Home > medication safety > Customs reauthorization bill picking up support: Consumer Medication Safety

Customs reauthorization bill picking up support: Consumer Medication Safety

August 14th, 2009

By Peter Cohn
August 14, 2009

An effort to elevate trade facilitation as a top priority alongside security and enforcement within U.S. customs agencies for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, has a good shot at being enacted in the 111th Congress, stakeholders say.

A customs reauthorization bill introduced late last week by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and ranking member Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, could move in committee this fall, sources said. Finance has been working on a bill since 2006, and lobbyists said the staff work and resources devoted to it are unprecedented.

The measure has drawn support from industries including drug-makers, retailers and video-game developers, as well as cargo carriers, customs brokers and others involved in the global supply chain. Introduction comes “at a time when the United States desperately needs to promote free trade as an engine of economic growth,” said American Association of Exporters and Importers President and CEO Marianne Rowden.

The measure would establish Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement within the Homeland Security Department as separate agencies with their budgets. It would also create a office to consolidate trade facilitation duties within CBP as well as a liaison between the agency and the private sector, while requiring consultations with other agencies and industry stakeholders before proposing regulations impacting trade.

The bill would require CBP to identify benefits for voluntary industry participants in programs such as the Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism. “CBP has promised more trade benefits to participating importers, but those benefits have not come to fruition,” said Stephanie Lester, vice president for international trade at the Retail Industry Leaders Association. “We welcome Congress’ guidance that more should be done to encourage public-private partnerships.”

The measure includes new trade enforcement provisions, including creation of an interagency working group on import safety and new training requirements for CBP port personnel. It would create an office within ICE to coordinate federal efforts to enforce intellectual property violations, while requiring CBP to dedicate port staff solely to inspections and, if necessary, seizure of counterfeit drugs, software and other products.

Read the rest of this article consumer medication safety on Government Executive.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • Propeller
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

medication safety

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.