On again, off again: biz owners reel from U.S. tariff ‘chaos’ Brewers, distillers encouraged by efforts to remove internal trade barriers
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/03/2025 (236 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
And just like that, California wine will rejoin the menu at 529 Wellington.
The restaurant’s parent company, Wow Hospitality, removed roughly $500,000 worth of American liquor from its six restaurants earlier this week. The removal was in response to U.S. President Donald Trump slapping 25 per cent tariffs on most Canadian goods on Tuesday. Premier Wab Kinew ordered Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries to pull U.S. booze from store shelves in response.
On Thursday afternoon, the Trump administration said it would pause the levies against some Canadian goods until April 2.
“Chaos, uncertainty. (It’s) very frustrating,” Doug Stephen, president of Wow Hospitality, said about the tariff back-and-forth.
“It’s all very confusing… But I think it’s definitely a step in the right direction.”–Tyler Slobogian
Following America’s policy reversal, Stephen’s staff began restocking U.S. wines in Wow’s restaurants. The bottles could be pulled again in April.
“I’m just hoping that cooler heads prevail and that the U.S. understands that Canada is a friend, not a foe,” Stephen said.
Tyler Slobogian, a senior policy analyst with the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, called the pause a “sigh of relief” for many.
Still, roughly 62 per cent of Canadian exports to the U.S. will likely be subject to tariffs because they don’t comply with the Canada U.S. Mexico Agreement, The Canadian Press reported.
“It’s all very confusing,” Slobogian stated. “But I think it’s definitely a step in the right direction.”
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS FILES Doug Stephen, CEO of WOW! Hospitality, said the tariff chaos and uncertainty is frustrating.
Slobogian credited Canadian governments for fighting back by unveiling retaliatory tariffs Tuesday, in which $30 billion worth of U.S. goods would be subject to 25 per cent tariffs.
Meanwhile, provincial governments have taken their own actions, including pulling American liquor from store shelves.
Ottawa said Wednesday most provinces had struck a deal to ease the trade of alcohol across provincial borders.
“This is unprecedented action to reduce trade barriers in Canada,” Internal Trade Minister Anita Anand told CBC News.
Regardless of tariffs, work to break down interprovincial barriers must continue, Slobogian urged, while calling the current progress “encouraging.”
“You can still get your good local stuff, and that won’t be affected (much) by tariffs.”–Willows Christopher
Manitoba entrepreneurs are waiting to put their company’s products in liquor stores in other provinces.
An interprovincial deal targeting direct-to-consumer sales won’t do much for Little Brown Jug Brewing Co., said founder Kevin Selch.
“If you live in Toronto… and you want to order our beer, we can ship it to you, but that’s expensive and inefficient,” he stated. “We need access to shelves.”
He and his peers want access to Ontario liquor stores. The Liquor Control Board of Ontario is one of the world’s largest alcohol purchasers; Canadian products made outside of Ontario compete with items globally, Selch explained.
“It’s right next door,” he said. “We would be in there tomorrow. We can fill those orders.”
Little Brown Jug is just one of the local breweries angling for access to Ontario liquor stores.
Brock Coutts, owner of Patent 5 Distillery, has also eyed Ontario customers. Patent 5 is shipping 80 cases of gin to Saskatchewan, a first dip of its toes into the Prairie province.
Both Coutts and Selch said Manitoba craft liquor producers would be more competitive — within the province and outside — if local regulations were changed.
For example, lowering the mark-up on beer sold in Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries stores would help offset increased costs caused by tariffs (if the levies reappear), Selch explained. The mark-ups are higher than those of other provinces, he said.
“We cannot sell direct to a bar or restaurant,” Coutts noted.
The province continues to work with Manitoba brewers and distillers, said Glen Simard, the minister responsible for Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries.
Patent 5 had almost begun selling alcohol in the States when the threat of tariffs arrived. Even with the current pause, the Exchange District distillery won’t invest an “extraordinary amount of time” into the project until the economy becomes more certain, Coutts said.
“You can still get your good local stuff, and that won’t be affected (much) by tariffs,” said Willows Christopher, co-founder of Shrugging Doctor Beverage Co.
He’s been preparing for the cost of Shrugging Doctor’s aluminum cans and glass bottles to increase, should tariffs materialize.
Trump is constantly gauging the public’s reaction to his policies, leading to a roller-coaster of changes, the Canada West Foundation’s chief executive explained.
The Winnipeg Community Taxi Association is urging people who want to support Canadian businesses to take local cabs instead of using ride-sharing apps such as Uber.
“The market reaction has been not very good,” Gary Mar said. “All of the gains that took place when he became president of the United States have now been erased in the markets.”
Trump measures his performance by the stock exchange, Mar added. Mar expects tariff concerns will continue over the next year. If there’s pushback on tariffs by Americans feeling pinched, the levies will disappear, Mar predicted.
“By reason of geography, the United States will always… be our biggest trading partner,” he said. “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be looking to other marketplaces.”
Mar applauded the Manitoba government for taking “measured” steps in response to the economic hit.
Trump said he still plans to install reciprocal tariffs beginning April 2.
— With files from the Canadian Press
gabrielle.piche@winnipegfreepress.com
Taxi operators tout Canadian ownership
Although the typical taxi is not covered in maple leaves, an industry association wants to make the message clear — the rides are Canadian.
“We are very shocked by what President Trump is doing,” said Abhishek Tara, spokesman for the Winnipeg Community Taxi Association. “It is a direct economic attack on our country.”
On Thursday, the group launched a campaign titled “Doesn’t get more Canadian than a Winnipeg taxi.”
Billboards and bus benches could soon spread the message, Tara relayed. The Unicity Taxi general manager stressed Manitoba taxi drivers — of whom Unicity has 3,000 — are locals.
The campaign runs nicely alongside a push in grocery stores identifying ‘Made in Canada’ items, Tara noted.
He wouldn’t give a price tag for the advertising spend but said it was upwards of $1,000. To start, promotions emphasizing the industry’s Canadian ties will be found on social media and on the association’s website, winnipegtaxi.ca, Tara said.
U.S. ride-sharing platforms Uber and Lyft have taken a large bite out of taxi revenues and customer bases, he noted.
“We want to support our… Manitoba economy,” Tara said. “We expect the same thing from our Winnipeggers, our Canadians. They should support local businesses, not only the taxi industry.”
Unicity and Duffy’s Taxi formed the organization in 2020.
Gabrielle Piché reports on business for the Free Press. She interned at the Free Press and worked for its sister outlet, Canstar Community News, before entering the business beat in 2021. Read more about Gabrielle.
Every piece of reporting Gabrielle produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
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