Unifor is fighting to protect good jobs amidst a perfect storm of crises impacting Canadian forestry.

A combination of economic, environmental, and global challenges continues to destabilize Canada’s forestry sector. The softwood lumber dispute and the threat of further tariffs have intensified a trade war that may cause disastrous repercussions. 

Unifor is actively engaged in lobbying government and corporate representatives to take action to protect forestry jobs. 

Canadian forestry workers, their families, and their communities deserve a sustainable, inclusive, and innovative forestry sector, one that supports good jobs, supports forestry communities, protects natural ecosystems and species, meets commitments to Reconciliation, and promotes innovation and value-added work. 

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Protecting Canadian Forestry Jobs

Quick facts

  • Unifor represents 22,100 members across 10 provinces

  • As of August 19, 2024, the United States tariff on Canadian softwood lumber imports is 14.54%, with incoming President-elect Donald Trump threatening to impose additional tariffs.  Seasonal wildfires pose a serious threat to our forests, forestry operations, and communities that depend on forestry

  • Important conservation measures complicate long-term planning for the sector

  • New EU regulations could negatively impact the ability of Canadian forest products to be sold in that market and around the world

WATCH: Lana Payne speaks to House of Commons Committee on International Trade on Softwood Lumber Dispute

"We need to make sure we are protecting Canadian workers & jobs," Lana Payne tells MP Simon-Pierre Savard-Tremblay, as workers face trade uncertainty.

Lana Payne addresses the long-standing American allegation of Canadian forestry subsidies.

Lana Payne tells MP Blake Desjarlais that workers must be central in policy discussions & that strong industrial policies are needed to protect jobs.

"Unifor has been clear to all levels of government on the need for bold redevelopment & a coordinated industrial strategy," Lana Payne tells MP Kyle Seeback.

Lana Payne says there needs to be a common approach from the entire forestry industry, government and unions in the U.S. softwood tariff dispute.

"The forestry sector cannot carry on with current and threatened tariffs looming over it," says Lana Payne.