A perspective from the company on the frontline – a conversation with Teal Jones’ Conrad Browne

In the seventh episode of the ForestWorks podcast, host Stewart Muir and guest Conrad Browne discuss Teal Jones, First Nations, and misinformation.

Conrad Browne, Teal Jones’ director of Indigenous Partnership and Strategic Relations.

ForestWorks delves below the rhetoric to get to the real facts of this important industry through conversation with people who really know their stuff.

On this week’s show, ForestWorks speaks with Conrad Browne, Teal Jones’ director of Indigenous Partnership and Strategic Relations. Conrad brings us an important perspective on the year of protests on southern Vancouver Island – the company, the logging, the First Nations, and the misinformation. Teal Jones is a value-added manufacturer that employs more than 1,000 British Columbians, most of those in milling and manufacturing. It does not ship any raw logs. Most of its logging on Vancouver Island is in second-growth, and the company has invested millions to build a mill specialized in maximizing value from smaller second-growth trees. It has a history of respectful engagement with First Nations in whose territories it works. So, why is the company facing blockades? Listen to find out.

Join us every Saturday morning for a new episode of ForestWorks. Or tune in to Radio NL 610AM Kamloops, Saturdays at 7 AM Pacific as we focus on the people, places, and stories of this important and often complicated industry that drives the BC economy.

Listen here:

iOS 14 to include revamped Podcasts app with recommendations, extras:  rumour – MobileSyrup

Get the latest news with the Resource Works newsletter.

Shaping the Peace: Balancing Energy, Environment, and Equity in Northeast BC's Peace River Region

Help Us Get Things Done

Related News

Ellis Ross will be a familiar face and powerful voice at IPSS

In the halls of Parliament, Ellis Ross may be the most high-profile advocate of Indigenous-led development in Canada.

Questions abound in fate of Wet’suwet’en governance

Non-Indigenous elected officials are staying quiet about a title deal made with a small group of unelected hereditary chiefs, despite calls for transparency from elected

Amid automotive turmoil, resources keep nation’s trade on even keel

Government moves to restrict wealth-building resource activities have grave consequences as the automotive industry sheds jobs.