Canada-US lumber trade dispute simmers on
The long-standing softwood lumber trade dispute between Canada and the US is far from over and local companies continue to face economic challenges, while the MP for Desnethé -Missinippi-Churchill River is calling for a quick settlement to matters.
According to Al Bulisky, CEO of Meadow Lake Tribal Council Industrial Investments (MLTCII) and president of NorSask Forest Products, the tariff system changed dramatically in 2017 when the Trump administration imposed new convoluted charges on Canadian lumber going to the U.S.
“In between [various trade] agreements, punitive tariffs are put on Canadian lumber and this goes back decades, so we’re in a tariff regime now and we’re paying somewhere in the area of 20 per cent on all the lumber shipments that are sold into the US housing market,” Bulisky told meadowlakeNOW.
Bulisky said $10 million in funds rest in trust at the US Department of Commerce until there is a resolution. Part of the proposed deal is that some of those funds are released back to the parties that put those funds forward.