CBP released the March 8 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 51, No. 10), which contains the following ruling actions (here):
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website March 3, along with the case number(s) and CBP message number, is provided below. The messages are available by searching for the listed CBP message number at http://adcvd.cbp.dhs.gov/adcvdweb.
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website March 2, along with the case number(s) and CBP message number, is provided below. The messages are available by searching for the listed CBP message number at http://adcvd.cbp.dhs.gov/adcvdweb.
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
A listing of recent antidumping and countervailing duty messages from the Commerce Department posted to CBP's website March 2, along with the case number(s) and CBP message number, is provided below. The messages are available by searching for the listed CBP message number at http://adcvd.cbp.dhs.gov/adcvdweb.
CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
Goods of Myanmar origin "entered or withdrawn from warehouse on or after Nov. 13, 2016, should be entered with the benefit" of the Generalized System of Preferences, CBP said in a CSMS message (here). The reinstated GSP benefits are the result of an executive order last year that added Myanmar as a least developed beneficiary developing country (see 1609140032).
CBP updated its list of frequently asked questions about protest filings in ACE (here). As of Aug. 27, 2016, protests filed electronically must be filed through ACE (see 1608080015).
CBP’s long awaited rewrite of the Part 111 customs broker regulations is currently in the drafting process at the agency’s Office of Regulations and Rulings, said Jerry Malmo, director of the CBP Civil Enforcement Division, at the March 1 meeting of the Commercial Customs Operations Advisory Committee. Malmo’s division, which is the “policy office for the broker regulations,” has taken the 37 recommendations previously issued by the COAC (see 1604250011) and, “to the extent that we could or decided we were able to,” incorporated them into a policy statement it has given to the regulations office, he said. The regulations office then takes the policy direction “in formulating the regulations,” he said. The National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America recently said the Part 111 rewrite is on hold “indefinitely” and the proposal won’t be seen until at least 2018 (see 1702270015).