LURC Study Commission releases final report
December 19th, 2011The LURC Study Commission has released final report & recommendations.
CLICK HERE to read the report
Latest PIX Index Values W/Comments
December 13th, 2011Foex has just done their weekly update on Pulp & Paper Prices in the USA
Review the latest numbers anytime on www.foex.fi
American Loggers Council Unveils New Website
December 13th, 2011Organization takes steps with industry partners to provide user friendly design and content
Hemphill, Texas (December 12, 2011) - Today, the American Loggers Council (ALC) unveiled a newly redesigned website. Americanloggers.org provides news and resources to better support the mission of the ALC to serve as a unified voice for professional loggers and to communicate with the public and policy makers on the issues that are of critical importance to the nation’s loggers. The new site contains easily accessible multimedia, contact information and advocacy resources, making it the go to place for loggers to obtain the latest in information and news on national issues.
“We believe that we now have one of the premier sites in the industry to better serve those that we represent,” said Danny Dructor, executive vice president, American Loggers Council. “We worked hand in hand with our friends at John Deere and its creative teams to develop a site that is user- friendly and easier to navigate. Financial support from both Caterpillar Forest Products and Bandit Industries also helped to provide the necessary funds to get the site up and running.”
“The on-the-ground, real-life video found on the site will help to put a face on the nation’s loggers and one that the public needs to see to better understand our industry,” Dructor went on to say. “For the most part, we are still considered an invisible industry as most of our operations are far away from the public’s view. One goal of the site is to bring the logger to the public so that they will have a better understanding of the professionalism of the industry.” There will be regular updates to the site, keeping the content current with current issues.
ALC President Steve Sherich commented that “the site is but one phase of the organizational work that is being done by the ALC to establish its identity with the loggers and the public,” and that “other programs are in the works, including building stronger communications and networking between our members and our sponsors.” “We are proud of the partnerships that have evolved over the past 17 years with all of our sponsors, but my hat’s off to John Deere for their creative efforts on this project and to Caterpillar and Bandit for helping to make the website a reality.”
The American Loggers Council is a 501(c)(6) organization representing timber harvesting professionals in 30 states. For more information contact the American Loggers Council Office at 409-625-0206 or visit their website at www.americanloggers.org.
As We See It: The Southern Loggers Cooperative…
December 8th, 2011…Something to Think About
Bill Jones – Assistant Director, Southern Loggers Cooperative
While attending the American Loggers Council Spring Board meeting in 2004 and after a long day of congressional visits and long walks to the Russell Senate building, ALC leaders recognized that help from the nation’s capitol might be slow in coming to the rescue for a challenged timber harvesting industry.
After observing some of the well established organizations such as the United Electrical Workers and the American Cattlemen Association strategizing and working their agendas on the hill, I realized that we, the loggers, were relatively new to this arena and that it might take some time to make meaningful gains for the industry with our policy makers.
But to a small group of Louisiana loggers, another thought emerged from a long day of meetings and door knocking. The idea of a purchasing group or a cooperative that could provide more immediate financial relief came out of those discussions and the Louisiana loggers went home and acted on starting a Loggers Cooperative.
Back home in Louisiana the idea started with a conversation with the members of the Louisiana Loggers Council and continued until the kitchen table of Clyde and Mary Todd became the first office for the Southern Loggers Cooperative and the Winnfield Fueling station became the start up location for the Cooperative for fuel distribution. The cooperative was formed under the provisions of Louisiana revised statute 3.71 and is owned by its members with nine original members providing the origination monies and the Articles of Association were signed by Fox McKeithen, Secretary of State, on October 15, 2004.
From the very start, the growth of the Southern Loggers Cooperative has been consistent in adding two to three fuel stations each year while negotiating annual fuel contracts to serve a growing membership that currently exceeds 1100 agriculture and forestry members.
In 2008 tires were added to the product lines and now SLC offers savings on several brands of tires, including retread tires.
In 2010 the office was moved from rented office space to a newly renovated office purchased and located in Pineville, LA. SLC now has a staff of five full time employees and one part time employee to provide member services and provide daily maintenance.
Currently, sixteen fuel stations are in operation from Texas to Virginia with average daily transactions between 700 and 800 fuel purchases of 60,000 to 70,000 gallons of fuel daily. Two new fuel stations in Chillicothe, OH and Georgetown, SC are in the works, and sites have been leased or purchased for both locations and construction is scheduled to begin in early 2012.
With leadership from the logging, trucking and timber industry, the Southern Loggers Cooperative continues the mission of serving its members with savings on consumable products that we use every day. According to Executive Director Clyde Todd, our mission is “cutting the cost of doing business for the agricultural, logging and timber businesses.” Under the guidance of SLC President Dave Cupp of Walsh Timber Co., patronage dividends to SLC members in 2009 and 2010 exceeded one million dollars.
The idea raised by Louisiana loggers during the American Loggers Council meeting in 2004 about the potential buying power of loggers has been acted on yet we have just started to scratch the surface of cost cutting opportunities. Together loggers and all members have come together to leverage buying power through the Southern Loggers Cooperative and we continue to look for ways to bring those savings to your area.
From a logger’s perspective, Washington D. C. oftentimes appears to be a ten square mile zone of confusion and an often non navigable swamp of public policy. The most important issues of transportation laws and regulations, new and developing markets, public timber availability, forest certification, and clean water must be addressed by leaders of the logging industry and the American Loggers Council continues to serve to meet that challenge.
While it is highly important that we remain focused on federal policies that impact all of our operations, the importance of communications and ideas that can be taken back to your state or regional association proves to be a valuable tool as well. If you are not engaged with your State Association or the American Loggers Council, we encourage you to do so. Working together, we can all make a difference. Now that’s something to think about!
The Southern Loggers Cooperative mission is to reduce the costs of supplies for the membership, enhance the common interest of the forest industry, and insure the integrity of the membership and all associates remain constant an positive. Their offices are located in Pineville, Louisiana. For more information, visit their website at www.southernloggers.com or contact Clyde Todd at 318-445-0750.
The American Loggers Council is a non-profit 501(c)(6) corporation representing professional timber harvesters in 30 states across the US. For more information, visit their web site at www.americanloggers.org or contact their office at 409-625-0206.
ME’s unemployment insurance taxes going up next year
November 30th, 2011AUGUSTA, Maine — Many Maine employers will see a slight increase in the taxes they pay to fund the state’s unemployment system come January. But even a small increase has employers upset, although not surprised…
[snip] The amount of the increase ranges from $2.40 per year per worker to $18 per worker for the year. Employers pay the tax on the first $12,000 in wages they pay for each worker. The unemployment system in Maine is entirely funded by employers…
Read full story on BangorDailyNews.com
November 25, 2011 “From the Field” Newsletter
November 29th, 2011
The November Department of Conservation Newsletter From the Field has been published.
CLICK HERE to read it
President Signs Transportation Funding Bill with Truck Weights Provision
November 18th, 2011President’s signature follows Congressional approval of Senator Collins’ provision to allow heavier trucks to use Maine’s federal interstates for at least 20 years
WASHINGTON, D.C.-President Obama, this morning, signed the Fiscal Year 2012 Transportation funding bill that includes a provision, written by Senator Susan Collins, that will allow the heaviest trucks to travel on federal interstates in Maine for 20 years instead of forcing them off the highways and onto Maine’s secondary roads and downtown streets.
While the Senate originally approved Senator Collins’ provision to make this change permanent, the House never approved a similar provision. As the top Republican on the Senate Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee, and a member of the conference committee charged with working out the differences between the two bills, Senator Collins successfully negotiated this 20-year compromise agreement.
Senator Collins has led the effort to allow trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates -including I-95, 195, 295, and 395. Senator Collins has worked closely with Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), also a member of the Transportation Subcommittee, and this agreement for Maine is paired with a similar change for Vermont.
“This is a major accomplishment and I am delighted to have successfully negotiated this agreement. Moving these trucks from our downtown streets and onto the federal interstates where they belong has always been one of my top transportation priorities,” said Senator Collins. “The agreement that I negotiated to allow the heaviest trucks on the highway for the next 20 years will help shippers, truckers, and Maine’s job creators. More important, it will improve safety for Mainers who live, work, and go to school along the secondary roads, and busy downtowns where these trucks are currently forced to travel.
“I appreciate the strong support I received from so many public safety groups, including the Maine State Police, the Maine Department of Public Safety, and the Bangor Police Department, as well as education and industry groups like the Maine Motor Transport Association. Together, we were able to achieve a major victory that will make a real difference to many Mainers and our economy,” Senator Collins continued.
Senator Collins’ effort is supported by the Association of Police, the Maine State Police, the State Troopers Association, the Maine Department of Public Safety, the Chiefs of Police, the Maine Motor Transport Association, the Parent Teacher Association, and the Bangor School Department, who have all expressed the importance of safety in getting these heaviest trucks off our local roadways and onto the interstates where they belong.
Currently, the heaviest trucks in Maine are diverted onto secondary roadways that cut through our downtowns on narrow streets, creating a major safety concern. In most of the surrounding New England states and nearby Canadian provinces, the heaviest trucks are free to use the interstates, but not in Maine and Vermont. This puts Maine businesses at a distinct competitive disadvantage. Heavy trucks already operate on some 22,500 miles of non-interstate roads in Maine, in addition to the approximately 109 miles of the Maine Turnpike. But the nearly 260 miles of non-Turnpike interstates that are major economic corridors are off limits.
In 2009, a pilot project that Senator Collins wrote, was included in the 2010 Omnibus Appropriations bill. This one-year pilot project allowed trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates. According to the Maine Department of Transportation, during the one-year period covered by the pilot, the number of crashes involving trucks on Maine’s local roads was reduced by 72 compared to a five-year average.
Truck Weights Legislation passes Senate, off to the President
November 18th, 2011The U.S. Senate, tonight, approved the Fiscal Year 2012 Transportation funding bill that includes a provision, written by Senator Susan Collins, that will allow the heaviest trucks to travel on federal interstates in Maine for 20 years instead of forcing them off the highways and onto Maine’s secondary roads and downtown streets.
Click Here to View Senator Collins’ statement following passage of the legislation.
While the Senate originally approved Senator Collins’ provision to make this change permanent, the House never approved a similar provision. As the top Republican on the Senate Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee, and a member of the conference committee charged with working out the differences between the two bills, Senator Collins successfully negotiated this 20-year compromise agreement. This bill will now be signed by the President.
Senator Collins has led the effort to allow trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates –including I-95, 195, 295, and 395. Senator Collins has worked closely with Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), also a member of the Transportation Subcommittee, and this agreement for Maine is paired with a similar change for Vermont.
“This is a major accomplishment and I am delighted to have successfully negotiated this agreement. Moving these trucks from our downtown streets and onto the federal interstates where they belong has always been one of my top transportation priorities,” said Senator Collins. “The agreement that I negotiated to allow the heaviest trucks on the highway for the next 20 years will help shippers, truckers, and Maine’s job creators. More important, it will improve safety for Mainers who live, work, and go to school along the secondary roads, and busy downtowns where these trucks are currently forced to travel.
“I appreciate the strong support I received from so many public safety groups, including the Maine State Police, the Maine Department of Public Safety, and the Bangor Police Department, as well as education and industry groups like the Maine Motor Transport Association. Together, we were able to achieve a major victory that will make a real difference to many Mainers and our economy,” Senator Collins continued.
Senator Collins’ effort is supported by the Association of Police, the Maine State Police, the State Troopers Association, the Maine Department of Public Safety, the Chiefs of Police, the Maine Motor Transport Association, the Parent Teacher Association, and the Bangor School Department, who have all expressed the importance of safety in getting these heaviest trucks off our local roadways and onto the interstates where they belong.
Currently, the heaviest trucks in Maine are diverted onto secondary roadways that cut through our downtowns on narrow streets, creating a major safety concern. In most of the surrounding New England states and nearby Canadian provinces, the heaviest trucks are free to use the interstates, but not in Maine and Vermont. This puts Maine businesses at a distinct competitive disadvantage. Heavy trucks already operate on some 22,500 miles of non-interstate roads in Maine, in addition to the approximately 109 miles of the Maine Turnpike. But the nearly 260 miles of non-Turnpike interstates that are major economic corridors are off limits.
In 2009, a pilot project that Senator Collins wrote, was included in the 2010 Omnibus Appropriations bill. This one-year pilot project allowed trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates. According to the Maine Department of Transportation, during the one-year period covered by the pilot, the number of crashes involving trucks on Maine’s local roads was reduced by 72 compared to a five-year average.
Truck Weight Legislation passes House, off to the Senate
November 18th, 2011
Today, the House passed a provision that would allow heavier trucks on the Maine Interstate. Passage by the Senate, which is expected later today or tomorrow, will clear the bill for the President’s signature.
Congressman Michaud spoke in favor of the provision on the House floor. Click Here to watch Congressman Michaud’s remarks
The provision was included as part of a conference report on a measure that funds the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Justice, Transportation and Housing and Urban Development, as well as the space program. The bill also contains a Continuing Resolution, which will fund the government until December 16, 2011.
Congressman Mike Michaud’s top priority was making sure that a fix for Maine’s truck weight problem was contained in the bill, and he worked with Democratic and Republican leaders in the House to make sure that the provision survived. Senator Collins worked to ensure that the provision was included in the original Senate bill to provide funding for transportation programs. Additionally, Senator Snowe and Congresswoman Pingree have been strong supporters of making this change.
“Mainers already know the benefits of this commonsense provision,” said Michaud. “Letting heavier trucks use the Interstate reduces fuel consumption, cuts emissions, reduces travel times and reduces the competitive disadvantage between Maine and our neighbors. I would like to thank House leaders for supporting my efforts to ensure that this provision was included in the final bill.”
Michaud is continuing to push forward with a bill he authored that will give Maine and other states the authority to make these changes. Michaud’s bill, the Safe and Efficient Transportation Act, currently has 57 bipartisan cosponsors and has been introduced in the Senate by Senator Mike Crapo (R-ID).






