Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Softwood Lumber Envoy Says Long-Term Deal Needed With U.S.

The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2017 12:30 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's trade envoy on softwood lumber says the province is ready to fight on behalf of its lumber producers, but isn't looking to become embroiled in a costly and lengthy legal battle with the United States.
     
    David Emerson was in Washington, D.C., this week meeting with U.S. trade officials, senators and representatives of the National Association of Homebuilders about the expired trade deal between Canada and the U.S.
     
    "We're not negotiating, but we're certainly setting the table, and I conveyed to the people I met with that British Columbia, as much of the rest of Canada, is not anxious to take a long, costly damaging (litigation) process," he said in a telephone news conference Wednesday.
     
    "We would like to see softwood lumber resolved in a more reasonable, fact-based framework."
     
    Emerson described his hour-long meeting with Oregon Senator Ron Wyden, one of the U.S. Lumber Coalition's chief advocates, as "prickly."
     
    The coalition representing lumber producers filed a petition last November asking the U.S. Department of Commerce and the U.S. International Trade Commission to limit Canadian lumber shipments.
     
    The group claimed Canada unfairly subsidizes its lumber industry, harming American workers who are experiencing mounting unemployment.
     
    Emerson said he's leaving the meetings feeling the Americans are aware that B.C. and Canada are looking to find a deal and are prepared to fight.
     
    The former federal cabinet minister said he also sensed the U.S. is still transitioning to President Donald Trump's administration and is not yet ready to begin trade talks on softwood lumber.
     
    "All told, it was a very good trip, but the administration is still far from stabilized," Emerson said.
     
    Emerson also held meetings this week in Ottawa with Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and Quebec's representative to the U.S., Raymond Chretien.
     
    The 2006 Softwood Lumber Agreement between Canada and the United States expired on Oct. 12, 2015.
     
    Premier Christy Clark has said about 40 per cent of B.C.’s rural communities are dependent on forestry and the industry provides more than 60,000 direct jobs in the province.
     
    The value of lumber exports from B.C. to the U.S. last year was $4.6 billion. B.C. is Canada’s largest producer of softwood lumber, accounting for about half of national production.
     
    Emerson said the forest sector supports jobs on both sides of the border and is a "critical part" of America's home-building industry.
     
    "Litigation will only disrupt the market and create artificial constraints on timber supply that will benefit a select few timber barons and sawmill owners at the expense of American workers and consumers," he said in a statement.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border
    WINNIPEG — People have been walking across the United States border to claim refugee status for years, but a Winnipeg immigration lawyer says he's not used to seeing them cross over in the bitter cold.

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts
    TORONTO — Canada has long prided itself on being a multicultural nation that values inclusion, opening its borders to refugees and immigrants, no matter their ethnicity or religion.

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her
    HALIFAX — The husband of Nova Scotia's immigration minister has been taken into custody at a psychiatric hospital on charges he assaulted, threatened and choked her on New Year's Eve.

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal

    TORONTO — A woman who claimed her foot got caught in the pedals when she drove into a Costco storefront in London, Ont., and killed a child and her newborn sister lost her bid Wednesday to have her conviction quashed.

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal

    Dutch Prosecutors Seek 11-Yr Sentence For Alleged Cyber Bully, Wanted In Canada

    In an emotional closing statement, prosecutor Annet Kramer urged judges at a court in Amsterdam to sentence the 38-year-old suspect, identified only as Aydin C., to 10 years and eight months in prison

    Dutch Prosecutors Seek 11-Yr Sentence For Alleged Cyber Bully, Wanted In Canada

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia
    SYDNEY, Australia — A bail hearing has been postponed for one of three Quebecers accused of trying to import a large amount of cocaine into Australia last year.

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Melina Roberge, Quebecer Facing Drug Charge In Australia