SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — A year ago, Steve Killgore walked into his mill's cafeteria, a white-collared executive entering the den of some of the timber industry's most bitter workers.
The plywood economy was in free-fall. The county assessor had served the mill with foreclosure notices for failure to pay $800,000 in back taxes, and rumors of bankruptcy were rippling through the lunch room.
"One out of three of you will be let go," Killgore, the president of McKenzie Forest Products, told the men in the cafeteria, steadying himself against the door.
It was the lowest point in his career, said Killgore, a man whose great-grandfather logged the mountains in eastern Oregon with a team of mules.
Six months later, Killgore's company is out of the red, one of 34 mills in the Pacific Northwest that has been revived by an unprecedented increase in plywood prices.
Last May, 1,000 square feet of plywood sold for $392, according to Random Lengths, a trade publication in Eugene, Ore. A month later, prices took off "like a rocket," said Jim Enright, general sales manager at Rosboro Lumber, another plywood manufacturer in Springfield.
By June, the same product sold for $435, and in August, prices topped $500. Prices reached an industry high of $650 in November — a record that was broken month after month in the first part of this year, peaking at $735 in the April 23 report. The price declined to $727 in the April 30 report.
"That's the highest price in the history of this publication. It's the highest in the history of the industry," said Shawn Church, editor of Random Lengths, referring to the $735. Random Lengths has tracked weekly price averages for different forest products for 60 years.
Lumber prices are so high, said Michael Carliner, an economist with the National Association of Homebuilders in Washington, D.C., that they are tearing the profit out of new construction.
"There's 300 wood panels in an average home. The wholesale price used to be $6. Now it's $17," said Carliner.
In Springfield, a city surrounded by mills, the resurgence marks the first time in recent memory that the manufacturer, not the builder, called the shots.
"You can hear the sense of panic in people's voices when they have a job to fill, and they can't find the wood in time. When you have 10 of them on hold, you know it's time to raise the price," said Josh Gibeau, sales manager for McKenzie Forest Products.
The plywood renaissance is a direct result of the booming housing industry, which represents 70 percent of the plywood market. Last year, builders broke ground on 1.5 million single-family homes, a building industry record. Houses are also bigger than they used to be, said Carliner — from an average of 1,600 square feet in 1973 to more than 2,300 square feet last year.
"That translates into more wood," he said.
For many in the plywood industry, the dramatic recovery is not a time to brag, but an opportunity to recover.
"We've just come out of a horrible period. People are just healing up," said Allyn Ford, president of Roseburg Forest Products, America's largest plywood manufacturer.
Ford shut down one of his mills last year, shedding 600 jobs. In Springfield, Killgore trimmed his mill work force from 325 to 200, but that managed to save it.
Since 1989, 35 of the state's 60 mills have been shuttered and 6,000 jobs have been lost — a decline brought by the listing of the spotted owl as an endangered species, which resulted in the closure of vast reaches of Northwest forests to logging.
But the turnaround has allowed Killgore to pay the Lane County assessor, replace broken machinery and recoup $3 million in environmental cleanup costs.
The resurgence has hit all aspects of the timber industry, but plywood has seen the most pronounced recovery.
While the industry as a whole grappled with the spotted owl, it was plywood alone that suffered from the introduction of oriented strand board, a composite product made primarily from Canadian aspen. Introduced in 1980, the cheaper board has taken a sizable chunk of the plywood market, said Jack Merry of the Engineered Wood Association in Tacoma, Wash.
Still, many caution that the wave is about to crest.
"It's a bubble," said Ford. "I live in hope. But in my old age, I have come to learn that you cannot sustain this level of activity."
The sound of a mill going full throttle is like a hailstorm. As the logs enter the mill, they are pushed into a house-sized saw, which peels rind after rind off the log, like a giant wooden orange. The plywood sheets spit out, pounding the assembly line.
"It's like Beirut in here," joked Killgore, as he walked past the assembly line in his Springfield mill.
One worker approached him with a question. Others waved.
"Before, I would walk through the mill and they wouldn't acknowledge me," he said. "Now they see the trucks and the railcars, the movement of the wood. I don't think anyone is making obscene gestures when I walk through the mill anymore."