The Prince George Citizen

Logging urgency being felt in wake of wildfires

T

- LES LEYNE

here’s a brief window ahead for loggers to go into forests ravaged by fire last summer and extract what they can. The opportunit­y lasts only until scorched timber starts to rot, a few short years, at best.

More than a million hectares of forest were burned this year – almost 10 times the average for wildfire seasons – so it’s a huge area of opportunit­y, but it will be economical­ly viable only for a relatively brief time.

Forests Minister Doug Donaldson has been pushed in the legislatur­e by B.C. Liberal critics to do what he can to expedite the salvage job. On Wednesday, he got another nudge from an all-party committee of MLAs. After touring B.C. to get input on what should be in next February’s budget, the finance committee released a report that takes special note of the wildfires’ impact.

The devastatin­g impact of the unpreceden­ted number of fires caused MLAs to emphasize the importance of not only supporting evacuees, but ensuring the rebuilding of businesses and communitie­s. The committee heard from business owners who are facing labour shortages due to the number of employees not returning home after evacuation orders were lifted. It highlighte­d two recommenda­tions – increase funding for forest management generally, and “incentiviz­e the remediatio­n and salvage of burnt timber.”

That includes expediting the approval of permits.

Donaldson told the legislatur­e recently that the ministry is working with companies on establishi­ng salvage pricing and getting the timber to the mills to support the jobs before it starts to decay.

“Recovery managers” have been designated in Interior communitie­s to determine the areas that can be harvested.

“We’ve come to solutions with the industry about the salvage pricing requiremen­ts, and we’re getting that timber flowing as quickly as possible because the jobs in the important areas of the communitie­s in the Interior are a matter of great significan­ce to us.”

Wednesday, in a conference call from Tokyo where he is on a lumber trade mission to China and Japan, he said the forests ministry is already implementi­ng some of the recommenda­tions. But he didn’t commit to incentives for logging burnt wood.

It looks as if the forest industry for the next while will be taking the same approach as the beetlekill­ed regions – get as much as they can, as fast as they can.

Liberal forests critic and Nechako Lakes MLA John Rustad, a former forests minister, said it’s the scope of the damage that brings home the crisis.

The ministry approves salvage logging every year for specific areas damaged by fire. But this year, the working estimate is 45 million cubic metres of fire-damaged timber. That’s enough to keep Cariboo sawmills going for three to five years.

Rushing in to extract as much value as can be had before that wood dies means overturnin­g some of the bureaucrat­ic processes the ministry relies on. It takes months to get a cutting permit approved, and companies usually have enough to plan a few years ahead. Companies might require ministeria­l directives to harvest scorched wood while they can.

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