“we have to transform this sector,” parmar said, adding that he will lobby for b.c. to receive its “fair share” of the funding.
haakstad said the additional funding will be welcome, but the single-window for applications to all the forestry programs might be the most helpful commitment particularly for smaller companies not accustomed to working with federal aid programs.
“they’re not big on it,” haakstad said. “announcing these programs is part 1, but actually getting them fully subscribed and maximizing the impact of them is the more important part.”
how effective the programs are, though, will depend on how quickly the support can reach companies on the ground.
however, extending loan programs and additional financing isn’t necessarily the assistance a lot of members in the independent wood producers association are looking for, according to its executive director brian menzies.
“they’re great if you could sell something to pay off your loan down the road,” menzies said.
the difficulty for independent wood producers, which manufacture value-added products out of lumber they buy and don’t hold timber-cutting rights, is that they’ve been putting up bonds to cover softwood duties since 2017, menzies said.