We need to get rid of the bother provincial and federal governments. Canada is a resource based economy! Get government out of the way and bring back jobs! I have always voted Conservative.
The BC Wildfire Service needs a complete overhaul. Citizens dont need to be exposed to 14km long back burns that burn their communities down like what happened last year in the North Shuswap.
The more I get to know John the more I agree with his ideas. Pls John 1st 3 things to solve in your 1st month. SOGI, Drugs, Carbon tax. Then on from there.
Where will all the timber come from to build the 3.9 million new houses Trudeau and EBY dream of. Or will we keep our natural resources pristine and import lumber from some other supplier without the restrictions placed upon our ethically produced forest industry, kind of like bringing in Saudi oil to Irving refineries in Atlantic Canada instead of from Western Canada. Why is lumber so expensive? Wonder why houses cost more to build?
You can thank our Prime Minister and the current premier as they are on the same program they want to completely eliminate not just the forest industry but every industry and we don't have much left.
NDP are not capable of running BC. Except to line the pockets of big party donors. Eby lost all support when he didn't stand by the other premiers against the carbon tax.
Quite a few mines running in bc that give a lot more jobs and revenue to the province for years while forest and mill jobs are being eliminated rapidly.
Vancouver Victoria urban versus rural is the whole story. I'd add E. Vancouver Island, in fact the whole of Van Island is full of retired Tilley hat former government bureaucrats from all over Canada. They got their pensions and they never worked a real day's work in their lives and they keep voting liberal or NDP.
How about we reinvent the lumber industry and sell to the Canadian market to build our own houses. Stop trying to bust into the American market and allowing them to raise tariffs and prices.
Ban open fires, Make electric companies have a huge swath around Is power lines, and every campground should have a closed fire pit. You can also take DNA off of a cigarette butt that's been thrown on the side of the road and a fire has been started, then the person should be fined!
This piece was very disappointing, and I found that you two focused on opinion instead of fact. In their financial reports, Canfor keeps talking about how they are not able to “access economically viable fibre”, which is a cute way to say that it costs too much to get the wood for what the market will pay for it. Some basic research would tell you that it currently costs $500 to make 1000 board ft of wood that sells for $390. I find it very hard to believe that the permitting process is responsible for 25% of Canfor’s operating expense. What you also don’t address is how much money Canfor made during the pandemic when lumber was $1,734 per 1000 board ft. There were not a lot of complaints about government regulation three years ago, but I guess that’s easier when you’re making hundreds of millions of dollars per quarter. Canfor is absolutely blaming the government for a rough economic cycle.
@@QuantumMechanic343, what most people forget to calculate into the price of lumber, are stumpage fees. Which in B.C. is anywhere from $40-100 per cubic meter, based on what species being harvested. A logging truck can typically carry up to 40 cubic meters per truck. For a single truck the stumpage on the "raw" logs can anywhere from $1600 to $4000 per truck. That's what the province takes before any milling takes place. A 1000 board feet is 2.36 cubic meters of "finished" lumber. Once you calculate the waste from the milling process the cost of stumpage goes up on the finished product. So when lumber prices are low the government is taking the lions share, because stumpage fees are a fixed rate. If stumpage fees were tied into market fluctuations instead of being fixed, then forest companies could venture further out to get fiber for the mills. The high lumber prices during the pandemic were an anomaly not the norm. People had nothing better to do. They couldn't go on that $10,000 vacation, they started doing projects on their homes. I know, I'm a carpenter by trade, and almost overnight the building trades people couldn't keep up to the number of people wanting projects to be taken on. The law of supply and demand kicked in, and lumber prices shot up. Mills and lumber companies don't set the prices, the stock market does, and the people who made all the money were the brokers dealing in lumber futures, buying up the production. For me the prices were so volatile, if a customer wanted a quote, that quote was only good for seven days.
@@andyfunke9484 Canfor is publicly traded, so we can actually see how much money they made when lumber prices were high, and it was hundreds of millions of dollars. Currently they are losing tens of millions of dollars, but that’s kind of how it goes in a business that is cyclical. Canfor is doing what they need to do to “appease their shareholders”, which is a lovely way to abstract away the fact that Jim Pattinson owns about ~50% of those shares. The cancelling of projects and closing of mills is capitalism/corporate greed, plain and simple. Aso, stumpage fees are not set at a fixed rate. Since 2004 they have fluctuated using the Market Price System that is spelled out in the Coast Appraisal Manual and the Interior Appraisal Manual. Some businesses actually complain about the market price system because it adds complexity by making it harder to estimate costs. While we’re on the topic of stumpage fees, I think it’s a good idea to remember what they represent. It’s important to remember that as British Columbians we are all owners of our forests, and the stumpage fee is what we, as a society, charge these companies to harvest the resource that we collectively own. As a British Columbian and part owner of our forests, I believe that stumpage fees are just compensation. Maybe you feel different about them, but I’m not really about giving away what I own to corporations, for free, who then use it to rake in millions of dollars in profits.
Climate change -- too many immigrants -- save canada 🇨🇦 Send them home -- save the tree's -- no polar ice caps left -- global warming -- money will destroy canada --- wait for a few plaques to come Big trouble on the way -- trust me .....
Governments power creep is getting disturbing.
Centralized Government policy is disturbing. Ignoring the rights of Provincial governing powers.
J Rustad is right on the mark. Get government out of the way and they need to be small. Big government is a recipe for disaster.
The Federal Government needs to get out of the business of Provinces.
We need to get rid of the bother provincial and federal governments. Canada is a resource based economy! Get government out of the way and bring back jobs! I have always voted Conservative.
I have been living here in British Columbia now for 35 years
I have yet to see a government in this province who wants any kind of industry at all
The BC Wildfire Service needs a complete overhaul. Citizens dont need to be exposed to 14km long back burns that burn their communities down like what happened last year in the North Shuswap.
The more I get to know John the more I agree with his ideas. Pls John 1st 3 things to solve in your 1st month. SOGI, Drugs, Carbon tax. Then on from there.
Where will all the timber come from to build the 3.9 million new houses Trudeau and EBY dream of. Or will we keep our natural resources pristine and import lumber from some other supplier without the restrictions placed upon our ethically produced forest industry, kind of like bringing in Saudi oil to Irving refineries in Atlantic Canada instead of from Western Canada. Why is lumber so expensive? Wonder why houses cost more to build?
Houses built in the east are built with brick and stone. Houses built of wood are temporary houses. Easily destroyed.
You can thank our Prime Minister and the current premier as they are on the same program they want to completely eliminate not just the forest industry but every industry and we don't have much left.
NDP are not capable of running BC. Except to line the pockets of big party donors. Eby lost all support when he didn't stand by the other premiers against the carbon tax.
BC should be booming.
THIS IS ALL INTENTIONAL
yup. just made the same comment.
Yup the WEF.
foretsry made BC .
Quite a few mines running in bc that give a lot more jobs and revenue to the province for years while forest and mill jobs are being eliminated rapidly.
Vancouver Victoria urban versus rural is the whole story. I'd add E. Vancouver Island, in fact the whole of Van Island is full of retired Tilley hat former government bureaucrats from all over Canada. They got their pensions and they never worked a real day's work in their lives and they keep voting liberal or NDP.
As an islander, I find there are more and more people waking up (thank god) so I’m hopeful there will be a major shift!
Now you know why we have a carbon tax ; to make up for the loss of income from the resource sector .
I’m definitely voting BC Conservative.
Me too voting conservatives I have high hopes for John and the BC Conservatives
Is Ebby the premier of bc with the wef?
John rustad for premier. Get rid of eby sogi and the ndp
yes, yes, yes get rid of Eby, Dix and Bonnie Henry
Rustad is an MLA not an MP. He is a member of the legislature not parliament.
Yet we keep raw log exporting?
NDP NFG
yes it is canfor buying up all the mills, then closes them all., now its buying mills ,in Alberta and closed them next ?
How about we reinvent the lumber industry and sell to the Canadian market to build our own houses. Stop trying to bust into the American market and allowing them to raise tariffs and prices.
how many mills / has canfor bought up and closed ? 300 Mills, 700 mills ? over the years ?,,,
BC never gets it. Too many liberals and NDP supporters there. They are ruining that province
Ban open fires, Make electric companies have a huge swath around Is power lines, and every campground should have a closed fire pit. You can also take DNA off of a cigarette butt that's been thrown on the side of the road and a fire has been started, then the person should be fined!
lower costs... i hope he doesnt mean the guys that get it out of the bush ... get a pay cut...
share
ignoring climate change
Not ignoring but Liberal NDP using it as a cash cow is not the answer
This piece was very disappointing, and I found that you two focused on opinion instead of fact.
In their financial reports, Canfor keeps talking about how they are not able to “access economically viable fibre”, which is a cute way to say that it costs too much to get the wood for what the market will pay for it. Some basic research would tell you that it currently costs $500 to make 1000 board ft of wood that sells for $390. I find it very hard to believe that the permitting process is responsible for 25% of Canfor’s operating expense.
What you also don’t address is how much money Canfor made during the pandemic when lumber was $1,734 per 1000 board ft. There were not a lot of complaints about government regulation three years ago, but I guess that’s easier when you’re making hundreds of millions of dollars per quarter.
Canfor is absolutely blaming the government for a rough economic cycle.
Government policy is the most important factor in a "rough economic cycle"
@@shanewoolsey940 Rake in the 100s of millions of $$ in the good times, and blame the government in the rough times.
@@QuantumMechanic343, what most people forget to calculate into the price of lumber, are stumpage fees. Which in B.C. is anywhere from $40-100 per cubic meter, based on what species being harvested. A logging truck can typically carry up to 40 cubic meters per truck. For a single truck the stumpage on the "raw" logs can anywhere from $1600 to $4000 per truck. That's what the province takes before any milling takes place. A 1000 board feet is 2.36 cubic meters of "finished" lumber. Once you calculate the waste from the milling process the cost of stumpage goes up on the finished product. So when lumber prices are low the government is taking the lions share, because stumpage fees are a fixed rate. If stumpage fees were tied into market fluctuations instead of being fixed, then forest companies could venture further out to get fiber for the mills. The high lumber prices during the pandemic were an anomaly not the norm. People had nothing better to do. They couldn't go on that $10,000 vacation, they started doing projects on their homes. I know, I'm a carpenter by trade, and almost overnight the building trades people couldn't keep up to the number of people wanting projects to be taken on. The law of supply and demand kicked in, and lumber prices shot up. Mills and lumber companies don't set the prices, the stock market does, and the people who made all the money were the brokers dealing in lumber futures, buying up the production. For me the prices were so volatile, if a customer wanted a quote, that quote was only good for seven days.
@@andyfunke9484 Canfor is publicly traded, so we can actually see how much money they made when lumber prices were high, and it was hundreds of millions of dollars. Currently they are losing tens of millions of dollars, but that’s kind of how it goes in a business that is cyclical.
Canfor is doing what they need to do to “appease their shareholders”, which is a lovely way to abstract away the fact that Jim Pattinson owns about ~50% of those shares. The cancelling of projects and closing of mills is capitalism/corporate greed, plain and simple.
Aso, stumpage fees are not set at a fixed rate. Since 2004 they have fluctuated using the Market Price System that is spelled out in the Coast Appraisal Manual and the Interior Appraisal Manual. Some businesses actually complain about the market price system because it adds complexity by making it harder to estimate costs. While we’re on the topic of stumpage fees, I think it’s a good idea to remember what they represent. It’s important to remember that as British Columbians we are all owners of our forests, and the stumpage fee is what we, as a society, charge these companies to harvest the resource that we collectively own. As a British Columbian and part owner of our forests, I believe that stumpage fees are just compensation. Maybe you feel different about them, but I’m not really about giving away what I own to corporations, for free, who then use it to rake in millions of dollars in profits.
BC has all kinds of fees that make it economically non viable during downturns. Which previously, BC used to be the most economical
Climate change -- too many immigrants -- save canada 🇨🇦 Send them home -- save the tree's -- no polar ice caps left -- global warming -- money will destroy canada --- wait for a few plaques to come Big trouble on the way -- trust me .....