Daily News for May 25, 2026

Special Feature

Combustible Dust Cleanup: Why Using Compressed Air is Risky

BC Forest Safety Council
May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

In sawmill operations, combustible dust can accumulate on equipment, rafters, floors, and production surfaces. If the dust becomes airborne, it can create a serious fire or explosion hazard. Good housekeeping is essential, but some cleaning methods can unintentionally increase risk. One of the most common examples is using compressed air to blow down and clear dust. There are many challenges and risks with using compressed air for blowdown. It doesn’t actually remove dust; instead, it instantly generates a dense dust cloud creating a significant explosion risk. The dust gets redistributed, shifting from one place to another, spreading across machinery, product lines, and other sensitive areas. It can be forced into hidden spaces or up into rafters, making future cleanup more difficult. When hazards like static discharge or sparks combine with airborne dust, conditions for an explosion can develop quickly. …Combustible dust hazards are manageable when dust is prevented from becoming airborne and ignition sources are tightly controlled.

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Manufacturing Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment – Being Proactive Matters

May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Wood products manufacturing operations have their share of hazards to workers. Identifying hazards, assessing the risk level and building controls are essential in both harvesting and manufacturing settings. BCFSC offers a wide range of resources and training courses to assist those who work in forestry. Visit the following web pages to learn more:

Identifying Hazards and Assessing Risk Training – Wood Products Manufacturing

Hazard Identification, Inspection and Investigation – Wood Products Manufacturing Supervisor

Field Level Hazard Assessment Forms for Manufacturing

 

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Connection to Care: Supporting Mental Health Across BC’s Forestry Sector

BC Forest Safety Council
May 25, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

BC’s forestry sector has always been known for its resilience, strong work ethic and deep connection to communities. In recent years, though, that resilience has been tested. Mill curtailments, closures, workforce reductions and ongoing economic uncertainty have taken a toll on workers and communities across the province. As we continue to adjust, one thing is becoming increasingly clear, supporting and prioritizing mental health is essential to keeping forestry workers safe. Workers across harvesting, silviculture, log hauling, sawmills and wood pellet operations are no strangers to demanding work conditions. Long hours and physical work are part of the job. But when mental strain like job uncertainty and financial pressure are added to the mix, it creates another layer of stress that can quickly start to weigh on people.

Stigma and concerns about job security can make it hard to speak openly about mental health and many workers continue to push through without reaching out for support. It will take a collective effort across industry to close the gap between needing support and asking for it without feeling judged or like they have to tough it out on their own.

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Safe Phase Integration: Preventing Congestion in Forestry Operations

By Alexandra Skinner
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
June 25, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Overlapping work activities are one of forestry’s most complex safety challenges; without proper controls, phase congestion can pose serious hazards to workers. However, with proper management, forestry operations can achieve safe, efficient phase integration. …Phase congestion occurs when multiple harvesting phases overlap in the same or nearby area, often due to insufficient time or distance between phases. It often builds gradually and can go unnoticed until a serious incident occurs. When phases aren’t properly coordinated, workers face greater risks of being struck by or caught between equipment, or missing other hazards. In 2019, a young worker was fatally injured after being caught between the counterbalance of a log loader and the cut slope beside the road. WorkSafeBC’s investigation found that four phases of work were happening simultaneously in an area less than 90 metres long. …Safe phase integration begins before work starts. Daily activities must be planned with separation in mind.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Getting credit: Why haven’t more B.C. community forests benefited from carbon credits?

By Stefan Labbé
Victoria Times Colonist
May 24, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 2009, the Lil’wat and Squamish nations entered into a formal 25-year agreement with the Resort ­Municipality of Whistler to create the Cheakamus ­Community Forest — a more than 33,000-hectare ­patchwork of forested Crown land bracketing the ­mountain village and ski resort. Today, the group has protected nearly half the ­forest from logging, reducing the annual allowable cut to about 21,000 cubic metres per year — roughly half of what the province allows. …Fifteen years ago, it became the first ­project of its kind to join B.C.’s carbon market, where companies and governments can pay others to ­neutralize their emissions. …In most years, carbon credits have netted the Cheakamus Community Forest about $100,000 in annual revenue, with the B.C. government, VanCity, Ecotrust Canada, and Resort Municipality of Whistler acting as regular buyers. …“What Saudi Arabia is to oil, B.C. is to carbon,” said Beresford. “I still don’t understand why we are the only community forest in B.C. doing it.”

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Changes could be coming to Alaska’s Tongass forest. Some are putting the forest service on blast

By Julien Greene
CBC News
May 24, 2026
Category: General
Region: United States, US West

Tlingit and Haida recently harvested totem trees in the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska whose rings suggest they are 500 years old. Members of those nations don’t often take saws to those giants — if they do, it’s done with the utmost care and gratitude. …The president of the Craig Tribal Association, which represents Tlingit and Haida, is unequivocal. “We are the people of the Tongass,” he said. …It’s been a decade since the federal government last updated the management plan for the region, which covers roughly 80 per cent of the Alaska panhandle. …The Forest Service states that with younger trees approaching harvestable age, it proposes increasing the sale of timber to 72 million board feet every year during the next decade. That’s an increase of roughly 56 per cent. …While the tribes are concerned about the impact of logging on their lands and practices, some conservation and fisheries advocates say they’re concerned about its impact on fish and their habitats.

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