Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

STAMER: Forestry isn’t a side industry — and if Premier Eby and Minister Parmar keep ignoring it, everything else will collapse with it


Premier Eby’s mandate letter to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar ordered the ministry to help the forestry sector achieve a harvest target of 45 million cubic metres per year—a staggering 50% increase over last year’s total.

That sounds good on paper. But it’s not going to happen. And when it doesn’t, you can already hear the excuses: permitting delays, overlapping consultations, a permitting backlog, and the usual regulatory maze.

Now there’s talk of Ottawa imposing quotas on Canadian softwood exports to the United States, a move that would add even more uncertainty. And you can bet this NDP government will use it as another excuse to stand back and let the annual allowable cut continue to slide further downward, pretending their hands are tied.

Well, we don’t have the luxury of pretending.

Even if the total harvest is only 30 million cubic metres, BC Timber Sales should still be producing at least 6 million. Instead, it’s on track to deliver less than three. That’s not sustainable—not for our mills, not for pulp and paper producers, and not for the forest communities that rely on that fibre.

We need fibre. We need certainty. And we need to keep our mills running.

Instead, BC’s forestry sector is being starved by red tape. The delays, the contradictory rules, and the constant shifting of the goalposts are putting people out of work and sending investment elsewhere. This is happening despite repeated promises from Premier Eby and Minister Parmar that permitting and approvals would be accelerated.

Six months after those promises, the situation is worse, not better.

So how would these rumoured quotas make things better? They won’t. If anything, they’ll make things worse—because it will be up to government to decide who gets to process and export softwood lumber to the U.S., with even more pressure on an already restricted fibre supply. Prices will rise, uncertainty will grow, and the fallout will hit hardest right here in BC, which produces 40% of all Canadian softwood lumber bound for the U.S.

Let’s not forget: quota systems have been proposed before, and the industry has consistently rejected them—because they don’t work. They’re messy, they’re political, and they come with added costs, including duties and tariffs that don’t go away just because a quota system is in place.

Meanwhile, Minister Parmar keeps showing up in forestry communities. He smiles for photos, holds round-tables, and assures people he’s listening.

But that’s not enough. The real problem isn’t lack of awareness—it’s lack of action.

There are systemic failures inside his ministry and across this NDP government. And until those are fixed, no amount of touring or talking will solve the crisis in forestry. 

One of the biggest systemic failures? Stumpage. BC has the highest cost for fibre anywhere in North America. That puts our mills at a competitive disadvantage before a single tree is even cut.

Stumpage needs a full reset. Not a Band-Aid. Not a temporary tweak. If there’s going to be a new softwood lumber deal tied to a broader Canada-U.S.-Mexico free trade agreement, this is the moment to finally overhaul our outdated stumpage system. Sadly, I don’t believe this government will do it. Instead, they’ll keep jacking up rates and driving more operators out of business.

So is it fair to say Premier Eby and Minister Parmar are abandoning forestry communities?

It certainly looks that way.

We don’t know yet how hard quotas and duties will hit our sector—but we do know this: 
there will be more curtailments. More shutdowns. More people out of work. And unless something changes, pulp mills will be next.

What do forestry families need? Not another speech. Not another loan. They need real solutions:

  • Cut the red tape and fast-track permitting and Indigenous consultation processes that are now taking years instead of months.
  • Legislate a guaranteed fibre access floor for BC Timber Sales, so that mills know supply won’t fall below a minimum threshold.
  • Reset the stumpage formula to reflect market realities, not political games.


Forestry should be a renewable, sustainable industry. But it also needs to be an investable one. If we want it to remain the backbone of BC’s economy—for this generation and the next—we need to act now.

Every week brings more signs that this province is heading toward a record deficit—rumoured to be between $16 and $18 billion.

If this government doesn’t get serious about forestry, it won’t have the financial base to fund healthcare, education, social programs, or the infrastructure BC needs to move forward.

Forestry isn’t a side industry. It’s the backbone of BC’s economy—and if Premier Eby and Minister Parmar keep ignoring it, everything else will collapse with it.


Ward Stamer is the former Mayor of Barriere. Elected in October 2024, Ward is now the BC Conservative MLA for Kamloops – North Thompson and Opposition Critic for Forests.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Budget 2027: After a Decade of Decline, NDP Budget Delivers an Assault on Seniors, Working Families, and Small Businesses

Peter Milobar, BC Conservative Finance Critic, condemned the NDP government’s latest budget as the result of a decade of decline that has left British Columbians broke, unsafe, and paying more for less.   “After ten years of NDP mismanagement, this budget is an assault on seniors, working families, and the small businesses that drive our economy,” said Milobar. “The NDP have turned their back on the people working hardest to make ends meet and the seniors who built this province.” Milobar pointed to a new $1.1 billion annual income tax increase and warned that the government is piling new costs onto households already struggling with affordability.   “This government keeps asking British Columbians for more, while delivering less,” Milobar said. “The question people are asking is simple: Where has all the money gone?” Milobar noted that BC has gone from a surplus in the first year of NDP government to a projected deficit of more than $13 billion this year, while prov...

WARD STAMER -- Those are REAL forestry numbers, not just made-up numbers

The following is a condensed version of remarks Kamloops – North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer’s made, regarding Forestry, in the BC Legislature, on Tuesday afternoon (02/24/2026)   Let’s talk a little bit, when we talk about Budget 2026, about the forest industry, which is near and dear to my heart. Forestry remains one of British Columbia’s foundational industries. It’s a pillar that built this province. Entire communities depend upon it. Interior towns, northern communities, Vancouver Island regions, the Kootenays, the Lower Mainland, with manufacturing facilities in Surrey and Maple Ridge, just to name a few — everywhere in BC is touched by forestry. One word that was not mentioned in Budget 2026 was forestry. That’s a shame, an incredible shame. It wasn’t an oversight – it was intentional. This government has driven forestry into the ground .... INTO THE GROUND! We can talk a little bit about some of the initiatives that this government has brought forth, to try to resurrect ...

FORSETH -- Before anyone gets excited about one poll showing a candidate with a 25 percent lead, and 44 percent support overall, let’s give it a few more weeks

Is this based in reality -- how accurate are the numbers? In the past couple of weeks a couple of candidates, for the leadership of the BC Conservative Party, have been presenting polling results that they lead the pack – one even going so far as to say they have a lock on 44% of those who will be voting, and a twenty-five percent lead over the individual ranked second. I am going to say that this one, from Kerry-Lynne Findlay, is highly suspect. First of all the company conducting the poll, ERG National Research, is not a Member of Industry Bodies (the Canadian Research Insights Council), meaning they do not adhere to established industry standards for research, such as transparency, privacy, and methodological rigor. AI Overview states that ... based on alerts from the Canadian Research Insights Council (CRIC) and reports, ERG National Research should be treated with extreme caution regarding its reliability, and legitimacy, in conducting political polling. Before I even read this in...

Labels

Show more