Daily News for June 08, 2026

Business & Politics

B.C.’s task force co-chair cites urgent action to ensure bright forestry future

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
June 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken Kalesnikoff

At the same time Ottawa commissioned a task force to delve into a transformational plan for Canada’s forest industry, BC’s exports continued to plummet. The task force co-chair, Ken Kalesnikoff, believes the sector has a bright future, but trade figures emphasize the urgency the industry requires — starting with easing access to logs. …”People aren’t going to invest in an industry that doesn’t have a secure, cost-competitive fibre supply.” Pushing provinces to reform regulations and transition to land-area based licensing were among the top recommendations. …Kalesnikoff gave Parmar’s ministry credit for moving in the right direction, “But it’s not easy and inside government you have different opinions on what we should be doing and not doing,” he added. …New Brunswick, Kalesnikoff said, stood out as a shining example of how to address the need for conservation and forest biodiversity while using intensive management to produce more timber per hectare.

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Robin Hood Award recognizes Nakusp and Area Community Forest’s commitment to sustainable forestry

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
June 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Nakusp and Area Community Forest (NACFOR) is being recognized with the 2026 Robin Hood Memorial Award for Excellence in Community Forestry. “When you look at what community forestry means in practice, from wildfire resilience, to local jobs and real partnerships, NACFOR stands out,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. …NACFOR is a community-owned corporation that manages nearly 12,600 hectares of forest on behalf of the Village of Nakusp and surrounding Arrow Lakes communities. With a focus on reinvesting revenues locally, NACFOR has built a model that prioritizes long-term economic resilience and responsible forest stewardship. …Mike Crone, general manager, Nakusp and Area Community Forest said “We recognize the over 20 years of dedication and effort from our community, board members, management teams, contractors, volunteers and partners that have gone into making community forestry a success in the Arrow Lakes region.”

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Governments here, not Trump, to blame for most forest sector woes

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
June 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

VICTORIA — B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar couldn’t wait to change the subject this week when confronted with a federal government report that said the troubles of the whole country’s forest industry are mostly homegrown. …Parmar pivoted to the NDP government’s preferred blame line for the ruinous state of the once-dominant industry. “I would also argue that duties and tariffs compound that and make it very challenging. Yes, Trump and tariffs. And when that fails, blame wildfires and the pine beetle infestation. Anything but admit the provincial government’s regulatory regime in driving up production costs and restricting access to marketable fibre. But there was no downplaying the final report of Canadian forest sector transformation task force. …“Over the past two decades, Canada has experienced declining production, capital flight, prolonged mill closures, and weakened investor and workforce confidence,” said the executive summary of the report.

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Irving Forest Products’ Ashland sawmill expansion will double space and production

By Paula Brewer
The Bangor Daily News
June 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MAINE — Irving Forest Products’ Ashland sawmill will soon double its space with help from the Finance Authority of Maine. FAME has approved approximately $42 million in tax credit financing for the project, an agency spokesperson said Thursday. The funding will allow Irving to modernize the mill in Nashville Plantation, which borders Ashland, at a time of growth for Maine wood products. The expansion will double the mill’s production and bring about 80 new jobs to the rural community, according to the company. “The expansion will add a second sawline and 68,000 square feet to the mill,” Anne McInerney, J.D. Irving VP of communications, said Friday. “The new sawline is designed to process larger and longer logs.” Irving Forest Products opened the 68,500-square-foot mill in 2014. The facility employs 140 full-time staff, which will rise to about 220 once the addition is online, McInerney said. Tax credit financing offers tax incentives to investors for backing a project. 

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Forestry

Canada’s aerial wildfire-fighting plan is a start — but it is not yet a strategy

By John Gradek, faculty lecturer at McGill University
The Conversation Canada
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Canadian government recently announced that it will lease a fleet of 10 firefighting aircraft and other support assets to be deployed for the 2026 wildfire season. The plan will see these 10 leased aircraft being managed by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre deployed strategically across the country and made available to provinces as they face intense wildfires. …This announcement follows the government’s fall 2025 budget announcement of a $316.7-million investment in Canada’s aerial wildfire-fighting capacity — an announcement that acknowledged a growing national challenge. …Canada’s wildfire aviation system remains fundamentally decentralized. What Canada lacks is a clearly defined national aerial response framework. That framework should establish how federally-funded aircraft are deployed, how they are prioritized when multiple provinces face simultaneous fires, and how they integrate with the emerging detection technologies — including satellite monitoring and long-endurance drones — that can identify fires earlier than ever before.

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Why Canada’s wildland firefighters aren’t officially considered firefighters

By Jess Winter
The Globe and Mail
June 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

For two decades, Harold Larson helped battle wildfires across BC, Alberta, the US, often working shoulder-to-shoulder with structural firefighters. But at every one of those fires where he and his crew risked their safety alongside their municipal colleagues, there was one perplexing difference: According to the federal government, Mr. Larson was not classified as a firefighter at all. …It’s a holdover from wildland firefighting’s early decades, when the job wasn’t to protect homes, towns and lives – it was to protect timber values as part of the country’s forestry industry. …Canada’s wildland firefighters are seeking to join their municipal counterparts, a cause most recently championed by Vancouver Island MP Gord Johns. …As fire seasons continue to worsen, Mr. Larson said this only underscores the need for Ottawa to recognize that both structural and wildland firefighters are equally important when it comes to keeping people and communities safe. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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The US government is pillaging our national forests from within

By Greg Frazier, ex-Agriculture Dept’s chief of staff
The Hill
June 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins claims “moving the Forest Service closer to the forests we manage is an essential action that will improve our core mission of managing our forests.” That is sophistry — a failed attempt to justify an ill-advised, destructive reorganization plan to remove Forest Service headquarters from Washington and radically cut its research infrastructure. Her fallacy implies that adjacent communities have a superior claim on national forests. …Government nihilists and dismantlers have for years peddled the “proximity begets policy expertise” canard, without evidence. …Meanwhile, Tom Schultz, the chief of the Forest Service, made clear his lingering allegiance to his former employer’s interests. Last month, he laid them out to House appropriators: “timber sales, critical minerals permitting, grazing allotment management.” That timber, he said, is “vital to the nation’s well-being.” In reality, only 6 percent of the total timber supply in the country comes from national forests.

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