Many of us grew up in an era when everyone knew someone who worked at a lumber or pulp mill, or drove a logging truck, or wielded a chainsaw in the woods.
It wasnB次元官网网址檛 long ago that B.C. was so synonymous with logging that even Monty Python could joke about B次元官网网址渢he mighty rivers of British ColumbiaB次元官网网址 in the lumberjack sketch. If you knew nothing else about B.C., you knew it was where men in plaid cut down big trees.
Up into the 1980s and early 1990s, even suburban communities like Langley, Surrey, and Maple Ridge had shorelines dotted with mills.
Remember the old Interfor mill in Fort Langley? Remember how Fort Langley used to be a sort of quaint little village that had a couple of museums, but was still largely a blue-collar town?
Those days are fading fast, and the recent provincial budget shows how much B.C.B次元官网网址檚 economic relationship with forestry has transformed over the space of a single generation.
Forestry is unquestionably in crisis right now, with mills shutting down, a debilitating labour dispute just ended, and low lumber prices and allowable cuts weighing on the whole industry.
The governmentB次元官网网址檚 response has been decidedly mixed.
But if it were any other non-resource industry that was in this kind of trouble B次元官网网址 if there was a slump in software or mass layoffs at a couple of retail chains B次元官网网址 you wouldnB次元官网网址檛 see the kind of breathless media coverage the forestry crisis has received.
We still think of British Columbia as somehow grounded in forestry. And while itB次元官网网址檚 a big industry, itB次元官网网址檚 not the biggest, and it hasnB次元官网网址檛 been in quite a while.
Go back to 1991 B次元官网网址 the earliest year for which numbers are available from BC Statistics B次元官网网址 and 97,000 people were employed in forestry, mills, and forestry support activities. In 2017, that was down to 51,793, down to barely more than half its previous total.
Meanwhile, B.C.B次元官网网址檚 population in 1991 was 3.3 million. TodayB次元官网网址檚 population is five million. Forestry is an ever smaller portion of an ever larger economic pie.
Population increases in B.C. year-over-year have been running at more than 70,000 people, a historic high.
ThatB次元官网网址檚 more people than even work in the industry, coming to this province every year for several years running. ItB次元官网网址檚 jobs being created in homebuilding, manufacturing, technology, education, tourism, and retail, and countless other jobs that have nothing to do with forestry.
This is, in many ways, a good news story. B.C.B次元官网网址檚 unemployment remains low, and the economy is far more diversified than when it was a three-legged stool based on forestry, fishing, and mining. When the forestry industry caught a cold in the 1970s or 1980s, it was enough to sicken the entire economy.
Now, the worst crisis in decades is hitting many communities and shops hard B次元官网网址 but it isnB次元官网网址檛 devastating the whole of the province. The forestry industry needs help, but itB次元官网网址檚 not the jobs driver it once was.