Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. promises $50M to get at fire-damaged wood

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2023 04:53 PM
  • B.C. promises $50M to get at fire-damaged wood

VANCOUVER - British Columbia Premier David Eby is promising $50 million from the upcoming budget to help transfer fire-damaged wood from remote areas to pulp mills.

Eby told the Truck Loggers Association Convention in Vancouver that will mean more work for forestry contractors hauling fibre that would otherwise be too costly or remote to access.

The premier says the money would be funnelled through the Forest Enhancement Society of B.C., with the goal of keeping those in the industry working.

The premier says the forestry industry is "clearly in crisis" and that means industry and government need to "find new ways of doing business."

At the association's first in-person convention in three years, Eby highlighted the $90-million B.C. manufacturing jobs fund targeting rural communities affected by the downturn, and a new agreement around land management signed this week with the Blueberry River First Nations.

That agreement provides a two-year plan for timber supply in northeastern B.C., while the nation and government negotiate longer-term agreements.

MORE National ARTICLES

Officer killed in B.C. avalanche was mentor: chief

Officer killed in B.C. avalanche was mentor: chief
Const. Wade Tittemore, 43, died Monday while off-duty, skiing with a colleague just north of Kaslo, B.C. Nelson police Chief Donovan Fisher said Tuesday that Tittemore will be missed terribly in the small force of 20 officers.

Officer killed in B.C. avalanche was mentor: chief

Altercation between parties results in overnight shooting in Whalley, lands one in hospital

Altercation between parties results in overnight shooting in Whalley, lands one in hospital
On Tuesday, at approximately 2:20 a.m., Surrey RCMP received multiple 911 calls that a man had been shot near a convenience store in the 13100-block of 104 Avenue. Police attended and located a 44-year-old man suffering from gunshot wounds. The victim was transported to hospital with serious injuries.

Altercation between parties results in overnight shooting in Whalley, lands one in hospital

Air passenger protection rights under spotlight

Air passenger protection rights under spotlight
Canada should make it so air travellers are automatically entitled to compensation from airlines when their flights are disrupted, rather than having to make claims on their own, a passenger advocate said Tuesday.

Air passenger protection rights under spotlight

RCMP seeking public assistance following road rage assault in North Vancouver

RCMP seeking public assistance following road rage assault in North Vancouver
On January 4th at approximately 1:00 p.m. Officers responded to a road rage incident near Mount Seymour Parkway and Lillooet Road in North Vancouver. Bystanders called 911 after the occupants of two vehicles exiting the Superstore parking lot entered into an altercation.

RCMP seeking public assistance following road rage assault in North Vancouver

Accused shoplifter allegedly threw hot soup in the face of a 70 year old female convenience store worker: Vancouver Police

Accused shoplifter allegedly threw hot soup in the face of a 70 year old female convenience store worker: Vancouver Police
The 70-year-old victim was injured when she tried to stop the would-be thief. The suspect, who was carrying a cup of instant noodles, allegedly threw the soup in the woman’s face and on her clothes. The suspect fled the store, but was arrested nearby after Vancouver Police responded to a 9-1-1 call from a witness.

Accused shoplifter allegedly threw hot soup in the face of a 70 year old female convenience store worker: Vancouver Police

Police officer killed in B.C. avalanche

Police officer killed in B.C. avalanche
The Nelson Police Board said the two were on snowmobiles about 70 kilometres north of the city when they were engulfed. The Avalanche Canada website rated the avalanche risk at a three on its five-point scale, meaning the danger was "considerable."

Police officer killed in B.C. avalanche