Vancouver Sun

A LITTLE HELP FOR LOGGERS

Horgan pledges aid for truckers

- ROB SHAW rshaw@postmedia.com twitter.com/robshaw_vansun

VICTORIA Premier John Horgan says aid for truck loggers hurt by a five-month forestry strike on Vancouver Island is on its way, just a day after contractor­s rallied for action on the steps of the legislatur­e.

Horgan told Postmedia News that he has heard “loud and clear” the stories of hardship and despair from mid- and North Island communitie­s where contractor­s, truck loggers and others are caught in the middle of a lengthy strike between the United Steelworke­rs and Western Forest Products.

“There are truck loggers who are being affected by this, not for any reason of their own making,” Horgan said Thursday. “So we’re looking at ways we can ensure that they keep their vehicles, for example. Those are programs that are being developed right now. And we’ll have more to say about that probably early in the new year, maybe as early as next week.”

More than 200 forest contractor­s rallied at the legislatur­e on Wednesday calling for government action.

United Steelworke­rs Local 1-1937 and Western Forest Products are to return to the negotiatin­g table Saturday with mediator Vince Ready.

Horgan acknowledg­ed he reached out to both parties recently to urge them to get back to the table. Issues include shift schedules and a drug-and-alcohol policy.

Contractor­s are out of work during the dispute because Western Forest Products controls the bulk of Crown timber tenures on the North Island. The contractor­s have said they are struggling economical­ly to retain their equipment and pay their bills as the longest strike in coastal forest history drags on.

Forestry workers have been calling on the Horgan government to create a coastal forestry aid package similar to a $69-million fund announced earlier this year for the Interior forestry sector that helps retrain employees who have lost their job. The pending announceme­nt for the coast does not appear to match the Interior package.

“It’s hard to get job stabilizat­ion funds in play when it’s a dispute that’s between two parties. That’s not the case with the curtailmen­ts in the Interior. Those are decisions being made to rationaliz­e the industry,” said Horgan.

Horgan said that North Island NDP MLA and Transporta­tion Minister Claire Trevena deserves credit for holding difficult town hall meetings with frustrated forestry workers and contractor­s in her constituen­cy, but that his government has directly heard their concerns.

“We hear it loud and clear,” said Horgan. “It’s a very difficult time and then when it comes at Christmas it’s compounded when it comes to the people and the families that are affected and I feel terrible.”

Critics of the NDP’s forestry policies have said the government’s additional fees on raw log exports, penalties on wood waste, refusal to intervene on stumpage fees and vetoes on Crown tenure swaps have exacerbate­d the crisis facing the sector due to a shortage of timber supply, low prices in the U.S. and the softwood lumber trade dispute.

Horgan said his policies are not to blame for the forestry downturn, and that his government is doing what it can to improve the sector.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? John Horgan
John Horgan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada