The Prosperity Coalition · Trade Impact Map

US-Canada Trade Impact Map
Where Trade Disruption Hits Closest to Home

Stories Documented
251 / growing
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The Prosperity Coalition is a US-Canada trade advocacy organization that documents the economic impact of US-Canada tariffs on American businesses and advocates for free and fair trade between the United States and Canada. This interactive map documents 251 verified American business stories showing how disruptions to US-Canada trade are hurting farmers, manufacturers, breweries, retailers, and tourism operators across 47 US states — with the Canada-US border economy feeling the sharpest disruption.

About this map · Key findings · Full 251-story index

About The Prosperity Coalition

The Prosperity Coalition was co-founded to defend and strengthen the Canada-US trading relationship — the largest bilateral trading relationship in the world. The Prosperity Coalition tracks the real-world cost of tariffs on American workers, businesses, and communities through documented case studies drawn from news reports, congressional testimony, corporate earnings calls, and direct interviews. The Prosperity Coalition's story map is the most comprehensive public database of tariff-impact stories on the Canada-US border.

The Canada-US Border Economy

No region has felt the strain on US-Canada trade more acutely than communities along the Canada-US border. From Maine and New Hampshire in the east, through the Great Lakes, and out to Washington state and Alaska in the west, Canada-US border counties rely on cross-border tourism, supply chains, and consumer traffic that tariffs have choked off. Canadian crossings into the US fell nearly 20% in 2025; in northern New Hampshire, New York, Montana, and Idaho, border businesses report 30-75% drops in Canadian visitors. The Canada-US border economy is the leading indicator of what tariffs cost America.

What The Prosperity Coalition Documents

The Prosperity Coalition has documented 251 American business stories across the following sectors: Tourism (declining Canadian visitors, hotel revenue losses, cancelled bookings); Agriculture (potash fertilizer cost spikes, collapsed export markets, wine and spirits losses); Manufacturing (aluminum and steel tariff cost increases, auto supply chain disruption, Canadian softwood lumber tariffs); Retail (Canadian consumer boycott, cross-border shopping collapse); Energy (crude oil tariffs threatening US refinery operations); and Food & Beverage (bourbon, wine, craft beer, specialty bakery exports, and seafood industry losses).

Key Findings: US-Canada Trade Impact

  • Canadian border crossings into the US fell nearly 20% nationally in 2025
  • US spirits exports to Canada fell 85% in Q2 2025 after provincial shelf bans
  • US wine exports to Canada fell 78% in 2025, a $357 million loss
  • Maine exports to Canada fell nearly 20% in 2025
  • New Hampshire exports to Canada fell 42.6% in the first half of 2025
  • Automakers paid $10 billion in Canada-Mexico tariffs through October 2025
  • NAHB estimates Canadian lumber tariffs add $10,900 to the cost of a new American home
  • The US Supreme Court struck down IEEPA tariffs in February 2026, estimating over $160 billion in illegally collected duties
  • Canadian visits to Las Vegas fell by 224,000 in 2025
  • Colorado ski resorts saw a 53% decline in Canadian bookings
  • Jay Peak Resort saw 35% fewer Canadian season passes; hockey tournament bookings collapsed from 300 teams to 5-6
  • Blaine, WA retail and service revenue fell 40% as Canadian border crossings from BC dropped 35%
  • Ford Motor absorbed a $1.5–$2B tariff headwind tied to the Canada supply chain
  • Alcoa paid $115M in tariff costs in a single quarter
  • AriZona Iced Tea's iconic 99-cent price point was threatened by 50% Canadian aluminum tariffs
  • Brown-Forman (Jack Daniel's) Canadian sales fell 62% year-over-year
  • The Gordie Howe International Bridge opening was threatened by the Trump administration

Prosperity Coalition Story Index — All 251 US Business Stories

The following is a summary index of the 251 American business stories documented by The Prosperity Coalition on this map. Each story links to sourced reporting and includes direct quotes from business owners, executives, farmers, and community leaders across the United States.

  1. NH Gift Shop — Fiddleheads, Colebrook NH: "Being only eight miles from the border, normally Canadians make up anywhere from 15–25% of visitors. Now, I can probably count the number of Canadian visitors on one hand." — Elizabeth Guerin, Owner (US Senate JEC Report, December 2025)
  2. Fox Run Vineyards, Penn Yan NY: Drop in Canadian wine tourists had a "noticeable impact on our bottom line." Canadians made up 10% of business. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  3. Old Stagecoach Inn, Waterbury VT: "This is long-lasting damage to a relationship. While people aren't visiting Vermont, they'll be finding new places to visit, making new memories… and we will not recapture all of that." — Christa Bowdish, Owner (Fortune, December 2025)
  4. SeaFeast Festival, Bellingham WA: "We could not rely on our Canadian business." More than half of 60 surveyed Bellingham businesses reported losses. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  5. Visit Fargo-Moorhead, Fargo ND: "These are more than numbers; they represent missed revenue for local businesses, reduced hotel demand." — Shirley Hughes, President & CEO (Fortune, December 2025)
  6. Minnesota Farm, Kerkhoven MN: "When it comes to something like tariffs, that is totally out of our control and very frustrating." — Harmon Wilts, Farmer (The Narwhal, January 2025)
  7. American Soybean Association, Magnolia KY: "Tariffs rock a core tenet on which our trading relationships are built, and that is reliability." — Caleb Ragland, President (AgWeb, March 2025)
  8. Ford Motor Company, Dearborn MI: $1.5B–$2B tariff headwind tied to Canada supply chain. (Ford/SEC Filing, October 2025)
  9. Alcoa Corporation, Pittsburgh PA: $115M in tariff costs in Q2 2025. (US Chamber of Commerce, December 2025)
  10. Point of View Inn, Old Orchard Beach ME: 90% of summer bookings paused or canceled. (Spectrum News Maine, June 2025)
  11. Seaside Inn, Kennebunk ME: "$7,000 in deposits returned — it's their honor." — Ken Mason, Owner (Spectrum News Maine, May 2025)
  12. Fitzgerald's Tavern, Calais ME: Canadian traffic down 75%. "The border used to feel like nothing. Now it's quiet in a way it's never been." (Portland Press Herald, September 2025)
  13. Resurgence Brewing, Buffalo NY: "All of our cans either come from Canada, or the aluminum being used to make the cans comes from Canada. And our biggest cost — our grain, our barley — we buy all of that from Canada too." — Jeff Ware, President (AP/Fortune, March 2025)
  14. Discover Kalispell, Kalispell MT: 46% decrease in Canadian credit card spending, 73% decrease in hotel bookings from Canada. (Daily Inter Lake, May 2025)
  15. Expeditions Alaska, Anchorage AK: "It just seems adversarial, and people don't want to come spend their money with adversaries." — Carl Donohue, Owner (ADN, June 2025)
  16. Skagway Brewing Company, Skagway AK: Rising food costs and fear of lost Canadian visitors. (Alaska Public Radio, March 2025)
  17. Solomon's Store, West Stewartstown NH: "The friction at the border is no longer just a headline; it is an empty parking lot and a threat to our livelihood." — Kyle Daley, Owner (JEC Report, December 2025)
  18. Java Moose Coffeehouse, Grand Marais MN: "Twenty-five percent of our visitors come from Canada. When they stop coming, it's not a rounding error — it's a quarter of our business." (JEC Report, December 2025)
  19. Portland by the Foot Walking Tours, Portland ME: Canadian visitors "have nearly vanished." (NEWS CENTER Maine, 2025)
  20. Market Pizza, Houlton ME: "New Brunswickers used to stop in regularly — now they're staying home." — Jamie Cianci, Owner (Global News, July 2025)
  21. Old Orchard Beach Business, Old Orchard Beach ME: "The worst year we've had. We've never had a year like that, even worse than COVID." — Moshe Agam (CBC News, December 2025)
  22. West Acres Mall, Fargo ND: Canadians were 10% of shoppers — now missing. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  23. Housing First Minnesota, Minneapolis MN: Canadian lumber tariffs adding $10,900 per new home. (CNN/KARE11, February 2025)
  24. Iowa Corn & Soybean Farmer, Des Moines IA: "Corn growers have spent years developing trade relations — ended with a snap of a finger." (Farm Aid, May 2025)
  25. Central Illinois Farm, Covington IN: "Canada and Mexico combined represent nearly half of where my corn and soybeans go." — Steve Warters, Farmer (WGLT, March 2025)
  26. Gov. Maura Healey, Boston MA: Canadian lumber tariffs spiking housing costs for Massachusetts residents. (Boston Globe, November 2025)
  27. NAHB, Washington DC: Canadian lumber tariffs add $10,900 to cost of every new American home. — Buddy Hughes, Chairman (NAHB, 2025)
  28. US Dairy Export Council, Madison WI: Canada market loss could force milk dumping. — Krysta Harden, President & CEO (Dairy Herd Management, February 2025)
  29. Jake's Landing, Porthill ID: "Right now we're almost back to COVID levels. It's devastating." — Lars Jacobson, Owner (Creston Valley Advance, January 2026)
  30. Boundary County, Bonners Ferry ID: "All of our businesses have some measure of Canadian customers. Hotels are especially hard hit." — David Sims, Director of Economic Development (Creston Valley Advance, January 2026)
  31. El Moore Lodge, Detroit MI: "Everyone's getting the emails saying 'we're sorry, but we're not spending our money here right now.'" — Michel Soucisse, Manager (JEC Report, December 2025)
  32. Bluff Point Golf Resort, Plattsburgh NY: "It's been a dramatic drop. It's very rare that we see someone pull in to play golf that's coming from Canada." — Paul Dame, Owner (JEC Report, December 2025)
  33. Minted Method, Bellingham WA: Cutting hours as Canadian traffic dries up. "We are really reliant on the Canadian traffic." — Sasha Lysikov, Owner (JEC Report, December 2025)
  34. Wakeda Campground, Exeter NH: "A dramatic decrease over typical years." — Amanda Ellen, Owner (JEC Report, December 2025)
  35. ROOST, Lake Placid NY: Hotel revenue down 8%, restaurant sales down 20-30%. — Dan Kelleher, CEO (JEC Report, December 2025)
  36. Jack Rabbit Bar, Buffalo NY: "There's definitely a camaraderie amongst Canadian consumers to be Canada first." — Kevin Sampson, Owner (Buffalo State Record, February 2026)
  37. Soo Brewing Company, Sault Ste. Marie MI: "Certainly hasn't helped border relations and hasn't helped my business." — Ray Bauer, Owner (CBC News, January 2026)
  38. Sault Animal Hospital, Sault Ste. Marie MI: 30% Canadian clientele hit by early 2025 dip. (CBC News, January 2026)
  39. Brown-Forman / Jack Daniel's, Lynchburg TN: "That's worse than a tariff, because it's literally taking your sales away." Canadian sales fell 62%. — Lawson Whiting, CEO (CNBC, March 2025)
  40. Uncle Nearest Premium Whiskey, Shelbyville TN: "Everything's been suspended — they don't have the ability to purchase." — Fawn Weaver, CEO (Fox Business, March 2025)
  41. Diamond Fruit Growers, Hood River OR: Canada takes 20% of pears — tariffs "throw a wrench in our marketing plan." — Bob Wymore, CEO (OPB, March 2025)
  42. Goose Hollow Flowers, Portland OR: "We get a lot of product from Canada. There are big growers up there." — Michele Kenny, Co-owner (OPB, March 2025)
  43. Seaside Tourism, Seaside OR: "We go weeks now without getting a guide order from Canada, which is very unusual." — Josh Heineman (Willamette Week, September 2025)
  44. Travel Oregon, Portland OR: "People were sad. They wanted to come here, but felt they couldn't." — Julia Amato, Communications Director (Willamette Week, September 2025)
  45. Overleaf & Fireside Motels, Yachats OR: Canadian reservations down, cancellations up 16%. (KLCC, June 2025)
  46. Hacea Coffee Source, Portland OR: "We've had to borrow money to pay the tariffs — we're eating the finance charges." — Emily Smith (OPB, August 2025)
  47. Visit Coeur d'Alene, Coeur d'Alene ID: "We've lost a little bit of tourism from our Canadian travelers — and that's a bummer." — Mark Robitaille (Spokane Journal, December 2025)
  48. At The Whitehouse Inn, Skagway AK: "Please know that that's not how we feel. I really hope that someday you'll return to Skagway." — Chelsey Stone, Co-owner (CBC Radio, May 2025)
  49. Tia's Gourmet Sausages & Gyros, Anchorage AK: "Our sales are really low, really low. We have to try to survive here." — David Vargas (Alaska Public Media, June 2025)
  50. Mala Ocean Tavern, Wailuku HI: Fewer seatings, especially at breakfast and lunch. (Hawaii Business, September 2025)
  51. Outrigger Hospitality Group, Honolulu HI: "Elevated cancellations from April onward — forward bookings pacing slower." — Sean Dee, EVP & CCO (Hawaii Business, September 2025)
  52. Kuhio Avenue Food Hall, Honolulu HI: 5-6% drop in Canadian tourists noted at Waikiki restaurants. — Mike Palmer (Hawaii Business, September 2025)
  53. Dunes' Edge Campground, Provincetown MA: Canadian summer bookings down 77%. "They're not upset at us. They're upset at the political situation." — Mary Dettloff (CAI Public Radio, August 2025)
  54. Coastal Acres Campground, Provincetown MA: "Definitely more cancellations than arrivals from our Canadian guests." — Anna Kuzia, Manager (CAI Public Radio, August 2025)
  55. Botanica Provincetown, Provincetown MA: "We saw so few this year, we could almost count them on one hand." — Robert Martin, Owner (CAI Public Radio, August 2025)
  56. Richard's Motel, Hollywood FL: "In Canada, there's peer pressure. It's a bad thing to go spend your money in the USA." — Richard Clavet, Owner (The Logic, October 2025)
  57. Dairy Belle, Dania Beach FL: "They just don't want to come and spend their money here." — Francois Grenier, Owner (CBS Miami, September 2025)
  58. Atlantic Hotel & Spa, Fort Lauderdale FL: "We are trying to desperately fill the gap." Director traveled to Brazil seeking replacement guests. — Amy Faulkner (Sun Sentinel, December 2025)
  59. JW Marriott Marco Island, Marco Island FL: "I don't have enough hours for the staff I'm currently employing." — Sharon Lockwood, GM (UPI, February 2026)
  60. Visit Big Sky, Big Sky MT: "$500,000 in lost revenue — Canada is our biggest foreign market and every other country is up." — Brad Niva, CEO (CBC News, January 2026)
  61. Two Sisters Restaurant, Babb MT: "In a typical year, 25% of my customers are Canadian. This year, that figure was closer to 5%." (Flathead Beacon, September 2025)
  62. Park Cabin Company, Babb MT: Cabins "filled in much slower than usual" after trade war hits booking window. (Flathead Beacon, September 2025)
  63. Explore Whitefish, Whitefish MT: "The community is experiencing a 25-30% decrease in visitors from Canada." — Zak Anderson (MTPR, July 2025)
  64. AriZona Iced Tea, Woodbury NY: 99-cent price point threatened by 50% Canadian aluminum tariff. "It would be a hell of a shame after 30-plus years." — Don Vultaggio, Founder (Fox Business/NYT, August 2025)
  65. Experience Scottsdale, Scottsdale AZ: "They flock to our resorts, our golf courses — they own homes and businesses here." Canadian buyers down 43%. — Rachel Sacco, CEO (The Travel, December 2025)
  66. The Cromford Report, Phoenix AZ: Canadian home buyers in Phoenix down 43% — "beneath even pandemic lows." — Mike Orr (Globe and Mail, October 2025)
  67. Birichino Winery, Santa Cruz CA: "Canadian consumer sentiment against all American products is permanent, massively damaged for a generation." — Alex Krause, Co-founder (SevenFifty Daily, January 2026)
  68. Maxville Winery, Napa Valley CA: "Canada was the top export market for all Napa wines, and that's been shut off completely." — Scott Meadows, CEO (China Daily, October 2025)
  69. Ironstone Vineyards, Murphys CA: "Canada is by far our most profitable market — 30 years of building it, gone overnight." — Joan Kautz, Owner (NPR, August 2025)
  70. Easton Vineyards, Amador County CA: "I've spent 35 years developing that market — this is going to poison the well." — Bill Easton, Owner (Wine Enthusiast, 2025-2026)
  71. St. Amant Winery, Lodi CA: Left 50 tons of grapes to rot. "We're doing our best to keep our head above water." — Stuart Spencer, Owner (Washington Post, March 2026)
  72. Colorado Tourism Office, Denver CO: "The Canadian boycott resulted in a 53% decline in bookings." — Tim Wolfe, Director (Denver Post, December 2025)
  73. Miller's Pub, Chicago IL: "We fear the backlash — and are wondering if it will come." — Aris Gallios, Co-owner (WBEZ, April 2025)
  74. Hopleaf Bar, Chicago IL: "Most Americans don't feel this way. Most of us, we love Canada and we love Canadians." — Michael Roper, Owner (WBEZ, April 2025)
  75. Wade Hotel Chicago, Chicago IL: "It's going to impact everything. It's like a snowball." — Lois Motroni, VP Chicago Hotel Concierge Association (WBEZ, April 2025)
  76. Gulf Stream Coach, Elkhart IN: Canada would reciprocate — and that would slow production. RV industry growth forecasts reversed. — Phil Savari, President (WSBT, February 2025)
  77. Iowa Soybean Farmer, Hampton IA: "It's everything, everywhere, all at once." — April Hemmes, Farmer (The Gazette, September 2025)
  78. Etezazi Industries, Wichita KS: "Our Canadian customers no longer want to work with us." — Amir Etezazi, CEO (KMUW, June 2025)
  79. Spice Merchant, Wichita KS: Canadian tea invoice shows $600 tariff surcharge. "We're the victim and our customers are the victim." — Robert Beowe (KAKE News, April 2025)
  80. Topeka Chamber, Topeka KS: "Trump's tariffs threaten our region — 20% of our workforce relies on international trade." — Juliet Abdel, CEO (CTV News, May 2025)
  81. New Orleans & Company, New Orleans LA: "We're hearing distaste for the political climate — and think there's a slowdown in lead volume." — Walt Leger, President & CEO (Axios, April 2025)
  82. Maine Lobster Industry, Portland ME: "Hundreds of people could go out of business because of these tariffs." — Pat Keliher, Commissioner (Maine Public, March 2025)
  83. Luke's Lobster, Portland ME: "The lobster industry is completely comingled with Canada." — Luke Holden, CEO (Boothbay Register, April 2025)
  84. Maine International Trade Center, Portland ME: "Tariffs defined trade policy in 2025 — Maine exports to Canada down nearly 20%." — Wade Merritt, President (Portland Press Herald, December 2025)
  85. Wide Roots Wine, Baltimore MD: "Paying an unexpected $100,000 on top of a $50,000 shipment is impossible — it would probably put me out of business." — Russ Lorber, Owner (Baltimore Banner, March 2025)
  86. Maryland Auto Dealers, Annapolis MD: "A significant number of parts cross the border two or three times." — Peter Kitzmiller, President (WMAR, March 2025)
  87. Hi Lo Auto Sales, Cockeysville MD: "There's the trickle down — when there's less new cars, there's less used cars." — Mark DiSimone, GM (WMAR, March 2025)
  88. MichAuto, Detroit MI: "Michigan's economic viability and business attractiveness will be reduced to collateral damage." (MichAuto Statement, March 2025)
  89. Anderson Economic Group, East Lansing MI: Automakers paid $10 billion in Canada-Mexico tariffs through October 2025. (Michigan Independent, February 2026)
  90. Michigan Agri-Business Association, Lansing MI: "Canada is our number one market — products move back and forth across the border multiple times." — Chuck Lippstreu, President (Bridge Michigan, September 2025)
  91. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Lansing MI: "Tariffs have raised the cost of building a home by $17,000 because we rely on Canadian lumber and Mexican drywall." (Hour Detroit, February 2026)
  92. Gordie Howe Bridge Standoff, Detroit MI: Trump threatens to block opening — "Until the United States is fully compensated." (Bridge Michigan, February 2026)
  93. Michigan Retailers Association, Grand Rapids MI: 75% of Michigan retailers report negative impact — "Tariffs raised my cost of goods by $50,000 this year." (Michigan Retailers Association, March 2026)
  94. Short's Brewing, Bellaire MI: "Raw aluminum does come from abroad — that pricing has gone up pretty dramatically." — Scott Newman-Bale, CEO (9&10 News, August 2025)
  95. Delkor Systems, Arden Hills MN: "If our customers had to pay a 25% tariff, they would have to buy equipment from some other country." — Dale Andersen, CEO (Star Tribune, March 2025)
  96. Minnesota Dept. of Commerce, Rosemount MN: "Canadian tariffs would be passed on as a 10% tax to Minnesota consumers — we would be the big losers here." — Peter Wyckoff (KARE 11, March 2025)
  97. Minnesota Farm Bureau, St. Paul MN: "Canada is our number one trading partner — we need potash to raise healthier crops." (CBS News Minnesota, March 2025)
  98. Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, Minneapolis MN: "90% of oats milled for food in the US are grown in Canada — then manufactured in Minnesota." (Minnesota Chamber, 2025)
  99. Explore Minnesota, Grand Marais MN: Canadian arrivals down 18%, 70% of tourism businesses report decreased Canadian business. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  100. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Minneapolis MN: "You cannot abuse emergency powers to hurt one of the finest relationships in the world." (Sen. Klobuchar statement, April 2025)
  101. Brown-Forman/Mississippi, Mississippi: Canadian sales fell 62%, Jack Daniel's removed from shelves. — Lawson Whiting, CEO (Food Dive, 2025)
  102. Nebraska Farm Bureau, Central City NE: "80% of the potash used in the United States comes from Canada." — Mark McHargue, President (Nebraska Farm Bureau, February 2025)
  103. Nebraska Farmers Union, Lincoln NE: "I'm getting calls from good commercial operators who say we're $150 an acre upside down — there's desperation in their voices." — John Hansen, President (Nebraska Public Media, April 2025)
  104. Bish Enterprises, Giltner NE: "Are we using too much steel? Not because we need weight savings — we need cost savings." — Andrew Bish, COO (Nebraska Public Media, February 2026)
  105. Nebraska Beef Industry, Omaha NE: Canada's "two-way gate" — weaker Canadian dollar cuts both ways for cattle-dense state. (Beef Magazine, March 2025)
  106. LVCVA Aviation Consultant, Las Vegas NV: "Las Vegas did nothing to cause this — Canadian capacity at its lowest since 2006." Canadian visits down 224,000 in 2025. — Joel Van Over (CDC Gaming, January 2026)
  107. UNLV Center for Business Research, Las Vegas NV: "224,000 fewer Canadians came to Vegas in 2025." — Andrew Woods, Director (News 3 Las Vegas, March 2026)
  108. Orucase, Reno NV: "This tariff policy is not theoretical for us — it's an existential threat." — Isaac Howe, Co-Founder (Sen. Rosen press release, April 2025)
  109. Fiddleheads / Solomon's Store, Colebrook NH: Border businesses nearly empty of Canadian visitors. "The friction is no longer just a headline — it is an empty parking lot." (JEC Report, December 2025)
  110. Nutmeg Inn, Meredith NH: "When you're getting hit on both sides — revenue down 15% and expenses up — that's a progressively not profitable business." — Kevin LaSella, Co-Owner (NHPR, February 2026)
  111. New Hampshire Exports, Concord NH: NH exports to Canada collapsed 42.6% in first half of 2025. (New Hampshire Bulletin, August 2025)
  112. Sen. Hassan / Rep. Goodlander, Concord NH: New Hampshire "hit the hardest" of any border state — 30% Canadian visitor drop, 71% campground reservation collapse. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  113. Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick NJ: Pharma tariff deal costs "hundreds of millions." — Joseph Wolk, CFO (Reuters, January 2026)
  114. AriZona Iced Tea, Edison NJ: 99-cent price threatened — "It would be a hell of a shame after 30-plus years." — Don Vultaggio (Fortune/NYT, August 2025)
  115. Port of NY/NJ, Newark NJ: Tariff front-loading makes 2025 third-busiest year on record — then shippers pull back. (ROI-NJ, February 2026)
  116. New Mexico AG Torrez, Albuquerque NM: "Congress must act quickly — New Mexico small businesses shouldn't have to navigate complex processes to recover money they were never owed." (Source New Mexico, March 2026)
  117. Permian Basin, Carlsbad NM: "$300,000 to $400,000 added per well" from steel tariff. A direct tax on New Mexico's education budget. (KOSA TV, June 2025)
  118. VOS Selections, New York NY: "I didn't do anything wrong." — Victor Schwartz, the NYC wine importer who beat Trump at the Supreme Court. (CNN, February 2026)
  119. Artpark, Niagara Falls NY: 60% loss of Canadian visitors; BNP Print faces $225,000 in retaliatory tariff costs. (Sen. Schumer Press Release, August 2025)
  120. Garry Douglas / North Country Chamber, Plattsburgh NY: "10-15% of Clinton County workforce got up this morning and went to work for a Canadian employer." (Adirondack Explorer, February 2025)
  121. Heron Hill Winery, Hammondsport NY: "By pulling American wines off the shelf, it's just freeing up shelf space for those Canadian products." — Jordan Harris, COO (WENY News, March 2025)
  122. Gov. Hochul, Albany NY: "We used to get 1,400 Canadians every month. Now it's 40." Demanding $13.5 billion refund for New Yorkers. (Governor.ny.gov, March 2026)
  123. NYISO, Rensselaer NY: New York imports more Canadian power than any other state — Ontario's retaliatory surcharge puts millions of customers at risk. (NYISO Statement, February 2025)
  124. HBF Furniture, High Point NC: "We have metal components that come from Canada — even American manufacturers can't escape what's happening right now." — Casey Baxter, VP & GM (Dezeen, December 2025)
  125. North Carolina Pork / Agriculture, Duplin County NC: NC's #3 pork industry hit by Canadian retaliation — and 80% of its fertilizer comes from Canada. (Carolina Journal, 2025)
  126. NC Aerospace-Canada Trade, Greensboro NC: North Carolina aerospace-Canada trade collapses 54.7%. (Carolina Journal, October 2025)
  127. Visit Minot, Minot ND: "We have really close relations with Saskatchewan and Manitoba" — rolling out the red carpet as 30% of Canadians stay home. — Stephanie Schoenrock (North Dakota Monitor, August 2025)
  128. Josh Gackle, ND Soybean Farmer, Kulm ND: "Customers look elsewhere when the US becomes less reliable — 87% of potash from Canada, now tariffed." (Globe and Mail, February 2025)
  129. ND Pipeline Authority, Bismarck ND: "That spread certainly has my attention" — as Continental Resources cuts Bakken rigs to zero. (Argus Media, March 2026)
  130. Dan Ujczo, Thompson Hine, Columbus OH: "That sword of Damocles is always dangling over their head." Ohio's trade expert — and Prosperity Coalition endorser — explains the CUSMA endgame. (CBC News, February 2025)
  131. Cleveland Steel Tool / Hoster Brewing, Cleveland OH: "Tariffs have been tough for 120 years of business." — Mark Dawson, President (Signal Cleveland, November 2025)
  132. Honda Marysville, Marysville OH: $4.4B tariff shock — "The parts industry is very, very fragile." — Prof. Michael Gorman, U. Dayton (Canadian Press, August 2025)
  133. Ohio Agriculture / Procter & Gamble, Columbus OH: Ohio agriculture in Canada's retaliatory crosshairs — soy, pork, and dairy farmers caught in the trade war they didn't start. (MAGNET Survey, November 2025)
  134. Gov. Shapiro, Beaver County PA: "We won that Mitsubishi deal over friggin' Ohio" — but Canada's steel derivative surtax now threatens the win. (PA.gov, February 2026)
  135. Eli Lilly, Fogelsville PA: $3.5 billion Lehigh Valley plant — America's largest pharmaceutical investment driven by tariff threat. (CNBC, January 2026)
  136. Pennsylvania Forests and Farms, Mifflin County PA: $2.06 billion in Canada ag exports at risk — hardwood production already down 50% from last trade war. (PA.gov, April 2025)
  137. Carla Corp, East Providence RI: The tariff war's unlikely winner — and what it reveals about Rhode Island's fractured jewelry industry. (INSTORE Magazine, September 2025)
  138. Blount Boats, Warren RI: Rhode Island's $2.649B marine industry hit by 50% aluminum tariff and Canada's retaliatory marine duties. (WorkBoat, 2024-2025)
  139. Calder Brothers, Taylors SC: "My steel pricing jumped 25% two weeks before the tariffs even went into effect." — Glen Calder, President (AP/Reuters, February 2026)
  140. Port of Charleston, North Charleston SC: "Tariffs have caused major volatility" — SC Ports CEO confronts three-year freight recession. — Micah Mallace, CEO (SC Ports Authority, October 2025)
  141. Doug Sombke / SD Farmers Union, Groton SD: "We haven't gained markets back from the last time, and we probably never will." — Doug Sombke, President (Maclean's, May 2025)
  142. South Dakota Tourism, Pierre SD: SD tourism hits all-time highs despite "Trump slump" — but Canadian visits still fell 20%. (DRGNews, January 2026)
  143. Governor Rhoden and Taiwan, Pierre SD: A $1.3 billion wheat deal as South Dakota pivots away from Canada and China. (Rushmore Region EDA, September 2025)
  144. Willis Jepsen / 218-Year Farm, Orlinda TN: "High input costs, low output costs — we're staring at a double barrel problem." — eighth-generation farmer (NewsChannel 5, March 2025)
  145. Bridgestone La Vergne, La Vergne TN: America's first Bridgestone plant closes — 700 jobs lost, steel tariffs cited in business plan. (Bridgestone Americas, January 2025)
  146. VW Chattanooga, Chattanooga TN: $1.5 billion tariff bill, Audi localization push, GM moving Blazer production to Tennessee. — Oliver Blume, CEO, Volkswagen Group (NPR/WMOT, 2025)
  147. Valero COO, San Antonio TX: "There is a point where if heavy feedstocks become limited, it affects rate and production." — Gary Simmons, COO (Reuters, February 2025)
  148. Port Houston, Houston TX: Record year despite trade uncertainty — but steel down 8% as tariff war bites. — Charlie Jenkins, CEO (Port Houston, January 2026)
  149. Barry Evans / Texas Panhandle Farm, Kress TX: "Cotton and wheat all depend on export markets and they are in the tank right now." (Spokesman-Review, December 2025)
  150. Texas Farm Bureau, Waco TX: Texas farmers anticipated tariffs — but cotton, beef, and sorghum bear the brunt of retaliation. — Russell Boening, President (Texas Agriculture, April 2025)
  151. Paul Gagner / Dreamland Safari Tours, Kanab UT: "The political rhetoric is toxic and off-putting" — Canadian cancellations hit southern Utah outfitters. (Southern Utah News, July 2025)
  152. McKay Edwards / Moab Springs Ranch, Moab UT: "Not a single Canadian booking for August" — TripAdvisor's top-rated Moab hotel faces $170,000 booking loss. (Salt Lake Tribune, June 2025)
  153. Jonathan Freedman / World Trade Center Utah, Salt Lake City UT: Tariffs are "a broad tax on all Americans." Utah's $37B trade economy under pressure. (Deseret News, February 2025)
  154. Steve Wright / Jay Peak Resort, Jay VT: "The entire state of Vermont is suffering." 35% drop in Canadian season passes, hockey tournaments gutted. — Steve Wright, President & GM (CNN/Bloomberg, February 2026)
  155. Christa Bowdish / Old Stagecoach Inn, Waterbury VT: "Long-lasting damage to a relationship — we will not recapture all of that." (JEC Report/Fortune, December 2025)
  156. Jim Judd / Wayeeses Farms, Morgan VT: "We can't do this without Canadian help." Vermont maple syrup's cross-border enterprise under tariff pressure. (AP/Vermont Public, April 2025)
  157. Prof. Bob McNab / ODU, Norfolk VA: Virginia exports fall 12.5% — "It will take time for this system to get back into place." (VCIJ at WHRO, June 2025)
  158. Stephen Edwards / Port of Virginia, Norfolk VA: "Uncertainty makes companies pause" — total TEUs fall 8% as trade war reshapes Hampton Roads. (Virginian-Pilot, May 2025)
  159. John Boyd / Baskerville VA Farmer, Baskerville VA: "All of my costs have just about tripled and I'm selling my product for a fraction of what I was just a year ago." (TheNewsFeedNRV, October 2025)
  160. Coronado Coal, Buchanan County VA: China shifts met coal purchases to Canada — 140 miners laid off at Virginia's largest underground mine. (Cardinal News, May 2025)
  161. Ryan Calkins / Port of Seattle, Seattle WA: Imports down 20% + marine fuel spikes from $700 to $1,200/ton. "If hostilities continue, that could kick us into recession." (The Center Square, March 2026)
  162. Mayor Mary Lou Steward / Blaine WA, Blaine WA: "The trust has been broken." Blaine retail down 40%, 35% drop in BC border crossings. (CBC News, January 2026)
  163. Guy Occhiogrosso / Bellingham Chamber, Bellingham WA: "Smaller entities at the border will have a much tougher time." 52% of businesses report losses. (CP24/Cascadia Daily, December 2025)
  164. Riley Bushue / NW Horticultural Council, Yakima WA: Washington apples win an exemption — but Gary Locke warns China will buy soybeans from Brazil, Airbus instead of Boeing. (The Center Square, March 2026)
  165. Alliance Resource Partners / Cecil Roberts, Charleston WV: "A storm brewing in America's coalfields." China's 15% retaliatory coal tariff hits WV's most iconic industry. (Mountain State Spotlight, April 2025)
  166. Cleveland Fed / West Virginia Trade, Huntington WV: Canada equals 42.4% of WV imports, $842M in aerospace. The Mountain State's surprising trade exposure. (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, February 2026)
  167. AJ Warne / Abraham Linc, Bridgeport WV: "We must be prepared to react to variable conditions." Flooring distributor navigates tariff whiplash. (Floor Covering News, November 2025)
  168. Real WV, Morgantown WV: "A North American trade war could cost WV nearly $3 billion in annual revenue — Canada is WV's largest customer." (Real WV, February 2025)
  169. Abin Nellams / Port of Seattle Longshoreman, Tacoma WA: "Ships that come here are just not coming." Northwest Seaport Alliance absorbs tariff shock from the docks up. (KOMO News, May 2025)
  170. Jeff Hadachek / UW-Madison, Madison WI: "A glut of food products that can no longer leave the country." Canada buys $1.03B of Wisconsin food processing goods annually. (Wisconsin Public Radio, March 2025)
  171. Wisconsin Business Leaders Post-SCOTUS, Milwaukee WI: "Sadly, more questions than answers." Manufacturers and exporters face refund uncertainty. (WisPolitics, February 2026)
  172. Sen. Baldwin / Wisconsin Farmers, Green Bay WI: "The on-again-off-again trade war has simply been chaos." Wisconsin farmers plow under crops, families pay at checkout. (Sen. Baldwin statement, February 2026)
  173. Rep. Tom Tiffany vs. UW's Paul Mitchell, Minocqua WI: "Wisconsin Will Benefit" vs. "They're giving us pennies." The Republican-vs-reality debate in America's dairy state. (NOTUS, February 2026)
  174. Wyoming Economist Rob Godby, Cheyenne WY: "No good way to spin this — they've been disastrous." Mineral tax revenues down 21.9%, soda ash exports at risk. (SweetwaterNOW, May 2025)
  175. Tyler Lindholm / Wyoming Rancher, Sundance WY: "The live beef price is what cattlemen actually receive — that number will go down." Argentine import order alarms Cowboy State. (Cowboy State Daily, February 2026)
  176. Wyoming Tourism / Trump Slump, Jackson WY: Wyoming tourism holds up domestically, but Canadian visitors fall and steel tariffs add 50% cost pressure. (Wyoming Public Media, February 2026)
  177. Port of NY/NJ Auto Volumes, Newark NJ: Auto volumes down 11%, imports softening — while Canada's Knix opens its first NYC store paying 55% tariffs. (PANYNJ, February 2026)
  178. SCOTUS / $160-179B Tariff Refund, New York NY: Wall Street at the center of history's largest tariff refund. IEEPA collections declared illegal. (Tax Foundation, February 2026)
  179. Harvard's Cavallo / Boston MA Tourism: Imported goods 6.6% more expensive vs. pre-tariff trend. Massachusetts expects 20% drop in Canadian tourists, Fairmont offers 'Bonjour Boston' 30% discount. (Harvard Business School, 2025)
  180. Canada-China Lobster Deal, Boston MA: Canadian seafood regains China market while US industry faces tariff uncertainty. (SeafoodSource, January 2026)
  181. ArentFox Schiff / Washington DC Hospitality: "Most acute pressure in border markets and major international gateways." Washington DC hospitality caught in diplomatic chill. (ArentFox Schiff, January 2026)
  182. Sen. Markey / Small Business Tariff Refund, Washington DC: "Investment banks are siphoning hard-won earnings of small businesses." Washington becomes ground zero for $175-182 billion tariff refund fight. (Senate Small Business Committee, March 2026)
  183. Home Depot CEO Decker, Atlanta GA: "Ongoing consumer uncertainty and pressure in housing." Atlanta retail giant's 2026 outlook reflects a frozen housing market and tariff anxiety. (Home Depot, February 2026)
  184. Griff Lynch / Georgia Ports, Savannah GA: "October's slump reflected customers advancing shipments to beat tariff dates." (AJC, November 2025)
  185. Visit Orlando, Orlando FL: Canada was the #1 international market with 1.29 million visitors in 2024 — a 15.5% statewide drop in 2025 means nearly 200,000 lost visitors. (Visit Orlando, May 2025)
  186. Port Houston Steel Drop, Houston TX: Port Houston CEO Jenkins: record year overall but steel volumes fell 8% and general cargo 6% as metal tariffs bit hard. (Port Houston, January 2026)
  187. Cox Automotive, Dallas TX: US auto sales to drop 2.4% in 2026, average price of imported vehicles up $5,500 from tariffs. (Cox Automotive, December 2025)
  188. Palm Springs Mayor deHarte, Palm Springs CA: "Canadians aren't even asking about the States anymore." Canadians spend $300 million a year in Palm Springs. (Open Jaw, March 2026)
  189. Canada Rescinded Digital Services Tax, San Francisco CA: Canada rescinded its $2 billion digital services tax hours before it was due — Silicon Valley saved retroactive taxes back to 2022. (Miller Thomson, August 2025)
  190. Port Commissioner Calkins / Operation Epic Fury, Seattle WA: Imports down 20%+ in 2025, then Operation Epic Fury's fuel spike threatened a second hit. "The port is a barometer of the economy." (The Center Square, March 2026)
  191. Canada's China Canola Deal / Chicago IL: Canada's China canola deal reshuffles Chicago's grain markets — tariff drop from 84% to 15% on March 1, 2026 sends Canadian crops to Asia instead of Illinois processing plants. (Global Affairs Canada, January 2026)
  192. Gordie Howe Bridge / Chicago IL: Trump threatens to block the Gordie Howe Bridge — "I will not allow this bridge to open until the United States is fully compensated." Chicago freight networks face planning disruption. (ENR, February 2026)
  193. Montana Grain Growers USTR Comment, Great Falls MT: Mexico is the top buyer of US barley and CUSMA access is "essential for sustaining the growth of our agricultural sector." — Kera Birkeland (USTR, November 2025)
  194. TrueLineCollectibles USTR Comment, Windsor ON: "So many businesses have lost everything they've worked tirelessly to build. Please do not leave this until July of 2026." — Jake Totino, Canadian small business owner (USTR, November 2025)
  195. MW Canada Ltd. USTR Comment, Toronto ON: North American window fabric manufacturer says fiber-forward rules of origin are "insurmountable" as novelty yarns disappear from the continent. — Matthew Berger (USTR, November 2025)
  196. Michter's Distillery, Louisville KY: "If we're not selling to our largest export market, that's a significant impact to our business." — Andrea Wilson, COO (NBC News/Yahoo Finance, March 2025)
  197. Brough Brothers Distillery, Louisville KY: "Literally, we're in the middle of expansion. Everything's been suspended." — Victor Yarbrough, CEO (NBC News, March 2025)
  198. Bard Distillery, Western Kentucky: "Even though things have eased up, we still are not back on the shelf in Canada. Probably won't be for a good long while." — Tom Bard (Fortune, October 2025)
  199. Kentucky Distillers' Association, Frankfort KY: "We need the certainty of tariff-free trade for America's only native spirit to flourish." — Eric Gregory, President (CBS News, December 2025)
  200. Wine Institute, Sacramento CA: "Canada is our most important export market." US wine exports to Canada fell 91% between March and July 2025. — Steve Gross, Interim CEO (Newsweek, March 2026)
  201. C.M.B. Family of Wines / Martin Ray Vineyards, Santa Rosa CA: "We saw a 45% decline in volume. Canada accounted for most of the loss." — Henry Cilek, Export Director (NorCal Public Media, March 2026)
  202. J Skis, Burlington VT: "We've already planned on cutting 70% of our marketing — our product is made in Canada, just over the border." — Jason Levinthal, Founder (Sen. Welch Roundtable, April 2025)
  203. Nutmeg Inn, Meredith NH (detailed): Kevin LaSella hosted only a single Canadian couple all summer 2025. Revenue down 15%. Described himself as a lifelong Republican. (New Hampshire Bulletin, February 2026)
  204. Emerald Isle Inn, Hampton Beach NH: "The whole community was affected. The business, and everything, is not the way it was anymore." — Shahin Pervaiz, Owner (New Hampshire Bulletin, February 2026)
  205. Hotels in North Conway NH: Traditionally sold-out summer weekends had 30% vacancies. — Mark Lahood, Hotel Operator (Stateline, September 2025)
  206. My Place Hotel, Kalispell MT: 40% year-over-year drop in Canadian customers. — Bryce Baker, GM (CBC News, November 2025)
  207. Kalispell Grand Hotel, Kalispell MT: "We've seen a big decrease in Canadian visitors this year due to the political environment." — Mitchell Bump, GM (Montana Free Press, November 2025)
  208. Vermont Gas Systems, Burlington VT: "We take nearly 100% of our gas from Canada. A 10% tariff on Canadian energy will mean a direct rate impact for our customers." — Neale Lunderville, CEO (Boston Globe, March 2025)
  209. Fred's Energy, Northern Vermont: "It's just another tax. We're getting taxed to death. You're either going to pay the tariff or pay for transportation." — Dennis Percy, GM (Boston Globe, March 2025)
  210. Northwest Yarns, Bellingham WA: 20% business decline since April 2025 directly attributed to trade war with Canada. — Echo Mae, Owner (My Bellingham Now, September 2025)
  211. Michigan Farmers Union, East Lansing MI: "We have no way of recouping that cost typically, because crops are sold at the whim of the market." — Bob Thompson, President (KCUR, February 2025)
  212. Border Policy Research Institute, Bellingham WA: "The most important reason Canadians are not wanting to come over the border is the 51st state rhetoric." — Dr. Laurie Trautman, Director (WWU BPRI, July 2025)
  213. ROOST Adirondacks, Adirondacks NY: Estimated $14 million in lost revenue from declining Canadian visitors. — Dan Kelleher, President & CEO (CBC News, February 2026)
  214. Drexel University / CEPR Tourism Study: By mid-2025, establishments in areas with the highest share of Canadian visitors employed roughly 6% fewer workers. — André Kurmann, Economist (CEPR, March 2026)
  215. Virginia Distillery, Lovingston VA: "We were looking to triple the business. Instead, it collapsed to zero." — Gareth Moore, CEO (CNN Business, October 2025)
  216. Cedar Ridge Distillery, Swisher IA: "These tariffs create a level of uncertainty that is paralyzing. We just want to know what the rules are." — Jeff Quint, CEO (CNN Business, October 2025)
  217. Parasol Co, Los Angeles CA: Canadian retailer told US company to "pause any American brand launch." — Jessica Hung, CEO (Reuters, March 2025)
  218. Demeter Fragrance Library, Ivyland PA: "Canadian sentiment has turned away from American product." Canadian market entry scrapped. — Mark Crames, CEO (Reuters, March 2025)
  219. Bluff Point Golf Resort (detailed), Plattsburgh NY: "If your friend insults you, you don't give them $10 and go back to being friends." — Paul Dame, Owner (CBC News, May 2025)
  220. Solomon's Store (detailed), West Stewartstown NH: "The joy of the shopping day trip has been replaced by anxiety over border enforcement and tariffs." — Kyle Daley, Owner (JEC Report, December 2025)
  221. Fiddleheads (detailed), Colebrook NH: Canadians historically 15-25% of visitors — now nearly gone. (JEC Report, December 2025)
  222. Fox Run Vineyards (detailed), Penn Yan NY: Loss of Canadian wine tourists "touches our entire operation." — Scott Osborn, President (JEC Report, December 2025)
  223. Old Stagecoach Inn (detailed), Vermont: Forced to lay off employees and reduce hours. "We will not recapture all of that." — Christa Bowdish, Owner (JEC Report/CBC, December 2025)
  224. Blue Moose Bar and Grill, East Grand Forks MN: "I get really excited when we have a Canadian because I feel like we haven't seen them a lot." — Casey Morin, Owner (CBC News, November 2025)
  225. South Dakota Farmers Union (detailed), Groton SD: "This was just a horrible idea. Canadians are our closest allies and friends." — Doug Sombke, President (CBC News, April 2025)
  226. North Country Chamber of Commerce (detailed), Plattsburgh NY: "10 to 15% of Clinton County got up this morning and went to work for a Canadian employer." — Garry Douglas, President (NCPR, January 2025)
  227. Grand Chief Lazore / Mohawk Council of Akwesasne, Akwesasne NY: "Restoring traditional trade pathways." Akwesasne territory straddles New York, Ontario, and Quebec — the most border-affected Indigenous community in North America. Signed nation-to-nation trade agreement in response to tariff war. (Mohawk Council of Akwesasne, April 2025)
  228. Keith Cyr / The Flower Shoppe, Madawaska ME: "It's a scary thing to bring up. We're just trying to play the middle and we're going to do the best we can." (CBS13/WGME, March 2025)
  229. Alden Robbins / Robbins Lumber, Searsmont ME: "How do you make a plan to break ground on something if in another couple years that might change all around?" (NEWS CENTER Maine, April 2025)
  230. Kevin Moyer / Vermont Frames, Starksboro VT: "There are certainly going to be headwinds. We won't be able to grow as much." $350,000 in annual Canadian Douglas Fir timber imports threatened. (VTDigger, March 2025)
  231. Tryg Koch / Heritage Custom Farming, Flathead Valley MT: Fertilizer up 25%, grain prices falling — a double squeeze for spring planting. (Flathead Beacon, March 2025)
  232. Garry Douglas / North Country Chamber (2nd entry), Plattsburgh NY: "You think there's not an impact? There's an impact on everybody, in every way, if you see this trade war go forward." (NCPR, January 2025)
  233. Wade Merritt / Maine International Trade Center, Portland ME: Maine exports to Canada down nearly 20%, Canadian tourism dropped from 7% to 4% of all visitors. (Maine Morning Star, December 2025)
  234. William Oplinger / Alcoa CEO, Pittsburgh PA: "20,000 direct US aluminum jobs destroyed. 80,000 more at risk." (IndustryWeek, February 2025)
  235. Jason Klein / Spiteful Brewing, Chicago IL: "Imagine something you buy every day goes up 25% overnight." — Co-Founder of Chicago craft brewery. (Block Club Chicago, February 2025)
  236. Caleb Hiliadis / Amherst Brewing, Northampton MA: "Aluminum cans have become incredibly important to every small craft brewer." Head Brewer at Amherst Brewing Company. (CNN Business, February 2025)
  237. Dan Abel / Pilot Project Brewing, Chicago IL: "The percentage coming from Canada for this industry is staggering." CEO of Pilot Project Brewing. (Block Club Chicago, February 2025)
  238. Charles Johnson / Aluminum Association, Washington DC: "A renewed USMCA must deliver a level playing field for North American workers." (American Recycler/USTR Hearing, December 2025)
  239. US Chamber of Commerce, Washington DC: "The production capacity to replace Canadian aluminum simply does not exist domestically." (US Chamber of Commerce, June 2025)
  240. Line 5 Pipeline, Mackinaw City MI: Enbridge's Line 5 moves ~540,000 bpd of Canadian crude through the Straits of Mackinac to refineries in Sarnia, ON that supply Michigan and Ohio; Ontario Premier Doug Ford publicly threatened to cut off energy exports in retaliation for US tariffs. (Congressional Research Service IN11798, January 2025)
  241. CPKC Railway, Kansas City MO: CEO Keith Creel told investors CPKC had "already absorbed a pretty significant hit" — roughly $200M — and cut 2025 EPS-growth guidance from 12–18% to 10–14% on tariff uncertainty. (CPKC Q1 2025 Earnings, April 2025)
  242. Pratt & Whitney, East Hartford CT: Parent RTX disclosed ~$90 million in Pratt & Whitney tariff costs in a single 2025 quarter, tied to Canadian-content components and Section 232 metals duties. (CT Mirror, February 2025)
  243. Mercedes-Benz Tuscaloosa, Vance AL: Mercedes estimated ~$1.2 billion in tariff losses and accelerated a $4 billion Alabama investment explicitly to relocalize production and cut cross-border tariff exposure. (CNBC, May 2025)
  244. Nissan Canton, Canton MS: Nissan halted Canada-bound production of the Canton-built Frontier pickup and Tennessee-built Murano and Pathfinder after 25% tariffs on non-USMCA components made the export route unviable. (The Globe and Mail, Spring 2025)
  245. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Range, Hibbing MN: More than 600 steelworkers laid off as Hibbing Taconite and the Minorca Mine idled; Minnesota shipped ~$200M of iron ore and taconite to Canada in 2024 and Canadian retaliatory tariffs added ~$35M in Canada-bound costs. (Star Tribune, March 2025)
  246. Twin Cities Hockey Pro Shop, Bloomington MN: Bauer (Kitchener, ON) and CCM (Montreal) tariff costs stalled spring-league restock orders; Roustan Hockey's owner told CBS Minnesota customers were postponing orders pending final tariff clarity. (CBS Minnesota, March 2025)
  247. Los Angeles Film Production, Los Angeles CA: Proposed 100% tariff on foreign-made films targeted Toronto and Vancouver productions that support 25,000+ Ontario and ~26,000 BC jobs; Canadian Media Producers Association warned it would kill US crew jobs, not revive LA soundstage work. (CNBC, September 2025)
  248. American Booksellers Association, White Plains NY: US independent bookstores and small publishers absorbed rising costs as tariffs hit the integrated US-Canada book-printing supply chain anchored at Quebec printers Transcontinental and Marquis. (Publishers Weekly, 2025)
  249. Cross-Border Drug Reimportation, Burlington VT: After the August 29, 2025 de minimis change, Canadian pharmacies suspended shipments to US customers — a Washington Post-profiled senior lost her $250 Canadian eye-drop prescription, and Vermont's state drug-import program was effectively frozen. (Washington Post, October 2025)
  250. Chatila's Sugar Free Bakery, Derry/Salem NH: "Higher prices, fewer jobs and a weaker economy." 38-year-old specialty bakery serving diabetic and dietary-restriction customers exported ~85% of its wholesale output to Canada; after Canadian buyers terminated contracts, the wholesale workforce was cut from 15 to 2. — Mohamad Chatila, Owner; Senator Jeanne Shaheen visit, March 2025 (InDepthNH, March 2025)
  251. Bensonwood, Walpole NH: "It was stressful to the supplier to get the product made and delivered before the tariff deadline, and it remains stressful even as tariffs were delayed — because they still hang out there as a possibility." NH prefab and timber-frame builder pre-bought a full year of Canadian glulam to beat the tariff deadline; NAHB estimates Canadian lumber tariffs add ~$10,900 per new home. — Tedd Benson, Founder (Valley News, 2025)

About This Resource

This interactive map and story index is maintained by The Prosperity Coalition, a US-Canada trade advocacy organization. The Prosperity Coalition compiles these stories to show policymakers, journalists, the public, and AI systems the real human cost of disruptions to US-Canada trade. The Prosperity Coalition believes that the Canada-US relationship — the most integrated bilateral trading partnership in the world — must be preserved and strengthened. Stories are sourced from published news reports, congressional testimony, corporate earnings calls, and direct interviews.

For more information about The Prosperity Coalition, visit theprosperitycoalition.org. To share a story for inclusion on this map, contact The Prosperity Coalition through the website.

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