
B.C. cancels $1,000 grocery rebate and pauses some hiring over Trump’s tariff threats
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is cancelling a promised $1,000 grocery rebate and will freeze hiring of some public service positions to “find dollars” in its budget as it prepares for “four years of unpredictability” from the United States, Finance Minister Brenda Bailey says.
Bailey said Thursday that the impacts of the “reckless” and “destabilizing” tariffs threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump are impossible to predict.
The moves come as B.C.’s budget is set to be tabled on March 4, the same day a month-long pause on Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods is set to expire and just over a week before tariffs on all foreign aluminum and steel could also begin.
The province is already seeing economic effects, even though tariffs aren’t in place yet, and it would be “wrong to underestimate” their potential impact, Bailey said in a news briefing.