Image: BC Sawmill / File / PML
OPINION

YOUR PERSPECTIVE: NDP must do more to help forest-dependent communities thrive

Apr 5, 2023 | 8:00 AM

It’s so important that B.C.’s forestry workers — and the communities that depend on them — have our support. Many of B.C.’s smaller, more rural communities exist because of the resource sector and now, some of those same communities are being hollowed out as industries like forestry see more and more mill closures and curtailments. People are losing their jobs, and some are leaving town to find work elsewhere.

I recently returned from a tour of some of these forestry-dependent communities because I wanted to see first-hand what they were dealing with, and hear directly from the mill operators and workers to truly understand their challenges. I got to see some operations that are doing well at the moment, like Structurlam in Okanagan Falls which manufactures some of North America’s most well-known and award-winning structures.

On the flip side, my tour also brought me to Merritt where the situation isn’t so rosy. I joined two of my colleagues, MLA Jackie Tegart who represents the area as well as MLA Michael Lee, to talk to mill workers and contractors at the Aspen Planers mill. We stood shoulder-to-shoulder with them at a rally in downtown Merritt, hearing their concerns and offering our support. They are asking for quick government action to issue permits and provide certainty as soon as possible.

In my riding of Peace River South, the small resilient community of Chetwynd is also suffering the fallout from the NDP’s failed forestry policies. Logging has been its prime industry for so long with mills being a major employer, providing good, family-supporting jobs for decades and bringing prosperity not only to our community and region but to our entire province.

Right now, the people of Chetwynd are scared. Because in about 4 weeks, the Canfor mill will be closing and about 150 full-time jobs will be lost. Some folks are already packing up and leaving for jobs in other communities and taking their families with them. So, in addition to losing forestry workers, Chetwynd is going to be losing health care professionals, teachers, coaches, volunteer firefighters — you name it. The closure of mills doesn’t just impact those workers or the forest industry solely. The entire fabric of the community changes.

The NDP government needs to be doing more to help the forestry industry thrive once again. While this government promised no mill closures in 2017, we all know the opposite is playing out today. Clearly a change in course is needed, and it’s needed quickly.

Since July 2017, Statistics Canada data shows B.C has lost 13,400 manufacturing jobs. More recently, B.C. saw a sharp decline in forestry jobs for January at almost 12 per cent job loss. Wood manufacturing declined 7 per cent and the pulp sector declined almost 15 per cent. When you look at these three sectors combined, their overall employment declined almost 10 per cent in January. When you look at these three sectors combined, their overall employment declined almost 10 per cent in January.

Meanwhile, families impacted by the forestry crisis have not bee provided with tangible supports, nor a plan forward for forest sector workers and forestry-dependent communities that addresses a range of policy challenges.

It’s not good enough for the NDP to sit back and simply manage the decline of the forestry industry. Workers and their families are demanding a clear vision, and the leadership needed to ensure the future of fforestry as a sustainable, vibrant, and economically viable sector employing thousands of workers, and supporting dozens of communities across British Columbia.

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Editor’s Note: This opinion piece reflects the views of its author, and does not necessarily represent the views of Fraser Valley Today or Pattison Media.