Land Use Policy

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An important part of LP’s sustainability program is to provide our employees and wood suppliers with current information on harvesting, reforesting and managing forest lands in order to achieve sustainability well into the future. Here are some practices we advocate and, whenever possible, require of our partners and ourselves.

Reforestation

We believe prompt reforestation is the cornerstone of sustainable forestry. On lands we manage, we reforest within two years of final harvest, or within five years when using planned natural regeneration. We encourage the same level of stewardship among the forest landowners with whom we do business. We suggest that landowners choose a suitable reforestation plan before the harvest.

Water Quality

LP encourages sustainable forestry practices that protect our water quality. Examples of best management practices include following a long-term forest management plan, leaving vegetated buffer strips along streams and other bodies of water, controlling or eliminating waste disposal on forest lands, properly maintaining roads, and implementing proper stream crossings.

Wildlife Habitat

We realize there is no single forest management practice that benefits all species equally. This makes developing a forest management plan particularly challenging for landowners. We encourage them to consider the type and age of the forest, size and shape of the property, presence of water bodies and streamside management zones, target wildlife species, and any unique habitats as part of their forest management plan.

Biodiversity

We encourage landowners to conserve and manage habitats of rare species by providing them with a wildlife habitat and biodiversity guidance document. Of particular importance are any listed as threatened or endangered by federal, state, or provincial governments. The goal of recognizing the habitats of rare species is to conserve and manage them to prevent any further population decline.