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Bill Would Boost Rural Communities

The 21st Century Conservation Corps for Our Health and Our Jobs Act recently introduced by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) provides more than $15 billion for a wide variety of public lands projects that benefit rural communities and wildfire risk communities that includes everything from mechanical thinning and forest restoration to a relief fund for public lands guides and outfitters who have been hit hard by the COVID-19 crisis.

The pending legislation provides $5.5 billion to the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Bureau of Land Management to increase hazardous fuels reduction and thinning efforts, including commercially viable timber, with previously approved and environmentally reviewed projects taking priority. The bill would also create a $9 billion fund to train and hire people to restore watersheds and public lands, plus another $6 billion to put people to work tackling maintenance  projects and a maintenance backlog on Forest Service lands. The proposal also includes fire-related funds such as $100 million for agencies to purchase personal protective equipment for their employees, contractors and service workers; $150 million to the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program for community forest restoration and fire risk reduction; and another $500 million for restoration projects across federal, state and private lands.

Latest News

Weyerhaeuser Enhances Coastal Holdings

Weyerhaeuser Co. entered into two agreements with Forest Investment Associates to divest 69,600 acres in upstate South Carolina for $170 million, and to purchase 60,700 acres of high-quality timberlands in coastal North Carolina, South Carolina and Mississippi for $163 million…

Boise Cascade Curtails Chapman Sawmill

Boise Cascade announced an indefinite curtailment of its lumber production in Chapman, Ala. The curtailment will affect 80 positions. The plywood operations at the Chapman location are not part of the curtailment. Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act notification was provided to impacted employees and specifies that operations will cease on January 28, 2024…

WWPA’s Mathews Leaves A Legacy

James R. Mathews, known by most as Jim, was a WWPA Lumber Inspector and Master Lumberman, but is most remembered by his colleagues and those in the industry as a great friend and mentor. He died at the age of 74. Mathews spent 42 years working in the lumber industry. He began his career with Weyerhaeuser Co., Klamath Falls, Oregon in 1970. He worked in most of the planer mill positions until moving into the lumber grading department as a student grader in 1972…

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