
Trump's steel and aluminum tariff hike creates uncertainty for construction in Waterloo region
Additional U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum may stall or even cancel some construction projects in Waterloo region, a local builder warns.
Jeff MacIntyre, president of the Grand Valley Construction Association, says the tariff hike will make more developers apprehensive about moving forward with a project.
"It's just another one of the things that have added up to make people a little bit more cynical and scared to proceed with projects." MacIntyre told CBC K-W's The Morning Edition on Thursday.
"It's a moving target," he said.
At midnight on Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump slapped an additional 25 per cent levy on steel and aluminum, bringing the total to 50 per cent.
MacIntyre says that although the new tariff will increase costs, he wants to make clear it's not to the degree some people may think.
"Your new condo is not going to cost 50 per cent more because of this," he said.
While a single construction project will not be tariffed 50 per cent, the level to which it is taxed depends on what type of structure is being built. According to MacIntyre, it can vary from five to 10 per cent.
Materials like structural steel are available in Canada but components made in Europe and moved to the United States will drive up costs.
MacIntyre says uncertainty is making it difficult for developers to move forward with building projects.
"They can't budget and as a result of that, they're afraid to pull the trigger on a project. They're just going to be punting them out a bit or ultimately stopping some of them for a while," he said.
Full impact not yet known
MacIntyre added that it's not clear how much the increase will impact costs to the local construction industry. Typically, developers and contractors agree on a fixed price for a project two years in advance. But now MacIntyre is seeing situations where the fixed price is only being held for three days, making it difficult to know how much future construction projects will cost.
"We can't build going forward unless we reduce some of these variables," MacIntyre said.
He added that this uncertainty will hurt the local economy, saying 10 to 12 per cent of the region's population work in or adjacent to the construction industry.
"It's a big industry with a big impact and it's certainly going to hurt people," he said.
Federal response
The federal government hasn't said how it will respond to the tariff increase.
Prime Minster Mark Carney called it "unjustified" and "illegal" but did not specify what the government's actions would be going forward. He said a response to the tariff would take "some time" as the federal government is currently in discussions with the United States over future trade.
When asked about possible counter-tariffs, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly brought up the government's 25 per cent tariff on $30 billion worth of U.S. goods.
"We have had really strong counter-tariffs against the Americans already," she said. "We are looking at different scenarios right now, and we will make a decision, but we need a little more time right now," she said.
Reaction from steel and aluminum industry
Catherine Cobden, CEO of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, told CBC News on Tuesday that a 50 per cent tariff means that the U.S. market is basically "completely closed" to Canadian steel.
She said she is expecting to see more job losses on top of the ones already lost to the initial 25 per cent tariff.
Keanin Loomis, president and CEO of the Canadian Institute of Steel Construction, said that Canada needs to "forcefully respond" to these additional tariffs.
He's calling for more retaliatory tariffs to be added to goods entering from the United States but cautioned that this should be done carefully to minimize blowback on Canadian businesses.
Bea Burke, president of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), urged the government in a press conference to act with "strength and with purpose" during this trade war. She said the CLC, which represents the majority of unions across Canada, is calling for emergency reforms to employment insurance to support workers who lose their jobs, made-in-Canada tax credits to incentivize Canadian sourcing, and a "firm commitment to use Canadian-made steel in all public infrastructure."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
14 minutes ago
- CBC
N.W.T. art centre looks to build on former site of Akaitcho Hall, wants community input
The group spearheading a project to build a new art centre in the N.W.T. is considering putting the facility on the site of a former government-run hostel and wants to know how others in the territory feel about that. The N.W.T. Art Centre Initiative is working to build a non-commercial art gallery in Yellowknife, and after a recent assessment of where it might go, the former site of Akaitcho Hall — a residence for students attending Sir John Franklin High School — emerged as a top contender. The group is now holding two gatherings later this month to hear what the public thinks. Sara Komarnisky, the development specialist with the project, said the Akaitcho Hall site is attractive for its proximity to Yellowknife's downtown, and to existing art amenities and education facilities. It also has access to outdoor space, a view of Great Slave Lake and a large enough location for potential future expansion. Komarnisky also recognizes the importance of honouring the site's legacy. "We can't really move forward without having a conversation about what it means to people who went to the school, and to the public, about building an art centre in this space," Komarnisky said. Akaitcho Hall operated from 1958 to 1994, run first by the federal government, then by the territorial government, without church involvement. It's among the institutions listed in the federal Residential Schools Settlement Agreement. Four students died there over the years, according to the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation. Crystal Fraser, a Gwichyà Gwich'in scholar and consultant on the art centre project, said there's a lot to talk about and learn when it comes to Akaitcho Hall's legacy. "It resonates with familiar residential school narratives, and that includes the forced relocation of Indigenous children, questionable living conditions," she said. She pointed to how, in 2021, Yellowknifers left shoes at the former Akaitcho Hall site to honour the memory of children who died at residential schools. Fraser also said RCMP were called to investigate multiple times throughout Akaitcho Hall's history, and there was overcrowding with 300 students living there when its capacity was closer to 250. She also said the facility was unique in not having ties to the church and that it had a fairly large non-Indigenous population. "So we're really hoping that folks can come out, in community. We're going to have wellness supports available. Share your stories, your thoughts about that site being re-purposed, and just add to this larger conversation about truth and reconciliation that we're having in the North," Fraser said. The first gathering is being held in person at the Tree of Peace in Yellowknife on June 17 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The second will be held virtually on June 25 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Participants can register through the art centre's website. Komarnisky said there are a lot of ways to reflect the history of residential schools at the site, if that's where the art centre is ultimately built. She said that could be through the design of the building, the naming of the space, its programming, or something outside the facility on the grounds. She said they're open to any other suggestions from the public. Komarnisky said the centre, once built, will likely have two galleries and a community space for gathering. She said it's too soon to say when the centre might open.


National Post
23 minutes ago
- National Post
Conrad Black: A repulsive antisemitism plagues U of T profs
Article content I live in a prosperous suburb of Toronto inhabited by people of many ethnicities, including a significant percentage of Jewish families. It has apparently become a routine event where cars are left in the driveway of nearby residences and there are mezuzahs by the doors of those residences, for the windows of the cars to be smashed. This happened to many neighbours last week. They have discovered from experience that nothing useful is achieved by calling the police. Nothing like this should be happening to anyone or any group anywhere in this country and it must be possible to conduct some sort of a follow-up given the profusion of security cameras. This doesn't directly affect me but it is disturbing and outrageous that this, or any neighbourhood in this country is plagued by such problems. Article content I commented in this space two weeks ago about the Canadian government joining with the governments of the United Kingdom and France in condemning Israel for conducting its offensive in Gaza. This all appears to be of a piece with the implicit and profoundly mistaken theory that what is going on in Gaza is a disproportionate response to a border skirmish. On October 7, 2023, Israel was invaded and assaulted and more Jews were killed on that day than at any time since the liberation of the death camps in Europe in 1945. The attack was intended to be, was, and has been replied to as an act of war that created a state of war. In wars there is no discussion of proportionality. The bombing of Dresden, like the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and innumerable actions of our enemies were disproportionate, but wars have nothing to do with proportion and are conducted until a comfort level has been achieved that the act that began the war will not be repeated. Article content Now, the RCMP, an organization that has appeared to be incapable of anything more challenging than a musical ride for the last 50 years, has been tasked with a 'structural investigation' (which we are told is quite distinguishable from a criminal investigation) into alleged war crimes committed in the Israel-Gaza war. It is difficult to imagine a more unpromising and redundant mission. Does the RCMP imagine that it possesses the ability to assess what goes on in Gaza and by what standard will a Canadian police force purport to judge the conduct of armed forces engaged in mortal combat in the Middle East? This has all the dreary ear-marks of more pandering to the not overly numerous but ever-more noisy and obnoxious Jew-baiters in our society. Article content I believe most Canadians remain tolerant and civilized, as they have always been. But leaders at all levels of government throughout the country have failed in all of these related areas. The former prime minister, Justin Trudeau, acquiesced in this country falsely labelling it as genocidal because of historic treatment of the Indigenous, which had many failings, but no aspects of genocide. The government of Quebec has been actively engaged for decades in trying to exterminate the English language in that province, often with the passive cooperation of the federal government. This is an outage that is only made less obvious because of the comparative prosperity and ability of the English-speaking population of Quebec to manage its own affairs, despite blunderbuss official suppression from the so-called National Assembly of Quebec. Article content Now we are clambering aboard the tawdry bandwagon of antisemitism, the most ancient, contemptible, and frequently wicked of all forms of collective hate and persecution. Where are our leaders while the national mission of 'peace, order, and good government' is mocked? And where is the solid, sensible, decent majority of Canadians when our leaders have so conspicuously and cravenly failed us, with the complicity of much of our painfully inadequate media? Answer, comes there, none. Article content


National Post
23 minutes ago
- National Post
Chris Selley: Earth to Liberals — First Nations are not an anti-development monolith
Sean Fraser — the federal Liberals' supposed master communicator who did a bad job as immigration minister, and then a bad job as housing minister, and then said he wasn't running again to spend time with his family, and then opportunistically changed his mind and was rewarded with the justice and attorney general portfolio — laid his first dog's egg of the Mark Carney era this week. Article content Article content Fraser said Indigenous groups don't have a 'complete veto' over natural-resource projects or any other government decisions — but that wasn't the turd in question, because it was absolutely true. Article content Article content The turd came later, apparently after getting his ears boxed by Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse: Fraser disavowed his entirely truthful statement. Article content 'I think even accepting the premise of the question that was put to me (about a 'veto') really made people feel like there may be an attempt by the government to work unilaterally, not in partnership (with First Nations),' Fraser told reporters in a public apology. 'Despite innocent intentions, I think my comments actually caused hurt and potentially eroded a very precarious trust that has been built up over many years to respect the rights of Indigenous people in this country,' he said. Article content Coming up on 500 years since Jacques Cartier first set foot here and named it Canada, and 150-plus years after the Crown concluded the first treaties with First Nations, and with President Donald Trump suddenly bringing our crippling dependence on the United States into very sharp focus, if we can't even speak the plain truth to each other in plain language, we might be in even bigger trouble than we realized. Article content Article content But I think we can speak the plain truth to each other in plain language, so long as we rightly marginalize fringe and unreasonable voices. While apologizing for speaking the truth, Fraser also accurately pointed to 'a frankly dangerous trope that paints a false picture of Indigenous peoples as being anti-development.' Article content Article content Media mostly portrayed the Ktunaxa Nation case, which wound up at the Supreme Court in 2017, as a matter of Indigenous people opposing the proposed Jumbo ski resort in eastern British Columbia on religious grounds: They felt the development would chase a spirit bear from their traditional lands. Receiving much less attention was the fact that the equally interested local Shuswap Nation supported the project, believing their concerns had been properly addressed and being eager to reap the financial benefits.