Eby says B.C. could fight lumber tariffs in U.S. courts
VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier David Eby says a ruling by the United States Supreme Court that strikes down far-reaching global tariffs opens the door to challenge other tariffs that currently hurt his province’s softwood lumber industry.
While Friday’s ruling does not lift long-standing American anti-dumping levies on B.C. softwood, Eby says it “opens up the possibility” of the province mounting a legal challenge in U.S. courts to the additional 10-per-cent tariff imposed last fall on national security grounds.
The premier, speaking at a press conference in Vancouver with Jobs Minister Ravi Kahlon, told reporters the province will reach out to its U.S.-based law firm to see what options might be available following the landmark ruling.
Eby says that while a future legal challenge falls “pretty squarely” within federal responsibility, B.C. might take a direct run at it.
