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The proposed emissions standard for formaldehyde in composite wood products would impose a particularly heavy burden on importers, said the International Wood Products Association (IWPA) in comments to the Environmental Protection Agency (here). Import certification requirements in EPA’s proposed rule would make importers do extra work without any real benefit, and the way compliance dates are structured would require importers to get up to speed faster than their domestic counterparts, IWPA said. For both importers and domestic industry, the differences between EPA’s proposal and the existing California standard would add unnecessary costs, it said. And a de minimis exception is also needed for goods like consumer electronics that may include small amounts of wood, said IWPA and other groups (here).
U.S. honey consumers should look for labeling that identifies honey as "True Source Certified" as a way to know the honey is coming from reputable sources, said True Source Honey in a press release. True Source, a joint "effort by a number of honey companies and importers to call attention to the problem of illegally sourced honey," provides third-party audits that certify the source of honey, it said.
The National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Association of America's board of directors recently approved 16 new members, the NCBFAA said in a notice on its website. New members include:
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for Oct. 7-11 in case they were missed.
A group of trade associations on Oct. 10 urged the Environmental Protection Agency to resume review of documents that accompany pesticide shipments, in a letter to EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy dated Oct. 10. Pesticide shipments are currently unable to clear U.S. customs, because the EPA regional staff that normally reviews notices of action have been furloughed during the federal government shutdown (see 13100229 and 13101002). The letter from 17 trade associations, including the American Association of Exporters and Importers, the American Association of Port Authorities, CropLife America and the National Association of Manufacturers, said the EPA employees responsible for review of notices of action should be deemed essential and resume work during the shutdown.
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Ten days into the federal government shutdown, many importers and exporters are feeling some impact from agency furloughs. Negative effects are generally confined to regulatory actions that don’t directly affect routine customs clearance, industry officials said, like Food and Drug Administration sampling and Department of Agriculture cheese import licenses. Some products are presenting more problems than others. Importation of pesticides has been impossible since the shutdown began and the Environmental Protection Agency largely went offline, officials from that industry said. Steel imports faced a similar problem initially due to furloughs at the Commerce Department, but the product is now coming in after a partial resolution was offered by the agency, one shipper told us.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration interpretation of the word "transaction" will largely determine to what extent customs brokers would be exempt from financial and licensing requirements of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), said Avalon Risk Management in a video outlining the exemptions to the law. The National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Association of America previously interpreted the bill's language to mean most work done by customs brokers is exempt from the new bonding requirements of MAP-21 (see 12070325), though the regulatory treatment of customs brokers seems to be an open question.
CBP's Los Angeles/Long Beach office started to use added enforcement measures to deal with non-compliance with Importer Security Filing (ISF) requirements, said a notice sent by the L.A. Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Association (LACBFFA). CBP will begin using holds on consolidated shipments for which there is no ISF on file 48 hours prior to the arrival, effective Oct. 7, said the LACBFFA notice. The LACBFFA said CBP's L.A. Director of Field Operations Todd Owen described the plans during a recent conference call with several trade associations in the area. CBP headquarters recently announced plans to ratchet up enforcement of ISF rules (see 13062613).