A22-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 1, 2000 (Continued from Pag* A 1) Agriculture. According to Lys kava, the forest production in dustry employs 90,000-100,000 individuals in the entire state in three different sectors. The first sector, lumber, in cludes logging, sawmills, panels, floorings, log and mobile homes, and moldings. About 1,700 woo d-related firms make their home in Pennsylvania and employ 36,000 employees. The second sector, furniture, includes household and furniture plus fixtures. About 17,000 workers are employed in this sector in 500 firms. The paper and paper products sector includes pulp and paper, paperboard, and container boxes. About 400 firms employ 36,000 Pennsylva nians, obviously a very import ant economic driving force over the entire state. Lancaster hosts the highest number of wood related establishments in the state, with 176 establishments employing more than 5,000 resi dents. York, with the Spring Grove paper factory, employs more than 6,000 residents. The top hardwood producer in America, Pennsylvania compa nies produce 1.1 billion board feet of lumber annually. If currrent trends in the timber industry continue, the future is bright for wood-related businesses. With increased con cern and emphasis on utilization and sustainability, logging com panies are assuring themseles of future supply. “Logs need to be available not only today but years down the road,” explained Lyskava. Pennsylvania forest products actually come from predomi nantly small, family-run compa nies harvesting locally-grown trees. “Their ties are not to Wall Street but to Main Street,’ said Lyskava. “There’s a misconcep tion that it’s a giant, corporate enterprise instead of a business harvesting locally-grown prod uct with strong ties to the com munity they serve.” Tom Buzby, Weaber’s direc tor of governmental affairs, gave a summary on the Sustainable Forestry Initiative of Pennsylva nia (SFI). The organization, a voluntary, effort to preserve trees, is a program of forestry and conservation practices. SFI accomplishes its goals through The company’s short board program includes finger and- edge-jointed boards less than 18 inches long to gether. These boards are actually stronger and more stable and 40 percent cheaper than traditional boards. From Forest To Flooring Tour Of Weaber Mill Reveals Importance Of Timber To Pennsylvania Economy educating landowners, training loggers, and providing the public with information on for ests. Through the SFI program landowners receive the latest in formation on methods for man aging forests. To promote sustainable forestry practices, loggers learn skills and proper environmental practices. In educating the public SFI works to “assure them (the public) that we’ve got a great forest system managed by skilled people,” said Buzby. Bill Robie, from the Hard wood Lumber Manufacturers Association of Pennsylvania (HLMA), explained how the or ganization’s outreach and edu cation projects. “Project Learning Tree,” for example, a national environmental educa tion program, will be distributed to every public school in the state this summer. The program includes a poster, video, and in teractive CD ROM along with other materials to help teach schoolchildren about the indus try. In addition, HLMA partnered with Penn State to outfit the interior of the univer sity’s nearby airport terminal in hardwood, an opportunity to expose people to hardwood products. The Mill Matt Weaber, vice president of Weaber and grandson of founder Walter Weaber, led the group on a tour through the mill. The company produces 200 truckloads, or 900,000 square feet of lumber per week of pre dominantly oak and poplar, spe cies common to the area. The company produces approxi mately 20,000 board feet per hour. Weaber gathers the bulk of their wood from a 70-mile radius, a circle which sometimes stretches 150 miles away. This radius reaches into five other states. Since much of this area is agricultural, the company uses a highly-sensitive metal detector to locate the insulators or wire before the log goes in to be sawed. Inside the mill, the trees are debarked and processed through a headsaw, which slices the logs into a rough, four-sided “cant” that is 8-16 feet long. The bigger pieces recirculate for a recut. The cut of the cants are dictated by computer but an operator carefully positions the logs before cutting. By keeping an eye on the computer screen and operating the various buttons and pedals, the operator sends the log into the twin bandsaw. The cuts are sorted by species, length, and width, and graded according to value. Next the planks are dropped into bins along with cuts of similar value. The boards are run through a planer, regraded, and sent through a kiln drying process. Although drying time depends on the thickness and type of wood drying, most wood is dried for about a week to the desired six- to- eight- percent moisture content. Three million board feet are in some form of drying at all times in the six kilns and two pre-drying kilns. The boards move to the warehouse, where they are shrink-wrapped for handling efficiency and protec tion and stacked like vanilla wafers in cellophane along the warehouse wall. The Trends “We get 25 percent more out of a log than we did 20 years ago,” said Weaber. Part of this efficiency can be attributed to “optimization,” where a com puter scans the logs to deter mine the optimum solution for most effective cutting. In addi tion, the company uses the thin nest blade possible to create less sawdust. The green sawdust that is produced goes to the boilers in the wood-drying kilns on the property and the dry sawdust becomes bedding for area live stock. The six truckloads of sawdust produced every week is a number that grows smaller every year, thanks to increased efficiency. Bark, another by product of the process, is used by area landscapers. The com pany’s short board program uti lizes the smaller pieces normally sent to the chopsaw. To ensure a quality end prod uct, the knots are cut out of the planks. The boards with knots that are two feet or longer move into the short board program, where they are marketed to the do-it-yourself home centers. The lower grade boards go to chop saws while the boards 18 inches or shorter go to the “finger jointer.” To finger-joint a board, grooves are cut into of the board and the boards are puzzled pieced together, then glued with a regular wood glue. Next the rough edges are taken off to yield a more paintable product. “Years ago these boards would have been sawdust, but now we’re recovering more wood out of the same log,” said Weaber. The finger joint boards are actually stronger and more stable, as they lock each other in place, and the joints allow for greater surface area for glue,” said Weaber. Also the boards are typically 40 percent cheaper than other boards of the same size. “For us, it’s a value-added product, because it’s got more value than sawdust,” Weaber said. When the long finger jointed boards are joined to other finger-joined boards, they become “edge-jointed,” with a hardwood floor appearance. These boards are used for stair skirts or column wraps in home construction. Bob Stamey positions the four-sided “cants” according to the computer scanning results for the operating saw. Closely watcing the computer screen, Stamey dictates the movement of the cant by operating appropriate buttons and pedals. The boards are sorted by species, length, and and then graded according to value. They will be dropped into bins with cuts of similar value before they head to the planer, are regarded, and sent to the kiln to dry for about a week. Another value-added process one example of the technology Weaber utilizes is the veneer which is changing the face of the profiler, which includes a piece timber industry. Workers use of veneer glued on top of the hand-held computers in the jointed board underneath. This warehouse, where the computer yields an oak veneer face or, screens show what cut of wood is more simply, a thin slice of oak needed to fill an order, then de over an oak substrate floor. A ducts the board from inventory, pelleted glue is heated and This, of course, has drastically pressed to hold the veneer finish cut down the time needed to fill onto the wood beneath. the smaller orders the company Small personal computers are (Turn to Pago A 24) Matt Waabar, vica preaidant of Waabar Inc., shows a board which has a thin slice of oak over a finger- and adge- Jointad board. A pelleted glue is heated and pressed to hold the veneer face to the board underneath.