest related programs that have high post-grad job placement rates. The criteria included: Job Placement Rate, Starting Salary, Reputation, Research Opportunities and Alumni Network. The top three schools were University of British Columbia, University of Montana, and Oregon State University. 

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Canadian Forestry Can Save The World – Forest Product Innovation

Forestry for the Future
Story Studio Network
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The global fight against climate change has become a collective race against the clock. To keep the average temperature from rising by more than 1.5°C — the mark noted by nations the world over as the one we need to hit to fulfill the promise we’ve made to future generations — we need collective action from every corner of society. Our forests have a critical role to play in that fight, and Canada’s in particular stand as a potential game-changer when it comes to growing a greener economy and combating climate change. But how we manage them matters. In this podcast we’ll explore what’s happening in Canada’s forests and why they represent so much untapped potential.

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Scientists tangle over ‘wood wide web’ connecting forests and fungi

By Sarah Kaplan
The Washington Post
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The discovery of mycorrhizal connections yielded a booming new body of research on what the academic journal Nature once called “the Wood Wide Web.” …Books, movies and news articles have helped popularize the concept, celebrating forests as models of cooperation in a world riven by human conflict, consumption and climate change. …“It’s such an appealing story”, said Justine Karst, a forest ecologist at the University of Alberta… “But the story is ahead of the science.” In a new perspective piece for the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, Karst and two fellow ecologists found that just a handful of experiments actually used genetic analysis to map mycorrhizal networks and show fungal links between trees. …Suzanne Simard, a forest ecologist at the University of BC who has been at the forefront of research on forest-fungi cooperation, pushed back …adding that scientists know enough about the importance of mycorrhizal networks to forests to know that both trees and fungi need to be protected.

Additional coverage in the Globe and Mail, by Ivan Semeniuk: Trees communicating via fungal networks has become a popular theory. These scientists say trees communicating via fungal networks has gotten too loose.

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COFI Welcomes New Measures and Investments that Support Accelerated Path Forward on Old Growth

Council of Forest Industries
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) President and CEO Linda Coady released the following statement in response to new measures announced today by the BC Government on old growth:  “Today’s announcement includes positive steps towards putting the necessary investments, frameworks and relationships in place to advance how old growth forests are conserved and managed in the province.”  “In addition to important capacity funding for Indigenous Nations and the First Nations Forestry Council, actions being taken to accelerate the old growth review process will also support land use planning at the local level. Strengthened Indigenous and local engagement on land use planning at the regional level will help ensure goals for forest health and biodiversity are met while also creating more predictability for workers, communities and forest-related businesses across BC.”  

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‘The right direction’: new B.C. plan could actually protect old-growth forests

By Sarah Cox
The Narwhal
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A “war in the woods” has simmered for decades in B.C., sometimes erupting into high-profile protests and arrests. …This week, the provincial government unveiled a suite of new measures that aim to accelerate old-growth protection and broker a truce. …Conservation groups and the First Nations Forestry Council were quick to praise the new measures, although some groups are calling for faster action to safeguard what little is left of B.C.’s old-growth forests. …Ken Wu, of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance… applauded the government’s decision to remove a clause in forest regulations that allowed timber supply to trump all other values. …First Nations Forestry Council CEO Leonard Joe said First Nations have been asking to have a seat at the table for years. “I for one am glad to see this day, to witness the province recognize the vital role of First Nations, the role that we play in managing sustainable forests.”

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province.

By Steve Kozuki, Executive Director
Forest Enhancement Society of BC
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Government has recently announced a significant amount of funding to enable FESBC and our partners to use as much incidental forest fibre (that is uneconomic to use and which would usually otherwise be burned in slash piles). Doing so will create a number of benefits, including stabilization of forest-dependent communities, dramatic reduction of GHG emissions from pile burning, maintenance and creation of family-supporting jobs, and improvement of air quality by reducing wood smoke.In this newsletter:

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Is BC Actually Putting Forest Health Ahead of Industry Needs?

By Zoe Yunker
The Tyee
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C. announced this week that it would scrap an infamous clause embedded in B.C.’s forest rules often recognized as a barrier to protecting forests and their biodiversity. The clause, written into B.C.’s Forest Range and Practices Act, says that ecological values like wildlife protection can only be included in forest planning if they don’t “unduly reduce the supply of timber from British Columbia’s forests.” For the most part, that means they can’t impede logging. The announcement comes as part of the province’s stated intentions to transition B.C.’s forestry sector away from the industry-led model to one that better prioritizes First Nations, ecosystems and communities. …Next weekend, the United For Old Growth rally at the B.C. legislature in Victoria will call on the province to implement the recommendations from the Old Growth Strategic Review. Almost three years after the review was released, these recommendations remain incomplete.

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B.C. introduces new measures on old growth, innovation, forest stewardship

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government is launching new measures to protect more old growth by fast-tracking innovation and co-developing new local plans with First Nations to better care for B.C.’s forests. …At the centre of the eight-point plan is $25 million for new Forest Landscape Planning (FLP) tables that will drive improved old-growth management while incorporating local knowledge and community priorities. …In response to requests from First Nations for more in-depth discussions about old growth, this funding will support eight new regional FLP tables with the participation of approximately 50 First Nations. These tables will prevent harvesting in old-growth forests important for ecosystem health, biodiversity, clean water, carbon storage and Indigenous values. They will also provide greater certainty about the areas where sustainable harvesting can occur. …The announcement also includes… doubling the new BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund to $180 million and expanding eligibility provincewide. …Previously, the fund was restricted to projects outside of the Metro Vancouver and the Capital regional districts. 

Additional government coverage from Sonia Furstenau, BC Green Caucus: Forestry announcement long overdue but a welcome relief

Endangered Ecosystems Alliance: The BC Government Starts Laying The Path For Expanded Forest Conservation

Video coverage from Global News:

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B.C. seeks to harness financial clout of conservation groups, fast-track its old-growth protection commitments

By Justine Hunter
The Globe and Mail
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

The B.C. government is seeking to harness the financial clout of non-profit conservation groups to protect endangered ecosystems. Premier David Eby announced his plans to fast-track his government’s progress on protecting old growth, including $25-million to help First Nations participate… and $90-million added to the B.C. Manufacturing Jobs Fund. …The new money pales in comparison with the potential for philanthropic conservation. Even without the province as a partner, non-profits have slipped past the province’s slow decision-making process. …Earlier this year, however, the province announced a major new conservation area secured through financing by the Nature Conservancy of Canada in Incomappleux Valley. …Inspired by that model which secured Indigenous consent and financing from corporate, private and federal government sources, the province is now promising to establish a conservation financing mechanism within six months that it expects will tap into “hundreds of millions of dollars of philanthropic donations to fund conservation measures.” …“This is significant – Eby is paving the path for a major transformation in conservation,” said Ken Wu of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance. [to access the full story, a Globe and Mail subscription may be required]

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B.C. downgrades import of timber supply in support of old-growth protection plans

By Les Leyne
The Times Colonist
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Premier David Eby said the government is accelerating the protection of B.C.’s oldest and rarest forests. Funding is being allocated to develop several new regional tables where forest landscape planning will be discussed with more First Nations input. Four of those are underway. …Among the new measures was a cabinet order that downgrades the importance of recognizing timber supply as a factor in forest planning. …Forests Minister Bruce Ralston said it was outdated wording. Removing it lets decision makers consider other objectives such as water quality and wildlife. There is also $10 million… to develop alternatives to clear-cutting. Another $2.4 million is being provided to the First Nations Forestry Council to increase Indigenous participation in the B.C.-wide “co-development” of new forest policy. A new conservation financing mechanism is promised within six months. …Eby and Ralston said communities and First Nations will be able to finance old-growth protection by selling verified carbon offsets that represent emission reductions, once a renewed version of that program is finalized this year. …Indigenous forester Gary Merkel… said it is about much more than stands of trees.

Additional coverage in:

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TimberWest Forest Corp. applies for Canadian Navigable Waters Act approval

Campbell River Mirror
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

TimberWest Forest Corp. hereby gives notice that an application has been made to the Minister of Transport, pursuant to the Canadian Navigable Waters Act for approval of the work described herein and its site and plans. Pursuant to paragraph 7(2) of the said Act, TimberWest Forest Corp. has deposited with the Minister of Transport, on the on-line Common Project Search Registry and under registry number 6711, or, under the NPP File Number 1989-502244. a description of the following work, its site and plans: Log dumping area in, on, over, under, through or across Cordero Channel at Brooks Bay in front of lot number 1714.

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Unifor welcomes new plans for beleaguered B.C. forestry sector

By Unifor
Cision Newswire
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Unifor welcomes the B.C. government’s new plans to double the B.C. Manufacturing Jobs Fund and to support job growth across the province. “Today, the BC NDP demonstrated a serious commitment to building a bright future for forestry workers in the province, which also serves as a positive example for the forestry sector across the country,” said Lana Payne, Unifor National President. “That funding for job growth is coupled with a firm commitment to protecting old-growth forests and a full partnership with First Nations demonstrates they’ve been listening to us.” …Gavin McGarrigle, Unifor’s Western Regional Director… “We are hopeful the doubling of the Manufacturing Jobs Fund and improving fibre access will help restart mills, bring back some of the 45,000 or more jobs lost in the sector, and help our rural communities thrive again.”

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Local trucking companies concerned about forestry downturn

By Caden Fanshaw
CKPG News Prince George
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – As forestry continues to waver in Northern BC, there are many companies feeling the residual effects in addition to the workers impacted. One of the main industries impacted is trucking, where a slowdown in forestry comes in addition to challenges companies have faced for years around finding drivers to meet increased demand for services.  All major players in the region including Excel Transportation, Lomak Bulk Carriers, and others have felt the effects of a driver shortage, which may soften the blow of less material to haul for now.  “We’ve heard for years there was going to be one pulp mill going down, so that makes sense. Another pulp mill going down would be devastating to our whole community, not just our trucking industry,” said Annie Horning, CEO of Excel Transportation. 

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Prince George’s Michael Jull named ABCFP 2022 Distinguished Forest Professional

PG Daily News
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Garnet Mierau & Michael Jull

Michael Jull, MSc, RPF, of Prince George, was one of two forest professionals presented with the 2022 Distinguished Forest Professional award by the Association of BC Forest Professionals (ABCFP) during a ceremony held as part of the organization’s 75th annual forestry conference on February 10.  The Distinguished Forest Professional award   recognizes a registrant for outstanding contributions to the forestry profession over the course of their career.  “Michael’s career serves as an example of how integrity, commitment, and a wiliness to share his expertise are key attributes necessary to achieving real and meaningful success in forestry and ensuring we are sustainably caring for BC’s forests for future generations,” said Jamie Jeffreys, RPF, ABCFP in-coming president.  Jull has close to 40 years of experience working as a forest professional in BC.

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Grand Forks’ Dan Macmaster named forester of the year

By the Association of BC Forest Professionals
My Grand Forks Now
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Garnet Mierau and Dan Macmaster

Dan Macmaster of Grand Forks has been named the 2022 forester of the year by his professional association. The award, presented by the Association of BC Forest Professionals, recognizes a registered professional forester for outstanding recent service to the profession of forestry and contributions to the betterment of forestry. Macmaster was presented with the award at the 75th annual forestry conference. “Dan’s dedication to innovative and sustainable forest practices as well as his commitment to working with and consulting with community groups serve as an inspiration,” said Jamie Jeffreys, the association’s incoming president. …Macmaster is Vaagen Fibre Canada’s fibre manager, as well as forest manager for the West Boundary Community Forest and manager of the Osoyoos Indian Band’s forestry licences. He is active on numerous boards, including the BC First Nations Forestry Council, BC Community Forest Association, Interior Lumber Manufacturers’ Association, and the Okanagan Nation Alliance’s forestry working group.

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The burning question: Addressing harvest residue management in B.C.

By Eric Nance, Dominik Roeser, Carly A. Phillips, Caren C. Dymond and Werner A. Kurz
Canadian Biomass Magazine
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The management of harvest residues has long been a challenge for British Columbian operators who are tasked with balancing wildfire fuel loading, planting space, and financial, operational, and regulatory constraints. Now, society’s concerns about carbon emissions have been added to that list and practices will have to change. Common practice in the industry today includes either leaving residues piled in the cutting area to decompose or open-burning residues with the practice of slash-pile burning (SPB). While these low-cost treatments may meet the minimum management requirements, more needs to be done to improve their use and management moving forward. SPB is a considerable emissions source, producing an array of harmful greenhouse gases (GHG) and particulate matter, and accelerating the release of carbon to the atmosphere. These factors enhance climate change and have negative human health impacts. In some areas, open burning of residues can also have negative impacts on ecological functions…

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Do forest trees really ‘talk’ through underground fungi? Overblown information can affect how forests are managed

By Bev Betkowski, University of Alberta
Phy.org
February 13, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Justine Karst

The idea that forest trees can “talk” to each other, share resources with their seedlings—and even protect them—through a connective underground web of delicate fungal filaments is so intriguing, it’s taken root in popular media… but the science behind those ideas is unproven, cautions University of Alberta expert Justine Karst. In Nature Ecology & Evolution, Karst and two colleagues contest three claims about the capabilities of underground fungi known as CMNs. …While CMNs have been proven to exist, there is no strong evidence that they offer benefits to trees and their seedlings. …Karst and co-authors found that claims that CMNs are widespread in forests, isn’t supported by enough scientific evidence. …The claim that resources such as nutrients are transferred by adult trees to seedlings through CMNs and that they boost survival and growth, was found to be questionable. …The claim that adult trees preferentially send resources or “warning signals” of insect damage to young trees is not backed up by a single peer-reviewed, field study.

Additional coverage in Ole Miss – University of Mississippi News: Can Trees Communicate Underground? Maybe Not. UM biology professor debunks popular theory about soil fungal networks

Scientific American by Stephanie Pappas: Do Trees Really Support Each Other through a Network of Fungi? Not everyone is convinced.

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Thichum Forest Products buys woodlot licence in qathet region

By Thichum Forest Products LP
Powell River Peak
February 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

t̓išosəm, qathet Regional District – Tla’amin Timber Products in its capacity as general partner of Thichum Forest Products, has reached an asset purchase agreement with GDF Ventures Ltd to acquire woodlot license 1671 (WL-1671). WL-1671 is an area based provincial Crown forestry tenure located in the ɬaʔamɩn Nation territory. The woodlot supports an annual harvest cut of 4,715 cubic meters per year. “Doug Fuller, the previous holder of the license, demonstrated a high level of pride and ownership in this woodlot”, said Adam Culos, General Manager of Thichum Forest Products. “This tenure acquisition and management opportunity within our territory strongly supports our strategic direction. Our vision is to develop an interpretive forest on this site which we can pass down knowledge and best practices throughout generations as we look to improve on current management practices in the BC forestry sector”. The term on the new licence begins immediately.

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Discussing Nicola Valley’s forestry industry

By Marius Auer
The Merritt Herald
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MERRITT, BC — Recent economic challenges throughout B.C.’s forestry have been felt in the Nicola Valley lately, with Aspen Planers closing their mill for more than five weeks, only reopening last week for a limited run. While the length of the re-opening is up in the air due to what Aspen Planers has said is stalled ‘reconciliation negotiations’ on cutting permits with local First Nations, the mill’s 150 employees are back on the job for now. …MLA Jackie Tegart, who represents the Nicola Valley said “There’s a great deal of concern about forestry, and about the lack of support for resource industries as a whole by the government”. …“Forestry has been cyclical for many, many years, but what I’m hearing from people is that they get a sense that their government doesn’t see a future in the industry.

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Mi’gmaq community wants Quebec to increase its wood allocation

By Breakaway with Alison Brunette
CBC Radio News
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Alison Brunette

AUDIO STORY — An Indigenous community on the Gaspé Coast is holding its ground. They say they’re willing to do whatever it takes to ensure their community has access to enough wood resources to keep their economy afloat. Guest host Allison Van Rassel speaks with the chief of Gesgapegiag.

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Ontario government invests $2.1 million for tree planting through Forests Ontario

By Forests Ontario
Cision Newswire
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

BARRIE, ON – At Forests Ontario’s Annual Conference in Alliston, Ontario today, the Honourable Graydon Smith, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry and MPP for Parry–Sound Muskoka, announced that the Ontario government is investing $2.1 million in tree planting through Forests Ontario. “We are proud to support Forests Ontario’s mission to make our forests greener,” Minister Smith says. “With this investment, our government is taking action to ensure the long-term sustainability of Ontario’s forests and forest sector businesses, while creating stability for workers, families and communities that depend on this sector.” The one-year investment will support tree planting through Forests Ontario’s tree planting programs. Through our comprehensive network of partners and programs, Forests Ontario has planted more than 41 million trees to date, resulting in 20,500 hectares of new forest created across more than 8,300 project sites.

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Port Hawkesbury Paper agrees to harvest less

By Jake Boudrot
The Port Hawkesbury Reporter
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

POINT TUPPER: The region’s largest employer has made changes to agreements it reached with the provincial government more than a decade ago. According to a press release issued by the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables (DNRR) on Feb. 8, agreements reached with Port Hawkesbury Paper (PHP) have been updated to support sustainable ecological forestry and the management of public lands. Geoffrey Clarke, Director of Business Development for PHP, said these are not new agreements. “Back in 1957, Stora signed a 50-year forestry licence for the area,” he said. “When Port Hawkesbury Paper came in 2012, we signed a 20-year renewable licence for Crown land for a volume of wood to supply the mill. What comes with that is a 10 year check-in so it accounts for all new developments.”  …the deal is now extended to 2043, the province said, noting that changes include a lower volume of timber so the province can accommodate multiple priorities on Crown land.

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Boreal Forest development’s opponents to host town hall

By Brad Sheratt
The Timmins Times
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TIMMINS, Ontario — The Kenogami Watershed Ecological Alliance will host a town hall meeting at Kirkland Lake’s Royal Canadian Legion hall on March 29. The purpose of the meeting is raise awareness to the proposed developments of land in unincorporated townships across many parts of Northeastern Ontario by a group known as the Boreal Forest Medieval Villages. Anna McPherson said, “The purpose of this meeting is for community awareness about off-grid developments in unincorporated townships. “It is not just affecting Kenogami, it is affecting all of Northern Ontario and all areas of unincorporated communities.” She feels without the rules, regulations being followed many areas are going to be affected and it will become “the wild west.” …The town hall meeting is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m.

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Fires of Winter

By Robert Hudson Westover
US Department of Agriculture
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Snow melts and becomes water, and the newly heated water becomes vapor as piles of dry wood and other plant debris start to burn slowly when firefighters, one after another, dip their drip torches. Winter is the ideal time of year for pile burning on national forests and it’s one of the many ways the USDA Forest Service works to remove excess debris and lower fire risks to communities in advance of wildfire activity each year. As winter conditions continue across the US, some national forests create hundreds of “slash piles.” These piles are waiting to be prescribed burned because, throughout the year, fuels reduction and hazardous tree removal projects have been completed. Fuels reduction involves mechanical and hand thinning, meaning that dead, dying or excess trees are removed to reduce forest density and improve forest health. 

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Plants Must Migrate to Survive Climate Change. But They Need Our Help

By Ciara Nugent
Time Magazine
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

When we talk about climate migration, we don’t normally picture a seed blowing uphill in the wind, or landing in a cooler place. Yet, plants around the world are being forced move because of shifting climate conditions in their original habitats. The problem, according to two new studies, is they don’t always make it where they need to go. The sheer speed of temperature increases in the climate crisis era, combined with the fragmentation of landscapes by human activity, is making it harder for trees and other plants to follow their preferred climate conditions. These changes are disrupting a millenia-old process of plant migration, and it could pose a major challenge to global efforts to protect wildlife and reforest land to fight climate change. …if we want plants to survive shifts in their habitats, we’ll have to give them some help.

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Apple backs groups conserving forests in the Deep South

By William Gallagher
Apple Insider
February 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Apple has highlighted the work of conservatory groups, including McIntosh S.E.E.D. who run the first Black-owned community forest in the US. Working with The Conservation Fund, Apple says that it partners with community groups like McIntosh S.E.E.D. across the Deep South. It’s in order to scale up sustainable land retention, specifically in Black and Brown communities. “To promote justice and address climate change, we have to share resources and partner with organizations that have real on-the-ground expertise,” Lisa Jackson, Apple’s vice president of Environment, Policy, and Social Initiatives, said in a press release. “I’ve always believed the most powerful solutions come from centering the most vulnerable communities, not ignoring them.” “In places like McIntosh County,” she continued, “families are coming together to preserve the land that sustains all of us.”

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Some of Eastern Oregon’s smallest communities look for wildfire protection through Firewise

By Antonio Sierra
Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Bruce Wilcox is helping his community, known locally as Blake Ranch, become the county’s first to join Firewise USA. He said the national program could be the key to protecting nearby homes from the next catastrophic fire. Firewise is sponsored by the National Fire Protection Association, with the Oregon Department of Forestry managing it at the state level. Through training and local fire prevention projects, Firewise aims to encourage property owners to take proactive measures to prevent fires from destroying their homes and businesses. Many of Oregon’s smallest and most isolated communities have become Firewise sites. Blake Ranch isn’t the first in Eastern Oregon: small communities in Baker, Grant and Wallowa counties have already secured the designation.

Additional coverage in Baker City Herald: Heppner area ranch becomes first Firewise community in Morrow County

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New Mexico law signed to help wildfire, flooding recovery efforts

Associated Press in PBS News Hour
February 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SANTA FE, N.M. — New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Monday signed to use zero-interest loans to help local governments in the arid, Southwest state repair or replace public infrastructure damaged by wildfires or subsequent flooding. The law follows last year’s historic Hermits Peak-Calf Canyon blaze that exploded into the largest wildfire in New Mexico’s recorded history. Begun in early April as a prescribed burn by the U.S. government, it grew into a monstrous blaze that blackened more than 530 square miles (1,370 square kilometers). Hundreds of homes in northern New Mexico were lost. A subsequent report by the U.S. Forest Service said its employees made multiple miscalculations, used inaccurate models and underestimated how dry conditions were. Experts say the resulting environmental harms will endure for decades.

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State forestry board stays course on habitat conservation plan

By Nicole Bales
The Astorian
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In a divided 4-3 vote on Wednesday, the Oregon Board of Forestry decided to stay the course on a draft habitat conservation plan amid growing pressure from counties and the timber industry to start over. The special virtual meeting was called late last week after county and timber industry leaders raised alarm over new data on timber harvests released by the state Department of Forestry. The 70-year plan would designate no-logging areas across nearly 640,000 acres of state forests, mostly in Clatsop and Tillamook counties. The protected areas are intended to keep species under the federal Endangered Species Act safe and keep the state in compliance with federal law. However, some county and timber industry leaders say the plan goes further than it needs to protect habitat. They also say reductions in timber harvests will have major ramifications on jobs and the 15 counties that depend on revenue from logging state forests.

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Ban foreign entities from buying Washington forest and farmland, lawmaker urges

By Tom Banse
Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Legislators in Washington state are joining more than a dozen other states that are considering whether to restrict or ban foreign entities from buying farmland. The initial hearing on Olympia’s version of the foreign ownership restrictions drew more criticism than support. The bill sponsor, state Rep. Clyde Shavers, asserted that foreign ownership of agricultural land threatens water supplies and the state’s food security. …As drafted, the legislation would bar foreign companies, governments and foreign-controlled American subsidiaries from purchasing land in Washington used for farming, ranching or timber production. …Tom Davis of the Washington Forest Protection Association, questioned the broad sweep of the restrictions and whether it addressed a real problem. “I know that a lot of people are concerned about China owning ag lands in the United States,” Davis said, before noting that Canadians were actually by far the top foreign investors in rural American counties, followed by a group of European entities…

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Wildfire damage prompts calls for funding water system

By Susan Montoya Bryan
Associated Press
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Dozens of traditional irrigation systems that supply community farms, gardens and orchards in northern New Mexico won’t flow with water this spring, forcing many families to decide whether to risk planting crops this year with no guarantee of water. Rural officials testified Tuesday before a state Senate committee, saying the damage done to the acequia system is a devastating consequence of a historic wildfire that the U.S. Forest Service sparked last year during a prescribed burn operation that went awry. Portions of the earthen canals have been wrecked by post-fire flooding and are choked with debris. Paula Garcia, who heads the New Mexico Acequia Association testified in support of legislation that would double the amount of money earmarked annually to fund community ditch infrastructure and construction projects. …Supporters estimate that there’s at least an $8 billion need for water infrastructure improvements statewide.

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Forest landslide frequency, size influenced more by road building, logging than heavy rain

National Science Foundation
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A long-term Pacific Northwest study of landslides, clear-cutting timber and building roads shows that forest management history has a greater impact on how often landslides occur and how severe they are compared to how much water is coursing through a watershed. Findings of the U.S. National Science Foundation-supported research, led by Catalina Segura and Arianna Goodman of Oregon State University, were published in the journal Earth Surface Processes and Landforms. “The study highlights the importance of land-use dynamics on natural processes such as landslides,” said Justin Lawrence, a program director in NSF’s Division of Earth Sciences. …Probing the factors behind landslide frequency and magnitude is crucial because slides occur in all 50 states, causing an average of more than 25 deaths per year, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The USGS puts the total annual average economic damage resulting from landslides at greater than $1 billion.

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County joins partnership to save communities through forest thinning

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Beset by wildfires and debris flows in recent years, the Gila County Board of Supervisors at its Feb. 7 meeting approved a new partnership with Salt River Project to thin the forest. The agreement creates a natural alliance. …National surveys show that Pine, Payson and other Rim Country communities are among the most fire-menaced in the whole county. And in recent years Globe, Miami and Tonto Basin have faced a plague of wildfires that have consumed homes and buried roads in post-fire flooding debris. Rim Country and the White Mountains have suffered a disastrous plague of wildfires in recent years, according to a summary in an SRP presentation. Wildfires have charred 3.2 million acres since 2000. Acreage burned went from about 72,000 in the 1980s to 200,000 in the 1990s and then exploded to 1.2 million acres in the 2000s and 1.3 million acres in the 2010s. Just in the past three years, more than 700,000 acres have burned.

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California’s snowpack is melting faster than ever before, leaving less available water

By Hayley Smith
The Los Angeles Times
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

For decades, Californians have depended on the reliable appearance of spring and summer snowmelt to provide nearly a third of the state’s supply of water. But as the state gets drier, and as wildfires climb to ever-higher elevations, that precious snow is melting faster and earlier than in years past — even in the middle of winter. That’s posing a threat to the timing and availability of water in California, according to authors of a recent study in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, which found that the effects of climate change are compounding to accelerate snowpack decline. “As wildfires become larger, burn at higher severities, and in more snow-prone regions like the Sierra Nevada, the threats to the state’s water supply are imminent,” said Erica Siirila-Woodburn, a research scientist with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and one of the authors of the study.

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Oregon bill would increase penalty for assaulting rangers amid growing violence outdoors

By Zach Urness
Salem Statesman Journal
February 13, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon’s House Bill 2011 proposes to increase penalties for assaulting parks and recreation employees. It would punish by a maximum of five years imprisonment, a $125,000 fine, or both. …The harassment has been growing as the number of people heading outdoors has skyrocketed, especially during the pandemic. Overcrowding at state parks and sold-out campgrounds have brought frustration, including extreme examples of campers literally fighting over first-come, first-served campsites. …The issue has also been growing on federal lands, often managed by agencies such as the U.S. Forest Service. “Traditionally about 1% of our visitors really struggle with complying to rules and regulations,” Dennis Benson, recreation manager for Deschutes National Forest, said. “Now, we’ve got more like 10% of the population that doesn’t comply or adhere with rules, regulations, those kinds of things, which is lending itself to more problematic behaviors on public lands.”

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For the First Time, Genetically Modified Trees Have Been Planted in a U.S. Forest

By Gabriel Popkin
The New York Times
February 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

GEORGIA — In a low-lying tract of southern Georgia’s pine belt, a half-dozen workers planted row upon row of twig-like poplar trees. These weren’t just any trees, though: Some of the seedlings being nestled into the soggy soil had been genetically engineered to grow wood at turbocharged rates while slurping up carbon dioxide from the air. The poplars may be the first genetically modified trees planted in the United States outside of a research trial or a commercial fruit orchard. Just as the introduction of the Flavr Savr tomato in 1994 introduced a new industry of genetically modified food crops, the tree planters on Monday hope to transform forestry. …Maddie Hall, the company’s co-founder said of her dream to deploy genetic engineering on behalf of the climate. But she and her colleagues have also found believers — enough to invest $36 million in the four-year-old company. The company has also attracted critics. [to access the full story a NY Times subscription is required]

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Are you a youth interested in forestry?

Pontotoc Progress
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MISSISSIPPI – Forestry has a large impact on the lives of Mississippians. It supplies the stimulus for over 64,000 jobs that contribute close to $3.3 billion in annual employee income in our state. Forestry employment possibilities for the youth of Mississippi will continue well into the future. Recent forest product mill expansion and construction throughout Mississippi indicates strong long-term demand. There will be opportunities for those who are looking to work in a high-tech environment either outdoors or in an industrial setting. Employment within the timber industry can relate to forestry operations and management, government agencies, and industrial wood processing mills. This column will discuss forestry careers and how youth can prepare themselves to join this exciting and fulfilling field. 

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$10 million grant to fuel economic resilience and sustainability in Eastern US forests

By Steve Koppes
Perdue University
February 13, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

WEST LAFAYETTE, Indiana — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has awarded a $10 million grant to Purdue University to help landowners and stakeholders better adapt their forests to increasingly complicated economic and climate conditions in the Eastern U.S. About five million small, private landowners control just over half the acreage of forests in the Eastern U.S. …Purdue and its project partners—the University of Georgia, the University of Maine and the U.S. Forest Service—aim to improve the management of 15 million acres of those forests. The project encompasses the northern hardwood forest in the Northeast, the central hardwood region, and the southern pine and mixed hardwood. “We will provide the digital tools that allow rapid response and precision management to improve forest health,” said Songlin Fei, a professor of forestry.

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Many companies and finance firms yet to set deforestation policy

By Simon Jessop
Reuters
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

LONDON — Almost half of the companies most reliant on the commodities responsible for deforestation, and the financial firms that back them, have no policy to rein it in, a report by Global Canopy says. Of 350 companies with the greatest exposure to palm oil, soy, beef, leather, timber and pulp and paper, and 150 banks and asset managers which lend to or invest in them, 201, or 40%, had no such policy. …Global Canopy said 100 of the companies had a deforestation commitment in place… yet only half were checking to ensure the policies were being followed. A further 109 had no deforestation commitments in place for any of the commodities. …While the number of companies pledging to get to net-zero carbon emissions by mid-century had grown five-fold in three years to 145, the lack of action on deforestation was hampering their ability to hit the target, the report said.

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Exhibition celebrating women in forestry to open

By Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs, Forestry Commission
Government of the United Kingdom
February 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Forestry Commission, Forestry England and Forest Research are today calling for the general public to submit photos of modern day ‘Lumberjills’ – pictures of women working in the forestry sector – to create a People’s Picture in a first of its kind celebration of women in forestry. The images will go on display at the forthcoming Women in Forestry, The Lumberjills Story exhibition this May. The People’s Picture will illustrate the connection today’s women have with forests and woodlands by inviting them to submit photos showing themselves at work. …The exhibition will also celebrate the contribution of the WWII Lumberjills: a group of women who played a vital role in maintaining the supply of timber during the Second World War. People who have pictures of working Lumberjills from WWII are also invited to submit their pictures for display at the forthcoming exhibition. Women have long played a role in modern forestry but are underrepresented. 

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