In the June 13, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 25), CBP published a notice modifying one classification ruling and revoking a treatment as follows:
In the June 13, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 25), CBP published a notice proposing to revoke a classification ruling and revoke a treatment as follows:
In the June 6, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 24), CBP published a notice modifying one classification ruling and revoking a treatment as follows:
Washington Trade Daily reports that House Ways and Means Committee Chairman, Charles Rangel, stated that the House could approve the bilateral free trade agreement with Peru next month as long as the workers rights and environmental protection provisions crafted by the Administration and lawmakers are incorporated into the text and after Peru's legislature agrees to the changes. The Chairman also told reporters he is not ready to give up on the pending FTA with Colombia, although Colombia would first have to address lawmakers' concerns about violence against union organizers. Rangel also noted that the Presidential Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) is expiring at the end of June, and he sees no likelihood of an extension, especially since the White House has not asked for one. (WTD, dated 06/19/07, www.washingtontradedaily.com)
In the June 6, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 24), CBP published a notice proposing to modify one ruling on NAFTA marking and revoke a treatment as follows:
In the May 30, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 23), CBP published a notice proposing to modify a country of origin ruling and revoke a treatment as follows:
In the June 6, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 24), CBP published a notice revoking one classification ruling and treatment as follows:
The International Trade Administration frequently issues notices on antidumping and countervailing duty orders which Broker Power considers to be "minor" in importance as they concern actions that occur after an order is issued and neither announce nor cause any changes to an order's duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective period.
In the June 6, 2007 issue of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Bulletin (CBP Bulletin) (Vol. 41, No. 24), CBP published a notice modifying one classification ruling and revoking a treatment as follows:
According to an American Shipper editorial, U.S. Customs and Border Protection's has been tweaking some of the approaches to ESAR while awaiting its deployment. The author opines that one noteworthy change is that instead of dividing Web site "folders" based on functions, which divided the program by user types such as importer/broker or truck carrier, the folders are now based on "processes." That includes folders for electronic truck manifest, revenue, post release, and accounts. (American Shipper, May 2007, www.americanshipper.com)