Skip to content
Government Federal, Political

Timber union to fight for every job under new environment laws

Timber, Furnishing and Textiles Union 2 mins read

The Timber, Furnishing and Textiles Union (TFTU) will continue to fight for every timber job and protect timber workers and communities across the country.

The union reaffirmed this commitment following the passage of new national environment laws in Canberra this week.

TFTU National Secretary Michael O’Connor said the full impact of the new laws on timber supply is yet to be established, but the union expects the industry’s environmental management system to stack up well when assessed against the new, stricter standards.

“The Greens are way off the mark by claiming this is the death of native forestry,” Mr O’Connor said.

“Some Liberal and National Party MPs and industry bodies should be cautious about mimicking Green talking points.”

“Our union expects the sector to do well if the new standards are sensible and applied in a reasonable, evidence-based way — which we’ll be pushing for.”

Under the new laws, environmental assessments of forestry operations currently undertaken through the Regional Forest Agreement framework will shift to an alternative accreditation pathway aligned with the yet-to-be-finalised National Environmental Standards.

“Our call is simple,” Mr O’Connor continued. “The finalisation of the standards — and the assessment of operations against them — must ensure ongoing active and sustainable forest management, support sustainable development in timber communities, and deliver a stronger future for the workers who manage these forests and those whose livelihoods they sustain.”

The union notes that any structural impacts from the new Standards are unlikely to exceed existing pressures on supply — including reductions associated with the Great Koala National Park in NSW and, in Tasmania, the long-forecast 50% decline in native forest sawlog volumes from Sustainable Timber Tasmania from 2027.

Mr O’Connor said the union welcomed the establishment of the Forestry Industry Growth Fund, which will provide access to concessional finance for retooling and upgrades, workforce training, work health and safety improvements and workplace productivity. He also welcomed the recognition of forestry, timber and wood-products manufacturing as a Priority Industry under the Future Made in Australia National Interest Framework, alongside sectors such as hydrogen, critical minerals and green metals.

“These are practical steps the Australian Government is taking to address policy settings and market disruptions affecting supply and profitability,” he said.

“Our union will continue working with the Australian and State Governments, and good, willing and capable employers, to overcome challenges and seize opportunities so that existing timber jobs are protected — and new, well-paid and secure jobs are created,” Mr O’Connor concluded.

Media comment: 0418550831

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Taxation
  • 02/04/2026
  • 07:30
Australian Taxation Office

ATO launches powerful new app feature to stop scam calls in their tracks

Australians can now instantly confirm whether a call claiming to be from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) is genuine, with the launch of a new in-app security feature designed to shut down scammers. The new ‘verify call’ feature in the ATO app allows users to confirm, in real time, that they are speaking with the real ATO, not a fraudster. ATO Assistant Commissioner Anita Challen says the new feature puts control back in taxpayers’ hands to be able to shut down calls that are not from the ATO and protect their accounts. ‘Scammers are becoming increasingly savvy, making it harder…

  • Government Federal, Mental Health
  • 02/04/2026
  • 07:00
Professor Ian Hickie AO

Free public transport key to combat mental health crisis amid global uncertainty

Free public transport key to combat mental health crisis amid global uncertainty One of Australia's leading mental health advocatesis calling on the NSW Government to make public transport free, warning that a return to pandemic-era isolation poses a significant threat to Australians’ mental health. Fuel shortages and rapidly increasing prices are prompting more Australians to work from home. They have created real barriers for people getting to work, school and participating in other essential community activities. Prominent psychiatrist, Professor Ian Hickie AO, says free public transport is a simple, immediate and effective solution to ensure people can maintain their daily…

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 02/04/2026
  • 06:00
Rewiring Australia

National plan needed as fuel crisis bites households

Australia needs a national plan to get off imported oil for good, not just a call to conserve it, Rewiring Australia said today. “Our country runs on someoneelse’s oil even though we’re one of the best locations in the world to generate cheap electricity,” said Rewiring Australia CEO Francis Vierboom. “More than four million homes already have rooftop solar andEV sales are surging. Australians can see where this is heading. They just need a national plan to get there faster.” Rewiring Australia is calling on the government to introduce a National Electrification Plan and end billions of dollars in fuel…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.