Pathway :: HomeNewsProvincial Weyerhaeuser Saskatchewan Logging Illegally to Supply Xerox
Weyerhaeuser Saskatchewan Logging Illegally to Supply Xerox
Contributed by David
Monday, 18 July 2005
Investigations by local residents,
Saskatchewan Environmental Society and Rainforest Action Network reveal
that Weyerhaeuser is illegally logging in Canada’s Boreal forests to
make plywood and copy paper for Xerox and other companies. In response to these, and other gross
violations of our forests, RAN is inviting other activists to join them
in an International Day of Action against Xerox on July 27.
Saskatchewan, Canada – Investigations by local residents,
Saskatchewan Environmental Society and Rainforest Action Network reveal
that Weyerhaeuser (NYSE: WY, TSX: WYL) is illegally logging in Canada’s
Boreal forests to make plywood and copy paper for Xerox (NYSE: XRX) and
other U.S. corporations.
Saskatchewan Environmental Society has retained Sierra Legal Defence
Fund to appeal Weyerhaeuser’s certification and call on Minister of
Justice Frank Quennell to investigate “the long-standing, continuing
and current legal non-compliance by Weyerhaeuser’s Saskatchewan
Forestlands operations.” The Canadian conservation community is calling
on Weyerhaeuser customers like Xerox to suspend purchases until the
company attains Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification for all
of its operations.
In “Saskatchewan: The Province of Weyerhaeuser,” a case study released
today, government documents confirm that Weyerhaeuser exceeded its
legal summer logging allowance by 100 percent and 20-year road building
allowance by 70 percent in less than five years. According to
Saskatchewan law, Weyerhaeuser currently owes the province almost $1.5
million in fines for these violations. In a grassroots documentary
webcast on RAN.org, Saskatchewan residents and former Weyerhaeuser
loggers testify to the company’s disregard of community concerns and
destruction of public forests. Despite known violations, Weyerhaeuser
is currently certified as “sustainable” by the Canadian Standards
Association (CSA).
The case study, grassroots video documentary and source documents (PDF)
are available for viewing and download online at:
http://www.ran.org/weyerhaeuser/
“The CSA framework contains no specific criteria and indicators,” said
Allyson Brady of the Saskatchewan Environmental Society. “By allowing
repeat offenders like Weyerhaeuser to write the rules, the CSA fails to
guarantee even minimal forest protections. The FSC is the only
certification system that is trusted by companies, consumers and
communities.”
“Most people associate illegal logging with endangered forests in South
America, Southeast Asia and Central Africa and are shocked to learn
that it is going on in their own back yard right here in North
America,” said Brant Olson, director of the Old Growth Campaign at
Rainforest Action Network. “Unlike industry leaders Tembec and Domtar,
Weyerhaeuser is a rogue corporation, consistently refusing to respond
to constructive community engagement until they are caught red handed.
From Haida Gwaii to Pemberton, Weyerhaeuser has proven that it takes
the threat of a blockade to get their attention. Until Weyerhaeuser
attains FSC certification and adopts a global policy to protect
endangered forests and respect human rights, communities across Canada
will continue to call on customers to cancel the contracts.”
Saskatchewan Environmental Society
The Saskatchewan Environmental Society is a non-profit, registered
charity whose mandate is to help build a sustainable society by
promoting healthy ecosystems, healthy livelihoods and healthy human
communities. For more information, please visit EnvironmentalSociety.ca.
Rainforest Action Network
Rainforest Action Network campaigns for the forests, their inhabitants
and the natural systems that sustain life by transforming the global
marketplace through education, grassroots organizing and non-violent
direct action. For more information, please visit RAN.org.
Help us send the message to Xerox that they should stop sourcing wood
from these regions by joining in on our international day of action to
protect endangered forests on July 27. To send a letter to Xerox, Weyerhaeuser, and the Minister of Environment go to http://action.ran.org/action/ our forests can't be duplicated.
Demonstrate! Help us put pressure on Xerox by going to your local
Costco or another store that sells Xerox products and demanding that
they drop their Xerox and Weyerhaeuser line. Go to www.wakeupweyco.com
and download our activist toolkit, which contains a sample leaflet,
letter and petition form. Contact us for more information:
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