Nashville Sets Perfect Stage For Lumber Conference
Lumber producers who made the trek to Room 205 and the 2023 Productivity & Efficiency Conference produced by Timber Processing and sponsored by Southern Forest Products Assn. (SFPA) were not disappointed as the event featured a wide range of speakers who delivered insights on different facets of mill operations.
According to Jessica Johnson, Conference Chairwoman who assembled the program, almost 100 southern sawmillers—and at least one from Colorado and one from Oregon—registered for conference. “We were so excited to be back at EXPO with SFPA. This year’s program had one of the best line-ups of sawmill-speakers we’ve ever had,” she said. “The range of experience among our speakers really showed the current landscape of the industry, especially in the Southern U.S. Ending the morning discussing a new training initiative for sawfilers widely supported by corporate mills really got the attention of the independents in the room.”
Kicking off the morning session was Bryant Beadles, General Manager of the Central Div., Canfor Southern Pine. Born into a sawmilling family, Beadles worked there and in the panel industry before operating his own sawmill that he sold to Canfor in 2015.
Beadles told of some of his experiences working with privately held companies, some of those with multiple owners (sometimes many) who don’t necessarily have the same priorities as mill management, especially when it comes to taking money from the company versus reinvesting.
With private companies, “Shareholders aren’t always involved,” he said.
Beadles added that Southern independent mills continue to seek buyers, that he’d been contacted by several in the past month. Going forward, Beadles noted that he’s taking an initiative to actively recruit younger sawmill management team members as labor issues continue and many supervisory personnel are nearing retirement age.
Tommy Stansell, Chief Operating Officer for CLAW Forestry gave a presentation detailing how his company acquired the legendary Anderson-Tully hardwood flooring mill at Vicksburg, Miss. and transformed it into a pine lumber producer.
He added that later this year, the company hopes to roll out a new branding to encompass its production facilities at Vicksburg and Ackerman, Miss.
Cade Warner, Chief Operating Officer for The Westervelt Co., gave a presentation detailing the company’s history that dates to 1884 and its evolution into five business segments today.
Looking at the company’s lumber business, Warner noted that key “tailwind drivers” for that segment include pent up demographic demand, underbuilt and old housing stock nationwide, new demand sources like mass timber and residuals markets and ESG-Sustainability investment trends.
Warner added that “headwind trends” challenging the lumber industry are material, labor and energy inflation, a changing workforce, international issues; logging constraints; and an oversupply of SYP on the market as multiple new producers come on-line.
One presentation in the morning session that left people talking into the lunch break came from Scott Ellsworth of Jobs for the Future and Paolo Morales of Reliability Solutions, who are heading up a new on-line saw filer training program,
Seeking to apply the traditional apprenticeship advancement process of the machinist to saw filer training, the two are seeking to further engage employers in developing and implement saw filer apprenticeship programs that can help in recruitment of new employees and retention of experienced ones.
“Invest and commit to your employees and they’ll commit to you,” Ellsworth said, noting that studies show most apprentices are still with the companies that have implemented the program one to three years later.
The presentation drew several questions and left Ellsworth and Morales involved in discussions as the morning session ended and the room emptied before lunch.
After lunch, three industry veterans covered the topic of primary and secondary breakdown profiling technology. Shawn Guibergia, President and COO of Real Performance Machinery, Bill Craig, U.S. representative for profiling pioneer Linck, and Tony LaSalata, product line manager primary breakdown systems for USNR, all presented insights into profiling technology.
Each company’s innovations and developments in profiling technology were covered, including options for sawing and system flexibility to meet customer requirements.
Latest News
Roseburg Names Orozco To Direct Strategic Business
Roseburg has annouced that Nadine Orozco has been promoted to Director of Strategic Business Development. She has served as manager of strategic business development since 2022, and has been deeply involved in key company projects, including the recent sale of Roseburg’s Simsboro, La., particleboard plant to Kronospan and the company’s historic $700 million investment in Oregon manufacturing.
Kalesnikoff Announces New Mass Timber Plant
Kalesnikoff Mass Timber announced it will build a $34 million mass timber facility in West Kootenays, British Columbia. It will create up to 90 jobs.
Hoffman Companies Acquires Besse Forest Products Group
The Hoffmann Family of Companies (HFOC), a Florida-based family-owned private equity firm, has acquired Besse Forest Products Group, the longstanding Michigan-based family-run company with 10 manufacturing facilities, including four sawmills, a lumber drying concentration yard, four veneer mills and a cut-to-size plywood mill.
Roseburg Names Tony Ramm Senior VP
Roseburg announced that Tony Ramm has been named Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Labor, overseeing the company’s human resources, benefits and compensation, recruitment, and environmental health and safety teams.
When He Talks People Listen
Article by Jessica Johnson, Senior Editor, Timber Processing January/February 2024
Some of the smartest men and women in the industry have graced the pages of this magazine—and have won the award of Timber Processing Person of the Year. They’ve all been incredibly worthy of this recognition for innovation, commitment and love of the industry they serve. Perhaps none have been quite as innovative as the introverted sawmiller from Georgia named Levi Anderson Pollard, V, whose name is on two of the patents that changed the way the sawmilling world manufactures and dries lumber (and on so many other patents as well).
Industry Says Goodbye To Walter Jarck
Walter Jarck, whose career in the forest products industry spanned 65 years and ranged from logging machinery to engineered wood products, died January 3, surrounded by his children, in North Wilkesboro, NC. He was 92.
Find Us On Social
Newsletter
The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.
Subscribe/Renew
Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.