Close X
Saturday, December 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2018 12:35 PM
    VICTORIA — Premier John Horgan says the relationship between British Columbia and the forest industry has fractured over outdated government policy that hurts communities and threatens many small business contractors.
     
     
    He told delegates at the Truck Loggers Association's convention on Thursday that the once solid social contract between the industry, government and communities is in need of repairs.
     
     
    The premier didn't promise any changes in policy during his 30-minute address, saying his government is awaiting recommendations of an industry sustainability review from former Liberal cabinet minister George Abbott within the next month.
     
     
    "We want to try and reconnect the social licence that existed over the decades in B.C.," he said.
     
     
    Horgan said previous Liberal government policy introduced in 2003 allowed forest companies to ship timber to mills of their choice. The result was industry bypassing communities and small contractors even though the timber is located close to their homes, he said.
     
     
    "Clearly, 14 years later it's not working for you," he said. "It's not working for communities, and it's not working for the province."
     
     
    Horgan said the conversation about reconnecting the industry with B.C.'s towns will not be easy but it's one the province must undertake.
     
     
    "It's a certainty in many communities that the relationship between tenure holders in the community has been broken. It's in all our interests to make sure we re-establish that relationship in the days, weeks and months ahead."
     
     
    Horgan said he's deeply concerned about increases in the export of raw logs from B.C. since the policy changes.
     
     
    "When we see raw log exports, log exports from public land, rise from eight per cent in 2003 to 23 per cent last year, that raises questions and concerns in communities," he said. "It raises questions and concerns with me."
     
     
    He said that amounted to 1.6 billion cubic metres of raw logs exported from the province last year.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Two Indians Charged With Smuggling Cigarettes Into US

    Through internet negotiations, two Indian men reached an agreement for a 20-foot container to be shipped from India to Miami laden with counterfeit Newport brand cigarettes.

    Two Indians Charged With Smuggling Cigarettes Into US

    WATCH: Sikh TV Campaign 'We Are Sikhs' Increased Positive View Of Community

    WATCH: Sikh TV Campaign 'We Are Sikhs' Increased Positive View Of Community
    Sikh campaigners who ran a $1.5 million TV campaign have said that it helped in increasing Americans' understanding of the community even though the US is in a period of rising communal tensions.

    WATCH: Sikh TV Campaign 'We Are Sikhs' Increased Positive View Of Community

    Indian-Origin Doctor Manish Shah Linked To 118 Sexual Offences Gets Bail

    A London-based Indian-origin doctor charged with 118 sexual offences, including one involving a 13-year-old girl, has been granted bail by a UK court.

    Indian-Origin Doctor Manish Shah Linked To 118 Sexual Offences Gets Bail

    Satya Nadella Criticises Trump's Stance To End Deferred Action For Childhood Arrivals

    Soon after it was reported that US President Donald Trump may roll back the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith have criticised the presidential stance.

    Satya Nadella Criticises Trump's Stance To End Deferred Action For Childhood Arrivals

    US Must Declare Pakistan State Sponsor Of Terrorism: Former US Senator

    US Must Declare Pakistan State Sponsor Of Terrorism: Former US Senator
    President Trump criticised Pakistan for providing safe havens to terror groups that kill Americans in Afghanistan while announcing his new Afghan and South Asia policy.

    US Must Declare Pakistan State Sponsor Of Terrorism: Former US Senator

    Finance To Freedom: A Businesswoman Finds Salvation In Buddhism

    Finance To Freedom: A Businesswoman Finds Salvation In Buddhism
    Emma Slade, 51, is an unusual Buddhist nun in Bhutan. The course of her life changed drastically after a visit to Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, in 1997.

    Finance To Freedom: A Businesswoman Finds Salvation In Buddhism