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Danielle Lussier

they/she

Danielle Lussier has been a registered forest practicioner in Alberta since 2006 and is the owner of the company Muskrat Environmental Ltd. When she isn't being slapped in the face by trees, running from bears, or being eaten by bugs in the bush: she can likely be found flying over the handle bars of a mountain bike or sled in Kaslo, BC. Her core beliefs are equality, sustainability and diversity.

About

Danielle Lussier

I started out cutting trails and learning about forestry as a Junior Forest Ranger at 16yrs old for the Alberta Government in the Crowsnest Pass. My career has since grown to include being a silviculture forester and landuse Supervisor in Hinton AB, manager of an MTU in Rocky Mountain House AB, Site Prep and Prescription Forester for IPL, and a contract manager and fieldwork supervisor for several contractors in northern Alberta before starting my own company. I specialize in forest mensuration work, silviculture practices, plant species ID/ecosite typing, and cutblock+road layout.

RFP

Origin

New Sarepta, Alberta

Current Location

Kaslo, BC and all over Alberta

- Registered Professional Forest Technologist since 2006

- Silviculture Forester

- Landuse Supervisor

- Prescription and Supervising RFP

- Crew Lead, RFP, Project Manager, GIS and Planning, Field Services

- Owner/ Director Muskrat Environmental Ltd: GIS and Planning, Silviculture + Measurement Field Services, Contract Management + Supervision, Mentoring

Site Contributions

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© WFCA 2023

Members of the Cache project team are grateful to live, work, and be in relationship with people from across many traditional and unceded territories, covering all parts of the land known as British Columbia, Canada. We thoughtfully offer this acknowledgement recognizing that reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples' is a commitment we all share as Canadians. We are grateful to live on this land and are committed to reconciliation, decolonization, and building relationships in our communities and workplaces. Land acknowledgements are one small step towards reconciling the relationships between settlers and Indigenous Peoples, in Canada. Colonialism is a current and ongoing process. Being mindful of our participation is another step on the path of healing. Learn more about land acknowledgements and moving beyond them here: https://native-land.ca/resources/territory-acknowledgement/

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