In the Feb. 25 - March 3 editions of the Official Journal of the European Union the following trade-related notices were posted:
The Trade Facilitation Agreement reached a 91% ratification rate among World Trade Organization members three years after it was introduced, according to a Feb. 22 news release from the WTO. The TFA, which applies only to WTO members who accept it, has the “potential” to “slash members' trade costs by an average” of about 14.5%, the WTO said. It reduces “time needed to import and export goods” and helps “expedite the movement, release and clearance of goods across borders.” As the TFA’s implementation rate increased, WTO members have shared information to help traders within the agreement understand varying import, export and transit procedures and the use of customs brokers, single windows and customs contact points, the WTO said.
The Trade Facilitation Agreement reached a 91% ratification rate among World Trade Organization members three years after it was introduced, according to a Feb. 22 news release from the WTO. The TFA, which applies only to WTO members who accept it, has the “potential” to “slash members' trade costs by an average” of about 14.5%, the WTO said. It reduces “time needed to import and export goods” and helps “expedite the movement, release and clearance of goods across borders.” As the TFA’s implementation rate increased, WTO members have shared information to help traders within the agreement understand varying import, export and transit procedures and the use of customs brokers, single windows and customs contact points, the WTO said.
Maine should fight a lawsuit by national ISP associations challenging a state ISP privacy law, said the American Civil Liberties Union and an ex-FCC official Tuesday. CTIA, NCTA, USTelecom and the American Cable Association sued Maine Friday in the U.S. District Court of Maine, before the regulations take effect July 1. Maine Gov. Janet Mills (D) signed the bill in June countering Congress' 2017 repeal of 2016 FCC broadband privacy rules, after bipartisan votes in the legislature (see 1906060050).
Maine should fight a lawsuit by national ISP associations challenging a state ISP privacy law, said the American Civil Liberties Union and an ex-FCC official Tuesday. CTIA, NCTA, USTelecom and the American Cable Association sued Maine Friday in the U.S. District Court of Maine, before the regulations take effect July 1. Maine Gov. Janet Mills (D) signed the bill in June countering Congress' 2017 repeal of 2016 FCC broadband privacy rules, after bipartisan votes in the legislature (see 1906060050).
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for Feb. 10-14 in case they were missed.
CBP and the trade community again face difficult decisions on how to move forward with mandatory continuing education for customs brokers. The toughest may be how to create a fair accreditation scheme, but that’s just one of many open questions as a joint task force again attempts to find some resolution of issues that caused continuing education to fall off CBP’s agenda nearly a half-decade ago.
President Donald Trump's recent executive order to strengthen e-commerce enforcement may pose hurdles to trade professionals, experts told us. The EO (see 2001310061) is ambiguous, and how Customs and Border Protection plans to heed the order's call to restrict access to importer of record numbers based on customs and intellectual property rights violations is unclear, said Sandler Travis lawyer Paula Connelly in an interview. The EO says customs brokers and express shippers would be responsible for determining if a foreign importer is trying to get around a past debarment, for instance, by changing the company's name. National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America President Amy Magnus said brokers aren't investigators, but “there’s going to be an expectation that we’re going to be more involved in the vetting and sort of screening of all parties.” The White House didn't comment Tuesday.
President Donald Trump's recent executive order to strengthen e-commerce enforcement may pose hurdles to trade professionals, experts told us. The EO (see 2001310061) is ambiguous, and how Customs and Border Protection plans to heed the order's call to restrict access to importer of record numbers based on customs and intellectual property rights violations is unclear, said Sandler Travis lawyer Paula Connelly in an interview. The EO says customs brokers and express shippers would be responsible for determining if a foreign importer is trying to get around a past debarment, for instance, by changing the company's name. National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America President Amy Magnus said brokers aren't investigators, but “there’s going to be an expectation that we’re going to be more involved in the vetting and sort of screening of all parties.” The White House didn't comment Tuesday.
The National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones appealed to CBP officials during the group's annual legislative summit on Feb. 11 on the issue of CBP's treatment of goods that are in foreign-trade zones and are subject to the Section 301 tariffs on goods from China that will be reduced on Feb. 14. CBP said in a recent CSMS message about the tariff decrease that the applicable tariff rate for goods in FTZs is based on “the rate of duty and tax in force on the date of filing the application for privileged foreign status.” That policy has prompted some industry claims of inconsistency by the agency (see 2002050038).