CBP issued its May 7 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 48, No. 18), which contains the following ruling actions:
In the April issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 48, No. 17), CBP published two notices that propose to revoke rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of Botox and Amevive, a drug used to treat psoriasis.
In the April issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 48, No. 17), CBP published two notices that propose to revoke rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of cinnamon sweet rolls and Phenylketonuria nutritional supplements.
The Commerce Department published notices in the May 2 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 April issue of the CBP Customs Bulletin (Vol. 48, No. 17), CBP published two notices that propose to revoke rulings and similar treatment for the tariff classification of wooden shelving units with baskets and wooden desks and bookcases.
The Commerce Department will consider a new exception to antidumping duties on wooden bedroom furniture from China (A-570-890) for certain wall bed systems, in a changed circumstances review initiated April 28. Techcraft requested the partial revocation in early March, and the domestic coalition that originally requested duties on wooden bedroom furniture subsequently confirmed that they have no interest in keeping duties on “murphy beds.” The proposed language for the exception to the AD duty order is as follows:
CBP issued its April 30 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 48, No. 17), which contains the following ruling actions:
The Commerce Department published notices in the April 30 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):
The Commerce Department is giving advance notice that it and the International Trade Commission will next month consider revoking the antidumping duty order on frozen fish fillets from Vietnam (A-552-802) in their automatic five-year sunset reviews scheduled to begin in June. Advance notice is given because sunset reviews have short deadlines. An order will be revoked unless Commerce finds that revocation would lead to a continuation or recurrence of dumping and the ITC finds that revocation would result in continuation or recurrence of material injury to a U.S. industry. As a result, a negative determination by either Commerce or the ITC would result in the revocation of these orders.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission began a five-year sunset review of the antidumping duty order on saccharin from China (A-570-878).