Natural resource jobs struggling mightily in Cariboo: report

Oct 30, 2020 | 4:53 PM

PRINCE GEORGE — The last few years have been rough for the natural resource sector especially in the Cariboo. According to a new report, unemployment numbers are the highest since 2009 and there is no telling when they will be able to bounce back.

The unemployment rate in the Cariboo continues to be a concern. It rose to 10.4 percent in the summer, the highest summer rate since the 2009 recession – and nowhere was that felt harder than the natural resource sector. Doherty believes recovery starts with a new softwood lumber agreement.

“Despite the challenges that we have right now south of the border and, now, globally with the COVID pandemic, we need to be able to build those policies and agreements and put those agreements in place so we can give assurances to our industry to see some long-term consistency and not have to ride that roller coaster all the time,” Doherty said.

According to the BC Check-up: Work, an annual report by the Chartered Professional Accountants of BC, the natural resource sector has lost nearly a third of jobs since September of last year. A big part of that is COVID, however, pre-COVID numbers were not promising either due to issues like the spruce beetle and wildfires.

Now with COVID adding to those issues, the question becomes: How do we get past this? Forestry prices are up 50 percent relative to the start of the year. Other reliant industries like construction continue to thrive through the pandemic. Two potential signs of good things to come.

“The market has still been really strong for lumber because the construction industry has not taken as hard a hit as other sectors and the demand seems to have stayed fairly good,” Stan Mitchell, Partner at KPMG, said. “And probably for the first time in a long time, we’ve got the demand curve outweighing the supply curve. So basic economics says when supply is less than demand, prices go up.”

Mitchell admits some businesses were fighting against the CERB and now other benefit programs which are also contributing factors to maintaining those high unemployment numbers.