Breweries and maple syrup producer among Vermont businesses hit by Trump's tariffs on Canada
Source: AP
Updated 5:00 PM EDT, March 18, 2025
NEWPORT, Vt. (AP) Business owners from both sides of the U.S.-Canada border gathered Tuesday in Vermont to share how the Trump administrations sweeping tariffs have affected their industries. President Donald Trumps tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum and repeated comments that Canada should become the 51st state have infuriated Canadians, and many are boycotting American goods in response.
Whats going on in Canada is without precedent. The threat is over and above tariffs right now, said Marie-Claude Bibeau, a Canadian member of parliament representing Compton-Stanstead. And Im even a bit a bit emotional when I say that because its a threat against our sovereignty.
The 18 participants in the roundtable discussion included breweries, a maple syrup producer, a furniture company, an electrical company and a ski resort. Donna Young of Judds Wayeeses Farms in Morgan said most of the equipment she uses to produce maple products comes from Canada.
All the tariffs and the changing political atmosphere, its just made it extremely disruptive, she said. The weather is always a big stress factor when youre sugaring. We dont need this extra stress on top of it.
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........Canada is the top export destination for 36 U.S. states. Nearly $3.6 billion Canadian (US$2.7 billion) worth of goods and services cross the border each day. In Vermont, trade with Canada accounted for more than a third of the states exports and two-thirds of its imports last year. According to Welch, one in four of the states businesses rely on trade with Canada, and they cannot afford to absorb a 25% hike on imports.
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Everybody knows, except apparently President Trump, that the people who pay the tariffs are the people who buy the products, Welch said in a Senate floor speech last week.This is really, really stupid. This is going to hurt Vermont.
Bibeau urged the American participants to pressure Trump to reverse course.
This is not the right thing to do, not for your economy and not for ours either, she said. And I think we have to keep working together and to make the demonstration that its harming our two countries and our people.