CBP released the July 15 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 28), which contains the following ruling actions (here):
In the July 1 issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 26) (here), CBP published notices that propose to revoke or modify rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of paperboard boxes and digestion medicine.
In the July 1 issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 26) (here), CBP published notices that propose to revoke or modify rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of wax depilatory kits and liquid hand soaps containing organic surface-active agents..
In the July 1 issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 26) (here), CBP published notices that propose to revoke or modify rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of fireplace mantels and "mess-free glitter" craft kits.
The Commerce Department published notices in the July 8 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
In the July 1 issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 26) (here), CBP published notices that propose to revoke or modify rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of footwear from China and mobile phone kits.
CBP released the July 8 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 27), which contains the following ruling actions (here):
The House is set to vote in the coming days to put in motion a conference on Customs Reauthorization legislation in order to resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill, said lobbyists in recent interviews. The verdict is still out on a range of policies that will directly impact compliance professionals and the broader trade community. Legislative conference is a notoriously secretive process, but lawmakers are expected to hammer out compromises on some major issues, including CBP evasion prevention and enforcement and Miscellaneous Tariff Bill process reforms.
The Commerce Department intends to end antidumping duties on purified carboxymethylcellulose from Finland (A-405-803), it said in the preliminary results of a changed circumstances review (here). Ashland Specialty Ingredients, the sole U.S. manufacturer of CMC and the original requestor of the duties, recently requested revocation of the AD duty order. If Commerce decides to revoke the order in the final results of its changed circumstances review, the effective date of revocation would be July 1, 2014, it said.
CBP released the July 1 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 49, No. 26), which contains the following ruling actions (here):