N.B. trade minister got things wrong on softwood lumber, says woodlot group - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. trade minister got things wrong on softwood lumber, says woodlot group

The New Brunswick Woodlot Federation says a provincial cabinet minister should get his facts straight when he argues against higher duties on softwood lumber from the province.

New Brunswick Woodlot Federation accuses Roger Melanson of pushing incorrect history of Crown land management

The New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners has written to Roger Melanson, minister responsible for trade policy, to help him understand how things have changed in the industry. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The New Brunswick Woodlot Federation says a provincial cabinet minister should get his facts straight when he argues against higher U.S. duties on softwood lumber from the province.

Roger Melanson, the minister responsible for trade policy, was wrong to say recently that nothing has changed in the way the province has managed Crown forestsover the last four decades, the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners says.

Melansonmade that statement last week after the U.S. Secretary of Commerce said shipments of softwood lumber from Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador should be excluded from anti-dumping and countervailing duties, without any mention of New Brunswick.

"Nothing has changed," Melanson said in aninterview withInformation Morning Fredericton. "We still keep doing the same practices of managingour Crown land that hasn't changed over the last 40 years."

But Rick Doucett, president of the woodlot federation, said this isn't the case.

The U.S. is expected to start pushing for higher border duties on softwood lumber on Tuesday. Rick Doucett says this is leading to a lot of worry among sawmill owners and wood producers. (CBC)
"We barely survived the last 10 years," Doucett said in an interview. "And that's a bit of a slap in the face to the private wood sector to say nothing changed."

"Something changed and we felt it and we have been clawing our way back to being where we need to be in order to provide an enormous economic benefit."

Doucett saidMelanson'sstatement about"more woodcoming from private land than from Crown land," was incorrect.

When the previous softwood lumber agreement was signed with the U.S., private woodlots were the source of23 per cent of the total wood supplied to sawmills in New Brunswick, and Crown land provided an average of 43 per cent.

In the 10 yearsafter that agreement was signed, the amount from from private woodlots dropped to 11.5 per cent of the total, and from Crown land rose to53 per cent.

Previous mistakes were made

Doucett said Melansonwas also incorrect to claim the amount of wood coming from private woodlots has doubled in the past two to three years,

The supply from private woodlots has increased by 20 per cent over the past two to three years, Doucettsaid, but as a proportion of the total, it'sdown almost 40 per cent from 2006.

"Mistakes have been made by previous administrations on this file that have caused private woodlot owners much grief over the past 10 years," said Doucett, who has written a letter to Melansonabout what's happened in the industry in recent years.

"Those mistakes are now causing our New Brunswick sawmills grief, and pretending they didn't happen will not help either group in the future."

After being asked for comment by CBC News on Thursday, Melanson's department said it was working on a response.

Doucett's letter said the federation supports the province's efforts to get fair treatment for New Brunswick in the latest softwood lumber dispute with the U.S.

But the group would also like to work with the province on solutions to what's happened over the last decade, Doucettsaid in the interview.

"This time around we're saying we still have a good case for exemptions," he said. "However, we need to fix something here in the province."