Daily News for February 20, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

US Supreme Court rules that Trump’s emergency tariffs are illegal

The Tree Frog Forestry News
February 20, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The US Supreme Court ruled (6-3) that President Trump’s emergency tariffs are illegal, declines to comment on possible refunds. In other Business news: the US Lumber Coalition added subsidy allegations to its Canadian lumber complaint; Coastal Forest Products is accused of evading US trade remedy laws; Western Forest Products and Tla’amin Nation agree on TFL 39 Block 1 sale; and Unifor seeks meeting with Kruger over Corner Brook mill. Meanwhile: Acadian Timber appoints Malcolm Cockwell CEO; Clearwater Paper reports Q4 net income; and Canfor supports Whitecourt, Alberta’s new event centre.

In Forestry news: First Nations chiefs file lawsuit over forest land title in Quebec; and Oregon and California railroad lands are set to allow more logging. Meanwhile: the US Forest Service announced $95 million for wood innovations; Massachusetts considers staircase code change; a PEFC webinar on agroforestry and urban forestry; SFI training programs across the US; and the latest news from WorkSafeBC, BC Wood, and the Softwood Lumber Board.

Finally, BC raw log exports—an emotionally charged phrase that obscures value and jobs.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Supreme Court to weigh appropriate legal path for reviewing complaint about railway

By Jim Bronskill
Victoria Times Colonist
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will help decide the appropriate means of reviewing a company’s complaint about the service provided by a railway. In November 2023, the Canadian Transportation Agency ruled that Canadian National Railway Co. failed to meet the level of service it owed to Alberta Pacific Forest Industries Inc. The agency is a federal regulator and quasi-judicial tribunal and, under section 41 of the Canadian Transportation Act, its decisions may be appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal on questions of law or jurisdiction. CN wanted to contest factual findings so it pursued an appeal under a provision of the Federal Courts Act, not under section 41.

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U.S. lumber group expands list of complaints against Canadian softwood producers

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Lumber Coalition has expanded its list of complaints against Canadian softwood producers. The group has presented nine “new subsidy allegations,” claiming that Canadian producers benefit from federal government programs, including one that offers refundable tax credits for clean technology such as solar power. …The Commerce Department is investigating the nine new allegations put forward by the group. Canada has repeatedly rejected American arguments that Canadian producers benefit from subsidies and also denies dumping. …One of the group’s complaints targets a federal program in Canada, open to eligible forestry companies, that provides refundable tax credits for carbon capture, utilization and storage. In addition, the group’s allegations name provincial programs in BC, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec. …The Commerce Department deferred a potential probe, suggested by the Coalition, into cases pertaining to alleged subsidies for long-term timber tenures in BC and Alberta. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Canfor secures naming rights for Whitecourt’s new Culture and Events Centre

By Brad Quarin
The Whitecourt Star
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

WHITECOURT, Alberta — The new culture centre being built adjacent to Festival Park in Whitecourt will be called the Canfor Culture and Events Centre, after the company Canadian Forest Products which obtained naming rights, according to the Town of Whitecourt. “We’re proud to support the communities where we operate,” Tom Thompson, Canfor Alberta region general manager, said. …Thompson said Canfor supported the centre through its Good Things Come from Trees Foundation. …The Town of Whitecourt began offering naming rights for the new facility and parts within it in the spring of 2025. …Canfor Corporation moved into Whitecourt in 2022 after completing its purchase of Millar Western Forest Products’ lumber operations and wood products assets.

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CN Rail corridor through 100 Mile House reportedly saved

By Misha Mustaqeem
The Clearwater Times
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The CN railway running through 100 Mile House will not be discontinued after all. District of 100 Mile House Mayor Maureen Pinkney said that the consultant hired to assess the rail line’s future had told her, and around 87 other stakeholders in the region between North Vancouver and Prince George, that removal of the rails was off the table. …CN Rail announced it would be discontinuing service between Squamish and 100 Mile House… and that rails and ties are removed after discontinuance. …Potentials for the new use of the rail tracks include the return of passenger rail to 100 Mile House. …Pinkney said that there could be opportunities from the saved rail line to make up for lost tax revenue from the closure of the West Fraser Mill, as well as the OSB plant. 

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‘Not disposal sites’: Snuneymuxw calls for action after oil spill, toxic sawmill effluent discharge at Duke Point

By Laura Brougham
Chek News
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Snuneymuxw First Nation is calling on other levels of government to act to protect its waters following an oil spill and long-standing discharge of “toxic sawmill effluent” at Duke Point near Nanaimo. The nation is calling for a full environmental investigation following the incidents it says are caused by Environmental 360 and Western Forest Products. The nation has sent letters to the federal, provincial and municipal governments calling on them to act. This comes after an oil spill was discovered on Jan. 2 which was eventually discovered to be from Environmental 360 properties. The nation also says it was recently informed of long-standing and significant toxic effluent discharges from Western Forest Products’ sawmill and says the issue has been ongoing for four decades. Snuneymuxw says it was misinformed about the scale and severity of the issue by the company, and recently learned there was a “high likelihood of ecological damage.”

Additional coverage in the Nanaimo News Bulletin: Snuneymuxw demands investigation into Western Forest Products runoff

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Western Forest Products and Tla’amin Nation Announce Milestone Agreement for the Purchase and Sale of Western’s Stillwater Forest Operation

Western Forest Products Inc.
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Tla’amin Territory – Western Forest Products Inc. and Qwoqwnes Forestry Holdings Limited Partnership, an entity beneficially owned and controlled by Tla’amin Nation (“Qwoqwnes”), have reached an agreement for the purchase by Qwoqwnes of a 100% ownership interest in the assets comprising Western’s Stillwater Forest Operation, located near Powell River, British Columbia, for an aggregate purchase price of $80.0 million. The Stillwater Forest Operation includes Block 1 of Tree Farm Licence 39 which covers approximately 154,000 hectares of forest land, the majority of which is located in the traditional territory of Tla’amin Nation. Subject to closing of the Transaction, Qwoqwnes, through the business of Thichum Forest Products, will manage an allowable annual cut of approximately 469,200 cubic metres of timber from TFL 39 Block 1 and will enter into a longterm fibre supply agreement with Western to sell timber harvested from the tenure to Western to support Western’s BC coastal manufacturing operations. 

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Unifor seeks ‘urgent’ meeting with Kruger boss about future of Corner Brook paper mill

By Terry Roberts
CBC News
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Lana Payne

The union that represents workers at Corner Brook Pulp and Paper and Deer Lake Power is requesting an urgent meeting with top brass at Kruger Inc., as questions mount about the future of the newsprint sector, and Kruger’s ambitious plan to diversify its operations in Newfoundland and Labrador. In a letter to Kruger Inc. CEO Joseph Kruger that was obtained by CBC News, Unifor president Lana Payne expressed concerned about the “lack of clarity and transparency” from the company about its business plan for the century-old operation, and the future of the roughly 300 people who work at the newsprint mill. “It is critical that Kruger engages with mill workers and their union, the community of Corner Brook, and the provincial government,” Payne wrote. …Payne’s letter emerges as the company slowly restarts one of the two newsprint machines at the mill following an extended shutdown, during which all employees were receiving full pay.

Unifor press release: The future of Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Mill

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Acadian Timber Corp. Announces Appointment of Malcolm Cockwell as Interim President & CEO

By Susan Wood, Chief Financial Officer
Acadian Timber Corp.
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Edmundston, NEW BRUNSWICK – Acadian Timber Corp. announced Malcolm Cockwell has been appointed Interim President & Chief Executive Officer, effective immediately. Mr. Cockwell succeeds Adam Sheparski, who has stepped down as President & Chief Executive Officer and as a Director of the Company to pursue other opportunities. “On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to thank Mr. Sheparski for his contributions to Acadian,” said Mr. Cockwell. “Looking ahead, Acadian will continue focusing on operational excellence within our existing timberland assets in New Brunswick and Maine.” Mr. Cockwell is a Registered Professional Forester, who has served as Chair of the Company since August 2019. He is the principal of Macer Forest Holdings Inc., the largest shareholder of Acadian, and holds a PhD in forestry from the University of Toronto.

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Supreme Court rules that Trump’s sweeping emergency tariffs are illegal

By John Fritz
CNN
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

John Roberts

The Supreme Court on Friday ruled that President Trump violated federal law when he unilaterally imposed sweeping tariffs across the globe, a striking loss for the White House on an issue that has been central to the president’s foreign policy and economic agenda. The decision is arguably the most important loss the second Trump administration has sustained at the conservative Supreme Court. …Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion and the court agreed 6-3 that the tariffs exceeded the law. The court, however, did not say what should happen to the more than $130 billion in tariffs that has already been collected. “The president asserts the extraordinary power to unilaterally impose tariffs of unlimited amount, duration, and scope,” Roberts wrote. “In light of the breadth, history, and constitutional context of that asserted authority, he must identify clear congressional authorization to exercise it.” The emergency authority Trump attempted to rely on, the court said, “falls short.”

In related coverage:

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Commends CBP Commitment to Addressing Evasion of Trade Remedy Laws

The US Lumber Coalition
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Customs and Border Protection on September 30, 2025 announced publicly its investigation into alleged evasion by Coastal Specialty Forest Products, Inc. of the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on lumber imports from Canada.  CBP launched its investigation based on an allegation filed by the U.S. Lumber Coalition that was supported by ship manifest data showing the transshipment of lumber from Canada through New Zealand. To date, close to $8 billion dollars in antidumping and countervailing duties, as well as Section 232 tariffs, have been paid directly by Canadian softwood lumber companies to U.S. Customs since 2017.  As the Canadian lumber industry is desperately trying to maintain its disruptive and harmful massive excess lumber capacity fueled by billions of dollars of Canadian taxpayer funded federal and provincial subsidies, it is critical that any steps to evade the payment of duties and tariffs is stopped in its tracks.

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Canada, Mexico want a trilateral agreement under CUSMA review, Canadian minister says

Reuters in CTV News
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

OTTAWA — The Canadian minister responsible for Canada-United States trade said Wednesday that Mexico was keen to maintain a trilateral agreement under the free trade pact between the three North American neighbors that is up for review this year. “I am reassured by the Mexican economy secretary … his desire to work with Canada and to ensure that the review of CUSMA results in a strengthened and ongoing trilateral trade arrangement,” Dominic LeBlanc said in a press conference from Mexico. LeBlanc is heading a group of over 370 delegates to Mexico for a six-day trade mission amid fears that U.S. President Donald Trump could ditch the decades-old three-way free trade agreement between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada when it comes up for review later this year. “The Mexicans have very similar interests to Canada,” LeBlanc said. “We both remain absolutely committed to the trilateral free trade agreement and working together as this review process unfolds,” he added.

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Finance & Economics

Why We’re Skeptical About That Surprising December Housing Starts Report

By Chris Versace
The Street Pro
February 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Wednesday’s data for Housing Starts, like a few other pieces of late, catches us up on the tail end of 2025. What we see in the headline figure for November and December points to a rebound in total housing starts. ..Peering into that breakdown, we see the greater increase came in the multi-family category. And then when we look at some other data in the report, namely the number of single-family housing units under construction at the end of December and the number of housing units authorized but not started at the end of December, we see a different picture. This points to slow levels of single-family housing construction and weaker order levels, which explains the continued fall in single-family housing units not started amid the falling number of units under construction. …Meanwhile, the recent bout of severe winter weather is going to throw a wrench into housing construction in the current quarter.

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Clearwater Paper reports Q4, 2025 net income of $38 million

By Clearwater Paper Corporation
Business Wire
February 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

SPOKANE, Washington — Clearwater Paper, an independent supplier of bleached paperboard to North American converters, reported financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. …Net sales were $386 million for the fourth quarter of 2025, flat compared to fourth quarter 2024 net sales of $387 million. Net income for the fourth quarter of 2025 was $38 million, compared to $199 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, which included a $307 million of gain on sale of the tissue division ($218 million after tax). Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations was $20 million, compared to $9 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. For the full year 2025, net sales of $1.6 billion… and net loss from continuing operations of $53 million. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wood Connections Newsletter – February 2026

BC Wood Specialties Group
February 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The latest Wood Connections newsletter delivers a mix of strategic announcements, professional development opportunities, program updates and industry news shaping British Columbia’s wood products sector. It leads with the Save-the-Date for the 23rd Annual Global Buyers Mission set for September 10–12, 2026, in Whistler, a key event for connecting international buyers with Canadian manufacturers. Funding support for export-oriented projects through CanExport SMEs is highlighted, alongside a call for supplier imagery submissions to naturally:wood’s promotional directory. The bulletin promotes upcoming learning opportunities, including a Webinar on grants and government funding, and UBC CAWP Management Skills Training courses focused on boosting quality and production planning. In program updates, BC Wood’s participation in global trade shows and missions such as Korea Build Week and Interzum Guangzhou 2026 reinforces export engagement. The Industry News section showcases wood-centric storytelling and continuing developments like the nine-storey mass timber hybrid building in East Vancouver.

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U.S. Forest Service announces funding opportunity to strengthen forest products economy, forest sector jobs

By the Forest Service
The US Department of Agriculture
February 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service announced up to $95 million in competitive grant funding through its Wood Innovations program for projects that advance innovative wood uses, expand wood-based construction, and grow U.S. wood energy markets and forest product processing capacity. “A strong timber industry is essential for active forest management and the vitality of rural economies,” said Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz. “By supporting mills and markets that transform forest byproducts into valuable goods, we strengthen domestic manufacturing, reduce wildfire risks, and generate well-paying jobs across rural America.” Funding is available through three Forest Service grant programs: the Wood Innovations Grant, Community Wood Grant, and Wood Products Infrastructure Assistance Grant programs. Together, these programs support projects that: Develop innovative wood products; Increase the use of wood in commercial and residential construction; Expand wood energy systems; and Modernize, retrofit, or increase the capacity of wood products manufacturing facilities.

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Softwood Lumber Board Monthly Update for February 2026

The Softwood Lumber Board
February 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

This newsletter features these stories and more:

  • Momentum for Mainstreaming Mass Timber: The SLB’s “From Niche to Mainstream” strategic plan a roadmap to attaining 2.9 BBF of annual incremental lumber demand by 2035 and expanding lumber’s role in the built environment by … building stronger preferences for wood design in high-opportunity markets.
  • Supply Chain Leaders Highlight How SLB Investments Expand Lumber Demand Beyond Housing: SLB is spotlighting industry leaders, programs, and partners advancing market growth. This month, Nick Milestone, COO of Mercer Mass Timber, and new alternate SLB Board Member Derek Ratchford, CEO of SmartLam, highlight growing the market for lumber by expanding wood construction in new building types.
  • How AWC Standards Shape Codes, Safety, and Wood’s Competitive Position: The AWC is currently updating two of its building design standards: the Special Design Provisions for Wind & Seismic and the Permanent Wood Foundation Design Specification. Updates support access to safe construction resources, and support standards that affect lumber’s competitive position. 

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Massachusetts Weighs Bold Staircase Code Change

WBSM Massachusetts
February 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

Massachusetts is considering changing state building codes to allow single staircases in multi-family residential buildings up to six stories. Advocates say the change would result in smaller buildings, space savings that could lead to 130,000 new housing units. Before changing the building codes, which currently require two exit stairways, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey has signed an executive order establishing a technical advisory panel to study potential safety issues. “We’re all about making it easier to build more housing across our state to drive down costs for everyone,” Healey said in a statement. “While the double-stair requirement plays an important role in ensuring safety, it’s also holding us back from the type of housing construction we need to meet demand.” …New York City and Seattle, Washington have “permitted single-stair buildings up to six stories for decades,” the administration says…, as have the states of Tennessee, Montana, and Connecticut.

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Forestry

https://fraservalleytoday.ca/2026/02/18/vancouver-foundation

By Mike Vanden Bosch
Fraser Valley Today
February 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

FRASER CANYON — The Nature-Based Solutions Foundation in Vancouver says it has recently acquired two clusters of private land inholdings totaling just over 55 hectares within the traditional territory of the Kanaka Bar Band in the Fraser Canyon for conservation purposes. According to a news release from the conservation organization, the 55 hectares of land are inside the boundaries of Kanaka Bar’s proposed Indigenous Protected & Conserved Area (IPCA). The foundation says the acquisitions will safeguard exceptionally diverse old-growth forests, including habitat that features Canada’s largest documented Rocky Mountain juniper, and they build on NBSF’s earlier purchase of the “Old Man Jack’s” parcel in 2022, thereby bringing the total to three private properties to be returned to Kanaka Bar through Indigenous-led conservation, title-registered legal protection, and long-term stewardship funding.

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The myth of the “raw log”

By Stewart Muir
Resource Works
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

By the time a so-called “raw log” is loaded onto a truck — or in a small minority of cases, onto a ship — it has already travelled through a dense web of economic activity that is anything but raw. It has been identified and cruised through professional forest planning. Roads have been engineered and constructed. Heavy equipment has been purchased, financed and maintained. Logging crews have mobilized. Mechanics and welders have serviced machinery. Truck drivers have hauled. Fuel suppliers have delivered. Silviculture obligations have been funded or secured. Stumpage has been paid to the Crown on public lands. In many instances, Indigenous partnerships and benefit agreements structure access and revenue sharing. Every log carries embedded value long before it ever approaches a mill gate or tidewater. Industry analyst David Elstone has noted that it can take more than 100 distinct job functions to sustainably plan, harvest and deliver timber from forest to primary manufacturing. 

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Community forest advocates headed to Vernon

By Liam Verster
Vernon Matters
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Representatives from the province’s community forest groups will gather in Vernon this summer to find solutions to challenges the sector faces. The B.C. Community Forestry Association will hold its 24th Annual General Meeting in Vernon June 3 to 5. Community forests are licensed provincial lands that are managed through partnerships, usually between municipalities, First Nations, and other stakeholders. They are intended to be managed in a way that prioritizes the needs of the community, such as local stewardship, sustainable forest management, and economic benefits. The association (BCCFA) is a grassroots, membership-based non-profit that acts as advocates for the community forest industry. “Every year we hold a conference and annual general meeting in or near one of our member communities,” Jennifer Gunter, Executive Director of the BCCFA, told Vernon Matters. “This year we will be hosted by the Monashee Community Forest, which is a partnership between the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby.”

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Greater Victoria students help discover new fungi species in B.C.

Victoria News
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A community science initiative is uncovering previously unrecorded fungi across Greater Victoria, highlighting the region’s rich and still largely unknown biodiversity. Some discoveries may even represent species new to science. The project, MycoMap BC, invites the public to photograph, collect and submit mushroom and slime mould samples for DNA sequencing. Since launching last fall, nearly 14,000 collections have been submitted across British Columbia, including about 2,500 from Greater Victoria. “We’re building baseline data on fungal biodiversity that simply doesn’t exist yet,” said Elora Adamson, project coordinator at the University of Victoria biodiversity lab. As of mid-February, roughly 350 DNA sequencing results have been processed. Adamson said 11 collections represent species recorded for the first time in British Columbia. … Of those results, six newly recorded fungi were found in Greater Victoria, four in Sooke and two in Victoria.

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First Nations chiefs file lawsuit claiming title over forest land in Quebec

By Matt Gilmour
CTV News
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — A group of First Nations chiefs has filed a lawsuit claiming Aboriginal title over three large tracts of land. They say it’s to have more control over forestry but the implications go much further. For months, First Nations land defenders have been disrupting the logging industry on their traditional lands. It started in protest of Bill 97, the controversial forestry reform bill that Quebec scrapped in September. Nitassinan hereditary chief Dave Petiquay says the group of hereditary chiefs — from the Haute-Mauricie and Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean regions want the power to decide who can log on their lands and where. Lawyer Frédéric Bérard argues the Canadian constitution gives them that right. …The lawyer says, if successful, the suit would have repercussions for hereditary chiefs across the country and could impact future major infrastructure projects. The chiefs say they are willing to go all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada.

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University of Toronto forest conservation winter field camp marks 30 years with return to the woods

The Bay Today
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The origins of one long-running University of Toronto field course trace back to a moment when debates over logging and white pine forests drew national attention. What began as a response to high-profile forestry protests south of Temagami in the mid-1990s has become an annual rite for forest conservation students: getting into the woods to see management practices firsthand. Thirty years on, the annual U of T Master of Forest Conservation Winter Field Camp still honours its original purpose: bringing students into the forest to learn from the land, forest professionals, and the connected communities. The 30th anniversary camp runs from today to Feb. 22 this year and will be based at the Mattawa Adventure Camp, near Mattawa. …At the time, concerns about forestry practices led to an invitation for local North Bay foresters to speak in Toronto. Instead of presenting there, North Bay foresters advised people to visit the site.

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Bureau of Land Management proposes quadrupling allowed logging on Oregon and California Railroad Lands in Western Oregon

By Justin Higginbottom
Jefferson Public Radio
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Bureau of Land Management is preparing a revision to how much logging is allowed on O&C Lands. That proposal is causing excitement and criticism. The Bureau of Land Management has filed a notice of intent to revise the resource management plan for nearly 2.5 million acres of forests in Oregon, potentially quadrupling the amount of timber open to logging on O&C Lands (Oregon and California Railroad Lands). The agency is seeking to increase its sustained yield timber harvest to around 1 billion board feet annually, an amount matching levels prior to conservation restrictions in the 1990s. Last year, logging on those lands only yielded around 250 million board feet. In its notice, the BLM says the proposed changes are needed because of wildfire, barred owl management and reduced revenue. The agency also cites an executive order from President Donald Trump directing federal agencies to issue new guidance aimed at increasing timber production.

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Logging with Purpose: How SFI Training Is Growing Across the United States

By Jeff Jenkins, FRA Appalachian Regional Manager
The Forest Resources Association
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Walk into a forest near you, whether that is the rolling hardwoods of Tennessee or the towering pine stands of Minnesota, and something important is happening. …On the surface, it may look like everyday forest work. But behind the scenes, a much bigger story is unfolding. Loggers and forest professionals are participating in structured training and education programs through the Sustainable Forestry Initiative Logger Training and Education effort. This isn’t just about learning new skills. …It reflects a commitment to sustainable forestry that balances economic opportunity with environmental responsibility. This philosophy has guided SFI since its founding in the mid-1990s and continues to shape how training programs empower forestry professionals nationwide. What Exactly Is SFI Logger Training and Education… and Why Ongoing Training Matters.

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Growing Trust Beyond Forests: Webinar to spotlight agroforestry and urban forestry certification

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
February 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

On 25 February, PEFC International will host the webinar Growing Trust Beyond Forests: PEFC Trees outside Forest certification for urban forestry and agroforestry, bringing together voices from science, policy, business, and local government. Held online in two live sessions (10:00 and 15:00 CET), the 90-minute event will focus on what it takes to scale responsible tree management beyond traditional forests and how credibility can be built along the way. The webinar will open with Arianna Oggioni of PEFC International, who will introduce the concept of trees outside forests and explain why agroforestry and urban forestry are gaining momentum as solutions for climate resilience, biodiversity, and sustainable production. Her remarks will set the stage for a central question running throughout the event: how can good practice on the ground translate into trusted, credible claims?

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Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC Health and Safety Enews – February

WorkSafeBC
February 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The WorkSafeBC February eNews highlights fresh tools, safety insights and upcoming opportunities to strengthen workplace health and safety. The newsletter opens with a spotlight on new safety posters designed to prompt safer conversations on topics like responsibilities, bullying, harassment and preventing slips and falls, with some available in multiple languages. It then shares new resources on fall prevention and commercial fishing safety, and summaries of recent incident investigations involving serious injuries across sectors including mining, construction and agriculture. A key operational update previews changes to worker injury reporting, as reporting by fax or mail will be phased out in March 2026 in favour of an improved online system. Updated payroll reporting guidance clarifies that cash tips on T4 slips no longer need to be separately tracked in assessable payroll. The eNews also invites participation in several events, including the Day of Mourning on April 28, a safety conference on Vancouver Island, and a webinar on preventing cargo securement mistakes.

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