Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

Nearly 500 B.C. staff hit by Canfor restructuring

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2023 10:50 AM
  • Nearly 500 B.C. staff hit by Canfor restructuring

VANCOUVER - Canfor Corporation says as many as 157 employees face layoffs in one northern British Columbia town, but the company says it's too early to estimate job losses in a second community as the forest products firm restructures its B.C. operations.

Canfor announced Wednesday that it is permanently closing its sawmill and pellet plant in Chetwynd, west of Dawson Creek, and shuttering its sawmill in the Bulkley Valley town of Houston for an unspecified period while it builds a new facility there.

The Chetwynd closure is expected in April or May and the announcement came just two days after the mill reopened following a holiday curtailment, but a company statement says Canfor is "committed to supporting displaced employees," and where possible, it says they will top the list for hiring at other mills.

The statement says "it is too early in the redevelopment planning process to fully understand" how many of the 333 employees in Houston could be laid off as Canfor designs what it describes as a "globally competitive manufacturing facility" producing "high-value products."

Canfor president Don Kayne has said the company is making "difficult but necessary decisions to create a more sustainable operating footprint" in B.C., and an email sent late Wednesday says the company will "explore creative options" to retain as many employees as possible.

Opposition Liberal forestry critic Mike Bernier, who's riding encompasses Chetwynd, says in a social media post that he is "devastated" by the closure of the Chetwynd mill, which comes about a week after Canfor confirmed it would close the pulp line at its Prince George operation, costing 300 jobs by the end of this year.

A lack of available fibre for the mills is one reason for the restructuring and the company estimates the Chetwynd and Houston shutdowns will remove approximately 750 million board feet of annual production capacity, or the equivalent of enough lumber to build nearly 46,000 houses.

"Our goal is to match our mill capacity with the economically available fibre for harvest," Kayne said in his statement released Wednesday. "This is what will ultimately create greater stability for our employees and communities."

Forests Minister Bruce Ralston issued a statement responding to the Canfor restructuring and saying the B.C. government's immediate priority is to assist affected workers and provide community support teams.

The statement says the government welcomes Canfor's decision to build a new mill in Houston, producing higher-value products from a wood supply that has declined by more than 25 per cent since 2008, in part due to wildfires and the end of the harvest of beetle-killed timber.

MORE National ARTICLES

More details of travel vaccine mandate announced

More details of travel vaccine mandate announced
Residents who leave their remote communities to access essential services need not be vaccinated to board a plane, Omar Alghabra told a news conference outside Toronto International Pearson Airport.

More details of travel vaccine mandate announced

Manage risks, don't close border again: task force

Manage risks, don't close border again: task force
The task force, assembled by the D.C.-based Wilson Center, says a risk-management approach to the border would have been less disruptive and damaging than the "zero-risk" approach that was adopted.

Manage risks, don't close border again: task force

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales
A statement from the board says 726 commercial properties sold in the Lower Mainland between April and June, a nearly 115 per cent increase from sales in the same period last year.

Strong Vancouver Q2 commercial real estate sales

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man
The concierge was working at a hotel on Robson Street on October 8 when he confronted a man who had entered the parkade and was peering into cars. The man pulled out a knife and allegedly threatened the hotel employee, before fleeing out to the street.

VPD appeals for help to ID knife-wielding man

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023
Ten days of trial dates were set during a brief, virtual courtroom hearing this morning, three months after military police charged the former Canadian Armed Forces commander following a sexual misconduct investigation.

Former defence chief to go on trial in May 2023

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern
The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat says 240,000 employees have filed their attestations of their vaccine status to the government, out of approximately 268,000.

Federal vaccine rules raise human rights concern