Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Hundreds of logging trucks clog Vancouver streets to protest state of B.C.’s forestry industry (PHOTOS)

Hundreds of logging trucks jammed into downtown Vancouver Wednesday afternoon as drivers made their way to the Vancouver Convention Centre to lobby for reforms to the province’s forestry industry.

 Hundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan ToulgoetHundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan Toulgoet

Hundreds of logging trucks jammed into downtown Vancouver Wednesday afternoon as drivers made their way to the Vancouver Convention Centre to lobby for reforms to the province’s forestry industry.

 Hundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan ToulgoetHundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan Toulgoet

The roughly 200 loggers left Merritt Wednesday morning and made their way into Vancouver for the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention — most just passed by the convention centre but about 10 stayed in the hopes of meeting with politicians attending this week’s conference.

 Hundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan ToulgoetHundreds of logging trucks lined up along Hastings Street as they made their way into Vancouver to protest the state of the B.C.’s forestry industry. Photo Dan Toulgoet

Their mission was to show support for rural municipalities hit by sawmill closures and to demand immediate reforms for B.C.’s forestry sector, including immediate changes to the way stumpage rates are set in B.C. and a return to some form of appurtenancy, which ties timber in a given region to specific sawmills or communities.

-With files from Nelson Bennett/Business in Vancouver

Vancouver Courier Logo