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British Columbia

Some forestry jobs returning to B.C. Interior after transfer of logging rights from shuttered mill

The transfer of Canfors Vavenby forest tenure to Interfor has been approved by the B.C. government.

B.C. government approves Vavenby forest tenure transfer from Canfor to Interfor

A close up shot of logs in a pile
Canfor's forest tenure near Vavenby in B.C.'s central Interior has been transferred to an Interfor lumber mill at Adams Lake which means some forestry workers in the area could be going back to work soon. (Erik White/CBC )

More timber harvesting jobs are expectedin B.C.'s central Interiornow that forest tenures from Canfor'sformersawmill in Vavenby havebeen transferred to lumber producer InterforCorp.

The B.C. government announced the long-awaitedtransfer Friday.

Clearwater MayorMerlin Blackwellhas been an outspoken criticof delays intransferring logging rights to another company after the nearby Vavenby mill closed in June2019, throwingmore than 170 people out of work in the area north of Kamloops.

"I'm so glad that the wait is over on this," he said.

"It may take a couple ... more weeks or months to get back to full operations, but it's what's needed to happen to give everybodya new future."

The transfer will give Interfor access to an annual cut of 349,000 cubic metres of wood to feed its Adams Lake Lumber Division located south of Clearwater and Vavenby.

"It's a clear positive for the staff of our Adams Lake region specifically, but also for the community within the region," said Marvin Juravsky, senior vice-president and CFO at Interfor.

Juravsky said having this additional tenure to support the Adams Lake sawmill is important in making sure that mill has a long future ahead of it, given the current state of the forestry industry in B.C.

There weresurprisecommunity benefits for Blackwell inFriday's announcement. The District ofClearwater will receive a $200,000 legacy fund from Canfor to be used at the district's discretion. An additional $500,000 will be given to the Wells Gray Community Forest and $150,000 will go to the United Way.

"People know where they stand now, they can start making plans, they can continue to decide to make truck payments," Blackwell said. "A lot of people can start breathing again."

"I'm just hoping the government can speed this up in the future so that the next time it comes, all the lessons learned from us can speed it up for the next community that has to go through this," Blackwell said.

Ravi Kahlon, B.C.'s parliamentary secretary for Forests, Lands and Natural Resources, said the companies were still changing their proposals 10 days ago.

"It's hard to make a decision when the actual proposals are still changing. It was in no one's interest to delay this longer than it needs to be."

Now that the government approval has come through, Canfor and Interfor can move forward with closing the deal. The agreement is expected to be completed this spring.

When the possibility of a change in ownership oftimber rights was first announced in June, leaders of the Simpcw First Nation,located between Kamloops andClearwater, said they weren't consulted and had hoped to acquire at least some of the land tenure.

Kahlon said the B.C. government is in discussions with the Simpcw.

"We've agreed that there are some issues there that we still need to resolve," he said.

With files from Jenifer Norwell