A sign on the Haines Highway. (Lex Treinen/Chilkat Valley News)

A sign on the Haines Highway. (Lex Treinen/Chilkat Valley News)

Haines worries about loss of relationship with Canadians due to resentment provoked by Trump

“I don’t think we could really replace it,” resident says about potential loss of northern visitors.

With rising tension between the United States and Canada, some are worried that Haines could pay the price of Canadian resentment.

It’s hard to put a precise number on Haines’ economic reliance on Canadian tourism, but tourism director Rebecca Hylton says it’s significant. “The Yukon is our closest neighbour,” said Hylton, “and [Yukoners] are basically everyone who has come into the Visitor Center in the past few weeks.” Canadian travelers are especially important to Haines, which receives fewer cruise ship tourists than neighboring Skagway and Juneau and is accessible from Canada via the highway. Those Canadian highway travelers, Hylton said, are what keep many Haines businesses running through the colder months.

But now, organizations around Haines are reporting Canadian customers and partners voting with their dollars and choosing not to spend them in the United States. Hylton said the Visitor Center has gotten “a couple dozen” emails from Canadians saying they have cancelled travel plans due to national tensions. “Some are saying, we had these plans to come but we’re going to cancel and tell our friends to do the same.”

There has been limited, but tangible evidence so far that this could be more than just talk. At Ampersand on Main Street, gallery owner Ramie Carlson Clayton said in the wake of tariff increases, two of the Canadian artists she represents have gotten in touch about limiting sales of their work. According to Clayton, one paused restocking “until the situation gets better,” and the other sent an email saying they wanted to “cease all relationships with U.S.-based businesses” due to “threats to the Canadian economy and Canadian sovereignty.” Carlson said she represents about 10 Canadian artists, and none of the others have pulled work.

Haines Huts and Trails has also seen an in-person impact, though it has been impossible to determine the exact cause. The organization’s Kat to Koot Race on Feb. 8 had only two Canadian participants, down from 15-30 in an ordinary year, said Huts and Trails spokesperson Nate Arrants. Though they are worried this could have a lasting impact, Arrants noted that this year’s race dates were different, which could have accounted for the change.

Richard Clement, board member for the Kluane Chilkat International Bike Relay, said the situation has his organization “not really worried, but concerned.” That space between worried and concerned, whatever it might be, seems to be where many in Haines are operating – a reflection of lots of buzz, but inconclusive evidence.

Still, impact could be significant. Clement said that each year over half of the race’s ridership comes from Whitehorse alone. “Boy, if we don’t get Whitehorse people in here, we’ll be in a world of hurt,” said Clement. “If it drops off, I don’t think we could really replace it.”

The next couple of weeks do include a couple of more solid bellwethers: Hylton and the Visitor Center will be keeping an eye on the opening of Beerfest ticket sales on March 1, where she says the majority of attendees each year come from the Yukon. If the tickets don’t sell out in the first couple of days, she plans to aggressively shift funds towards marketing targeted at Yukon residents.

It’s a similar story for KCIBR, for which registration opens on March 15. Clement says that in a usual year, team signups fill up within the first week. If signups are slower, it will be an indication that the dropoff is real. The organization hasn’t planned any response if that does occur.

• This story orignally appeared in the Chilkat Valley News.

More in News

The Norwegian Bliss arrives in Juneau on Monday, April 14, 2025. (Jasz Garrett / Juneau Empire file photo)
Ships in port for the week of April 20

This information comes from the Cruise Line Agencies of Alaska’s 2024 schedule.… Continue reading

Rep. Andi Story (D-Juneau), co-chair of the House Education Committee, speaks in favor of overriding Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s veto of an education funding bill during a joint session of the Alaska Legislature on Tuesday. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Legislature fails to override Dunleavy’s veto of $1,000 increase in per-student education spending

Lawmakers supporting veto note state’s financial shortfall, suggest smaller BSA increase or new revenue.

Sarah Palin arriving at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on Tuesday, April 22, 2025. (Andres Kudacki / For The New York Times)
Jury rules against Palin in libel case against the New York Times

After two hours of deliberation, claim rejected she was defamed in newspaper’s 2017 editorial.

The Norwegian Bliss cruise ship docks in downtown Juneau on Monday, April 21, 2025. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Ballot petition to restrict daily and annual cruise passengers in Juneau certified for signatures

Opponent of measure argues it violates due process, free travel and other constitutional rights.

Workers process pollock. (Photo provided by Thompson and Co. PR on behalf of the Alaska Pollock Fishery Alliance)
Murkowski and other US lawmakers seek guest worker visa exception for seafood industry

Legislation would exempt seafood companies from a cap on the number of H-2B visa workers.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Sunday, April 20, 2025

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Will Muldoon’s official campaign profile photo as a Juneau Board of Education candidate in the 2024 municipal election. Muldoon resigned from the board on Monday. (City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Former write-in candidate Will Muldoon resigns from Juneau Board of Education

Muldoon, first write-in to win local election in 29 years in 2021, won easily reelection last fall.

Dancers exit the main conference room at Elizabeth Peratrovich Hall as part of the opening ceremonies for the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska’s 90th Tribal Assembly on Wednesday, April 16, 2025. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Tlingit and Haida votes to give smaller Southeast communities more representation at tribal assembly

Change during constitutional convention significantly shrinks delegations in Anchorage and Seattle.

Lee Hart puts her jacket back on while talking with security officer Rayme Vinson after going through the new security screening process at the Alaska State Capitol on Monday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
TSA-style security screenings now required for visitors at Alaska State Capitol

Lawmakers, family, staff and other with keycards can bypass scans that began Monday.

Most Read