Sask. company fears closure after government regulation change
A Saskatchewan wood preservation company is supposed to be celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. Instead, the family-owned business might be shutting down.
Perry Vermette, the CEO and president of Vermette Wood Preservers in Prince Albert, said the business was started by his dad in the early 1970s. The plant became pentachlorophenol-based after Canadian regulations over wood preservation changed in the ‘90s.
When Vermette’s father passed away in 2004, Perry and his two brothers bought the company from their uncle to keep running it as a family business. Today, it’s just Perry at the helm to navigate the problems ahead.
Vermette said his company used the oil-based product to preserve their wood and sell it, but last year the Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) decided to discontinue its licence for the pentachlorophenol product that Vermette’s company uses.