The Teal-Jones Group has an injunction, which was approved in court last week, that will result in contempt of court charges for demonstrators who do not clear blockades in one of four demonstration sites in the area when asked to by police. Wright said the company, which is the largest privately owned timber harvesting and primary lumber product manufacturing company in B.C., will likely try to enforce it once the snow has melted in some of the work-site areas. Roads will be need to be built to access the trees. “The judge was clear in his decision that blockades impeding our access to the area are illegal,” a representative for Teal-Jones said in a statement to the Times Colonist. “We are not in a position to get into next steps at this time, other than to say it is time for our work to get underway.”