Nip Impressions logo
Thu, May 2, 2024 15:48
Visitor
Home
Click here for Pulp & Paper Radio International
Subscription Central
Must reads for pulp and paper industry professionals
Search
My Profile
Login
Logout
Management Side
Maine leaders upbeat about forest products industry

SKOWHEGAN, Maine (From The Press Herald) -- Members of Maine's congressional delegation expressed optimism Friday about the future of the state's forest products industry as they toured the Sappi Fine Paper mill a day after announcing the formation of a federal economic development team that will work with Maine businesses in the wake of several mill closures.

"We had a great visit today at Sappi," said Sen. Angus King, an independent. "The demise of the paper industry in Maine has been grossly exaggerated. That's one of the points we want to get across. This is a great mill, the seventh-largest coated paper mill in the world, and they're working hard and making progress."

King, who also visited the Androscoggin Mill in Jay on Friday, joined Republican Sen. Susan Collins and Rep. Bruce Poliquin, R-2nd District, at the Skowhegan mill, where they met with workers and officials and toured the plant. Earlier in the week the three, along with Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-1st District, received notice from the U.S. Department of Commerce that the federal government will put together an Economic Development Assessment Team, at the request of Collins and King, to evaluate the future of Maine's forest products industry and how it can remain viable.

The request in March came on the heels of the closure of Madison Paper Industries - the fifth mill to close in the state in two years.

Key to the success of Maine's remaining mills is innovation, members of the delegation said Friday.

"There are still about 35,000 jobs in the woods products industry here in Maine - sawmills, loggers, truckers, paper mills. We need to do everything humanly possible to help these mills thrive," Poliquin said.

Skowhegan's Sappi Fine Paper employs about 800 people and produces more than 2,000 tons of coated paper per day.

"Sappi North America was pleased to host a tour of our congressional delegation in Maine today and we appreciate the support they provide the pulp and paper industry," Mark Hittie, director of packaging brands and communications for the company, said in a prepared statement. On Friday's tour, which was closed to the media, Collins said the delegation learned that while coated paper, a glossy paper often used in magazine printing, is still an important product, the Skowhegan mill also is looking at other paper products it can make.

"For example, they're looking at packaging for food, for dog food. That's really important, that these mills diversify in order to keep jobs," she said.

Sappi North America has been producing LusterPrint, a grease-resistant paper used primarily for pet food packaging, since 1993, and last year it expanded the line to include a new paper called LusterCote at the Skowhegan mill, according to Hittie.

The launch of the new paper line was a key facet in the company's decision to expand production of packaging materials, according to a news release issued in February 2015.

The Economic Development Assessment Team team announced Thursday will be modeled on the National Disaster Framework and will be similar to groups the federal Economic Development Administration has used to address more than 30 other major incidents and economic development crises, such as the New England fisheries challenges, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Colorado wildfires and flooding.

Agencies that will be involved include the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Labor, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of the Treasury, the Small Business Administration, and the Northern Border Regional Commission. Representatives from those groups will meet with local community and business representatives this month to discuss strategies for economic growth and recovery, the delegation said.

They also will look at other factors, such as high energy costs, foreign competition and the high value of the U.S. dollar in terms of how they affect the health of the forest products economy.

"It's going to be a comprehensive look at the industry," Collins said. "It will cut across agency lines and will have great involvement from stakeholders here in Maine. That's the most important part. What I hear that we need is an inventory of the wood resources that we have in our state."

The Maine Forest Products Council, the University of Maine and state officials also are looking at questions of economic development around the forest products industry, according to an emailed statement Friday from Patrick Strauch, executive director of the forest products council.

"We welcome a discussion with federal officials about resources that might contribute to our effort to strengthen our businesses and the rural communities that rely on the 33,538 jobs our industry supports in Maine," Strauch said.

The federal team plans to produce a customized economic development plan for each community it looks at as a guide to creating new jobs and future economic development. Members of the team initially will come to Maine for three days this month, though exact dates have not yet been set, according to a news release Thursday from the delegation.

"This is only the 30th time the federal government has done anything like this across the country," King said. "It's really a big deal to focus the resources of the federal government on helping. It's a bottom-up process that will start with the people on the ground and the problems they have."


Printer-friendly format

 





Powered by Bondware
News Publishing Software

The browser you are using is outdated!

You may not be getting all you can out of your browsing experience
and may be open to security risks!

Consider upgrading to the latest version of your browser or choose on below: