Charter Renewal of the Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs); Request for Nominations, 18720-18721 [E6-5421]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 70 / Wednesday, April 12, 2006 / Notices
manufacturers or exporters will
continue to be the ‘‘all others’’ rate of
5.71 percent, which is the ‘‘all others’’
rate established in the LTFV
investigation, adjusted for the export
subsidy rate in the countervailing duty
investigation. See Amended Final
Determination. These cash deposit rates,
when imposed, shall remain in effect
until publication of the final results of
the next administrative review.
Notification to Importers
This notice also serves as a
preliminary reminder to importers of
their responsibility under 19 CFR
§ 351.402(f)(2) to file a certificate
regarding the reimbursement of
antidumping and countervailing duties
prior to liquidation of the relevant
entries during this review period.
Failure to comply with this requirement
could result in the Secretary’s
presumption that reimbursement of
antidumping and countervailing duties
occurred and the subsequent assessment
of double antidumping duties.
We are issuing and publishing this
notice in accordance with sections
751(a)(1) and 777(i)(1) of the Act.
Dated: April 3, 2006.
David M. Spooner,
Assistant Secretaryfor Import Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–5404 Filed 4–11–02; 8:45 am]
Billing Code: 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Charter Renewal of the Industry Trade
Advisory Committees (ITACs); Request
for Nominations
International Trade
Administration, Manufacturing and
Services.
ACTION: Notice of Renewal of the
Charters and Request for Nominations.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: On February 17, 2006, the
Secretary of Commerce and the United
States Trade Representative (USTR)
renewed the charters of the 16 Industry
Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs)
and the Committee of Chairs of the
ITACs for a four-year term to expire on
February 17, 2010. The ITACs advise
the USTR and the Secretary on trade
matters. There are currently
opportunities for membership on each
of these Committees, including
opportunities to serve as environmental
representatives or public health or
health care community representatives
on select ITACs. Nominations will be
accepted for current vacancies and those
that occur throughout the remainder of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
19:56 Apr 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
the charter term, which expires on
February 17, 2010.
DATES: Appointments will be made on
a rolling basis. For that reason,
nominations will be accepted through
February 17, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit nominations to
Ingrid V. Mitchem, Director, Industry
Trade Advisory Center, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 14th and Constitution
Avenue, NW., Room 4043, Washington,
DC 20230.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ingrid V. Mitchem, Director, Industry
Trade Advisory Center, (202) 482–3268.
Recruitment information also is
available on the International Trade
Administration Web site at:
www.ita.doc.gov/itac.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(5 U.S.C. appendix 2), and section 135
of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended
(19 U.S.C. 2155), the Secretary of
Commerce (the Secretary) and the
United States Trade Representative
(USTR) have renewed the charters of 16
Industry Trade Advisory Committees
(ITACs) and the Committee of Chairs of
the ITACs. The Secretary and the USTR
welcome nominations for the ITACs
listed below:
• Industry Trade Advisory Committees
on:
(ITAC 1) Aerospace Equipment
(ITAC 2) Automotive Equipment and
Capital Goods
(ITAC 3) Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals,
Health/Science Products and
Services
(ITAC 4) Consumer Goods
(ITAC 5) Distribution Services
(ITAC 6) Energy and Energy Services
(ITAC 7) Forest Products
(ITAC 8) Information and
Communications Technologies,
Services, and Electronic Commerce
(ITAC 9) Nonferrous Metals and
Building Materials
(ITAC 10) Services and Finance
(ITAC 11) Small and Minority
Business
(ITAC 12) Steel
(ITAC 13) Textiles and Clothing
(ITAC 14) Customs Matters and Trade
Facilitation
(ITAC 15) Intellectual Property Rights
(ITAC 16) Standards and Technical
Trade Barriers
Background
Section 135 of the Trade Act of 1974,
as amended (19 U.S.C. 2155),
established a private-sector trade
advisory system to ensure that U.S.
trade policy and trade negotiation
objectives adequately reflect U.S.
commercial and economic interests.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Section 135(a)(1) directs the President
to:
Seek information and advice from
representative elements of the private sector
and the non-Federal governmental sector
with respect to—
(A) negotiating objectives and bargaining
positions before entering into a trade
agreement under [title I of the Trade Act of
1974 and section 2103 of the Bipartisan
Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002];
(B) the operation of any trade agreement
once entered into, including preparation for
dispute settlement panel proceedings to
which the United States is a party; and
(C) other matters arising in connection
with the development, implementation, and
administration of the trade policy of the
United States * * *
Section 135(c)(2) of the 1974 Trade
Act provides that:
(2) The President shall establish such
sectoral or functional advisory committees as
may be appropriate. Such committees shall,
insofar as is practicable, be representative of
all industry, labor, agricultural, or service
interests (including small business interests)
in the sector or functional areas concerned.
In organizing such committees, the United
States Trade Representative and the
Secretaries of Commerce, Labor, Agriculture,
the Treasury, or other executive departments,
as appropriate, shall—
(A) consult with interested private
organizations; and
(B) take into account such factors as—
(i) patterns of actual and potential
competition between United States industry
and agriculture and foreign enterprise in
international trade,
(ii) the character of the nontariff barriers
and other distortions affecting such
competition,
(iii) the necessity for reasonable limits on
the number of such advisory committees,
(iv) the necessity that each committee be
reasonably limited in size, and
(v) in the case of each sectoral committee,
that the product lines covered by each
committee be reasonably related.
Pursuant to this provision, Commerce
and USTR have established and coadminister 16 ITACs and the Committee
of Chairs of the ITACs.
Functions
The duties of the ITACs are to provide
the President, through the Secretary and
the USTR, with advice on objectives and
bargaining positions for multilateral
trade negotiations, bilateral and regional
trade negotiations, and other traderelated policy matters. The Committees
provide nonpartisan, industry input in
the development of trade policy
objectives. The Committees’ efforts have
assisted the United States in putting
forward unified positions when it
negotiates trade agreements.
The ITACs address market-access
problems; barriers to trade; tariff levels;
discriminatory foreign procurement
E:\FR\FM\12APN1.SGM
12APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 70 / Wednesday, April 12, 2006 / Notices
practices; and information, marketing,
advocacy needs of their sector. Thirteen
ITACs provide advice and information
on issues that affect specific sectors of
U.S. industry. Three ITACs focus on
cross-cutting, functional issues that
affect all industry sectors: customs
matters and trade facilitation (ITAC 14);
intellectual property rights (ITAC 15);
and standards and technical trade
barriers (ITAC 16). In addition to
members appointed exclusively to these
three ITACs, ITACs 1—13 each may
select a member to represent their ITAC
on each of these three cross-cutting
ITACs so that a broad range of industry
perspectives is represented. Other trade
policy issues, e.g., government
procurement, subsidies, etc., are
handled in ad hoc policy meetings.
Committees meet an average of six
times a year in Washington, DC. Some
ITACS meet more often depending on
the work of a particular committee.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
Membership
Members serve without compensation
and are responsible for all expenses
incurred to attend the meetings. ITAC
members are appointed jointly by the
Secretary of Commerce and the USTR.
Appointments are made at the
chartering of each Committee and
periodically throughout the four-year
charter term. Members serve at the
discretion of the Secretary and the
USTR. Appointments to an ITAC expire
at the end of the Committee’s charter
term, in this case, February 17, 2010.
Each Committee elects a chairperson
from the membership of the Committee,
and that chairperson serves on the
Committee of Chairs of the ITACs.
Eligibility
Eligibility for membership on any
Committee is limited to U.S. citizens
who are not full-time employees of a
governmental entity and are not
registered with the Department of
Justice under the Foreign Agents
Registration Act. Members must
represent a U.S. entity that (a) is directly
engaged in the import or export of goods
or that sells its services abroad, or (b) is
an association of such entities. For
purposes of the preceding sentence, a
‘‘U. S. entity’’ is an organization
incorporated in the United States (or if
unincorporated, having its principal
place of business in the United States)
that is controlled by U.S. citizens or by
another U.S. entity. An entity is not a
U.S. entity if 50 percent plus one share
of its stock (if a corporation, or a similar
ownership interest of an unincorporated
entity) is controlled, directly or
indirectly, by non-U.S. citizens or nonU.S. entities. If the nominee is to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:42 Apr 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
represent an entity or corporation with
ten percent or greater non-U.S.
ownership, the nominee must
demonstrate at the time of nomination
that this ownership interest does not
constitute control and will not adversely
affect his or her ability to serve as a
trade advisor to the United States.
In addition to the industry
representatives, the ITACs on
Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Health/
Science Products and Services (ITAC 3)
and on Forest Products (ITAC 7) have
environmental representatives. The
Secretary of Commerce and the USTR
also are soliciting nominations for the
appointment of public health or health
care community representatives to the
ITACs on Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals,
Health/Science Products and Services
(ITAC 3) and on Intellectual Property
Rights (ITAC 15). Commerce solicited
nominations for public health or health
care community representatives in
December 2005 (70 FR 74776, Dec. 16,
2005). Commerce is still in the process
of considering nominations received in
response to that solicitation. Anyone
who submitted a nomination in
response to that announcement does not
need to submit an additional
nomination in response to this broader
announcement. Environmental
representatives and public health and
health care community representatives
must represent a U.S. entity interested
in issues relevant to the work of the
specific ITAC. A nongovernmental
organization is a ‘‘U.S. entity’’ if the
organization is (1) Incorporated in the
United States (or, if unincorporated,
having its headquarters in the United
States), (2) the organization is controlled
by U.S. citizens or by another U.S.
entity, and (3) at least 50 percent of the
organization’s annual revenue is
attributable to nongovernmental U.S.
sources. Regarding the controlled by
factor, a nongovernmental organization
is not a U.S. entity if more than 50
percent of its Board of Directors or
membership is made up of non-U.S.
citizens. If the nominee is to represent
an organization more than ten percent of
whose Board of Directors or
membership is made up of non-U.S.
citizens or non-U.S. entities, the
nominee must demonstrate at the time
of nomination that this non-U.S. interest
does not constitute control and will not
adversely affect his or her ability to
serve as a trade advisor to the United
States.
Members are selected to represent
their respective sponsoring U.S. entity’s
interests on trade matters and thus
nominees are considered foremost based
upon their ability to carry out the goals
of section 135(c) of the Trade Act of
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
18721
1974, as amended. Other criteria are the
nominee’s knowledge of and expertise
in international trade issues as relevant
to the work of the committee and
ensuring that the Committees are
balanced in terms of sectors, product
lines, demographics, geographic
representation, and company size.
Appointments to all ITACs are made
without regard to political affiliation.
All ITAC members must be able to
obtain and maintain a security
clearance.
Application Procedures
For consideration, a nominee should
send (1) A sponsor letter, (2) a resume,
with demonstrated knowledge of
international trade issues, and (3)
company or organization information to
the Director, Industry Trade Advisory
Center, U.S. Department of Commerce,
14th and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Room 4043, Washington, DC 20230.
Sponsor letters must be on the company
or organization letterhead. Company or
organization information must address
the activities, products, or services of
the U.S. entity to be represented and
certify that the entity is a U.S. entity as
defined in the Eligibility section above.
Additional requirements exist for
nominations of consultants, legal
advisors, and trade associations. The
specific requirements will vary
depending on the nature of the
organization and interests to be
represented. Interested consultants,
legal advisors, and trade associations
should contact the Industry Trade
Advisory Center or consult the ITAC
Web site for additional information on
the submission requirements.
This notice is issued pursuant to the
Federal Advisory Committee Act (5
U.S.C., app. 2), 19 U.S.C. 2155, and 21
CFR part 14 relating to advisory
committees.
Dated: April 6, 2006.
Jack McDougle,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Manufacturing
and Services.
[FR Doc. E6–5421 Filed 4–11–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DR–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Export Trade Certificate of Review
Notice of Issuance of an
Amended Export Trade Certificate of
Review, Application No. 85–12A18.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: On April 6, 2006, The U.S.
Department of Commerce issued an
amended Export Trade Certificate of
E:\FR\FM\12APN1.SGM
12APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 70 (Wednesday, April 12, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18720-18721]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-5421]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Charter Renewal of the Industry Trade Advisory Committees
(ITACs); Request for Nominations
AGENCY: International Trade Administration, Manufacturing and Services.
ACTION: Notice of Renewal of the Charters and Request for Nominations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On February 17, 2006, the Secretary of Commerce and the United
States Trade Representative (USTR) renewed the charters of the 16
Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs) and the Committee of Chairs
of the ITACs for a four-year term to expire on February 17, 2010. The
ITACs advise the USTR and the Secretary on trade matters. There are
currently opportunities for membership on each of these Committees,
including opportunities to serve as environmental representatives or
public health or health care community representatives on select ITACs.
Nominations will be accepted for current vacancies and those that occur
throughout the remainder of the charter term, which expires on February
17, 2010.
DATES: Appointments will be made on a rolling basis. For that reason,
nominations will be accepted through February 17, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Submit nominations to Ingrid V. Mitchem, Director, Industry
Trade Advisory Center, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Room 4043, Washington, DC 20230.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ingrid V. Mitchem, Director, Industry
Trade Advisory Center, (202) 482-3268.
Recruitment information also is available on the International
Trade Administration Web site at: www.ita.doc.gov/itac.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to the Federal Advisory Committee
Act (5 U.S.C. appendix 2), and section 135 of the Trade Act of 1974, as
amended (19 U.S.C. 2155), the Secretary of Commerce (the Secretary) and
the United States Trade Representative (USTR) have renewed the charters
of 16 Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs) and the Committee of
Chairs of the ITACs. The Secretary and the USTR welcome nominations for
the ITACs listed below:
Industry Trade Advisory Committees on:
(ITAC 1) Aerospace Equipment
(ITAC 2) Automotive Equipment and Capital Goods
(ITAC 3) Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Health/Science Products and
Services
(ITAC 4) Consumer Goods
(ITAC 5) Distribution Services
(ITAC 6) Energy and Energy Services
(ITAC 7) Forest Products
(ITAC 8) Information and Communications Technologies, Services, and
Electronic Commerce
(ITAC 9) Nonferrous Metals and Building Materials
(ITAC 10) Services and Finance
(ITAC 11) Small and Minority Business
(ITAC 12) Steel
(ITAC 13) Textiles and Clothing
(ITAC 14) Customs Matters and Trade Facilitation
(ITAC 15) Intellectual Property Rights
(ITAC 16) Standards and Technical Trade Barriers
Background
Section 135 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19 U.S.C. 2155),
established a private-sector trade advisory system to ensure that U.S.
trade policy and trade negotiation objectives adequately reflect U.S.
commercial and economic interests. Section 135(a)(1) directs the
President to:
Seek information and advice from representative elements of the
private sector and the non-Federal governmental sector with respect
to--
(A) negotiating objectives and bargaining positions before
entering into a trade agreement under [title I of the Trade Act of
1974 and section 2103 of the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority
Act of 2002];
(B) the operation of any trade agreement once entered into,
including preparation for dispute settlement panel proceedings to
which the United States is a party; and
(C) other matters arising in connection with the development,
implementation, and administration of the trade policy of the United
States * * *
Section 135(c)(2) of the 1974 Trade Act provides that:
(2) The President shall establish such sectoral or functional
advisory committees as may be appropriate. Such committees shall,
insofar as is practicable, be representative of all industry, labor,
agricultural, or service interests (including small business
interests) in the sector or functional areas concerned. In
organizing such committees, the United States Trade Representative
and the Secretaries of Commerce, Labor, Agriculture, the Treasury,
or other executive departments, as appropriate, shall--
(A) consult with interested private organizations; and
(B) take into account such factors as--
(i) patterns of actual and potential competition between United
States industry and agriculture and foreign enterprise in
international trade,
(ii) the character of the nontariff barriers and other
distortions affecting such competition,
(iii) the necessity for reasonable limits on the number of such
advisory committees,
(iv) the necessity that each committee be reasonably limited in
size, and
(v) in the case of each sectoral committee, that the product
lines covered by each committee be reasonably related.
Pursuant to this provision, Commerce and USTR have established and
co-administer 16 ITACs and the Committee of Chairs of the ITACs.
Functions
The duties of the ITACs are to provide the President, through the
Secretary and the USTR, with advice on objectives and bargaining
positions for multilateral trade negotiations, bilateral and regional
trade negotiations, and other trade-related policy matters. The
Committees provide nonpartisan, industry input in the development of
trade policy objectives. The Committees' efforts have assisted the
United States in putting forward unified positions when it negotiates
trade agreements.
The ITACs address market-access problems; barriers to trade; tariff
levels; discriminatory foreign procurement
[[Page 18721]]
practices; and information, marketing, advocacy needs of their sector.
Thirteen ITACs provide advice and information on issues that affect
specific sectors of U.S. industry. Three ITACs focus on cross-cutting,
functional issues that affect all industry sectors: customs matters and
trade facilitation (ITAC 14); intellectual property rights (ITAC 15);
and standards and technical trade barriers (ITAC 16). In addition to
members appointed exclusively to these three ITACs, ITACs 1--13 each
may select a member to represent their ITAC on each of these three
cross-cutting ITACs so that a broad range of industry perspectives is
represented. Other trade policy issues, e.g., government procurement,
subsidies, etc., are handled in ad hoc policy meetings.
Committees meet an average of six times a year in Washington, DC.
Some ITACS meet more often depending on the work of a particular
committee.
Membership
Members serve without compensation and are responsible for all
expenses incurred to attend the meetings. ITAC members are appointed
jointly by the Secretary of Commerce and the USTR. Appointments are
made at the chartering of each Committee and periodically throughout
the four-year charter term. Members serve at the discretion of the
Secretary and the USTR. Appointments to an ITAC expire at the end of
the Committee's charter term, in this case, February 17, 2010.
Each Committee elects a chairperson from the membership of the
Committee, and that chairperson serves on the Committee of Chairs of
the ITACs.
Eligibility
Eligibility for membership on any Committee is limited to U.S.
citizens who are not full-time employees of a governmental entity and
are not registered with the Department of Justice under the Foreign
Agents Registration Act. Members must represent a U.S. entity that (a)
is directly engaged in the import or export of goods or that sells its
services abroad, or (b) is an association of such entities. For
purposes of the preceding sentence, a ``U. S. entity'' is an
organization incorporated in the United States (or if unincorporated,
having its principal place of business in the United States) that is
controlled by U.S. citizens or by another U.S. entity. An entity is not
a U.S. entity if 50 percent plus one share of its stock (if a
corporation, or a similar ownership interest of an unincorporated
entity) is controlled, directly or indirectly, by non-U.S. citizens or
non-U.S. entities. If the nominee is to represent an entity or
corporation with ten percent or greater non-U.S. ownership, the nominee
must demonstrate at the time of nomination that this ownership interest
does not constitute control and will not adversely affect his or her
ability to serve as a trade advisor to the United States.
In addition to the industry representatives, the ITACs on
Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Health/Science Products and Services (ITAC
3) and on Forest Products (ITAC 7) have environmental representatives.
The Secretary of Commerce and the USTR also are soliciting nominations
for the appointment of public health or health care community
representatives to the ITACs on Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Health/
Science Products and Services (ITAC 3) and on Intellectual Property
Rights (ITAC 15). Commerce solicited nominations for public health or
health care community representatives in December 2005 (70 FR 74776,
Dec. 16, 2005). Commerce is still in the process of considering
nominations received in response to that solicitation. Anyone who
submitted a nomination in response to that announcement does not need
to submit an additional nomination in response to this broader
announcement. Environmental representatives and public health and
health care community representatives must represent a U.S. entity
interested in issues relevant to the work of the specific ITAC. A
nongovernmental organization is a ``U.S. entity'' if the organization
is (1) Incorporated in the United States (or, if unincorporated, having
its headquarters in the United States), (2) the organization is
controlled by U.S. citizens or by another U.S. entity, and (3) at least
50 percent of the organization's annual revenue is attributable to
nongovernmental U.S. sources. Regarding the controlled by factor, a
nongovernmental organization is not a U.S. entity if more than 50
percent of its Board of Directors or membership is made up of non-U.S.
citizens. If the nominee is to represent an organization more than ten
percent of whose Board of Directors or membership is made up of non-
U.S. citizens or non-U.S. entities, the nominee must demonstrate at the
time of nomination that this non-U.S. interest does not constitute
control and will not adversely affect his or her ability to serve as a
trade advisor to the United States.
Members are selected to represent their respective sponsoring U.S.
entity's interests on trade matters and thus nominees are considered
foremost based upon their ability to carry out the goals of section
135(c) of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended. Other criteria are the
nominee's knowledge of and expertise in international trade issues as
relevant to the work of the committee and ensuring that the Committees
are balanced in terms of sectors, product lines, demographics,
geographic representation, and company size. Appointments to all ITACs
are made without regard to political affiliation. All ITAC members must
be able to obtain and maintain a security clearance.
Application Procedures
For consideration, a nominee should send (1) A sponsor letter, (2)
a resume, with demonstrated knowledge of international trade issues,
and (3) company or organization information to the Director, Industry
Trade Advisory Center, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Room 4043, Washington, DC 20230. Sponsor
letters must be on the company or organization letterhead. Company or
organization information must address the activities, products, or
services of the U.S. entity to be represented and certify that the
entity is a U.S. entity as defined in the Eligibility section above.
Additional requirements exist for nominations of consultants, legal
advisors, and trade associations. The specific requirements will vary
depending on the nature of the organization and interests to be
represented. Interested consultants, legal advisors, and trade
associations should contact the Industry Trade Advisory Center or
consult the ITAC Web site for additional information on the submission
requirements.
This notice is issued pursuant to the Federal Advisory Committee
Act (5 U.S.C., app. 2), 19 U.S.C. 2155, and 21 CFR part 14 relating to
advisory committees.
Dated: April 6, 2006.
Jack McDougle,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Manufacturing and Services.
[FR Doc. E6-5421 Filed 4-11-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-DR-P