Gold River still reinventing its economy 20 years after mill closed - Action News
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British ColumbiaMILL TOWNS

Gold River still reinventing its economy 20 years after mill closed

Logging is the main employer in Vancouver Island's Gold River following the closure of the pulp and paper mill in 1998, but work continues to build a stronger tourism sector.

Hopes pegged on new industry, tourism and home-based businesses

Mayor Brad Unger is hopeful a new business at the old mill site located near the geographic centre of Vancouver Island will provide more employment. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

Gold River's mill days are firmly in the rearview mirror, but decaying buildings from that era down the road from the villageare a constant reminder that pulp and paper built thistown.

The millis the reason Gold River existsin the middle of Vancouver Island, with road access to Nootka Sound on the island's west coast.TheTahsis Company that built it back inthe 1960s built the houses, too.

"It was just an instant town," says Mayor Brad Unger.

The mill ran as a pulp operation and later produced paper as well.But in 1998it shut down, eliminating360 good payingjobs the village relied on.

It was the start of a new, and much more challenging, era for Gold River.

"It didn't happen immediately, but it wasn't long after the young people were leaving town ... house prices plummeted," Unger says.

The town of Gold River was built by the mill and is now largely sustained by the logging industry. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

During the boom days, Unger says the population topped 2,000 people. Now there are about 1,300.

In the two decades that have passed since the closure, the old mill site has changed hands several times.

Hopes for a new large-scale industrial business, including one that had a plan to burn Vancouver's garbage, didn't take.

But newowners purchased the site last year andhave started to dismantle the remaining mill buildings.

"I look at this as a positive because ifthey are spending money to tear things down, they must be ready to have something in the future," Unger says.

The deep sea port next to the old mill site on Nootka Sound is the draw for the new ownership, West Coast Marine Terminals. It is tearing down the buildings to make room for a new marine storage and staging business.

One of the first projects could be storage of construction materialsfor the new LNG Canada plant further up the B.C. coast in Kitimat, says operations director Kent O'Neill.

The old mill in Gold River is located at a deep sea port on Nootka Sound. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

"I've been working in this area for the last 17 years and driving by the old mill, it's kind of reminder of what was,"he says."It's kind of nice to have it taken down and moved out of the way and let the new stuff come in."

The new business will provide employment, O'Neill says, but noton the scale of the old mill.

Logging in the forests around Gold River is the main employer, along withaquaculture. The town council has also worked tosecurewood supply for a small sawmilland a cedar shake mill that provide employment.

Coming technological upgrades such as high-speed internetand maybe one day cellphone service are also expected to help attract more home-based businesses.

But economic hopes are also pegged ontourism.

Behind the counter at the Clayworks Cafe and Gallery, Anita Lawrence and her husband Neil are part of that new economy. Their cafeis a hot spot for locals and tourists alike.

"I see an increase in visitor traffic of course every summer," Anita Lawrence says. "People are looking for outdoor adventure, they're looking for a beautiful landscape,they're wanting to do some camping and fishing."

Phillip Parkes, a school district principal, runs a highly regarded outdoor education program that has been drawing new families to Gold River. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

But making the shift from a resource-based economy is a challenge, she says.

"There'salways these sort of questions about developing a tourism strategy and what comes first," she says. "There's always this fine play between who's going tocome and set up shop, and then who's going tocome and visit if there's no shop set up."

Just up the street at Gold River's high school, district principal Philip Parkes is thinking outside theclassroom.

A decade ago he started an outdoor education program. It has helped attract new families to townand now it evendraws International students from countries around the world.

The programinjects money in Gold River's economythrough homestays for the international students and hiring outdoor contractors.

"I think the transition from a resource-based community to a more modern community is an ongoing conversation and how we achieve that remains up for debate," hesays.

Western Forest Products says approximately 3,000 workers walked off the job Monday, July 1, 2019. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

But in Parkes mind, the natural beauty outside everyone's front door in Gold River is a key part of the conversation.

"It's just figuring out how we can attract people here and get them into the wilderness and and show them how beautiful this area is."

While work continues on the tourism front, construction activity at the old mill site is also encouraging, Mayor Unger says.

But no matter how thatnew business takes shape, he saysGold River doesn't plan to ever go back to being a one-company town.

"Every community now, especially your small resource ones, don't want that one big employer. Now we like to have three or four, employing 30people, 40 people."

And he's confident Gold River has a lot to offer.

"One of our slogans is: It's all here, why aren't you?"

Listen to the complete radio documentary below:

Mill Towns is a series by CBC Victoria exploring how forestry-dependent communities on Vancouver Island view changes planned by the provincial government to revitalize forestry on the B.C. Coast.