Clearwater Times: Bridges Project
This is an example of actions to contribute to community diversification and shows the influence HFHC had in Clearwater, BC.
Category Archives: External Documents
Statement – National Forest Week celebrates forests, communities
Statement – National Forest Week celebrates forests, communities
Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations
The Future of BC Forests
The Future of BC Forests
Bill Bourgeois, PhD RPF, BC Forest Professional
National Forest Week theme announced
Mid-Term Timber Supply Mitigation Options
Mid-Term Timber Supply Mitigation Options
Kevin Kriese, ADM
Presentation made to the Legislative Committee on Timber Supply showing the results of various option analyses.
Conserving lands and prosperity
Abstract – Conserving lands and prosperity: Seeking a proper balance between conservation and development in the Rocky Mountain West (full article).
This article supports the community identified need for a diversified economy.
Special committee to examine mid-term timber supply
Special committee to examine mid-term timber supply
Press Release – BC Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations
Provincial-Level Projection of the Current Mountain Pine Beetle Outbreak
Provincial-Level Projection of the Current Mountain Pine Beetle Outbreak
Update of the infestation projection based on the Provincial Aerial Overview Surveys of Forest Health conducted from 1999 through 2011 and the BCMPB model (year 9)
Adrian Walton, BC Forest Service
Our Natural Advantage: Forest Sector Strategy for British Columbia
Our Natural Advantage: Forest Sector Strategy for British Columbia
Building on the Report of the Working Roundtable on Forestry.
BC Belongs to British Columbians
BC Belongs to British Columbians
Current trends being experienced in the field are disturbing and leave many people wondering whether the government of today has abandoned the concept of sustainability and the notion of ‘stewarding the land for the future’. BC’s Crown lands are being treated as ‘government land’ that the Province can do with what they want – with seeming little respect for public ownership, economic sustainability and the Crown’s obligation to honor the claims of First Nations.
