Clayton Burger is a Northwest Pacific born and raised tree faller from Iskut, B.C., taking his skills with a chain saw all over the province, all types of forest and species of trees. After 20 years in the business as a faller, he went to work as a foreman for logging outfit, which proved to be excellent preparation to, “start my own. This is our second year operating out of Terrace, B.C..
Moving from Iskut (Tahltan territory) came after doing the coastal falling jobs, “I spent ten years in camps, had two seasons of heli-logging. I have ten 10 fallers working for me now, anywhere between eight and 15, through the year, and it will grow a lot more. We are working even as far as Columbia Valley, on the transmission line job there.”
Edziza is working in Edson, Alberta, and Dawson Creek, B.C. and, “right where we are with the Northern Transmission Line project.” Any falling or slashing is the game, “Line cutting, right-of-way, seismic, oilfield line, pipeline,” routes cut to make trails for industry, or government contracts.
Edziza is working on the Northwest Transmission Line survey of the centre line for the 300-plus kilometre transmission line project that proceeds from Terrace in Kitsumkalum through the Nass Valley and Nisga’a Nation, proceeding across Gitxsan into Tahltan territory.
“Weather’s been horrible,” miserable, raining or cold, but the crew of 12 continues to plug away through the wet conditions, “We started September 2010, and we are working on the project from point-to-point. I have a 12-man crew working on the centre line.” Most of the employees have been trained in chainsaw faller competency at his own company’s expense, by a company called Enform, and these men form the core of a company that is expanding operations to other principalities, including Alberta, and the north.
The NTL project involves doing the survey, and at the same time, cutting a walking trail the entire distance so engineers and construction teams or environmental monitoring personnel can access the route. “We are working with All-North Contracting on the survey job at NTL. I am also working on a program now in Nisga’a to run a training course for two weeks looking for chain-saw-experienced people with no tickets. We will get them out and prepare them to test, then they can pass the tests,” to be certified fallers in the region.
He says, “Business is good and getting better. We go year-round. We worked last winter in Alberta in the beetle control fall and burn program from January to March. and seismic lines. I expect that’ll keep us going again this winter.” The personnel is usually First Nation, “Most of my guys are from Hazelton, Nass Valley, Iskut, Kitimat, and Tsimshian, even Prince George. I just hired four more from Lytton and Kelowna area, since we are getting work down south on the Columbia Power project.