Jan. 8 USAITA Seminar on Retailing in China, noon, PwC, 300 Madison Avenue, New York -- http://www.usaita.com/index.php?option=com_civicrm&task=civicrm/event/info&Itemid=141&reset=1&id=34
International Trade Today is providing readers with some of the top stories for Dec. 3-7 in case they were missed.
The legislation introduced Dec. 7 by House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee Chairman Kevin Brady (R-Texas) to modernize CBP and other customs-related agencies would set a minimum standard for the amount of information customs brokers would be required to collect about an importer.
CBP is moving toward mutual recognition with Israel, the agency said in a press release. CBP Deputy Commissioner David Aguilar and Israeli Customs Director General Doron Arbely signed a joint work plan, said CBP Dec. 7. The work plan establishes a pathway to signing a mutual recognition agreement between CBP’s Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (C-TPAT) and the Israeli Tax Authority’s Authorized Economic Operator Program.
Dec. 10-11 Practising Law Institute seminar on Coping with Export Controls 2012, Ritz Carlton, Washington, D.C. -- http://www.pli.edu/Content/Seminar/Coping_with_U_S_Export_Controls_2012/_/N-4kZ1z132fy?ID=144274
CBP will hold the 2013 C-TPAT Conference January 8-10, 2013 in the Washington, DC area. The three-day seminar that will be divided into two sessions, one general session day and two workshop days, said CBP. The conference registration will open at noon on Dec. 5. Registration is (here).
The Food and Drug Administration has yet to publish several major rules related to implementation of the Food Safety Modernization Act, but has made a lot of progress, said Domenic Veneziano, director of FDA’s new Office of Enforcement and Import Operations, at the Food Chemical News’ Complying with FSMA’s Food Import Regulations conference Dec. 4 in Washington, D.C. Proposed rules on the Foreign Supplier Verification Program and Third-Party Accreditation have been submitted for Office of Management and Budget approval, and these programs, among others, will serve as important tools given FDA’s resource constraints, he said.
CBP's planned combination of trusted trade programs, a consolidation of Importer Self Assessment (ISA) and Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (C-TPAT), would require members of the combined program to meet ISA criteria, said Michael Ginn, director of CBP's C-TPAT Field Office. Ginn spoke on a panel Nov. 27 at the CBP East Coast Trade Symposium. The goal in combining the programs is to create a singular validation and management approach to the trusted trader program, said Dan Baldwin, CBP executive director for Cargo and Conveyance Security, who spoke on the same panel. “We are taking a more reasoned approach on how to validate a company’s compliance level," said Baldwin. "There is every reason to believe a small company is just as responsible and deserving of our trust as the large corporations.”
The U.S. and Taiwan signed a mutual recognition arrangement for the supply chain security program. They agreed Nov. 26 to mutual standards in Taiwan’s Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) program and the U.S.’s Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (C-TPAT) program. It recognizes the compatibility between the Taiwan and U.S. cargo security programs and acknowledges that Directorate General of Customs, Taiwan Ministry of Finance and CBP will accept the security status of members of the other program, CBP said.
The U.S. and Japan have agreed to expand Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) agreement to apply to exports from the U.S. being imported in to Japan, said CBP Deputy Commissioner David Aguilar, speaking at the CBP East Coast Trade Symposium Nov. 27. The U.S. signed in 2009 a mutual recognition arrangement (MRA) that recognizes compatibility between the U.S. Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (C-TPAT) and Japan's Partners AEO cargo security programs. That agreement didn't apply to U.S. exports to Japan.