Forest industry cuts continue in B.C. as Teal-Jones halts harvesting on coast
VICTORIA — The latest shutdown announcement from a wood products firm in British Columbia threatens the jobs of 800 employees in what the province’s forests minister concedes is an industry “correction.”
Teal-Jones Group vice-president Gerrie Kotze said Tuesday 300 logging contractors on Vancouver Island and the Fraser Valley are out of work immediately and 500 people employed at the company’s two lumber, shake and shingle mills in Surrey will likely be out of work in a matter of weeks as timber supplies run out.
In the last few months, B.C. forest companies, citing low lumber prices, high operating costs and dwindling timber supplies, have announced closures or curtailments in more than two dozen mills that have resulted in hundreds of lost jobs and rocked communities.
“It’s an indefinite shut down, and obviously, we intend to restart those operations as soon as possible,” said Kotze. “It could be painful. It is of course impossible to predict when we will see a more sustained recovery in lumber prices. The sooner the better for us.”