Daily News for September 15, 2025

Business & Politics

Indigenous firefighter group seek same pay for same work as GNWT crews

By Lisa Iesse
My True North Now
September 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A group of Indigenous wildland firefighters have been battling blazes alongside GNWT firefighters, but said they are being denied the same wages for the same work. Josée-Anne Spirito, who is a vice president at the Public Service Alliance of Canada, told True North FM that mediation efforts have failed and arbitration has been delayed as the group waits for a response from the employer, Evergreen Forestry. Spirito said the group of 32 Indigenous Wildland firefighters have been without a collective agreement since Dec. 2023. …During that same period of time, the GNWT’s Wildland firefighters have had a 2.5 per cent increase per year for both years. The group said their dispute is with the employer, Evergreen Forestry. The company is overseen by the Deh Gáh Got’ı̨ę First Nation and the Kátł’odeeche First Nation under contract with the GNWT.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Mass timber going mainstream in B.C. despite growing pains

By Jami Makan
Business in Vancouver
September 13, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mass timber is making a bold entrance in B.C. real estate, but experts say it faces hurdles including supply-demand mismatch and fire safety concerns. The province’s mass timber industry is seeing growth. About 450 mass-timber buildings were completed or under construction in the province as of December 2024, up from about 410 a year prior, said a statement from the B.C. Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth. …Wider adoption may hinge on developers changing their mindset. Better alignment is needed between supply chains and developer demand in order for new construction methods to really take off, said Andrew Stiffman, vice-president of construction services with Kalesnikoff Mass Timber Inc. …There is incongruity between the way some buildings are designed and the way his industry is currently set up to deliver them. …Public perceptions of fire safety may also be holding the industry back.

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Forestry

Conservationists decry lack of progress 5 years after B.C.’s old-growth logging review

By Chad Pawson
CBC News
September 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s been five years since the B.C. government promised to overhaul how old-growth trees are logged in the province — a process that was supposed to take three years — and conservationists say the province’s heel-dragging is resulting in preventable biodiversity loss. …”This isn’t just about trees. It’s about climate, community safety, Indigenous rights and the future of forests in B.C.,” said Tobyn Neame, a campaigner with the Wilderness Committee, in one of several releases from similar groups marking the anniversary of the report. …Conservationists argue the province has not moved deliberately to accomplish the 14 recommendations in the report, the culmination of B.C.’s Old Growth Strategic Review process. …In early September, the Provincial Forest Advisory Council, an independent group of forestry experts, announced a new public-facing website seeking input over the issue.

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Logging firm wins injunction to halt Walbran Valley blockade on Vancouver Island

By Daryll Greer
Canadian Press in CTV News
September 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — The BC Supreme Court has granted an injunction to a forestry company to halt a blockade against old-growth logging in the Walbran Valley on Vancouver Island, in a ruling that has been hailed by a group of First Nations that want the “unlawful occupation” ended. The protesters are mostly anonymous although BC Supreme Court Justice Amy Francis said that they include some of the same group involved in the blockade at nearby Fairy Creek. Francis said protests “are part of a healthy democracy. Criminal conduct is not.” …Michelle Corfield, a spokeswoman for a group of First Nations, said the territory belongs to the Pacheedaht First Nation. “I just really want everybody to understand how deeply hurt the Pacheedaht people are about this unlawful occupation,” she said. …Francis said the law around granting injunctions is well established, and “it appears clear that the defendants’ actions are criminal in nature.”

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