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Clark seeks Trudeau含羞草研究社檚 help for forest industry

含羞草研究社榃e need action含羞草研究社 to protect B.C. communites
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Premier Christy Clark meets with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Ottawa, 2016. Lumber trade has been Clark含羞草研究社檚 top priority with Trudeau since his election. /PMO

Premier Christy Clark has written to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to formally request additional Employment Insurance coverage, funds for tree planting work and loans to forest companies as Canada braces for border taxes and trade barriers from U.S. President Donald Trump.

Clark含羞草研究社檚 letter to Trudeau, sent last week and obtained by Black Press, notes that 含羞草研究社渦nfair American tariffs含羞草研究社 imposed in the latest softwood lumber trade dispute would hit B.C. harder than any other province.

The letter calls on the federal government to announce measures by April 24 that were discussed at a recent resource ministers含羞草研究社 meeting.

含羞草研究社淭he provinces have different priorities but there is broad agreement on the steps that need to be taken to support workers and communities put in harm含羞草研究社檚 way as a result of the softwood lumber dispute,含羞草研究社 Clark wrote. 含羞草研究社淗owever, agreement is not enough. We need action.含羞草研究社

Those measures include:

含羞草研究社 providing 含羞草研究社渁ccess to appropriate credit facilities that will allow otherwise sound businesses to continue to operate despite unfair unfair American tariffs含羞草研究社

含羞草研究社 Investments in tree planting and other silviculture work to provide forest industry jobs and improve Canada含羞草研究社檚 greenhouse gas emission performance

含羞草研究社 Step up efforts to reduce trade barriers and increase B.C. wood products exports to Asia

If U.S. border tariffs force the closure of B.C. sawmills and manufacturers, Clark calls for EI support and retraining for laid-off workers and 含羞草研究社渆conomic diversification in rural communities to help them weather the economic impact.含羞草研究社

B.C. has retained former lumber executive and federal cabinet minister David Emerson as its trade representative in Washington D.C., and this week Trudeau announced former prime minister Brian Mulroney will advise the federal cabinet on changes to the North American Free Trade Agreement that Trump wants to renegotiate.

B.C. lumber exports to the U.S. have risen from $1.6 billion in 2011 to $4.6 billion in 2016, about half of Canada含羞草研究社檚 total lumber sales south. In the past two years, lumber exports have soared as the latest softwood lumber deal expired and opened a brief window of free trade across the U.S. border.

The U.S. industry is pursuing its fifth unfair trade case against Canadian lumber since 1982, after previous cases examining timber sales from Crown land have been decided in Canada含羞草研究社檚 favour.

Among the suggestions by Trump含羞草研究社檚 officials is the removal of the dispute resolution system under NAFTA that has rejected allegations of subsidies for B.C. lumber in the past.





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