Notice of Determinations Regarding Eligibility To Apply for Worker Adjustment Assistance and Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance, 57681-57682 [E8-23297]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 193 / Friday, October 3, 2008 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Notice of Determinations Regarding
Eligibility To Apply for Worker
Adjustment Assistance and Alternative
Trade Adjustment Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19
U.S.C. 2273) the Department of Labor
herein presents summaries of
determinations regarding eligibility to
apply for trade adjustment assistance for
workers (TA–W) number and alternative
trade adjustment assistance (ATAA) by
(TA–W) number issued during the
period of September 15 through
September 19, 2008.
In order for an affirmative
determination to be made for workers of
a primary firm and a certification issued
regarding eligibility to apply for worker
adjustment assistance, each of the group
eligibility requirements of Section
222(a) of the Act must be met.
I. Section (a)(2)(A) all of the following
must be satisfied:
A. A significant number or proportion
of the workers in such workers’ firm, or
an appropriate subdivision of the firm,
have become totally or partially
separated, or are threatened to become
totally or partially separated;
B. The sales or production, or both, of
such firm or subdivision have decreased
absolutely; and
C. Increased imports of articles like or
directly competitive with articles
produced by such firm or subdivision
have contributed importantly to such
workers’ separation or threat of
separation and to the decline in sales or
production of such firm or subdivision;
or
II. Section (a)(2)(B) both of the
following must be satisfied:
A. A significant number or proportion
of the workers in such workers’ firm, or
an appropriate subdivision of the firm,
have become totally or partially
separated, or are threatened to become
totally or partially separated;
B. There has been a shift in
production by such workers’ firm or
subdivision to a foreign country of
articles like or directly competitive with
articles which are produced by such
firm or subdivision; and
C. One of the following must be
satisfied:
1. The country to which the workers’
firm has shifted production of the
articles is a party to a free trade
agreement with the United States;
2. The country to which the workers’
firm has shifted production of the
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23:33 Oct 02, 2008
Jkt 217001
articles to a beneficiary country under
the Andean Trade Preference Act,
African Growth and Opportunity Act, or
the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery
Act; or
3. There has been or is likely to be an
increase in imports of articles that are
like or directly competitive with articles
which are or were produced by such
firm or subdivision.
Also, in order for an affirmative
determination to be made for
secondarily affected workers of a firm
and a certification issued regarding
eligibility to apply for worker
adjustment assistance, each of the group
eligibility requirements of Section
222(b) of the Act must be met.
(1) Significant number or proportion
of the workers in the workers’ firm or
an appropriate subdivision of the firm
have become totally or partially
separated, or are threatened to become
totally or partially separated;
(2) The workers’ firm (or subdivision)
is a supplier or downstream producer to
a firm (or subdivision) that employed a
group of workers who received a
certification of eligibility to apply for
trade adjustment assistance benefits and
such supply or production is related to
the article that was the basis for such
certification; and
(3) Either—
(A) The workers’ firm is a supplier
and the component parts it supplied for
the firm (or subdivision) described in
paragraph (2) accounted for at least 20
percent of the production or sales of the
workers’ firm; or
(B) A loss or business by the workers’
firm with the firm (or subdivision)
described in paragraph (2) contributed
importantly to the workers’ separation
or threat of separation.
In order for the Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance to issue a
certification of eligibility to apply for
Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance (ATAA) for older workers,
the group eligibility requirements of
Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act
must be met.
1. Whether a significant number of
workers in the workers’ firm are 50
years of age or older.
2. Whether the workers in the
workers’ firm possess skills that are not
easily transferable.
3. The competitive conditions within
the workers’ industry (i.e., conditions
within the industry are adverse).
Affirmative Determinations for Worker
Adjustment Assistance
The following certifications have been
issued. The date following the company
name and location of each
determination references the impact
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
57681
date for all workers of such
determination.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(a)(2)(A) (increased imports) of the
Trade Act have been met.
TA–W–63,765; Campbell
Manufacturing, Sparta, MO: July 25,
2007.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(a)(2)(B) (shift in production) of the
Trade Act have been met.
None.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(b) (supplier to a firm whose workers
are certified eligible to apply for TAA)
of the Trade Act have been met.
None.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(b) (downstream producer for a firm
whose workers are certified eligible to
apply for TAA based on increased
imports from or a shift in production to
Mexico or Canada) of the Trade Act
have been met.
None.
Affirmative Determinations for Worker
Adjustment Assistance and Alternative
Trade Adjustment Assistance
The following certifications have been
issued. The date following the company
name and location of each
determination references the impact
date for all workers of such
determination.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(a)(2)(A) (increased imports) and
Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act
have been met.
TA–W–63,841; Great Lakes Industry,
Inc., Jackson, MI: August 8, 2007.
TA–W–63,885; Cochrane Furniture
Company, Lincolnton, NC: August
15, 2007.
TA–W–63,777; Wilton Armetale,
Aerotek Commercial Staffing,
Mount Joy, PA: July 9, 2007.
TA–W–63,390; Hickory Business
Furniture, Inc., Subsidiary of HNI
Corporation, Hickory, NC: May 14,
2007.
TA–W–63,814; T.I. Industries, Inc.,
Lexington, NC: August 4, 2007.
TA–W–63,834; Hickory Hill Furniture
Corp., Subsidiary of Norwalk
Furniture, Kelly Services, Fulton,
MS: July 25, 2007.
TA–W–63,875; JD Lumber, Inc., Priest
River, ID: August 12, 2007.
TA–W–63,881; JCIM, LLC, Workers Paid
by Plastech Engineered, Caro, MI:
August 8, 2007.
E:\FR\FM\03OCN1.SGM
03OCN1
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
57682
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 193 / Friday, October 3, 2008 / Notices
TA–W–63,883; Metaldyne, Sintered
Division, Ridgway, PA: August 11,
2007.
TA–W–63,953; Katahdin Paper
Company, LLC, Millinocket, ME: August
27, 2007.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(a)(2)(B) (shift in production) and
Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act
have been met.
TA–W–63,775; Duncan Solutions,
Harrison, AR: July 30, 2007.
TA–W–63,846; Kennametal, Inc.,
Chestnut Ridge Plant, Latrobe, PA:
August 7, 2007.
TA–W–63,860; K–Rain Manufacturing
Corp., Riviera Beach, FL: August 7,
2007.
TA–W–63,888; Plastech Engineered
Products (JCIM), Franklin, TN:
August 7, 2007.
TA–W–63,939; Hewlett Packard, Inkjet
& Web Sol., CDI, Manpower,
Securitas, Volt, Corvallis, OR:
August 26, 2007.
TA–W–63,972; DeRoyal Industries, Inc.,
DeRoyal Surgical Div., Powell, TN:
August 26, 2007.
TA–W–63,978; Rieter Automotive
Systems, Leased Workers From The
Wood Companies, Saint Joseph, MI:
July 22, 2007.
TA–W–63,996A; MPC Computers, LLC,
North Sioux City, SD: September 4,
2007.
TA–W–63,996; MPC Computers, LLC,
Leased Workers of Adecco Staffing,
Nampa, ID: September 4, 2007.
TA–W–64,039; Kaz, Inc., Hudson, NY:
September 12, 2007.
TA–W–63,829; S4 Carlisle Publishing
Services, Carlisle Publising, Carlisle
Communications, Dubuque, IA: July
29, 2008.
TA–W–63,838; International Rectifier,
Fabrication Facility #5, El Segundo,
CA: July 29, 2007.
TA–W–63,849; HDM/Henredon
Showroom/Offices, A Subsidiary of
Furniture Bands International, High
Point, NC: August 5, 2007.
TA–W–63,863; WH Manufacturing, Inc.,
A Subsidiary of Propulsys, Inc.,
Formerly known as White
Hydraulics, Inc., Hopkinsville, KY:
August 12, 2007.
TA–W–63,870; Peerless-Winsmith, Inc.,
Springville, NY: August 8, 2007.
TA–W–63,877; Covidien, Medical
Devices Division, formerly known as
Tyco Healthcare Group, LP,
Watertown, NY: August 11, 2007.
TA–W–63,945; Futuro, A Division of
Beiersdorf NA, Mariemont, OH:
November 1, 2007.
TA–W–63,983; Hillerich and Bradsby
Co., Louisville Slugger Div, Select
Staffing, Ontario, CA: July 22, 2008.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
23:33 Oct 02, 2008
Jkt 217001
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(b) (supplier to a firm whose workers
are certified eligible to apply for TAA)
and Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade
Act have been met.
TA–W–63,987; Metaldyne, St Marys, PA:
October 31, 2008.
The following certifications have been
issued. The requirements of Section
222(b) (downstream producer for a firm
whose workers are certified eligible to
apply for TAA based on increased
imports from or a shift in production to
Mexico or Canada) and Section
246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act have
been met.
None.
Negative Determinations for Alternative
Trade Adjustment Assistance
In the following cases, it has been
determined that the requirements of
246(a)(3)(A)(ii) have not been met for
the reasons specified.
The Department has determined that
criterion (1) of Section 246 has not been
met. The firm does not have a
significant number of workers 50 years
of age or older.
TA–W–63,765; Campbell
Manufacturing, Sparta, MO.
The Department has determined that
criterion (2) of Section 246 has not been
met. Workers at the firm possess skills
that are easily transferable.
None.
The Department has determined that
criterion (3) of Section 246 has not been
met. Competition conditions within the
workers’ industry are not adverse.
None.
Negative Determinations for Worker
Adjustment Assistance and Alternative
Trade Adjustment Assistance
In the following cases, the
investigation revealed that the eligibility
criteria for worker adjustment assistance
have not been met for the reasons
specified.
Because the workers of the firm are
not eligible to apply for TAA, the
workers cannot be certified eligible for
ATAA.
The investigation revealed that
criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.A.) and (a)(2)(B)(II.A.)
(employment decline) have not been
met.
None.
The investigation revealed that
criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.B.) (Sales or
production, or both, did not decline)
and (a)(2)(B)(II.B.) (shift in production
to a foreign country) have not been met.
TA–W–63,959; KDH Defense Systems,
Inc., Johnstown, Pa.
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
The investigation revealed that
criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.C.) (increased
imports) and (a)(2)(B)(II.B.) (shift in
production to a foreign country) have
not been met.
TA–W–63,641; Shaw
Industries,Residential
Manufacturing, Stevenson, AL.
TA–W–63,781; Dow Reichhold Specialty
Latex, LLC, Chickamauga, GA.
TA–W–63,836; Weyerhaeuser
Company,ILevel Coburg Sawmill,
Eugene, OR.
TA–W–63,928; Norandal USA, Inc.,
Salisbury, NC.
TA–W–63,933; Upoc Networks, Inc., A
Subsidiary of DADA USA, Inc., New
York, NY.
The workers’ firm does not produce
an article as required for certification
under Section 222 of the Trade Act of
1974.
TA–W–63,854; Cassens Transport, Inc.,
Fenton, MO.
TA–W–63,958; American Parts and
Services, Inc., Schaumburg, IL.
The investigation revealed that
criteria of Section 222(b)(2) has not been
met. The workers’ firm (or subdivision)
is not a supplier to or a downstream
producer for a firm whose workers were
certified eligible to apply for TAA.
None.
I hereby certify that the
aforementioned determinations were
issued during the period of September
15 through September 19, 2008. Copies
of these determinations are available for
inspection in Room C–5311, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20210
during normal business hours or will be
mailed to persons who write to the
above address.
Dated: September 26, 2008.
Erin Fitzgerald,
Director, Division of Trade Adjustment
Assistance.
[FR Doc. E8–23297 Filed 10–2–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
Investigations Regarding Certifications
of Eligibility To Apply for Worker
Adjustment Assistance and Alternative
Trade Adjustment Assistance
Petitions have been filed with the
Secretary of Labor under Section 221(a)
of the Trade Act of 1974 (‘‘the Act’’) and
are identified in the Appendix to this
notice. Upon receipt of these petitions,
the Director of the Division of Trade
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03OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 193 (Friday, October 3, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57681-57682]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-23297]
[[Page 57681]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training Administration
Notice of Determinations Regarding Eligibility To Apply for
Worker Adjustment Assistance and Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended
(19 U.S.C. 2273) the Department of Labor herein presents summaries of
determinations regarding eligibility to apply for trade adjustment
assistance for workers (TA-W) number and alternative trade adjustment
assistance (ATAA) by (TA-W) number issued during the period of
September 15 through September 19, 2008.
In order for an affirmative determination to be made for workers of
a primary firm and a certification issued regarding eligibility to
apply for worker adjustment assistance, each of the group eligibility
requirements of Section 222(a) of the Act must be met.
I. Section (a)(2)(A) all of the following must be satisfied:
A. A significant number or proportion of the workers in such
workers' firm, or an appropriate subdivision of the firm, have become
totally or partially separated, or are threatened to become totally or
partially separated;
B. The sales or production, or both, of such firm or subdivision
have decreased absolutely; and
C. Increased imports of articles like or directly competitive with
articles produced by such firm or subdivision have contributed
importantly to such workers' separation or threat of separation and to
the decline in sales or production of such firm or subdivision; or
II. Section (a)(2)(B) both of the following must be satisfied:
A. A significant number or proportion of the workers in such
workers' firm, or an appropriate subdivision of the firm, have become
totally or partially separated, or are threatened to become totally or
partially separated;
B. There has been a shift in production by such workers' firm or
subdivision to a foreign country of articles like or directly
competitive with articles which are produced by such firm or
subdivision; and
C. One of the following must be satisfied:
1. The country to which the workers' firm has shifted production of
the articles is a party to a free trade agreement with the United
States;
2. The country to which the workers' firm has shifted production of
the articles to a beneficiary country under the Andean Trade Preference
Act, African Growth and Opportunity Act, or the Caribbean Basin
Economic Recovery Act; or
3. There has been or is likely to be an increase in imports of
articles that are like or directly competitive with articles which are
or were produced by such firm or subdivision.
Also, in order for an affirmative determination to be made for
secondarily affected workers of a firm and a certification issued
regarding eligibility to apply for worker adjustment assistance, each
of the group eligibility requirements of Section 222(b) of the Act must
be met.
(1) Significant number or proportion of the workers in the workers'
firm or an appropriate subdivision of the firm have become totally or
partially separated, or are threatened to become totally or partially
separated;
(2) The workers' firm (or subdivision) is a supplier or downstream
producer to a firm (or subdivision) that employed a group of workers
who received a certification of eligibility to apply for trade
adjustment assistance benefits and such supply or production is related
to the article that was the basis for such certification; and
(3) Either--
(A) The workers' firm is a supplier and the component parts it
supplied for the firm (or subdivision) described in paragraph (2)
accounted for at least 20 percent of the production or sales of the
workers' firm; or
(B) A loss or business by the workers' firm with the firm (or
subdivision) described in paragraph (2) contributed importantly to the
workers' separation or threat of separation.
In order for the Division of Trade Adjustment Assistance to issue a
certification of eligibility to apply for Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance (ATAA) for older workers, the group eligibility requirements
of Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act must be met.
1. Whether a significant number of workers in the workers' firm are
50 years of age or older.
2. Whether the workers in the workers' firm possess skills that are
not easily transferable.
3. The competitive conditions within the workers' industry (i.e.,
conditions within the industry are adverse).
Affirmative Determinations for Worker Adjustment Assistance
The following certifications have been issued. The date following
the company name and location of each determination references the
impact date for all workers of such determination.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(a)(2)(A) (increased imports) of the Trade Act have been
met.
TA-W-63,765; Campbell Manufacturing, Sparta, MO: July 25, 2007.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(a)(2)(B) (shift in production) of the Trade Act have been
met.
None.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(b) (supplier to a firm whose workers are certified eligible
to apply for TAA) of the Trade Act have been met.
None.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(b) (downstream producer for a firm whose workers are
certified eligible to apply for TAA based on increased imports from or
a shift in production to Mexico or Canada) of the Trade Act have been
met.
None.
Affirmative Determinations for Worker Adjustment Assistance and
Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance
The following certifications have been issued. The date following
the company name and location of each determination references the
impact date for all workers of such determination.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(a)(2)(A) (increased imports) and Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii)
of the Trade Act have been met.
TA-W-63,841; Great Lakes Industry, Inc., Jackson, MI: August 8, 2007.
TA-W-63,885; Cochrane Furniture Company, Lincolnton, NC: August 15,
2007.
TA-W-63,777; Wilton Armetale, Aerotek Commercial Staffing, Mount Joy,
PA: July 9, 2007.
TA-W-63,390; Hickory Business Furniture, Inc., Subsidiary of HNI
Corporation, Hickory, NC: May 14, 2007.
TA-W-63,814; T.I. Industries, Inc., Lexington, NC: August 4, 2007.
TA-W-63,834; Hickory Hill Furniture Corp., Subsidiary of Norwalk
Furniture, Kelly Services, Fulton, MS: July 25, 2007.
TA-W-63,875; JD Lumber, Inc., Priest River, ID: August 12, 2007.
TA-W-63,881; JCIM, LLC, Workers Paid by Plastech Engineered, Caro, MI:
August 8, 2007.
[[Page 57682]]
TA-W-63,883; Metaldyne, Sintered Division, Ridgway, PA: August 11,
2007.
TA-W-63,953; Katahdin Paper Company, LLC, Millinocket, ME: August
27, 2007.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(a)(2)(B) (shift in production) and Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii)
of the Trade Act have been met.
TA-W-63,775; Duncan Solutions, Harrison, AR: July 30, 2007.
TA-W-63,846; Kennametal, Inc., Chestnut Ridge Plant, Latrobe, PA:
August 7, 2007.
TA-W-63,860; K-Rain Manufacturing Corp., Riviera Beach, FL: August 7,
2007.
TA-W-63,888; Plastech Engineered Products (JCIM), Franklin, TN: August
7, 2007.
TA-W-63,939; Hewlett Packard, Inkjet & Web Sol., CDI, Manpower,
Securitas, Volt, Corvallis, OR: August 26, 2007.
TA-W-63,972; DeRoyal Industries, Inc., DeRoyal Surgical Div., Powell,
TN: August 26, 2007.
TA-W-63,978; Rieter Automotive Systems, Leased Workers From The Wood
Companies, Saint Joseph, MI: July 22, 2007.
TA-W-63,996A; MPC Computers, LLC, North Sioux City, SD: September 4,
2007.
TA-W-63,996; MPC Computers, LLC, Leased Workers of Adecco Staffing,
Nampa, ID: September 4, 2007.
TA-W-64,039; Kaz, Inc., Hudson, NY: September 12, 2007.
TA-W-63,829; S4 Carlisle Publishing Services, Carlisle Publising,
Carlisle Communications, Dubuque, IA: July 29, 2008.
TA-W-63,838; International Rectifier, Fabrication Facility #5, El
Segundo, CA: July 29, 2007.
TA-W-63,849; HDM/Henredon Showroom/Offices, A Subsidiary of Furniture
Bands International, High Point, NC: August 5, 2007.
TA-W-63,863; WH Manufacturing, Inc., A Subsidiary of Propulsys, Inc.,
Formerly known as White Hydraulics, Inc., Hopkinsville, KY: August 12,
2007.
TA-W-63,870; Peerless-Winsmith, Inc., Springville, NY: August 8, 2007.
TA-W-63,877; Covidien, Medical Devices Division, formerly known as Tyco
Healthcare Group, LP, Watertown, NY: August 11, 2007.
TA-W-63,945; Futuro, A Division of Beiersdorf NA, Mariemont, OH:
November 1, 2007.
TA-W-63,983; Hillerich and Bradsby Co., Louisville Slugger Div, Select
Staffing, Ontario, CA: July 22, 2008.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(b) (supplier to a firm whose workers are certified eligible
to apply for TAA) and Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) of the Trade Act have
been met.
TA-W-63,987; Metaldyne, St Marys, PA: October 31, 2008.
The following certifications have been issued. The requirements of
Section 222(b) (downstream producer for a firm whose workers are
certified eligible to apply for TAA based on increased imports from or
a shift in production to Mexico or Canada) and Section 246(a)(3)(A)(ii)
of the Trade Act have been met.
None.
Negative Determinations for Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance
In the following cases, it has been determined that the
requirements of 246(a)(3)(A)(ii) have not been met for the reasons
specified.
The Department has determined that criterion (1) of Section 246 has
not been met. The firm does not have a significant number of workers 50
years of age or older.
TA-W-63,765; Campbell Manufacturing, Sparta, MO.
The Department has determined that criterion (2) of Section 246 has
not been met. Workers at the firm possess skills that are easily
transferable.
None.
The Department has determined that criterion (3) of Section 246 has
not been met. Competition conditions within the workers' industry are
not adverse.
None.
Negative Determinations for Worker Adjustment Assistance and
Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance
In the following cases, the investigation revealed that the
eligibility criteria for worker adjustment assistance have not been met
for the reasons specified.
Because the workers of the firm are not eligible to apply for TAA,
the workers cannot be certified eligible for ATAA.
The investigation revealed that criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.A.) and
(a)(2)(B)(II.A.) (employment decline) have not been met.
None.
The investigation revealed that criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.B.) (Sales or
production, or both, did not decline) and (a)(2)(B)(II.B.) (shift in
production to a foreign country) have not been met.
TA-W-63,959; KDH Defense Systems, Inc., Johnstown, Pa.
The investigation revealed that criteria (a)(2)(A)(I.C.) (increased
imports) and (a)(2)(B)(II.B.) (shift in production to a foreign
country) have not been met.
TA-W-63,641; Shaw Industries,Residential Manufacturing, Stevenson, AL.
TA-W-63,781; Dow Reichhold Specialty Latex, LLC, Chickamauga, GA.
TA-W-63,836; Weyerhaeuser Company,ILevel Coburg Sawmill, Eugene, OR.
TA-W-63,928; Norandal USA, Inc., Salisbury, NC.
TA-W-63,933; Upoc Networks, Inc., A Subsidiary of DADA USA, Inc., New
York, NY.
The workers' firm does not produce an article as required for
certification under Section 222 of the Trade Act of 1974.
TA-W-63,854; Cassens Transport, Inc., Fenton, MO.
TA-W-63,958; American Parts and Services, Inc., Schaumburg, IL.
The investigation revealed that criteria of Section 222(b)(2) has
not been met. The workers' firm (or subdivision) is not a supplier to
or a downstream producer for a firm whose workers were certified
eligible to apply for TAA.
None.
I hereby certify that the aforementioned determinations were issued
during the period of September 15 through September 19, 2008. Copies of
these determinations are available for inspection in Room C-5311, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20210
during normal business hours or will be mailed to persons who write to
the above address.
Dated: September 26, 2008.
Erin Fitzgerald,
Director, Division of Trade Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E8-23297 Filed 10-2-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-FN-P