top of page

Indigenous Awareness Training:

For Forestry Workers

Inspire a culture of accountability and awareness in your Forestry company, with an understanding of history, culture, and relationships with Indigenous Peoples.

Communication

Understand the significance of terms and language—and what respectful communication looks like.

Relationship Building

Learn how Indigenous and Western worldviews impact decision-making, perspectives and needs.

​

Understanding Rights

Learn about the legal constitution, Aboriginal and treaty rights and your duty to uphold them.

galen-crout-dzMGBH88ZOA-unsplash.jpg

Improve cultural awareness

This online course will provide you with background information on Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

The duty to consult and accommodate Indigenous communities regarding resource development projects (as outlined in Canadian law and affirmed by court decisions) can sometimes lead to conflicts in the forestry sector.

This training program has been created by Indigenous Corporate Training Inc. and has been licensed to the WFCA—in an effort to promote cultural competence and reconciliation within BC's Forestry Sector.

Through this training, you will learn a number of perspectives and receive hints and tips to build relationships and work effectively on unceded lands.

Join the Online Training

​

If you are a BC forestry worker, leader or employer—you can register for free access.

SAC Wordmark_Final-01.png

© WFCA 2025

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. Reconciliation 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/

bottom of page