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April 26, 2010
Cloquet Logger Named National Logger of the Year

Rockville, MD – The Forest Resources Association honored Cloquet, Minnesota’s Berthiaume Logging as its 2010 National Outstanding Logger at its March 14 Annual Awards Luncheon in Hilton Head, South Carolina. FRA Chairman Dave Liebetreu presented Dave and Cindy Berthiaume with a special plaque.

Kent Hall of Stihl also congratulated them and presented them with a $1,000 check.

Dave Berthiaume thanked Liebetreu and FRA for the Award, commenting, “My father, now 87, started the Berthiaume family logging business nearly 60 years ago. As I and my brothers grew up and entered the business, he instilled upon us the values of hard work, the unbendable rule of treating people fairly and that if you treat the land with respect, it will provide for you always.”

He added, “I would be remiss not to mention how all of us in the timber industry have a greater environmental awareness than ever before. It does my heart good to see industry companies up north like Sappi, Potlatch, and Bell Timber step forward to support logger training and best management practices.”

Over the years, Berthiaume Logging has developed a strong reputation for conducting harvests in a way that is sensitive both to the environment and to landowner objectives. On sites where harvesting will be highly visible and aesthetics will be a major issue, it is not uncommon to hear—from industry, agency, or consulting forester—”Can we get Berthiaume Logging to do the work?”

One of many examples of Berthiaume Logging’s commitment to following Sustainable Forestry Initiative requirements is its use of logging slash on steep slopes to divert water runoff and mitigate erosion concerns. Governing his operation in accordance with the Minnesota Forest Management Guidelines, Dave Berthiaume does not wait for the forester or landowner to shut his crew down if a site has received significant rainfall—he suspends operations until conditions improve, voluntarily.

Berthiaume Logging’s commitment to safety and the firm’s outstanding safety record also set it apart. Consuming mills often consult Dave for his advice on woodyard safety, as well as on trucking and logging safety issues.

A family-run business for three generations, Berthiaume Logging has been a mainstay in the education of students at Cloquet Forestry Center. When students need to see an example of sound forest management, they tour an active Berthiaume Logging site, questioning crew members about practices and performance. The company has also made itself available to work with researchers at the Cloquet Forestry Center, in one case reducing productivity significantly to conduct a controlled experiment on the impact of spreading, versus removing, logging slash on an active job, to permit the Center to evaluate impacts.

In spite of the many demands of his business, it is important to Dave Berthiaume to find the time to involve himself deeply in his community. As his daughter, Rachael, wrote in supporting Berthiaume Logging’s nomination:

“My Dad always claims, ‘You have to work with the people.’ One of my favorite donations he does is to haul and set up the buildings for the Sentence to Serve. These are young folks that have started out life down the wrong path but gain a sense of pride by participating in the creation of these buildings. My Dad says it’s all worth it when he sees the young folks’ excitement when the final log is raised.”

Dave Berthiaume sits on the board of Directors of the Minnesota Timber Producers Association (TPA) the state’s largest trade organization representing loggers.

“We couldn’t be more proud of Berthiaume Logging, said Ray Higgins of TPA. “They’re indicative of the excellent loggers we have in Minnesota, companies that properly manage our state’s forests, supplying the timber needed to make the products we all use daily, and ensuring the forest’s health for generations to come.”

FRA has honored 20 National Outstanding Loggers since establishing the national award in 1990. Recent National Outstanding Loggers include Mitchell and Wanda Presley of Alabama (2005), Adrian Bishop, of South Carolina (2006), Tommy Barnes and David Cox, of Edgemoor, South Carolina (2007), David and Kurt Babineau, of West Enfield, Maine (2008), and the partners of Redoutey Logging, McDermott, Ohio, last year. Nominees for this year’s award passed through state-level recognition to regional award programs administered through FRA’s Regional Division structure. A jury of 25 national-level leaders in forestry and conservation selected the winner.

The other nominees for this year’s National award were:
John F. Sprigs, S&S Lumber Company LLC, McDermott, Ohio
Hermell Pelletier and Lyle Brundige, Monadnock Land Clearing, Greenville, New Hampshire
Anthony and Janet Ison, Ison Logging Company, Inc., LaFayette, Alabama
Gary NeeSmith, NeeSmith Timber Company, Lyons, Georgia

The Outstanding Logger program is designed:

1)to recognize outstanding logging contractor performance;
2)to raise the visibility of competent, professional independent logging contractors in the forestry community;
3)to encourage other independent logging contractors to emulate the outstanding performance of the award winners; and
4)to improve forester-logger relations by publicly recognizing outstanding logging performance as an essential element of every planned timber harvest.

The Forest Resources Association Inc. is a nonprofit trade association concerned with the safe, efficient, and sustainable harvest of forest products and their transport from woods to mill. FRA represents wood consumers, independent logging contractors, wood dealers, and landowners, as well as businesses providing products and services to the forest resource-based industries.

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