Archive for April, 2009

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The following article is excerpted from the 17 April 2009 edition of “The Journal of Commerce”.

Canada Customs is bowing to favored importers and carriers, those certified to be of low-risk, and for them is not enforcing its long-stated policy of only clearing imports into Canada at their first port of arrival.

The many and mostly smaller businesses and their carriers, Canadian or American, which have not joined the bi-national FAST … program or other Canadian or U.S. supply chain security programs, are not included. Canada Border Services Agency last week told the trading industry at a Toronto meeting that it will retain for designated low-risk carriers and importers the option of carrying goods inland to bonded warehouses if there is a problem of delayed or incomplete or inaccurate admissibility data that is supposed to be received before a truck rolls up to the border.

CBSA has long been adamant that it is moving to a strictly-enforced first-port-of-arrival policy, that shipments would have to be cleared where they would enter Canada, or at least have had their admissibility data received before moving inland. A main reason given was that this would provide greater convenience and less cost for CBSA itself&hellip.

The policy handed bonded warehouses in Canada their death notice, unlike the situation in the United States where they remain an active part of the goods trading system, and several have closed over the last couple of years. For less-than-truckload carriers and their importers, problems were particularly strong. If only one importer’s goods on a truck had key data missing or incorrect on arrival, the whole truck would be held up.

CBSA now is relenting to a degree, saying the option of later clearance at a bonded warehouse nearer destination remains open to low-risk carriers and importers. The agency has yet to come up with the detailed regulations surrounding all this.

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The following is excerpted from today’s edition of ST&R “WorldTrade Interactive”.

An outbreak of swine flu that has spread to the U.S. and other countries is beginning to raise some concern about the possible imposition of trade and travel restrictions. Some such measures have already been taken; for example, a BBC article reports that “China and Russia have banned imports of pork and pork products from Mexico and three US states that have reported cases of swine flu” and that Indonesia plans to soon follow suit. According to the Associated Press, these steps have sparked fears that global trade could slow even further and jeopardize prospects for a possible economic recovery later this year. A Reuters article points out that any trade restrictions imposed due to a public health emergency would be permitted under World Trade Organization rules.

The U.S. has yet to limit international trade or travel due to the outbreak… An AP article added that the U.S. has “stepped up checks of people entering the country by air, land and sea.” Reuters noted that U.S. agricultural producers are particularly concerned about potential restrictions considering that Mexico and Canada are their two largest export markets…

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The following was reported on in today’s edition of “American Shipper”.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk met with Canadian Trade Minister Stockwell Day in Washington on Monday to discuss the importance of U.S.-Canada bilateral trade relations.

Kirk and Day discussed the World Trade Organization Doha Round and the importance of achieving a successful outcome to spur new economic opportunities and contribute to global development. They also considered specific bilateral issues, including softwood lumber, intellectual property rights, country of origin labeling, and a U.S. tax credit designed to encourage the use of alternative fuels.

“During President Obama’s trip to Ottawa in February, the president made it clear that the United States wants to ‘grow trade and not contract it’ and he underscored the importance of trade to the United States, Canada and the global economy, I sent that same message to Minister Day today,” Kirk said in a statement. “We have a great track record here to build upon.”

Canada is the United States’ largest bilateral trading partner with more than $1.6 billion in goods crossing the border each day. Two-way trade (exports plus imports) totaled $597 billion in 2008. U.S. exports to Canada were $261.4 billion and imports from Canada were $355.6 billion, resulting in a goods trade deficit of $74.2 billion in 2008, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

Monday, April 27th, 2009

The following is excerpted from the 25 April 2009 edition of the “Toronto Star”.

Canada. Conduit. Terror.

Three words no Canadian likes to hear in the same sentence. Three words that just keep spilling out of Americans, as they did this week from Janet Napolitano, the Obama administration’s homeland security secretary.

When the words leaked from Napolitano’s mouth, they at least left room for her foot. In it went, up to the knee, with her inference that the 9/11 bombers came via Canada.

Ouch. And, a day later ouch again, when Napolitano offered a double-edged clarification that a) cleared Canada on 9/11, but b) insisted others – vague, unnamed others – crossed from Canada with terror on their minds. And yesterday, ouch yet again as Senator John McCain, the former Republican presidential candidate, repeated the original falsehood on Fox News.

Are the Americans making up this stuff? Well, no, actually. The latest raw data making the rounds in Washington in fact reinforces the notion of Canada as the weakest, leakiest flank in the stateside obsession to batten down its hatches against terrorism.

According to figures confirmed for the Toronto Star by the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, travellers arriving from Canada registered 500 “hits” on the government’s integrated terror watch list for the year ending last October. That compares to 150 hits on the U.S.-Mexico border for the same period.

In other words, the flow of people from Canada is more than three times more suspicious than that from Mexico, according to the classified data the U.S. security agencies use to measure the risk of terror.

All of which drives Canadian officials bananas.

[T]he breakdown of those “500 hits,” Canadian sources say, shows the vast majority of the individuals in question are either U.S. citizens or U.S. landed immigrants.

Only a small minority of the 500 are Canadian passport holders.

Where does it all leave Canada? Ticked off. But with a renewed appreciation for the anxieties that drive what former Canadian diplomat Paul Frazer (reviving a Trudeau-era metaphor) calls the “elephant’s paranoia.”

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff, who was in Washington this week, said the American tendency to write off Canadians as wobbly on security is based on “ignorance.”

“This is the malign consequence of the benign indifference of Americans toward Canadians,” he said.

Monday, April 27th, 2009

The following is extracted from today’s edition of “globeandmail.com”.

The European Union endorsed plans today to open negotiations with Canada on a new free-trade pact.

The negotiations, which could last two years, are to be officially launched at an EU-Canada leaders summit May 6, in Prague.

EU Trade Commissioner Catherine Ashton said launching the talks “sends a signal that the European Union remains committed to trade and open markets at a time of economic crisis and rising protectionist sentiment.”

The “enhanced” trade deal will aim to open up trade in numerous areas including investment services, government procurement and agriculture goods. It will also aim to include a first-time agreement to allow the temporary movement of workers between Canada and the 27-member bloc and include efforts to bring into line regulatory rules on everything from copyright to food and animal safety rules&hellip.

A study evaluating the benefits of closer economic ties concluded a deal could open up trade worth $18 billion a year for the European Union and $13 billion annually for Canada. It said both sides could profit from closer ties in science and technology and better environmental co-operation&hellip.

The EU is Canada’s second-largest trading partner after the United States, while Canada is only the EU’s 11 most important trading partner.

Interest on the EU side for closer ties is based on getting better access to the North American market, notably to the United States, via its North American Free Trade pact. The EU already has a free-trade deal with Mexico.

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Capital Customs Brokers Is Moving

New address
745 Aylmer Road, Suite 205,
Gatineau (Québec) J9H 0B8

From Ottawa to Gatineau - We are pleased to announce that as of May 30, 2009 Capital will be re-locating to our new office in the heart of Canada’s Capital Region – Gatineau, Quebec, right across the river from Ottawa. Operating with a new VoIP system, all of our contact numbers remain conveniently unchanged.

Built for Our Employees - Close to Gatineau Park and downtown Ottawa, our attractive and spacious new office is a short drive away for most of our employees; immediately accessible to public transit services; moments from a number of restaurants, and offers a host of other conveniences including on site daycare.

Designed for Our Customers -  As the business of customs transactions continues to be effectively and seamlessly managed electronically, Capital remains faithfully and immediately connected to our customers and their imports, toll free, 24/7. Our customers can continue to count on Capital to monitor, trace, and release their goods through customs efficiently and expediently at any border point across Canada.

A New Office for Us, More Services for You -  Proud of our new offices, we’re equally excited about our brand new website. Built to be customer friendly, relevant, and informative, our website now allows our customers to take advantage of online Pars Tracking, and a confidential Client Login feature for monitoring activity and report generation.
____________________

On behalf of Capital, we remain honoured to continue to serve you. We’d be pleased to have you visit; please accept an open invitation to drop by and say hello.

All the best for 2009 and beyond,

Pierre Wistaff
President

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

The following is excerpted from today’s edition of “Canada.com”.

It is clear that Homeland Security Director Janet Napolitano was tricked in her interview with a television reporter to repeat the myth that terrorists who carried out attacks on the United States on Sept. 11, 2001, came from Canada.

But she should have known better. Unfortunately, other senior U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, have similarly misspoke.

It is an urban legend that Canadian diplomats have tried for years to dispel. The 9/11 terrorists held valid visas issued by the U.S. government and trained for their horrific mission within U.S. borders.

But Napolitano was partly right about the threat of terrorists coming from Canada. Recall that Mohammed Mansour Jabarah, who grew up in St. Catharines, Ont., after his family immigrated from Kuwait, pleaded guilty to conspiring to kill U.S. nationals, to destroy U.S. property abroad with weapons of mass destruction, to kill U.S. employees while on duty and to use U.S. weapons of mass destruction against American property.

Then there’s Abderraouf bin Habib bin Yousef Jdey, who was granted asylum in Canada and citizenship thereafter, whose video recording vowing attacks on U.S. targets and to die as a martyr was found in the rubble of a house in Afghanistan. The U.S. State Department offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to his capture.

Not to mention Mohammed Momin Khawaja, born in Canada to Pakistani immigrants, and charged with plotting terrorist bombings in Britain, as well as financing and facilitating terrorism; or Jamal Akkal, a Canadian citizen and Hamas operative convicted of planning attacks on Jewish targets in North America, or Ahmed Ressam, an Algerian living in Montreal, who planned to bomb Los Angeles International Airport, captured by U.S. customs officials after crossing to Washington state from Victoria.

The main thrust of Napolitano’s remarks is regrettably true. Canada does harbour active terrorist cells that the U.S. needs to worry about. However, the U.S. has many more home-grown terrorist threats that will be unaffected by increased border security.

It’s a sad fact that the longest undefended border is no more. Canada has promised to raise an army of 4,400 armed border guards to meet U.S. demands for greater security. And passports for all travellers between the two countries will be required as of June 1.

But thickening the border carries a high cost. More than 300,000 people cross the shared border every day. More than two million crossings a year occur at the Peace Arch entry alone. On Good Friday, there was a four-hour wait there to get into the U.S. from Canada.

Leaving aside the environmental impact of idling vehicles for that length of time, tourism is a major industry for both countries, providing jobs and ancillary benefits as well as government revenue from taxes and fees. A delay of half a day is an incentive to stay home.

Perhaps even more significant is the impact on bilateral trade between the U.S. and Canada, which amounts to $1.5 billion a day — of which 70 per cent moves by truck. Some steps have been taken to speed commercial traffic through border crossings, such as the Free and Secure Trade (FAST) program and the Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism.

Impeding the flow of trade between the two countries does neither one any good.

The way to combat terrorism is through information and intelligence, which must be shared among all countries willing to join the fight. Even if an attack should emanate from Canada, it would be stopped long before it reached the 49th parallel if security agencies cooperated as fully as they could.

Napolitano said Canada allows people into the country that the U.S. would not. The U.S. has an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants, many of whom arrived by fording the Rio Grande. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.

In its fight against terrorism and illegal immigration, the U.S. should recognize who its friends are and work with them for their mutual benefit…

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

The following is excerpted from today’s edition of “Journal of Commerce”.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection is stepping up its efforts to secure the nation’s land borders, and the agency is receiving hundreds of millions of dollars to support its efforts.

Jayson Ahern, acting commissioner, said CBP will receive $420 million in federal stimulus funds for border security, and the General Services Administration will receive $300 million for border facility enhancements.

Ahern said Wednesday at the annual conference of the National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America this funding will be a “good first step” toward the estimated $5 billion needed to build infrastructure and upgrade border facilities.

CBP has already invested heavily in X-Ray equipment and other technologies that are used to search for narcotics and weapons of mass destruction in passenger vehicles and freight transportation.

However, inadequate infrastructure continues to restrain CBP’s efforts at a time when there is a crescendo of concern in Congress and the media over border violence among Mexican drug cartels…

Protecting the nation’s security and preventing terrorists and weapons of mass destruction from entering the U.S. have remained CBP’s top priority since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Terrorist incidents in Pakistan and India and the recent attack on the Maersk Alabama by pirates off the coast of Somalia are reminders that terrorism is still a global threat….

That is why CBP is pressing the trade community to provide more information about imported products from as far back in the supply chain as possible. …

Monday, April 20th, 2009

This publication has been provided in order to give the reader a better understanding of the verification process under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

It is available on the CBSA web site, at:

http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/publications/pub/bsf5083-eng.html

Friday, April 17th, 2009

The following news release was issued by the CBSA on 17 April 2009.

The Honourable Peter Van Loan, Minister of Public Safety, today announced that the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has successfully met the Government of Canada’s target for all participating departments and agencies to reduce 20 percent of the requirements their policies and forms impose on Canadian business.

This 20 percent reduction is part of the Government of Canada-led Paperwork Burden Reduction Initiative. Through this initiative, the CBSA has eliminated over 1,600 obsolete, non-essential requirements and administrative demands imposed on business, making the overall CBSA commercial process clearer and easier for Canadian businesses to comply with and understand.

Through its own business simplification initiative and in support of the Paperwork Burden Reduction Initiative, the CBSA partners with key representatives from business, industry and trade to continue making the commercial process easier at the Canadian border. One of these key partnerships is with the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB). The CFIB has played an important role in the CBSA’s ongoing business simplification efforts.”The CBSA’s business simplification working group is an exemplary illustration of how the private and public sectors are working together towards paperwork reduction,” said Corinne Pohlmann, Vice-President of National Affairs at the CFIB. Ms. Pohlmann is also the co-chair of the CBSA’s business simplification working group.