Path: cs.ubc.ca!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!unixg.ubc.ca!unixg.ubc.ca!gauvreau
From: gauvreau@unixg.ubc.ca (Gwethalyn Gauvreau)
Newsgroups: bc.general
Subject: Overlogging and Jobs
Date: 13 Oct 93 13:57:38 GMT
Organization: The University of British Columbia
Lines: 60
Distribution: bc
Message-ID: <gauvreau.750520658@unixg.ubc.ca>
NNTP-Posting-Host: unixg.ubc.ca


Recently Vaughn Palmer has been discussing the implications of the handful
of timber supply reports commissioned by the government and now completed.
 (Vancouver Sun, Oct. 6 - 8).  Robert Smits in is recent post allows that
there has been some overlogging in some areas.  The government's own
reports state that so far all the areas have been extensively overlogged
in relation to sustainability.  For example the midcoast area centered on
Bella
Bella the approved cut was 3 times what could be sustained in the long run.
It is my belief that almost everyone not blinded by fear of losing their
livlihood knows that BC has been extensively overlogged and that we are
facing a severe downturn in the logging industry not due to
environmentalist acitivity but due to very short term thinking.  If we
think in the long term with the goal of keeping the industry going beyond
say the next 20 years then we are facing a cut in AAC of 14 to 20%.  A cut
of only 10% will result in the loss of 30,000 jobs and a mini-recession
for BC. Basically the human cost will be borne by the workers who now
misguidedly support the large corporations.  Since when has the company
really concerned itself with the workers?  Many people I have spoken to
who have dealt with the big forest companies on the management level have
told me that they all knew this was coming 15 to 20 years ago.  They are
going to take the money and run and leave the workers to pay the price.  I
feel so frustatrated listening to the workers who support the companies.
You have been fooled into thinking that those of us who don't want to lose
the last remaining forests before the inevitable industry decline are  the
enemy.  We are not.  As far as I can see, we are the only ones asking for
company support for retraining, the only ones who are trying to stress the
importance of secondary industries, of locally worker owned forest
industries and the only ones willing to put ourselves on the line to make
the public aware.  

Basically a lot of the forest industry workers have been at the trough too
and they have been paid salaries of$80,000 and more a year to cut the
trees down.  To me this is the way the forest companies have bribed the
workers into sharing the guilt but the big profits are going into other
pockets and all of us in BC are going to be left to pick up the pieces. 
For many of the people involved in logging it is going to be very
difficult to face how they have been complicit in the exceedlingly poor
management of resources that belong to all of us.  But as the facts come
in it will become clearer and clearer that we have been overcutting for
years and that even after you cut all the old growth, the forest industry
will still have to lay off thousands of workers.  

Did you know that the eastern coast of Russia has forests like British
Columbia had 150 years ago?  That the forest companies invest their
money for maximum return anywhere in the world and feel no loyality to BC
in particular?

For all of you who are spouting the forest industry line because your
livlihood depends on it, wouldn't it be better to face the truth that the
industry is dying because of greedy mismanagement and your security would
be better served by coming up with ways to deal with the inevitable decline
of the industry?  There is no large corporation that has ever taken
resposibility for its workers when there was no profit in doing so and I
predict that many of you will be repaid for your loyality with lay off
notices.

The environmentalists are not the enemy, we are the whistleblowers.  It
isn't the news you want to hear but I think it is the truth and we may be
better friends to the workers than you think.


