1 / 15

Harrop-Procter Community Forest Ideals into action

Harrop-Procter Community Forest Ideals into action. Erik Leslie, RPF HPCC Forest Manager BCCFA Director. Outline. Landbase, community, history, forestry HPCC business Lessons. The Harrop-Procter Forest. 11,000 ha 100 year old mixed forests Steep, sensitive terrain Domestic watersheds.

damien
Download Presentation

Harrop-Procter Community Forest Ideals into action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Harrop-ProcterCommunity Forest Ideals into action Erik Leslie, RPF HPCC Forest Manager BCCFA Director

  2. Outline • Landbase, community, history, forestry • HPCC business • Lessons

  3. The Harrop-Procter Forest • 11,000 ha • 100 year old mixed forests • Steep, sensitive terrain • Domestic watersheds

  4. The Harrop-Procter Community • Diverse rural community • Mixed economy • Independent, volunteer spirit • Concerns about industrial clearcutting

  5. 1980’s and 90’s: The ‘War in the Woods’

  6. Harrop-Procter Community Co-op • Offered community forest in 1999 • Member-owned co-operative • Objectives: • Watershed protection • Ecosystem-based forestry • Local employment

  7. Ecosystem-based forestry Comprehensive reserve network Riparian Old growth Rare ecosystems Connectivity Zoning for multiple uses Site-sensitive logging, partial cutting Climate change adaptation

  8. 10,000 m3 AAC 100% in-house planning, layout, supervision Strong relationships with area mills 10 – 20% of logs to our mill FSC certification The business—forestry

  9. The business—value-added Higher-value, unique logs 2 bandsaw mills, edger, kiln, moulder Storage sheds, delivery truck Cedar and Douglas-fir lumber; custom timbers Primarily local retail market, some regional/ wholesale

  10. The business—overview $1,000,000 revenue 2011/12 Small profits after start-up losses Job creation Strong community support

  11. Lessons for communities Stay true to your vision Stay focused Don’t take ‘no’ for an answer Grassroots, co-operative approach can work

  12. Lessons for everybody Small community groups can succeed where traditional enterprises fail Community forests can be a solution for contentious public lands A crisis helps to mobilize support The CBFM risks are low, the potential benefits large

  13. Thank you! Erik Leslie, RPF erikl@netidea.com www.hpcommunityforest.org

More Related