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British Columbia

West Fraser sees earnings increase after closing B.C., U.S. mills

Approximately 1 in 10 jobs being lost in Fraser Lake, helping boost profits for Vancouver-based company.

Company says it is seeing early financial benefits from recent closures of some of its lumber mills

Piles of logs are pictured at a sawmill.
West Fraser Timber Co.'s closure of its sawmill in Fraser Lake, B.C., is expected to impact 175 employees, the company says. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

West Fraser Timber Co. says it earned $35 millionUS in its first quarter, up from a loss of $42 millionUS a year earlier.

The Vancouver-based company says sales totalled $1.63 billion US, unchanged from a year earlier. Earnings per diluted share were 42 cents US, compared with a loss of 52 cents during the same quarter last year.

West Fraser president and CEO Sean McLaren says the company is already seeing early financial benefits from the recent closures of some of its higher-cost lumber mills.

Earlier this year, West Fraser announced it was permanently closing a sawmill in Fraser Lake, B.C., shuttering another in Maxville, Fla., and indefinitely curtailing operations at its Huttig, Ark., sawmill.

The company said the decision to close down operations in Fraser Lake, roughly 140 kilometres west of Prince George, wasdue to an inability to access economically viable fibre in the region.

The job losses represent about onein 10 people in the community with an estimated 175 jobs disappearing in the village of approximately965 people.

The community held emergency meetings ahead of the planned shutdown, set to take place in May, with many expressing fear about the future of the community.

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Mayor Sarrah Storey has saidwhile some are able to take retirement packages, the future for most residents remains unclear though she is hopeful other economic opportunities can be found.

West Fraser has said it will help employees who want to relocate to job sites in its other locations.

Earlier this month, West Fraser announced it and Mercer International Inc. were dissolving their joint venture in Cariboo Pulp and Paper, with West Fraser to be the sole owner and operator.

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With files from CBC News