Energy works, diamond 7 meat, a small meat processor of Saskatcheva.
An employee ties to a working ties, another pig sausage and a whisk with the third red packing paper.
But there is something that can do something business: an invisible line called the border of the year.
The work sits on the edge of the Lloydminster, on the edge of Sask, about 150 meters from the border with Alberta. So close, President Robert Lundquist can see this from the front door.
However, the company cannot sell products in nearby Alberta.
LundQuist, something that something said that it is not a federal certificate of the company, something that will be worth millions of dollars, cannot travel along the borders of the meat.
It is a difficult pill to absorb when you can see the highway that marks the invisible line between the two years.
“It’s very nervous. It’s very annoying,” said Lundquist.
“At one time when we can trade in Canada at one time. Some of these obstacles are really … Archaic.”
The issue, the US tariff threats became especially pressure as a dark cloud continues to shed.
“Everyone leads concerns about so many tariffs and products to the United States … maybe at a time we pay a little attention to what happened to our borders of Canada,” Lunduist said.
On Friday, Prime Minister Maryam Carney promised free trade between the provincial and territories by the Day of Canada.

Berry Farmer Alice Pattison understands the complications of the movement of food between the provincial borders.
Marshall can sell Cams and Jellies in Alberta for approved by the Canadian food inspection agency near the cuisine, near Saskha, the cuisine.
But Pattison had sources to do so because not every work could do.
“It’s a very red ribbon. You should do what you should do?
Border town
Lloydminster is the only border city of Canada, partly sits in Alberta and partly Saskatchewan.
For years, it had to deal with the rules of both provinces, such as enterprises, insurance policy and professional rules.
Sometimes former President of the Lloydminster Chamber of Commerce Blaine Stephan, sometimes caused difficult situations.

The city of Alberta, but referred to a grocery store with gas stations on the Saskatchewan side of the city.
“They made sandwiches in the main store, and they were not allowed to sell four blocks in the gas station,” he said.
Stephan said the bureaucracy protects businesses from flourishing.
“It was super frustrating, that you have a market as close as you are as close as your neighbor and know that you cannot buy your product legally …,” he said.
Because Canadian translator tries to increase trade, CBC News travel to the Saskatchewan-Alberta border in Saskatchevan-Alberta, where some business owners say red ribbons.
In November, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the rules for allowing the flow of free food in the Lloydminster city limit, and Stephan said it made a difference.
“(People) can do their jobs, and can do their food and sell their work and sell their products.”
And the changes in Lloydminster, this is possible for the removal of trade barriers, he said.
“When the right people come to the table, we can create an approach in general,” he said.
“We have such large products and want to buy them in need.”
As for the lunguzist, it sees calls to land for trade barriers as a citizen debt.
“I want to do my job better. I want to grow it and make it better. It makes my society better, the better the country is doing better,” he said.