3 minute read

Public Expectations Require Forest Professionals to Balance Competing Desires

By Christine Gelowitz, RPF, CEO Forest Professionals British Columbia

Societal expectations for B.C.’s forests are changing. How and where timber is harvested is being widely questioned and a large segment of the population wants to halt logging of all old, large trees. The role of Indigenous Peoples in forest management and ownership is rightly expanding. Forests are increasingly used for recreation, while wildfires, bugs, drought, and flooding impact forest health, the environment, and public safety.

These expectations require registered forest professionals to balance what the public wants with what government policies and laws require. But that presents an exciting opportunity. Forest professionals care about forests; this is their passion, what their education, experience, and training prepared them for. Forest professionals have university degrees or college diplomas; they have completed a twoyear articling process, passed a series of licensure examinations, and follow professional standards and codes. They are part of a regulated profession like accounting, medicine, or engineering. Forest professionals are accountable and willingly subject themselves to investigation and discipline overseen by the regulator, Forest Professionals British Columbia.

It is important to realize that forest professionals are not loggers and professional forestry is not logging. However, forest professionals do develop harvesting and other plans to ensure logging is done responsibly and meets the environmental and forestry laws the government has set.

Equally important is the fact that most of B.C.’s for- ests are publicly owned. This means the B.C. government, not forest professionals, decides how a forested area is to be used—for a park, wildlife habitat, harvested for timber and wood products, water management, or often, for multiples of these uses. Currently, about 15 per cent of B.C. forests have been set aside and protected, and each year less than 0.05 per cent of B.C.’s forests are harvested and then replanted.

Forest professionals see and recognize how climate change affects our forests, understanding active forest management is a form of climate action. They also understand the way wildfire was dealt with in the past no longer works in a changing climate.

Regardless of their personal views, forest professionals are required to fol- low the law, and keep public interest paramount when making recommendations on forest management decisions.

As professionals responsible for caring for and managing B.C.’s forests, they are constantly working to find an acceptable balance between legal (government-required) and non-legal (locally de- sired) priorities that often conflict with each other.

Forest professionals by themselves cannot make all the changes desired by segments of the public for how forests are used. Nor are they responsible for past practices some now disagree with. But their informed voices remain vital in helping all parties understand the ecological conse- quences of whatever policies and choices are introduced to meet the changing public desires around B.C.’s forests. Forest professionals are part of the solution to ensure B.C.’s forests are here for generations to come. SP

Source: Christine Gelowitz, RPF, Forest Professionals BC CEO.

We asked some recent sellers how they did with our new free equipment listing service. Here’s some of the responses:

“We listed a Cat 558 through the free listing service on SupplyPost.com. The next day I took a call from a qualified buyer and it was sold and on a truck within a few days. Now I’m listing my other one. Thanks Supply Post!” — Sean Mahovlic, Bristol Parts

“I posted a Cat 725 off-highway truck for sale on Supplypost.com as a Free listing, and it sold right away. Thanks Supply Post!”

— Larry Ofstie

FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1971

SIX LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

Victoria: 888-652-9139

Duncan: 866-746-1515

Nanaimo: 250-756-0026

Campbell River: 250-286-1151

Langford: 250-915-0350

Burnside (Parts): 250-384-0451

WE ARE HERE TO SUPPORT YOU!

· All our locations are open providing safe places to get your truck serviced · We will get the right parts delivered to your location.

Contacts

Ed Murray: 250-812-2925

Rob Nessel: 250-710-3626

Justin Jolicoeur: 250-668-7172

Garry Shelton: 250-715-5088

Craig Willett: 250-287-6169

Emily Polack: 250-480-8281

Ted Peterson: 604-240-6181

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS – WORK READY

TRI AXLE, TILT DECK TRAILERS. heavy duty hauling w/ easy load tilt deck performance. Platform cushioning cylinders w/ built in counterweights, and fold down approach plate. SPRING OR AIR SUSPENSION AVAIL.

Comes with aluminum wheels, belt boxes, recessed rollers in the deck. 25,000lb winch mounted on the front of the deck, with cordless remote. 9’ WIDE.

53’ STEEL STEPDECK WITH EQUIPMENT RAMPS. Comes with polished aluminum wheels, and polished aluminum belt box. ONLY 1 LEFT IN STOCK, CALL YOUR NEAREST DEALERSHIP FOR DETAILS.

More Flat Deck Trailers Arriving For Summer

2017

LANDSCAPER TRUCK. Large aluminum toolbox behind cab, with access on both sides. Rack built above toolbox to hold rakes and shovels. Dump box comes with a remote in cab, fold down sides, www.prtruckcentre.com

This article is from: