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TJ Watt2026-03-03 09:07:112026-03-04 14:36:34NOW HIRING: Forest CampaignerRelated Posts
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TJ Watt2026-03-03 09:07:112026-03-04 14:36:34NOW HIRING: Forest Campaigner
It’s AFA’s 16th Birthday!
On Tuesday, February 24th, we’re celebrating 16 years of working together with you, our community, to ensure the permanent protection of old-growth forests in BC. To mark the date, will you chip in $16 or more to support our work?

Budget 2026 Shortchanges Nature Protection and Sustainable Forestry Transition At a Critical Time for British Columbia
BC’s Budget 2026 fails to provide the funding needed to secure lasting protection for endangered ecosystems and at-risk old-growth forests in the province.

Welcome, Zeinab, our new Vancouver Canvass Director!
We're excited to welcome Zeinab Salenhiankia, our new Vancouver Canvass Director, to the Ancient Forest Alliance team!
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Film series turns eye to Youbou closure
/in AnnouncementsIt will have been 10 years on Wednesday, Jan. 26 since TimberWest’s Cowichan Sawmwill at Youbou closed.
A total of 220 families lost their jobs that day.
As is often the case in that sort of situation, many of the workers who had hung onto their jobs to the end had 25 or more years of service.
According to the Youbou Timberless Society (YTS), founded by former employees after the closure, many never found future employment.
Those that did find work in other sawmills still suffered the fate of their friends as mill after mill closed on the Island and all across B.C.
The YTS aimed both to fight against the mill closure and, going forward, to try to improve the situation of forest-dependant communities.
Its goals from 10 years ago remain strong today, according to group stalwart Ken James.
“With over 200 paid up members we continue to work with other groups, often behind the scenes now, to promote our ideas of sustainable, profitable, forestry that will leave a standing forest behind for future generations,” he said this week.
“One of the most rewarding things we have been able to accomplish was uniting groups that were previously opposing each other on forest issues. To bring most of the environmental lobby onside with forest workers, was no small accomplishment.”
Anyone interested in learning what the group is doing now, 10 years after, should attend a special evening Thursday, Jan, 20 at 7 p.m. at the United Church Hall, when the Eye Opener film series will show two short videos about log exports.
One of the films was made by graduating students from Lake Cowichan Secondary School and the other was produced by the Youbou TimberLess Society itself.
Following the showings, there will be a time for discussion and reflection of the last 10 years and what has happened to the Cowichan Valley’s once vibrant forest economy.
The Death Of A Sawmill
/in Announcements, News CoverageTweet
The tenth anniversary of closure of Timberwest’s Youbou sawmill — and its economic and family fallout — will be discussed during tomorrow’s Eye-Opener Film Series in Duncan.
The Cowichan Citizens’ Coalition will screen the documentaries Stump To Dump, and Raw Log Exports made by Lake Cowichan Secondary School students.
Discussion will involve Youbou Timberless Society members, plus Ken Wu and T.J. Watt of the Ancient Forest Alliance.
YTS, the Tree-Huggers and Tree-Cutters Alliance, and the Citizens’ Coalition were formed after protests about the mill’s demise on Jan. 26, 2001.
It was allowed shut by Victoria after then-forests minister, Dave Zirnhelt, signed a document that removed Clause 7 linking Timberwest’s annual allowable cut to keeping the mill open.
The mill’s closure tossed some 220 workers out of jobs, sparking seven years of failed court challenges by the YTS.
Bitterness of the closure still simmers among YTS members and local families.
In the 2006 24-minute Ban Raw Log Exports, filmmakers Brent Rayner and buddies Travis Stock, Reece Docherty and Cody Lawson express their anger about what they see as corporate mismanagement of Crown timber, and raw-log exports allowed by Victoria while wood-manufacturing jobs go begging.
“The Liberals aren’t listening,” said Rayner. “They’re after the money and we’re all just numbers.”
The selective-logging fan said the 2007 disappearance of his unemployed Youbou mill-worker father, Darreld, isn’t linked to the operation’s closure.
“He wouldn’t have done that to our family.”
Stock — whose dad, Ken, works for Island Pacific Logging — said raw-log exports make no sense.
“I hope people see how our logs are sent to the states when we have families here to be employed processing those logs.”
Your ticket
What: Youbou mill closure films and discussion
When: Jan. 20, 7 p.m.
Where: Duncan United Church, Ingram Street
Tickets: By donation. Call 250-701-1682
Ancient Forest Alliance’s One Year Anniversary, Organization Prepares for Province Wide Tour
/in Announcements, Media ReleaseTweet
The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) reached its one year anniversary today, after being launched at a press conference in the old-growth forests of Francis King Regional Park in Victoria a year ago (see AFA news archives at https://ancientforestalliance.org/recent-news/). Since then the non-profit environmental organization has become perhaps the fastest growing environmental group in BC, snowballing to 18,000 supporters through Facebook and by email, and garnering hundreds of news stories in the media on its campaigns.
“We’ve grown so fast, like a young spruce in the sunlight alongside a rainforest river, because we’ve had perfect growing conditions. Today, the vast majority of people on Vancouver Island and increasingly across BC, get it – that we need to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests for wildlife, the climate, and tourism, while ensuring sustainable second-growth forestry and ending raw log exports to protect BC forestry jobs,” stated Ken Wu, the AFA’s executive director. “It’s a minority opinion to still say ‘let’s take it to the end of the resource and export the raw logs.’ 15 years ago, this was not necessarily the case.”
The currently leaderless BC Liberal and BC NDP parties presents an opportunity for change in BC politics, and as such the AFA will be pushing hard for strong old-growth forest and forestry jobs policies within both parties. As part of the organization’s “100,000 Strong for Ancient Forests and BC Forestry Jobs” public education and mobilization campaign, the AFA is launching a slideshow tour to dozens of communities throughout the province, starting in early February, to build public pressure on the parties. The BC Liberals currently contend that BC’s old-growth forests are not endangered and raw log exports should continue, while the NDP is calling for a provincial old-growth strategy (how much protection this would entail has not been specified yet) and increased restrictions on raw log exports. The Green Party is calling for a phase-out of old-growth logging and to ban raw log exports
Over the past year the AFA has organized a torrent of public hikes, slideshows, rallies, protests, petition drives, and letter-writing campaigns on Vancouver Island and in the Lower Mainland. On university campuses and in provincial swing ridings, it has also helped to empower and train new forest activists.
A particular strength of the organization is the spectacular nature photography of AFA campaigner and co-founder TJ Watt, whose photos of Vancouver Island’s old-growth trees and giant stumps are increasingly being featured in national and international media publications. See some of Watt’s magnificent photos at the AFA’s online photogallery at:
https://ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/
“By photographing BC’s largest trees and stumps, often in the hinterland along rough logging roads that few people traverse, we’ve been able to bring the ancient forests – and their clearcut devastation – to the homes of millions of people. We’ve sort of become the eyes and ears of the forest to alert people of what’s going on in one of the world’s most spectacular and endangered ecosystems,” states TJ Watt. “Many Canadians still don’t know that we have trees that can grow nearly twice the height of Niagara Falls with trunks as wide as a living room – and fewer realize they are still being cut down.”
The organization is perhaps best known for popularizing the “Avatar Grove”, an endangered stand of easily accessible, monumental old-growth redcedars and Douglas firs in close proximity to Port Renfrew. Within the Grove are several trees with spectacular, large burls growing out of their sides, including a burly cedar that has been dubbed “Canada’s Gnarliest Tree”. The campaign to save the Avatar Grove has garnered support from the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce, Sooke Regional Tourism Association, and from all levels of the region’s political representatives, including federal Liberal MP Keith Martin, provincial NDP MLA John Horgan, and Regional Director Mike Hicks. See photos at https://ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/
The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC government to:
– Undertake a Provincial Old-Growth Strategy that will inventory and protect the remaining old-growth forests in regions where they are scarce (eg’s. Vancouver Island, Southern Mainland Coast, Southern Interior, etc.)
– Ensure the sustainable logging of second-growth forests, which now constitute the majority of forest lands in southern BC.
– End the export of BC raw logs to foreign mills in order to ensure a guaranteed log supply for BC wood processing facilities.
– Assist in the retooling of coastal BC sawmills and the development of value-added facilities to handle second-growth logs.
– Undertake new land-use planning processes to protect endangered forests based on new First Nations land-use plans, ecosystem-based scientific assessments, and climate mitigation strategies through forest protection
75% of the ancient forests have been logged on Vancouver Island (see “Before” and “After” Maps at https://ancientforestalliance.org/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/), while less than 10% of our productive forests are in protected in parks and Old-Growth Management Areas, and the situation is similar throughout southern BC. Tens of thousands of hectares of ancient forests fall each year in BC.
Old-growth forests are important for species at risk, the climate, tourism, supplying clean water, and for many First Nations cultures.
“Right now, with the unprecedented situation of both the BC Liberals and NDP being simultaneously leaderless, we have a first rate opportunity to push both parties to commit to new, strong policies to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests and forestry jobs. We’ll give public credit to any politicians who move their party forward on these issues but we’ll also point out those who are firmly committed to the backwards, destructive status quo,” states Ken Wu.