Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund and Agriculture Wool Apparel Manufacturers Trust Fund, 12321-12332 [2015-04385]
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12321
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 80, No. 45
Monday, March 9, 2015
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1471
RIN 0551–AA86
Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund
and Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund
Foreign Agricultural Service
and Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC), USDA.
ACTION: Final rule with request for
comments.
AGENCY:
This final rule implements
the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund
(Agriculture Pima Trust) and the
Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund (Agriculture
Wool Trust) Fund established in the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (Farm Bill).
The Agriculture Pima Trust provides
annually for one payment, called the
Pima Cotton Payments. The Agriculture
Wool Trust provides annually for four
payments. The first payment under the
Agriculture Wool Trust is currently
administered by the Department of
Commerce’s Office of Textiles and
Apparel (OTEXA), and is called the
Grants to Manufacturers of Certain
Worsted Wool Fabrics. This program is
being transferred from OTEXA to the
Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary),
who will administer the payment for the
2015–2019 calendar years, and will be
called Payments to Manufacturers of
Certain Worsted Wool Fabrics. The
second payment is called Monetization
of the Wool TRQ. The Farm Bill requires
the Secretary to determine a monetary
amount equivalent to what a person
would have saved if OTEXA’s Wool
Tariff Rate Quota program (Wool TRQ)
were still in effect. This payment will be
based on OTEXA’s Wool Tariff Rate
Quota program, which terminated at the
end of calendar year 2014. The
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SUMMARY:
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Monetization of the Wool TRQ will be
administered by the Secretary for the
2015–2019 calendar years. The third
payment is called the Wool Yarn, Wool
Fiber, and Wool Top Duty
Compensation Payment. Payments are
made to processors of wool yarn, wool
fiber, and wool top to compensate them
for termination of the suspension of
import duties on such wool. This
payment will be administered by the
Secretary for the 2015–2019 calendar
years. The fourth payment is called the
Refund of Duties Paid on Imports of
Certain Wool Products. This program is
currently administered by the
Department of Homeland Security’s
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
through calendar year 2015. The
program will be transferred in calendar
year 2016 to the Secretary, who will
administer the program for the 2016–
2019 calendar years. Regulations for the
fourth payment will be published at a
later date.
DATES: This final rule is effective March
9, 2015. Comments concerning this final
rule must be received by April 8, 2015,
to be assured consideration. We are
issuing this final rule without prior
notice and opportunity for comment.
ADDRESSES: The Foreign Agricultural
Service (FAS), USDA, invites interested
persons to submit comments on this
final rule. Comments may be submitted
by one of the following methods:
• Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Preferred
method; follow the on-line instructions
for submitting comments on the final
rule.
• Email: Comments can also be
addressed to Mr. Benjamin Chan at
pimawool@fas.usda.gov. All comments
submitted in response to this rule will
be included in the record and will be
made available to the public. FAS will
make the comments publicly available
online at: https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Benjamin Chan, Import Policies and
Export Reporting Division, Office of
Trade Policy, Foreign Agricultural
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture;
email: pimawool@fas.usda.gov; 202–
720–8877.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This rule sets forth regulations
regarding the implementation of the
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Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund and
the Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund.
Subpart A. Pima Agriculture Cotton
Trust Fund (Agriculture Pima Trust)
The Agriculture Pima Trust was
established in section 12314 of the Farm
Bill. The Agriculture Pima Trust is a
funding mechanism for pima cotton
payments.
(1) Pima Cotton Payments
The Secretary is required in section
12314 of the Farm Bill to establish an
annual payment for domestic users of
pima cotton, pima cotton yarn spinners,
and pima cotton trade associations. The
Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) has
been delegated the authority to
administer this payment and to issue
regulations to carry it out for calendar
years 2014–2018. There was insufficient
time to publish regulations for the 2014
payment and a notice was published in
the Federal Register at 72 FR 29363 on
May 2, 2014. Subpart A is applicable to
annual payments in the 2015–2018
calendar years.
The purpose of the annual payment is
to provide monetary relief to certain
persons in the U.S. that have incurred
economic injury through the
importation of pima cotton and have
incurred tariffs on pima cotton fabric
that are higher than tariffs on certain
imported apparel articles made of pima
cotton fabric. The first Pima Cotton
Trust Fund was established under the
Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006
and administered by the Customs and
Border Protection Agency of the
Department of Homeland Security (CBP)
in 2007 and 2008. Section 12314 of the
Farm Bill authorized the Agriculture
Pima Trust and pima cotton payment for
the 2014–2018 calendar years. The Farm
Bill authorizes $16 million from the
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
for each calendar year to fund annual
payments.
Section 12314 requires that a specific
percentage of annual funding be
distributed to certain sectors of the
domestic pima cotton apparel industry.
Twenty-five percent is to be paid to one
or more nationally recognized
associations established for the
promotion of pima cotton for use in
textile and apparel goods.
Twenty-five percent is to be paid to
domestic yarn spinners of pima cotton
that, during the calendar year
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immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar year 2013, produced
ring spun cotton yarns in the United
States measuring less than 83.33 decitex
(exceeding 120 metric number), in
single and plied form. A payment to a
yarn spinner is based on the ratio of the
yarn spinner’s 2013 production to the
total production of all domestic yarn
spinners in 2013 who qualify for a
payment.
The remaining fifty percent is to be
paid to manufacturers that during both
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment and during the
2013 calendar year used imported pima
cotton fabric (80s or higher count and 2ply in warp) to manufacture men’s and
boys’ woven pima cotton shirts. A
payment to a manufacturer is based on
the ratio of the dollar value (excluding
duty, shipping, and insurance) of the
manufacturer’s 2013 production of
men’s and boys’ woven pima cotton
shirts to the dollar value (excluding
duty, shipping, and insurance) of the
total production in 2013 of all men’s
and boys’ woven pima cotton shirts by
manufacturers who qualify for a
payment. The Farm Bill explicitly
requires exclusion of ‘‘duty, shipping,
and related costs’’ from the reported
dollar value of imported woven cotton
shirting fabric. Of the costs ‘‘related’’ to
shipping that are separate from the
freight cost itself, insurance is generally
the largest. As payments to
manufacturers are based on a
production ratio incorporating the
intrinsic dollar value of the imported
fabric, excluding ‘‘duty, shipping, and
related costs’’ in both parts of the ratio,
to limit ‘‘related costs’’ to insurance
gives effect to the purpose of the statute
and affords simplicity of calculation.
To apply for a payment, claimants are
required to submit an affidavit by March
15 of the calendar year of the
application for a payment. Payments
will be made not later than April 14.
Persons applying for a payment must
provide information required by the
Secretary through annual affidavits.
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Subpart B. Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund (Agriculture
Wool Trust)
The Agriculture Wool Trust was
established in section 12315 of the Farm
Bill. The Agriculture Wool Trust is a
funding mechanism for four payments:
(1) Payments to Manufacturers of
Certain Worsted Wool Fabrics; (2)
Monetization of the Wool Tariff Rate
Quota; (3) Wool Yarn, Wool Fiber, and
Wool Top Duty Compensation Payment;
and (4) Refund of Duties Paid on
Imports of Certain Wool Products.
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(1) Payments to Manufacturers of
Certain Worsted Wool Fabrics
OTEXA has administered the Grants
to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted
Wool Fabrics program through calendar
2014. Section 4002(c)(6) of the
Miscellaneous Trade and Technical
Corrections Act of 2004, as amended,
authorizes OTEXA to administer this
payment through 2014. Section
12315(b)(1) of the Farm Bill directed the
Secretary to continue to administer this
payment for the 2015–2019 calendar
years. The title is changed to ‘‘Payments
to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted
Wool Fabrics’’ to avoid confusion with
competitive grant programs also
administered by the Secretary.
The purpose of this payment is to
provide financial assistance to persons
in the U.S. that manufactured worsted
wool fabrics during 1999, 2000, and
2001. Section 12315 of the Farm Bill
authorizes the Secretary to continue to
make these payments to the same
persons that, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar years 1999, 2000, and
2001, were manufacturers of at least one
of two kinds of worsted wool fabrics: (1)
Subheading 9902.51.11 of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (HTS) containing 85
percent or more by weight of wool, with
average fiber diameters greater than 18.5
microns; and (2) subheading 9902.51.15
of the HTS containing 85 percent or
more by weight of wool, with average
fiber diameters of 18.5 microns or less.
All references to subheadings of the
HTS in the context of this payment are
to the subheadings as described in the
HTS in 2014.
As specified by the Miscellaneous
Trade and Technical Corrections Act of
2004, an amount of $2.666 million is
available each year for each HTS
subheading of wool fabric, to be divided
between persons based on the
percentage of each person’s total actual
manufacturing of that type of worsted
wool fabric during each of calendar
years 1999, 2000, and 2001 in relation
to the total manufacturing of such fabric
by all persons who qualified for
payments in those years.
Persons applying for a payment must
provide information required by the
Secretary through annual affidavits.
(2) Monetization of the Wool Tariff Rate
Quota (TRQ)
The Wool TRQ was established in
Title V of the Trade and Development
Act of 2000, and provided for temporary
duty reductions—i.e., lower duty rates—
on limited quantities of two categories
of worsted wool fabrics suitable for use
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in making suits, suit-type jackets, or
trousers for men and boys. The TRQ has
been administered since 2004 by
OTEXA, and the authority for the TRQ
expired on December 31, 2014.
This worsted wool fabric is of the
kind described in subheading
9902.51.11 of the HTS with average
fiber diameters greater than 18.5
microns, and subheading 9902.51.15 of
the HTS with average fiber diameters of
18.5 microns or less. A third worsted
wool fabric HTS subheading was added
to the TRQ by the Miscellaneous Trade
Act of 2004, subheading 9902.51.16 of
the HTS, with average fiber diameters of
18.5 microns or less.
All references to subheadings of the
HTS in the context of this payment are
to the subheadings as described in the
2014 HTS. The subheading references
are to a past HTS because these
subheadings have expired and have
been subsumed under other HTS
headings in 2015. Congress also used
these now expired HTS subheadings in
the Farm Bill, further necessitating their
use here. The term ‘‘duty paid’’ means
the dollar amount of the duty actually
paid by an importer in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment. In
other words, duty paid equals the
applicable duty rate multiplied by the
quantity of worsted wool fabric
imported. The term ‘‘lower duty rate’’
means the rate of duty that would have
been applied under the 2014 HTS
because of the duty reduction
percentage required by the Wool TRQ
that ended on December 31, 2014.
On February 7, 2014, Congress created
in section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill a
new payment that ‘‘monetizes’’
OTEXA’s Wool TRQ. Because the lower
duty rate is no longer available to
importers after December 31, 2014,
when authority for the TRQ expired,
Congress decided to monetarily
compensate importers of worsted wool
fabric of the kind covered by the three
HTS subheadings for the additional cost
of the increased tariff. Congress
accomplished this in section 12315(e)
by requiring that in the event that the
Wool TRQ administered by OTEXA
should expire during the administration
of the Agriculture Wool Trust by the
Secretary (through 2019), the Secretary
shall determine an amount ‘‘. . . that is
equal to the amount the manufacturer or
successor-in-interest would have saved
during the calendar year of the payment
if the suspension [or reduction] of duty
on wool fabrics were in effect.’’ The
Secretary has delegated this function to
FAS at 7 CFR 2.43.
Section 12315(e) provides that only
the person (or a successor-in-interest to
the person) that imported worsted wool
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fabric involving one or more of the three
HTS subheadings covered by this
payment is eligible for the payment. To
be eligible for a payment, the person
must also have used the imported
worsted wool fabric to produce in the
U.S. suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers
for men and boys (or, in the case of
imported wool of the kind described in
HTS subheading 9902.51.16, must have
manufactured the wool fabric) during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment.
The worsted wool fabric covered by
the three HTS subheadings under this
payment are either imported directly by
persons (i.e., importing manufacturer),
in which case the person directly
purchased the imported worsted wool
fabric and paid the duty, or imported
indirectly (i.e., non-importing
manufacturer) through a third party
broker that had directly paid the duty.
The payment applies to persons that
either directly or indirectly imported
worsted wool fabric.
The calendar year immediately
preceding the payment is the time
period that will be used to establish the
basis for calculating a payment. This
historical basis applies to the duty paid
and to the production or processing by
the person applying for a payment. The
duty paid arises from application of the
duty rate applicable to imports of one or
more of the three worsted wool fabrics
of the kind described in the three
subheadings covered by the payment.
To be eligible for a payment, during the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment a person must have
imported, directly or indirectly, one or
more of these HTS subheadings of
worsted wool fabric, and used such
worsted wool fabric in the U.S. to make
men’s and boy’s suits, suit-type jackets,
or trousers (or, in the case of subheading
9902.51.16, manufactured such worsted
wool fabric).
Section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill
anticipates a time when the TRQ’s lower
duty rate is no longer in effect,
acknowledges that duty rates will have
increased upon expiration of the TRQ,
and focuses on the savings that an
importer (direct or indirect) of worsted
wool fabric would have realized had the
lower duty rate remained in effect.
Section 12315(e) states that the savings
is ‘‘. . . an amount . . . equal to the
amount the manufacturer or successorin-interest would have saved during the
calendar year . . . if the suspension [or
reduction] of duty on wool fabrics were
in effect.’’ The focus of the savings is on
the difference between the duty paid for
the worsted wool fabric in the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment, and the duty that would have
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been paid on the same quantity of
worsted wool fabric if the lower duty
rate had applied. This allows the
payment to address the ‘‘savings’’
contemplated in 12315(e) of the Farm
Bill as close to the real time experience
of the person as is administratively
possible. For example, a person’s import
of worsted wool fabric in calendar year
2016 will be the basis for calculating the
person’s payment in 2017. This is
consistent with the statute’s focus on
the savings that would have been
realized if a TRQ were still in effect, and
is also consistent with OTEXA
previously basing a TRQ allocation on a
period of time immediately prior to the
allocation.
The payment will be made to eligible
persons by April 15 of the calendar year
subsequent to the year of the person’s
reported wool fabric imports. This
allows the Secretary to base the
payment on the person’s total actual
imports of wool fabric during the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment.
The savings involves three factors
spread over two time periods: (1) The
duty paid at the higher duty rate
applicable to the worsted wool fabric
described in the applicable 2014 HTS
subheadings in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment; (2)
the production or further processing of
the imported worsted wool fabric in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment; and (3) the duty paid at
the lower duty rate applicable to that
HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric
in 2014, the last year the TRQ was
effective. The higher value of duty paid
in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment is used to
calculate the 2016–2019 payments.
However, for the 2015 payment, the
higher duty rate in the 2015 HTS will
be used instead of the duty rate
applicable in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment,
which would be 2014. The reason for
this exception for the 2015 payment is
that 2014 is both the last year in which
the TRQ’s lower duty rate was still in
effect, and is also the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment
(2015). As a result, for the 2015
payment, a proxy is necessary to serve
as the higher duty rate in the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment. It is necessary to create such
a proxy and generate a 2015 payment,
because the statute requires that this
payment be made in any year in which
the wool TRQ is not in effect. The first
year the TRQ is not in effect is calendar
year 2015. Notwithstanding this proxy
for the higher duty rate for a 2015
payment, the calendar year immediately
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preceding the payment (2014) will still
be used to establish that production or
processing by the eligible person
occurred (which is an eligibility
requirement).
There were three essential data
components of the wool TRQ that
terminated at the end of the 2014
calendar year: (1) The quantity of
imported wool fabric subject to the
lower duty rate; (2) the price of the
imported wool fabric; and (3) the
person’s actual production of worsted
wool suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers
for men and boys (or, in the case of wool
under HTS subheading 9902.51.16,
manufactured the wool fabric). This
information has been annually collected
by OTEXA by means of affidavits
supplied by persons applying for a
payment. The Secretary will continue to
collect this information through annual
affidavits to ensure that the person,
during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, (1) imported,
either directly or indirectly, the quantity
of worsted wool fabric of the kind
described under one or more of the HTS
subheadings covered by this payment,
and (2) produced in the U.S. suits, suittype jackets, or trousers for men and
boys (or, in the case of wool under HTS
subheading 9902.51.16, manufactured
the wool fabric).
The dollar value and quantity of such
imports are also factors in determining
the savings that would have been
realized because of the TRQ. Dollar
value data effectively captures the price
of such fabric and the dollar amount
paid by the person. OTEXA has
collected data about the dollar value
and quantity of such imports by
requiring the person to report the dollar
value and quantity of the imports during
the first six months of the calendar year
of the license allocation. The Secretary
will continue to collect the person’s
reported dollar value and quantity of
imports of worsted wool fabric, but will
require information about imports for
the entire calendar year immediately
preceding the payment. The savings in
the context of the payment can be
restated accordingly. In any calendar
year in which the lower duty rate on
worsted wool fabric of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.11,
9902.51.15, and 9902.51.16 of the 2014
HTS is not in effect, a person (or a
successor-in-interest of the person) that,
during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, in the U.S., (1)
directly or indirectly imported worsted
wool fabric of the kind described under
one or more of the three HTS
subheadings covered by this payment,
and (2) used the worsted wool fabric to
produce suits, suit-type jackets, or
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trousers for men and boys (or, in the
case of worsted wool fabric covered by
subheading 9902.51.16, manufactured
the worsted wool fabric), is eligible for
a payment that is equivalent to the
difference between the higher duty paid
on such worsted wool fabric in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment and the reduced duty that
would have been payable under the
TRQ (in 2014) on the quantity of
worsted wool fabric imported in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment. For the purpose of
calculating the payment for each of the
2015–2019 calendar years, it will be
assumed that 100% of the person’s
imports were covered by the lower duty.
The rationale for this assumption is that
under the wool TRQ that expired on
December 31, 2014, persons that
received licenses to import up to
specific amounts of worsted wool fabric
at reduced duty rates never used the
entire license allotment, and the excess
allotment was left unused. In those
cases, because 100% of the person’s
imports were in fact covered by the
available lower duty rate under the
TRQ, the savings referenced in section
12315(e) should also apply to 100% of
a person’s imports.
The duty rate codified in the 2014
HTS applicable to imports of worsted
wool fabric in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment fall
into one of three categories: (1) The
general duty rate that is applicable to
worsted wool fabric covered by the
subheading unless one of the other two
categories applies; (2) the duty rate is
0%, because imports from certain listed
countries are duty free; and (3) duty
rates applicable to imports from specific
countries (e.g., 7.5% duty rate for
imports of worsted wool fabric under
subheading 9902.51.11 of the HTS from
Oman in 2015). Because the HTS is
statutory, one of the three categories
must be applied when calculating a
monetary payment. Similarly, in years
following 2014, the applicable duty may
vary as a function of the country of
origin of the imported fabric. In any
given year, the country of origin of the
worsted wool fabric will affect the
applicable duty rate and resulting duty
paid used to calculate the payment. The
duty rate applicable to worsted wool
fabric under subheadings 9902.51.15
and 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS was
0%, and for subheading 9902.51.11 of
the 2014 HTS was 10%. Thus, in any
given year, duty rates may vary based on
the country of origin of the imported
fabrics, and as a result, the amount of
the payment may be significantly
affected.
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The payment will be annually
calculated for each of the 2015–2019
calendar years as follows. For each HTS
subheading, the savings of the person
for any given calendar year will be the
difference between the higher duties
paid in the calendar year preceding the
payment and the duties that would have
been payable at the lower 2014 duty
rate. The savings for each of the three
subheadings will then be added
together, the sum of which will equal
the annual payment for that person.
Two simple examples, the first
involving imports in 2017 and the other
in 2015, illustrate how this calculation
will work.
The first example applies to a
payment in 2017. Under the TRQ that
expired on December 31, 2014, worsted
wool fabrics entering the United States
under HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and
9902.51.16 were assessed zero duty, and
worsted wool fabrics from Oman
entering under 9902.51.11 were
assessed a 10% duty. Starting on
January 1, 2017, assume that imports
entering the United States of worsted
wool fabrics previously described under
HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and
9902.51.16 (but in 2017 actually
entering under a different HTS
subheading, because of the expiration of
the particular subheadings under HTS
chapter 99) are assessed a 20% duty,
and worsted wool fabrics from Oman
previously described under 9902.51.11
are assessed a 10% duty.
A person imports 200 square meters
of worsted wool fabric in 2017, 100
square meters of which is of the kind
described by HTS subheadings
9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16, and the
remaining 100 square meters is of the
kind described in HTS subheading
9902.51.11, imported from Oman. The
person reports a dollar value of $1 per
square meter. For the 100 square meters
of worsted wool described under HTS
subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16,
the calculation would be 0.20 (20%
converted to a numeric value), which is
the duty rate in 2016, minus 0 (2014
duty rate, 0%, converted to a numeric
value), multiplied by 100 (dollar value),
which would equal $20 ((0.20¥0) ×
100). For the 100 square meters of
worsted wool fabric described under
HTS subheading 9902.51.11 and
imported from Oman, the calculation
would be 0.10 (10% converted to a
numeric value), the duty rate in 2015,
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, minus 0.10
(10%, the 2016 duty rate when Oman is
the country of origin) multiplied by 100
(dollar value), which would equal $0
((0.10¥0.10) × 100).
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The second example applies to a
payment in 2015 using the ‘‘2015
proxy’’ discussed above. Recall that
under the applicable TRQ that expired
on December 31, 2014, worsted wool
fabrics entering the United States under
HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and
9902.51.16 were assessed zero duty, and
worsted wool fabrics from Oman
entering under 9902.51.11 were
assessed a 10% duty. Starting on
January 1, 2015, imports entering the
United States of worsted wool fabrics
previously described under HTS
subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16
are assessed a 25% duty, and imports of
worsted wool fabrics from Oman
previously described under 9902.51.11
are assessed a 20% duty.
A person imports 200 square meters
of worsted wool fabric in 2015, 100
square meters of which is of the kind
previously described by HTS
subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16,
and the remaining 100 square meters is
of the kind previously described in HTS
subheading 9902.51.11 imported from
Oman. The person reports a dollar value
of $1 per square meter. For the 100
square meters of worsted wool under
HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and
9902.51.16, the calculation would be
0.25 (25% converted to a numeric
value), which is the 2015 higher duty
proxy used when the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment is
2014, minus 0 (2014 duty rate, 0%,
converted to a numeric value),
multiplied by 100 (dollar value), which
would equal $25 ((0.25¥0) × 100). For
the 100 square meters of worsted wool
fabric under HTS subheading
9902.51.11 imported from Oman, the
calculation would be 0.20 (20%
converted to a numeric value), the 2015
higher duty proxy when the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment is 2014, minus 0.10 (10%, the
2014 duty rate when Oman is the
country of origin) multiplied by 100
(dollar value), which would equal $10
((0.20¥0.10) × 100). The statutory
language of section 12315 directs the
Secretary to determine the savings that
the person would have realized if the
lower duty rate had been in effect. Thus,
it is not necessary to determine what the
person would have done with the
savings realized from the lower duty
rate. Nor is it necessary to inquire about
the person’s imports in a year that also
include imported worsted wool fabric
that is of the kind under HTS
subheadings other than those covered
by this payment, imported worsted wool
fabric not subject to the duty reduction,
or domestic wool.
As discussed earlier, the payment
applies to direct and indirect imports of
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worsted wool fabric of the kind
described in the three specific HTS
subheadings. If the import was through
a third party broker, the person must so
state in the affidavit prior to the
payment, and provide any other
information required by FAS. For
persons that are indirect importers of
worsted wool fabric, the dollar value of
the imports reported in their affidavit
will be subject to a 10% reduction by
the Secretary. The reason for this
reduction is that the broker that directly
imported the worsted wool fabric is
assumed to sell it to the person who
submits the affidavit for an amount
higher than the tariff price. The 10%
reduction is intended to compensate for
that higher price, and make the reported
price paid by indirect importers more
equivalent to the price paid by direct
importers. OTEXA also administered
this 10% reduction in the reported price
paid by indirect importers as part of its
administration of the wool TRQ.
Persons that imported worsted wool
fabric directly are required to submit to
FAS as part of the affidavit package
scanned copies of the CBP Form 7501
‘‘Entry Summary’’ for the relevant
calculations made in the affidavit.
Persons that imported worsted wool
fabric indirectly are required to submit
to FAS as part of the affidavit package
invoices from third party brokers for the
relevant calculations made in the
affidavit.
Persons applying for a payment must
provide information required by the
Secretary through annual affidavits.
(3) Wool Yarn, Wool Fiber, and Wool
Top Duty Compensation Payment
All references to subheadings of the
HTS in the context of this payment are
to the subheadings as described in the
2014 HTS.
The duty on imported wool yarn of
the kind described in subheading
9902.51.13 of the HTS, and the duty on
wool fiber and wool top of the kind
described in subheading 9902.51.14 of
the HTS were suspended in their
entirety in section 503 of the Trade and
Development Act of 2000. The total
duty suspension for both subheadings
has been extended three times since
then, most recently through December
31, 2014. Section 12315(e) of the Farm
Bill requires the Secretary to make
payments to processors of wool yarn,
fiber, and top of the kind described in
subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14
of the HTS, respectively, in amounts
that the processors would have saved if
the duty suspension had been in effect.
To be eligible for a payment, during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment a person must
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have imported into the U.S., directly or
indirectly, wool yarn, fiber or top of the
kind described in subheadings
9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14, and
manufactured such wool yarn, fiber, or
top in the U.S.
The duty rates in chapter 99 of the
HTS for subheadings 9902.51.13 and
9902.51.14 are listed in three categories:
(1) The general duty rate applicable to
wool yarn covered by the subheading,
unless one of the other two categories
applies; (2) the duty rate is 0 because
imports from certain listed countries are
duty free; and (3) duty rates applicable
to imports from specific countries (e.g.,
2.4% duty rate for imports of wool yarn
from Oman in calendar year 2014).
Because the HTS is statutory, one of the
three categories must be applied when
calculating a monetary payment
equivalent to the savings that a person
would have realized if the suspension of
the duty rate had been in effect. Thus,
the country of origin of the wool yarn,
wool fiber, or wool top, may
significantly affect the duty rate used to
calculate a person’s payment. The
general duty rate applicable to
subheading 9902.51.13 in 2000 was 6%
of the import price of the imported wool
yarn at the time the duties were
suspended. The general duty rate
reverted to 6% of the import price of the
imported wool yarn in 2015.
However, subheading 9902.51.14,
which expired at the end of 2014,
applied to wool fiber and top now
described in eight subheadings of
chapter 51 of the HTS, and the duty
applicable to each subheading in
chapter 51 varies. Thus, a determination
of the applicable duty is subject to the
determination of the Secretary in
accordance with duty rates applicable to
the specific sub-subheading of wool
fiber or top imported.
The difference between the 0% duty
in effect during the duty suspension and
the duty applicable in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment for
the two HTS subheadings of wool yarn,
fiber, and top (which is 100% of the
duty) will be used to calculate duty
compensation payments. Section
12315(e) of the Farm Bill anticipates a
time when the total duty suspension is
no longer in effect, acknowledges that
duty rates will have increased upon
expiration of the total duty suspension,
and focuses on the savings that an
importer (direct or indirect) of wool
yarn, fiber, or top would have realized
had the 0% duty rate remained in effect.
Section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill states
that the annual payment is ‘‘. . . an
amount . . . equal to the amount the
manufacturer or successor-in-interest
would have saved during the calendar
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12325
year . . . if the suspension . . . of duty
on wool fabrics were in effect.’’ The
focus of the savings is on the difference
between the duty paid for the wool
yarn, fiber or top of the kind described
in subheadings 9902.51.13 and
9902.51.14 in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment,
and the 0% duty that would have been
paid for such wool imported into the
U.S., directly or indirectly, if the total
duty suspension were still in effect.
This allows the payment to address the
‘‘savings’’ contemplated in 12315(e) of
the Farm Bill as close to the real time
experience of the person as is
administratively possible. For example,
a person’s import of wool yarn, fiber or
top in calendar year 2016 will be the
basis for calculating the person’s
payment in 2017. This is consistent
with the statute’s focus on the savings
that would have been realized if a duty
suspension were still in effect, and is
also consistent with CBP’s treatment of
wool yarn, fiber or top in its Wool Duty
Refund Program, in which it based the
Duty Refund payment on the prior year.
The payment will be made to eligible
persons by April 15 of the calendar year
subsequent to the year of the person’s
reported imports. This allows the
Secretary to base the payment on the
person’s total actual imports of wool
yarn, fiber or top during the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment.
The savings involves three factors
spread over two time periods: (1) The
higher duty rate applicable to the wool
yarn, fiber or top described in the
applicable 2014 HTS subheadings in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment; (2) the further processing
of the imported wool yarn, fiber or top
in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment; and (3) the total
duty suspension applicable to that HTS
subheading of wool yarn, fiber or top in
2014, the last year the duty suspension
was effective. The higher duty rate paid
by the eligible person in the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment is used to calculate the 2016–
2019 payments. However, for the 2015
payment, the higher duty rate in the
2015 HTS will be used instead of the
total duty suspension effective through
the 2014 calendar year. The reason for
this exception for the 2015 payment is
that 2014 is both the last year in which
the total duty suspension was still in
effect and the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment (in
2015). As a result, for the 2015 payment,
a proxy is necessary for the higher duty
rate. It is necessary to create this proxy
for the 2015 payment because Congress
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requires that this payment be made
when the duty suspension is no longer
in effect. The first year the duty
suspension is not in effect is calendar
year 2015. Finally, for a 2015 payment,
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment will still be used
to establish the dollar value of the
imported wool yarn, fiber, or top by the
eligible person.
The dollar value of the wool yarn,
fiber or top imported into the U.S. is
also a factor in determining the savings
that would have been realized because
of the TRQ. Dollar value data effectively
captures the price of such fabric and the
dollar amount paid by the person. CBP
has not been collecting this data in the
context of its Wool Duty Refund
Program. But in light of the statutory
requirement to capture the savings that
would have been realized for wool yarn,
fiber or top imported into the U.S. had
the duty suspension been in effect, the
Secretary will collect the person’s
reported dollar value and quantity of
imports of wool yarn, fiber or top
imported into the U.S. during the entire
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment.
The Secretary has determined that the
intent of the savings language in section
12315 of the Farm Bill can be best
realized by looking at what the person
would have saved during the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment. For example, the dollar value
of the person’s imports wool yarn, fiber,
or top in calendar year 2014 will be the
basis for calculating the payment in
2015 (in contrast to the proxy duty used
for the 2015 payment). This allows the
payment to address the ‘‘savings’’ in
section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill as
close to the real time experience of the
person as is administratively possible
yet still cover the full prior year’s
imports.
Other than with respect to the 2015
payment calculated using a proxy duty
rate as described above, the duty
compensation payment under this
section will be equal to 100% of the
duty paid for wool yarn, fiber, or top of
the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14 imported in
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment.
The two HTS subheadings of
imported wool yarn, fiber, or top
covered by this payment are either
imported directly by persons, in which
case the person also directly paid the
duty, or imported indirectly through a
third party broker that directly paid the
duty. The payment applies to persons
that either directly or indirectly
imported wool yarn, fiber, and top. If
the import was through a third party
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broker, the person must so state in the
affidavit prior to the payment, and
provide any other information required
by FAS. For persons that are indirect
importers of wool yarn, fiber, or top, the
dollar value of the imports reported in
their affidavit will be subject to a 10%
reduction by the Secretary. The reason
for this reduction is that the broker that
directly imported the wool yarn, fiber,
or top is assumed to sell it to the person
who submits the affidavit for an amount
higher than the price merely increased
by the applied duty. The 10% reduction
is intended to compensate for that
higher price, and make the reported
price paid by indirect importers more
equivalent to the price paid by direct
importers. CBP also administers this
10% reduction in the reported price
paid by indirect importers as part of its
administration of the Wool Duty Refund
Program (which includes subheadings
9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14).
Persons that imported wool yarn, fiber
or top directly are also required to
submit to FAS as part of the affidavit
package scanned copies of the CBP
Form 7501 ‘‘Entry Summary’’ for the
relevant calculations made in the
affidavit. Persons that imported wool
yarn, fiber or top indirectly are required
to submit to FAS as part of the affidavit
package invoices from third party
brokers for the relevant calculations
made in the affidavit.
Persons applying for a payment must
provide information required by the
Secretary through annual affidavits.
(4) Refund of Duties Paid on Imports of
Certain Wool Products
CBP is administering this payment to
U.S. manufacturers and processors of
wool for duties paid on the imported
wool in 2000, 2001, and 2002 through
calendar year 2015. FAS will continue
this payment for calendar years 2016–
2019, and will publish regulations later
next year. The regulations for this
payment will be published at 7 CFR
1471.12.
Effective Date and Notice and Comment
We are issuing this final rule without
prior notice and opportunity for
comment. The Administrative
Procedure Act exempts rules ‘‘relating
to agency management or personnel or
to public property, loans, grants,
benefits, or contracts’’ from the statutory
requirement for prior notice and
opportunity for comment 5 U.S.C.
553(a)(2). Accordingly, this rule may be
made effective less than 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register.
However, we invite you to participate in
this rulemaking by submitting written
comments, data, or views. We will
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consider the comments we receive and
may conduct additional rulemaking
based on the comments. This rule
allows FAS to provide adequate notice
to eligible manufacturers about the new
Pima Agriculture Cotton and Wool
Apparel Manufacturers Trusts
regulation so that they will be ready to
begin filing for payments by March 15
in the case of Agriculture Pima Trust
payment, and by March 1 in the case of
the several Agriculture Wool Trust
payments.
Executive Order 12630
This Executive Order requires careful
evaluation of governmental actions that
interfere with constitutionally protected
property rights. This rule does not
interfere with any property rights and,
therefore, does not need to be evaluated
on the basis of the criteria outlined in
Executive Order 12630.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule is issued in
conformance with Executive Order
12866 and Administrative Procedure
Act (5 U.S.C. 553). It has been
determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and
was not reviewed by OMB for this
purpose. A cost-benefit assessment of
this rule was not completed.
Executive Order 12372
This final rule is not subject to
Executive Order 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with
State and local officials. See the notice
related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V,
published at 48 FR 29115 (June 24,
1983).
Executive Order 12988
This final rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12988.
This rule would not preempt State or
local laws, regulations, or policies
unless they present an irreconcilable
conflict with this rule. This rule would
not be retroactive.
Executive Order 13132
This final rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 13132,
‘‘Federalism.’’ The policies contained in
this final rule do not have any
substantial direct effect on States, on the
relationship between the Federal
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, nor does this final
rule impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments. Therefore, consultation
with the States is not required.
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Executive Order 13175
This final rule has been reviewed for
compliance with E.O. 13175. The
policies contained in this final rule do
not have tribal implications that
preempt tribal law.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act does
not apply to this rule because FAS is not
required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or any other
law to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking with respect to the subject
matter of this rule.
Civil Rights Impact Statement
No major civil rights impact is likely
to result from the announcement of this
notice. It will not have a negative civil
rights impact on very-low income, low
income, and moderate income and
minority populations.
Environmental Assessment
The environmental impacts of this
rule have been considered in a manner
consistent with the provisions of the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4347), the
regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), and FAS regulations for
compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part
799). FAS has determined that NEPA
does not apply to this rule and that no
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement will be
prepared.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This final rule does not impose any
enforceable duty or contain any
unfunded mandate as described under
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA). Therefore,
this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
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E-Government Act Compliance
FAS is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act to promote the
use of the internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information,
services and for other purposes. The
forms, regulations, and other
information collection activities
required to be utilized by a person
subject to this rule are available at:
https://www.fas.usda.gov.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1471
Agricultural commodities, Imports.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 7 CFR part 1471 is added to
read as follows:
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PART 1471—PIMA AGRICULTURE
COTTON TRUST FUND
(AGRICULTURE PIMA TRUST) AND
AGRICULTURE WOOL APPAREL
MANUFACTURERS TRUST FUND
(AGRICULTURE WOOL TRUST)
Subpart A—Agriculture Pima Trust
Sec.
1471.1 Provisions common to this subpart.
1471.2 Pima cotton payments.
1471.3 Affidavit of producers of ring spun
pima cotton yarn.
1471.4 Affidavit of manufacturers of pima
cotton shirts.
1471.5 Affidavit of pima cotton trade
association.
Subpart B—Agriculture Wool Trust
1471.10 Provisions common to this subpart.
1471.11 Payments to manufacturers of
certain worsted wool fabrics.
1471.12 [Reserved]
1471.13 Monetization of the wool tariff rate
quota.
1471.14 Wool yarn, wool fiber, and wool
top duty compensation payment.
Authority: Sections 501–506, Pub. L. 106–
200, (114 Stat. 299–304); Section 4002, Pub.
L. 108–429 (7 U.S.C. 7101 note); Section
1633, Pub. L. 109–280 (120 Stat. 1166);
Section 325, Pub. L. 110–343 (122 Stat.
3875); Sections 12314 and 12315, Pub. L.
113–79 (7 U.S.C. 2101 note and 7101 note).
Subpart A—Agriculture Pima Trust
§ 1471.1 Provisions common to this
subpart.
(a) Agriculture Pima Trust—(1)
Establishment. The Agriculture Pima
Trust has been established to provide
funding for payments under this part.
(2) Purpose. The purpose of the
Agriculture Pima Trust is to reduce the
injury to domestic manufacturers
resulting from tariffs on cotton fabric
that are higher than tariffs on certain
apparel articles made of cotton fabric.
(3) Funding availability. $16,000,000
will be available annually for eligible
payments authorized under subpart A of
this part.
(4) Definitions. As used in this
subpart:
Agriculture Pima Trust means the
Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund.
CCC means the Commodity Credit
Corporation.
FAS means the Foreign Agricultural
Service.
Secretary means the Secretary of
Agriculture.
Agriculture Pima Trust means the
Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund.
U.S. means the United States of
America.
(b) Other provisions common to
subpart A of this part—(1) Affidavits.
FAS shall annually, not later than
February 15 of the year of the applicable
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payment, make affidavits available on
the FAS Web site, which can be found
at https://www.fas.usda.gov/. Affidavits
must be submitted electronically to
pimawool@fas.usda.gov.
(2) Filing deadline. Any person filing
an affidavit under this part for a
particular year must file the affidavit for
such calendar year, during calendar
years 2015 through 2018, not later than
March 15 of the applicable calendar
year.
(3) Basic information. In addition to
information required in §§ 1471.3,
1471.4, and 1471.5, as applicable, every
person applying for a payment must
provide the following information,
applicable to the year for which a
payment is sought:
(i) The current company name,
address, contact, phone number of the
person;
(ii) The name and address of each
plant or location of the person during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment; and
(iii) A W–9 providing the Federal tax
identification number of the person;
(4) Standard Form 1199A. Every
person claiming a payment must
provide Standard Form 1199A, a direct
deposit sign-up form, to facilitate any
transfer of funds.
(5) Affirmation. Every person
applying for a payment must affirm in
its affidavit that ‘‘all information
contained in the application is complete
and correct and that the information
does not contain a false claim,
statement, or representation.’’
(6) Document retention. All persons
receiving a payment under this part
must maintain all pertinent
documentation for 3 years after the year
of receipt of the payment.
(7) False statements. Persons
providing false or fraudulent claims, or
persons making materially false
statements or representations in their
affidavit, are subject to civil or criminal
penalties pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(8) Confidentiality. Specific business
information that is marked ‘‘business
confidential’’ will be protected from
disclosure to the full extent permitted
by law.
(9) Review of affidavits. Affidavits
will be reviewed to determine whether
they are complete and responsive to the
content and form of affidavit
requirements under this part.
(10) Finality of determinations by
Secretary. A determination by the
Secretary about a payment under this
part shall be final and is not subject to
appeal or protest.
(11) Timing of payments. A payment
for which a person is eligible under this
part will be disbursed in each of
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calendar years 2015 through 2018, not
later than April 15 of the applicable
year.
(12) Sequester. Payments covered by
this part shall be subject to sequester of
payments, if required by law.
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§ 1471.2
Pima cotton payments.
From available funds in the
Agriculture Pima Trust, CCC will
annually make payments for each of
calendar years 2015 through 2018 as
follows:
(a) Twenty-five percent of the
amounts in the Agriculture Pima Trust
shall be paid to one or more nationally
recognized associations established for
the promotion of pima cotton for use in
textile and apparel goods, as determined
by the Secretary, during the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment.
(b) Twenty-five percent of the
amounts in the Agriculture Pima Trust
shall be paid to yarn spinners of pima
cotton that produce ring spun cotton
yarns in the U.S. during 2013 and the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment, to be allocated to each
yarn spinner in an amount that bears the
same ratio as
(1) The yarn spinner’s production of
ring spun cotton yarns in 2013,
measuring less than 83.33 decitex
(exceeding 120 metric number) from
pima cotton in single and plied form
during calendar year 2013, bears to
(2) The production of the yarns
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section during calendar year 2013 by all
yarn spinners that qualify under this
paragraph (b).
(c) Fifty percent of the amounts in the
Agriculture Pima Trust shall be paid to
manufacturers that, during the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment, certify, pursuant to the
affidavit under § 1471.4, they used
imported pima cotton fabric during
calendar year 2013 to produce such
shirts, to be allocated to each
manufacturer in an amount that bears
the same ratio as
(1) The dollar value (excluding duty,
shipping, and insurance of imported
woven pima cotton shirting fabric of 80s
or higher count and 2-ply in warp used
by the manufacturer during calendar
year 2013 to produce men’s and boys’
pima cotton shirts, bears to
(2) The dollar value (excluding duty,
shipping, and insurance of the fabric
described in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section used to manufacture men’s and
boy’s pima cotton shirts in 2013 by all
manufacturers that qualify under this
paragraph (c).
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§ 1471.3 Affidavit of producers of ring
spun pima cotton yarn.
In addition to reporting and
information requirements in § 1471.1,
the affidavit of a yarn spinner that is a
producer of ring spun cotton yarn must
be an affidavit provided annually by an
officer of the yarn spinner that produces
ring spun yarns affirming that:
(a) During the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar year 2013, the yarn
spinner used pima cotton to produce
ring spun cotton yarns in the U.S.
measuring less than 83.33 decitex
(exceeding 120 metric number), in
single and plied form;
(b) During 2013, the yarn spinner
actually produced the quantity,
measured in pounds, of ring spun cotton
yarns measuring less than 83.33 decitex
(exceeding 120 metric number), in
single and plied form; and
(c) The yarn spinner continues to
maintain supporting documentation
about such production during calendar
year 2013 which shows the actual
quantity of such yarns produced, and
evidencing the yarns as ring spun pima
cotton yarns, measuring less than 83.33
decitex (exceeding 120 metric number),
in single and plied form.
§ 1471.4 Affidavit of manufacturers of
pima cotton shirts.
(a) In general. In addition to
applicable information requirements in
§ 1471.1, an affidavit of a manufacturer
that is a producer of men’s and boys’
pima cotton shirts must be an affidavit
provided annually by an officer of the
manufacturer which affirms the
following information
(1) During the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar year 2013, the
manufacturer used imported pima
cotton fabric to cut and sew men’s and
boys’ pima cotton shirts in the U.S.;
(2) During calendar year 2013, the
dollar value of imported woven pima
cotton shirting fabric of 80s or higher
count and 2-ply in warp purchased and
used by the manufacturer to cut and sew
men’s and boys’ woven pima cotton
shirts in the U.S.;
(3) The manufacturer continues to
maintain invoices and other supporting
documentation (such as price lists and
other technical descriptions of the fabric
qualities) showing the dollar value of
such fabric purchased, the date of
purchase, and evidencing the fabric as
woven pima cotton fabric of 80s or
higher count and 2-ply in warp; and
(4) The imported pima cotton fabric
purchased in 2013 and in the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment was suitable for use in the
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manufacturing of men’s and boys’
cotton shirts.
(b) Date of purchase. For purposes of
the affidavit under paragraph (a) of this
section, the date of purchase shall be the
invoice date, and the dollar value shall
be determined excluding duty,
shipping, and insurance.
§ 1471.5 Affidavit of pima cotton trade
associations.
In addition to applicable information
requirements in § 1471.1, trade
associations filing a claim for a payment
must electronically provide a statement
which states whether, during the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment and in calendar year 2014,
they were, as determined by the
Secretary, a domestic nationally
recognized association established and
operating for the promotion of pima
cotton for domestic use in textile and
apparel goods.
Subpart B—Agriculture Wool Trust
§ 1471.10
subpart.
Provisions common to this
(a) Agriculture wool trust—(1)
Establishment. The Agriculture Wool
Trust has been established to provide
funding for payments under this part.
(2) Purpose. The purpose of the
Agriculture Wool Trust is to reduce the
injury to domestic manufacturers
resulting from tariffs on wool fabric that
are higher than tariffs on certain apparel
articles made of wool fabric.
(3) Funding availability. Not more
than $30,000,000 will be available
annually for payments authorized under
this part.
(4) Definitions. As used in this
subpart:
Agriculture Wool Trust means the
Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund.
U.S. means the United States of
America.
CCC means the Commodity Credit
Corporation.
FAS means the Foreign Agricultural
Service.
HTS means the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States.
Secretary means the Secretary of
Agriculture.
TRQ means Tariff Rate Quota.
(b) Provisions common to this part—
(1) Affidavits. FAS shall annually, not
later than February 15 of the year of the
applicable payment, make affidavits
available on the FAS Web site, which
can be found at https://
www.fas.usda.gov/. Affidavits must be
submitted electronically to: pimawool@
fas.usda.gov.
(2) Filing deadline. Any person filing
an affidavit under this part for a
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particular year must file the affidavit for
such calendar year, during calendar
years 2015 through 2019, not later than
March 1 of such year.
(3) Required information. In addition
to information required in §§ 1471.11,
1471.13, and 1471.14, as applicable,
every person applying for a payment
under this part must provide the
following information applicable to the
year for which a payment is sought:
(i) The current company name,
address, contact, phone number of the
person;
(ii) The name and address of each
plant or location of the person in the
year immediately preceding the
payment; and
(iii) A W–9 providing the Federal tax
identification number of the person.
(4) Standard Form 1199A. Every
person seeking a payment must also
provide Standard Form 1199A, a direct
deposit sign-up form, to facilitate any
transfer of funds.
(5) Affirmation. A person filing an
affidavit under this part must affirm that
‘‘all information contained in the
application is complete and correct and
that the information does not contain a
false claim, statement, or
representation.’’
(6) Document retention. All persons
receiving a payment under this part
must maintain all pertinent
documentation for three years after the
year of receipt of the payment.
(7) False statements. Persons
providing false or fraudulent claims or
making materially false statements or
representations are subject to civil or
criminal penalties pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
1001.
(8) Confidential information. Specific
business information provided in
affidavits that is marked ‘‘business
confidential’’ will be protected from
disclosure to the full extent permitted
by law.
(9) Review of affidavits. Affidavits
will be reviewed to determine whether
they are complete and responsive to the
content and form of affidavit
requirements in this part.
(10) Finality of determination by the
Secretary. A determination by the
Secretary about a payment under this
part shall be final and is not subject to
appeal or protest.
(11) Timing of payments. A payment
for which a person eligible under this
part will be disbursed in each of
calendar years 2015 through 2019 not
later than April 15 of the applicable
year.
(12) Proration and sequester.
Payments covered by this part will be
subject to proration in the event that
insufficient funds exist in the
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Agriculture Wool Trust during the year
of the payment, and will be subject to
sequester, if required by law.
(13) HTS subheadings. All references
to subheadings of the HTS in this part
are to the subheadings as described in
the HTS in 2014.
§ 1471.11 Payments to manufacturers of
certain worsted wool fabrics.
(a) Definitions. In this section the
following definitions apply:
Eligible person. The term ‘‘eligible
person’’ means a manufacturer in the
U.S. of qualifying worsted wool fabric
during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment and during each
of calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001.
Qualifying worsted wool fabric. The
term ‘‘qualifying worsted wool fabric’’
means a worsted wool fabric containing
at least 85% by weight worsted wool of
the kind described in subheading
9902.51.11 or 9902.51.15 of the 2014
HTS that, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and
during each of calendar years 1999,
2000, and 2001, was manufactured by
an eligible person in the United States.
(b) Distribution of funds. From
amounts in the Agriculture Wool Trust,
CCC will annually make payments for
each of calendar years 2015 through
2019 to eligible persons that
manufactured qualifying worsted wool
fabric as provided in paragraphs (b)(1)
or (2) of this section.
(1) Payments for production under
subheading 9902.51.11 of the HTS—(i)
In general. Eligible persons that
manufactured qualifying worsted wool
fabric during calendar years 1999, 2000,
and 2001 that is of the kind described
in subheading 9902.51.11 of the HTS are
eligible for a payment as provided in
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Payment amounts. A total of
$2,666,000 will be allocated annually
among eligible persons covered by this
paragraph on the basis of the percentage
of each eligible person’s total
production (actual production, not
estimates) for the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment of
qualifying worsted wool fabric
described in paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this
section in relation to the total
production for the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment of
such fabric by all eligible persons who
qualify for payments under this
paragraph.
(2) Payments for production under
subheading 9902.51.15—(i) In general.
Eligible persons that manufactured
qualifying worsted wool fabric during
calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001
that conforms in composition to
subheading 9902.51.15 of the HTS are
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eligible for a payment as provided in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Payment amounts. A total of
$2,666,000 will be allocated annually
among eligible persons covered by this
paragraph on the basis of the percentage
of each eligible person’s total
production (actual production, not
estimates) for the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment of
qualifying worsted wool fabric
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section in relation to the total
production for the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment of
such fabric by all eligible persons who
qualify for payments under this
paragraph.
(c) Annual affidavit—(1) In general.
An eligible person applying for a
payment under this section shall
comply with all applicable reporting
requirements of this section and of
§ 1471.10.
(2) Specific business information. An
eligible person shall, for the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment and for each of calendar years
1999, 2000, and 2001, annually report
the actual dollar value and the actual
quantity (linear yards) of qualifying
worsted wool fabric that was
manufactured.
(3) Manufacturing of wool. When
reporting the annual dollar value and
quantity of imports of qualifying
worsted wool fabric, and the annual
dollar value and quantity of the
qualifying wool fabric that was
manufactured, an eligible person may
either have manufactured the qualifying
worsted wool on its own behalf or had
another person manufacture the
qualifying worsted wool fabric,
provided the eligible person owned the
qualifying worsted wool fabric at the
time of manufacture.
§ 1471.12
[Reserved]
§ 1471.13 Monetization of the wool tariff
rate quota.
(a) Definitions. In this section the
following definitions apply:
(1) Lower duty rate. The term ‘‘lower
duty rate’’ means the duty rate as
codified in the 2014 HTS that would
have been applicable to qualifying
worsted wool fabric of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.11,
9902.51.15, and 9902.51.16 of the 2014
HTS prior to the expiration of the Wool
TRQ on December 31, 2014.
(2) Eligible person—(i) In general. The
term ‘‘eligible person’’ means a
manufacturer (or a successor-in-interest
to the manufacturer) in the U.S. during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment that:
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(A) Imported qualifying worsted wool
fabric; and
(B) Used the imported qualifying
worsted wool fabric
(1) In the case of wool of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.11 or
9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS, to produce
worsted wool suits, suit-type jackets and
trousers for men and boys; or
(2) In the case of wool fabric of the
kind described in subheading
9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS, used such
wool fabric in manufacturing.
(ii) Successor-in-interest. If a person
satisfies the criteria for becoming a
successor-in-interest to an eligible
person under paragraph (a)(4) of this
section, the person shall succeed to the
status of the eligible person and become
eligible for the payment.
(3) Qualifying worsted wool fabric.
The term ‘‘qualifying worsted wool
fabric’’ means imported worsted wool
fabric containing at least 85% by weight
worsted wool of the kind described in
subheadings 9902.51.11, 9902.51.15, or
9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS that, during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment was:
(i) Imported by an eligible person in
the U.S.; and
(ii) Used by the eligible person in the
U.S.
(A) In the case of wool fabric of the
kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11 or 9902.51.15 of the HTS, to
produce worsted wool suits, suit-type
jackets and trousers for men and boys;
or
(B) In the case of wool fabric of the
kind described in subheading
9902.51.16 of the HTS, was used in
manufacturing.
(4) Successor-in-interest. The term
‘‘successor-in-interest’’ means a person
that is eligible to claim a payment under
this section as if the person were the
original eligible person, without regard
to section 3727, title 31, United States
Code because of—
(i) An assignment of the claim;
(ii) An assignment of the original
eligible person’s right to manufacture
under the same trade name; or
(iii) A reorganization of the eligible
person.
(b) Purposes. The purposes of a TRQ
monetization payment are to provide an
eligible person—
(1) Compensation for termination of
the TRQ for qualifying worsted wool
fabric; and
(2) A payment that is equivalent to the
amount the eligible person would have
saved during the calendar year for
imports of qualifying worsted wool
fabric if the lower duty rate under the
applicable 2014 HTS subheading(s) of a
qualifying worsted wool fabric were in
effect.
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(c) Calculation of monetized TRQ
payment. A payment will be established
by calculating, as provided in
paragraphs (c)(1) through (4) of this
section, the savings that would have
been realized by the eligible person for
imports of qualifying worsted wool
fabric of the kind described in one of the
three subheadings 9902.51.11,
9902.51.15, or 9902.51.16 of the 2014
HTS (as applicable), had the lower duty
rate been in effect.
(1) Payment formula. Except as
provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, a payment shall be calculated
by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar
value of imported worsted wool fabric,
for each of the 2014 HTS subheadings
of worsted wool fabric, during the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment;
(ii) Subtracting the duty rate
(converted to numeric value) for each
applicable 2014 HTS subheading of
worsted wool fabric that would have
been paid in calendar year 2014 from
the duty rate (converted to numeric
value) that was actually paid in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment;
(iii) For each applicable 2014 HTS
subheading of worsted wool fabric,
multiplying the numeric values
described in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii)
of this section; and
(iv) Adding each product obtained in
paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section.
(2) Exception for 2015 payment. In the
case of the payment to be made in 2015,
for purposes of the calculation
component described in paragraph
(c)(1)(ii) of this section the duty rate
applicable in 2015 shall be deemed the
duty rate actually paid in 2014. The
reason for this exception for the 2015
payment is that 2014 is both the last
year in which the lower duty rate was
still in effect, and is also the calendar
year immediately preceding the
payment (the payment is in 2015). As a
result, for the 2015 payment, a proxy is
necessary for the higher duty rate in the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment.
(3) 2015 payment. A payment in 2015
shall be calculated by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar
value of imported worsted wool fabric
during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment under the 2014
HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric;
(ii) Subtracting the lower duty rate
(converted to numeric value) that would
have been applicable to the 2014 HTS
subheading of worsted wool fabric from
the duty rate applicable to that HTS
subheading in 2015 (converted to
numeric value);
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(iii) Multiplying the numeric values
described in paragraphs (c)(3)(i) and (ii)
of this section); and(iv) Adding the
product obtained in paragraph (c)(3)(iii)
of this section to the product obtained
for every applicable subheading of
worsted wool fabric.
(4) 2016–2019 payments. A payment
in each of years 2016–2019 shall be
calculated by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar
value of imported worsted wool fabric
during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment under the 2014
HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric;
(ii) Subtracting the lower duty rate
(converted to numeric value) that would
have been applicable to the 2014 HTS
subheading of worsted wool fabric from
the duty rate applicable to the calendar
year preceding the payment (converted
to numeric value);
(iii) Multiplying the numeric values
described in paragraphs (c)(4)(i) and (ii)
of this section; and
(iv) Adding the product obtained in
paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section to the
product obtained for every applicable
subheading of worsted wool fabric.
(d) Annual affidavit—(1) In general.
An eligible person applying for a
payment under this section shall
comply with all applicable reporting
requirements of this section and of
§ 1471.10.
(2) Specific business information—(i)
Imports and production.—An eligible
person shall, for the entire calendar year
immediately preceding the payment,
report the actual dollar value and the
actual quantity of
(A) Imports into the U.S. of qualifying
worsted wool fabric (square meters); and
(B) The qualifying worsted wool
fabric used by the eligible person in the
U.S.
(1) In the case of wool of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.11 or
9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS, to produce
worsted wool suits, suit-type jackets and
trousers for men and boys (units); or
(2) In the case of wool of the kind
described in subheading 9902.51.16 of
the 2014 HTS, such wool that was
manufactured (square meters).
(ii) Direct and indirect importers—(A)
In general. Eligible persons that import
qualifying worsted wool fabric through
a third party broker are considered to be
indirect importers of the qualifying
worsted wool fabric. Persons that
directly import qualifying worsted wool
fabric and pay the import duty for such
wool are considered to be direct
importers of the qualifying worsted
wool fabric.
(B) Reported dollar value. Eligible
persons must state in their annual
affidavit whether, in the calendar year
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immediately preceding the payment,
they were direct or indirect importers,
and the dollar value of the imported
qualifying worsted wool fabric. The
reported dollar value of such imports by
indirect importers will be subject to a
10% reduction.
(C) Affirmation. An eligible person
shall annually affirm in the affidavit
that, in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, in the U.S., the
eligible person:
(1) Directly or indirectly imported the
qualifying worsted wool fabric into the
U.S.;
(2) Used that fabric to produce in the
U.S. worsted wool suits, suit jackets,
and trousers for men and boys (or, in the
case of qualifying worsted wool fabric of
the kind described in the 2014 HTS
subheading 9902.51.16, for
manufactured in the U.S.); and
(3) Imported qualifying worsted wool
fabric from the country of origin
identified in the affidavit.
(iii) Import documentation—(A)
Direct imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding
payment, an eligible person that directly
imported qualifying worsted wool fabric
is required to submit to FAS as part of
the affidavit package scanned copies of
CBP Form 7501 ‘‘Entry Summary’’ for
the relevant calculations made in the
affidavit.
(B) Indirect imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding
payment, an eligible person that
indirectly imported qualifying worsted
wool fabric is required to submit to FAS
as part of the affidavit package invoices
from third party brokers as required in
the affidavit.
(3) Production of garments or
manufacturing of qualifying worsted
wool fabric—(i) Production of
garments—(A) In general. When
reporting the annual dollar value and
quantity of imported qualifying worsted
wool fabric, and the annual dollar value
and quantity of the qualifying worsted
wool fabric that was cut and sewn, an
eligible person may either have cut and
sewn the wool on its own behalf or had
another person cut and sew the wool on
behalf of the eligible person, provided
the eligible person owned the wool at
the time it was cut and sewn.
(B) Applicability. This paragraph
applies to wool of the kind described in
subheadings 9902.51.11 and 9902.51.15
of the 2014 HTS.
(ii) Manufacturing of qualifying
worsted wool fabric—(A) In general.
When reporting the annual dollar value
and quantity of imported qualifying
worsted wool fabric, and the annual
dollar value and quantity of the
qualifying worsted wool fabric that was
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manufactured, an eligible person may
either have manufactured the wool on
its own behalf or had another person
manufacture the wool, provided the
eligible person owned the wool at the
time of manufacture.
(B) Applicability. This paragraph
applies to wool of the kind described in
subheading 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS.
§ 1471.14 Wool yarn, wool fiber, and wool
top duty compensation payment.
(a) Definitions. In this section the
following definitions apply:
(1) Duty. The term ‘‘duty’’ means the
duty rate codified in the HTS for a year
that is applicable to qualifying wool of
the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14 of the 2014
HTS.
(2) Eligible person—(i) In general. The
term ‘‘eligible person’’ means a
manufacturer (or a successor-in-interest
to the manufacturer) in the U.S. during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment; that
(A) Imported qualifying wool; and
(B) Manufactured the qualifying wool.
(ii) Successor-in-interest. If a person
satisfies the criteria for becoming a
successor-in-interest to an eligible
person under paragraph (a)(4) of this
section, the person shall succeed to the
status of the eligible person and become
eligible for the payment.
(3) Qualifying wool. The term
‘‘qualifying wool’’ means imported wool
yarn of the kind described in
subheading 9902.51.13 of the 2014 HTS,
and imported wool fiber or wool top of
the kind described in subheading
9902.51.14 of the 2014 HTS, that, during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment was
(i) Imported, directly or indirectly, by
an eligible person (or a successor-ininterest) into the U.S.; and
(ii) Manufactured by the eligible
person in the U.S.
(4) Successor-in-interest. The term
‘‘successor-in-interest’’ means a person
that is eligible to claim a payment under
this section as if the person were the
original eligible manufacturer, without
regard to section 3727, title 31, U.S.
Code because of
(i) An assignment of the claim;
(ii) An assignment of the eligible
person’s right to manufacture under the
same trade name; or
(iii) A reorganization of the eligible
person.
(b) Import duties. The duties on
imports of qualifying wool were
suspended in their entirety in section
503 of the Trade and Development Act
of 2000. The suspension of the duties
for both HTS subheadings of qualifying
wool was extended through December
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31, 2014. These duties were reinstated
as of January 1, 2015.
(c) Duty compensation payment—(1)
Calculation of payment. For each of the
2015–2019 calendar years the duty
compensation payment of an eligible
person will be established by
calculating, as provided in paragraphs
(c)(2) through (5) of this section, the
savings that would have been realized
by the eligible person for imports of
qualifying wool had the duty
suspension been in effect.
(2) Savings for each subheading. The
savings realized by an eligible person
for imports of qualifying wool under a
HTS subheading covered by this section
shall be obtained by multiplying
(i) The reported dollar value of
imports under a HTS subheading during
the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment; and
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph
(c)(5) of this section, the duty applicable
to that HTS subheading in the calendar
year preceding the payment, converted
to numeric value.
(3) Sum of subheading savings. The
product obtained in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section for imports of qualifying
wool previously described under each
HTS subheading shall be added to the
savings obtained for imports under the
other HTS subheading (as applicable).
(4) Duty compensation payment
amount. The sum obtained in paragraph
(c)(3) of this section shall equal the
annual duty compensation payment for
the eligible person for the applicable
calendar year.
(5) Exception for 2015 payment. In the
case of the 2015 payment, for purposes
of the calculation component described
in paragraph (c)(2) of this section the
duty rate applicable in 2015 shall be
deemed the duty rate actually paid in
2014. The reason for this exception for
the 2015 payment is that 2014 is both
the last year in which the duty
suspension was still in effect, and is
also the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment (the payment is
in 2015). As a result, for the 2015
payment, a proxy is necessary for the
higher duty rate in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment.
(d) Annual affidavit required—(1) In
general. An eligible person applying for
a payment under this section shall
comply with all applicable reporting
requirements described in this section
and § 1471.10.
(2) Specific business information—(i)
Imports and production. An eligible
person shall, for the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment,
report the actual dollar value and the
actual quantity of:
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(A) Imports into the U.S. of qualifying
wool by the eligible person; and
(B) Such qualifying wool that was
manufactured in the U.S. by the eligible
person.
(ii) Direct and indirect importers—(A)
In general. Eligible persons that import
qualifying wool through a third party
broker are considered to be indirect
importers of the qualifying wool.
Persons that directly import qualifying
wool and pay the import duty for such
wool are considered to be direct
importers of the qualifying wool.
(B) Reported dollar value. Eligible
persons must state in their annual
affidavit whether, in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment,
they were direct or indirect importers,
and the dollar value of the imported
qualifying wool. The reported dollar
value of imports by indirect importers
will be subject to a 10% reduction.
(C) Affirmation. An eligible person
shall annually affirm in the affidavit
that, in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, the eligible
person
(1) Directly or indirectly imported the
qualifying wool into the U.S.;
(2) Manufactured the qualifying wool
in the U.S.; and
(3) Imported qualifying wool from the
country of origin identified in the
affidavit.
(iii) Import documentation—(A)
Direct imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment, an eligible person that
directly imported qualifying wool is
required to submit to FAS as part of the
affidavit package scanned copies of CBP
Form 7501 ‘‘Entry Summary’’ for the
relevant calculations made in the
affidavit.
(B) Indirect imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding
the payment, an eligible person that
indirectly imported qualifying wool is
required to submit to FAS as part of the
affidavit package invoices from third
party brokers for the relevant
calculations made in the affidavit.
(3) Manufacture of qualifying wool.
When reporting the annual dollar value
and quantity of imported qualifying
wool, and the annual dollar value and
quantity of the qualifying wool that was
manufactured, an eligible person may
either have manufactured the qualifying
wool on its own behalf or had another
person manufacture the qualifying wool,
provided the eligible person owned the
qualifying wool at the time of
manufacture.
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Dated: February 25, 2015.
Phil C. Karsting,
Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service,
and Vice President, Commodity Credit
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015–04385 Filed 3–6–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–10–P
the FAA, Transport Airplane
Directorate, 1601 Lind Avenue SW.,
Renton, WA. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA,
call 425–227–1221. It is also available
on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2014–
0347.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Examining the AD Docket
Federal Aviation Administration
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2014–
0347; or in person at the Docket
Management Facility between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this AD, the regulatory
evaluation, any comments received, and
other information. The address for the
Docket Office (phone: 800–647–5527) is
Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, Docket
Operations, M–30, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Philip Sheridan, Senior Aerospace
Engineer, Systems and Equipment
Branch, ANM–130S, FAA, Seattle
Aircraft Certification Office, 1601 Lind
Avenue SW., Renton, WA 98057–3356;
phone: 425–917–6441; fax: 425–917–
6590; email: philip.sheridan@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2014–0347; Directorate
Identifier 2013–NM–173–AD; Amendment
39–18109; AD 2015–04–07]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; The Boeing
Company Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for certain
The Boeing Company Model 767–200
and –300 series airplanes equipped with
Pratt & Whitney Model JT9D or PW4000
engines. This AD was prompted by a
report of several cases of low hydraulic
pressure or loss of electrical power to
the alternating current motor pump
(ACMP) on the left engine. This AD
requires inspecting for damage of the
wiring bundles in the left engine’s strut
and corrective actions if necessary, and
installing new wire support brackets
and bundle clamps. We are issuing this
AD to detect and correct chafed wire
bundles due to rubbing against structure
or a hydraulic piping elbow, which
could result in electrical arcing in a
flammable fluid leakage zone, and
provide a possible ignition source for
fuel vapors and hydraulic fluids. Ignited
fuel vapors or hydraulic fluid in an area
without a fire detection or suppression
system could result in an uncontained
engine strut fire and structural damage
to the engine strut.
DATES: This AD is effective April 13,
2015.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of certain publications listed in this AD
as of April 13, 2015.
ADDRESSES: For service information
identified in this AD, contact Boeing
Commercial Airplanes, Attention: Data
& Services Management, P.O. Box 3707,
MC 2H–65, Seattle, WA 98124–2207;
telephone 206–544–5000, extension 1;
fax 206–766–5680; Internet https://
www.myboeingfleet.com. You may view
this referenced service information at
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Discussion
We issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) to amend 14 CFR
part 39 by adding an AD that would
apply to certain The Boeing Company
Model 767–200 and –300 series
airplanes equipped with Pratt &
Whitney Model JT9D or PW4000
engines. The NPRM published in the
Federal Register on June 30, 2014 (79
FR 36680). The NPRM was prompted by
a report of several cases of low
hydraulic pressure or loss of electrical
power to the ACMP on the left engine.
The NPRM proposed to require
inspecting for damage of the wiring
bundles in the left engine’s strut and
corrective actions if necessary, and
installing new wire support brackets
and bundle clamps. We are issuing this
AD to detect and correct chafed wire
bundles due to rubbing against structure
or a hydraulic piping elbow, which
could result in electrical arcing in a
flammable fluid leakage zone, and
provide a possible ignition source for
fuel vapors and hydraulic fluids. Ignited
fuel vapors or hydraulic fluid in an area
without a fire detection or suppression
E:\FR\FM\09MRR1.SGM
09MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 45 (Monday, March 9, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 12321-12332]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-04385]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 45 / Monday, March 9, 2015 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 12321]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1471
RIN 0551-AA86
Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund and Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund
AGENCY: Foreign Agricultural Service and Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC), USDA.
ACTION: Final rule with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule implements the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust
Fund (Agriculture Pima Trust) and the Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund (Agriculture Wool Trust) Fund established in
the Agricultural Act of 2014 (Farm Bill). The Agriculture Pima Trust
provides annually for one payment, called the Pima Cotton Payments. The
Agriculture Wool Trust provides annually for four payments. The first
payment under the Agriculture Wool Trust is currently administered by
the Department of Commerce's Office of Textiles and Apparel (OTEXA),
and is called the Grants to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted Wool
Fabrics. This program is being transferred from OTEXA to the Secretary
of Agriculture (Secretary), who will administer the payment for the
2015-2019 calendar years, and will be called Payments to Manufacturers
of Certain Worsted Wool Fabrics. The second payment is called
Monetization of the Wool TRQ. The Farm Bill requires the Secretary to
determine a monetary amount equivalent to what a person would have
saved if OTEXA's Wool Tariff Rate Quota program (Wool TRQ) were still
in effect. This payment will be based on OTEXA's Wool Tariff Rate Quota
program, which terminated at the end of calendar year 2014. The
Monetization of the Wool TRQ will be administered by the Secretary for
the 2015-2019 calendar years. The third payment is called the Wool
Yarn, Wool Fiber, and Wool Top Duty Compensation Payment. Payments are
made to processors of wool yarn, wool fiber, and wool top to compensate
them for termination of the suspension of import duties on such wool.
This payment will be administered by the Secretary for the 2015-2019
calendar years. The fourth payment is called the Refund of Duties Paid
on Imports of Certain Wool Products. This program is currently
administered by the Department of Homeland Security's Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) through calendar year 2015. The program will be
transferred in calendar year 2016 to the Secretary, who will administer
the program for the 2016-2019 calendar years. Regulations for the
fourth payment will be published at a later date.
DATES: This final rule is effective March 9, 2015. Comments concerning
this final rule must be received by April 8, 2015, to be assured
consideration. We are issuing this final rule without prior notice and
opportunity for comment.
ADDRESSES: The Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS), USDA, invites
interested persons to submit comments on this final rule. Comments may
be submitted by one of the following methods:
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Preferred method; follow the on-line instructions
for submitting comments on the final rule.
Email: Comments can also be addressed to Mr. Benjamin Chan
at pimawool@fas.usda.gov. All comments submitted in response to this
rule will be included in the record and will be made available to the
public. FAS will make the comments publicly available online at: https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Benjamin Chan, Import Policies and
Export Reporting Division, Office of Trade Policy, Foreign Agricultural
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture; email: pimawool@fas.usda.gov;
202-720-8877.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This rule sets forth regulations regarding the implementation of
the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund and the Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund.
Subpart A. Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund (Agriculture Pima Trust)
The Agriculture Pima Trust was established in section 12314 of the
Farm Bill. The Agriculture Pima Trust is a funding mechanism for pima
cotton payments.
(1) Pima Cotton Payments
The Secretary is required in section 12314 of the Farm Bill to
establish an annual payment for domestic users of pima cotton, pima
cotton yarn spinners, and pima cotton trade associations. The Foreign
Agricultural Service (FAS) has been delegated the authority to
administer this payment and to issue regulations to carry it out for
calendar years 2014-2018. There was insufficient time to publish
regulations for the 2014 payment and a notice was published in the
Federal Register at 72 FR 29363 on May 2, 2014. Subpart A is applicable
to annual payments in the 2015-2018 calendar years.
The purpose of the annual payment is to provide monetary relief to
certain persons in the U.S. that have incurred economic injury through
the importation of pima cotton and have incurred tariffs on pima cotton
fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain imported apparel
articles made of pima cotton fabric. The first Pima Cotton Trust Fund
was established under the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 and
administered by the Customs and Border Protection Agency of the
Department of Homeland Security (CBP) in 2007 and 2008. Section 12314
of the Farm Bill authorized the Agriculture Pima Trust and pima cotton
payment for the 2014-2018 calendar years. The Farm Bill authorizes $16
million from the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) for each calendar
year to fund annual payments.
Section 12314 requires that a specific percentage of annual funding
be distributed to certain sectors of the domestic pima cotton apparel
industry. Twenty-five percent is to be paid to one or more nationally
recognized associations established for the promotion of pima cotton
for use in textile and apparel goods.
Twenty-five percent is to be paid to domestic yarn spinners of pima
cotton that, during the calendar year
[[Page 12322]]
immediately preceding the payment and during calendar year 2013,
produced ring spun cotton yarns in the United States measuring less
than 83.33 decitex (exceeding 120 metric number), in single and plied
form. A payment to a yarn spinner is based on the ratio of the yarn
spinner's 2013 production to the total production of all domestic yarn
spinners in 2013 who qualify for a payment.
The remaining fifty percent is to be paid to manufacturers that
during both the calendar year immediately preceding the payment and
during the 2013 calendar year used imported pima cotton fabric (80s or
higher count and 2-ply in warp) to manufacture men's and boys' woven
pima cotton shirts. A payment to a manufacturer is based on the ratio
of the dollar value (excluding duty, shipping, and insurance) of the
manufacturer's 2013 production of men's and boys' woven pima cotton
shirts to the dollar value (excluding duty, shipping, and insurance) of
the total production in 2013 of all men's and boys' woven pima cotton
shirts by manufacturers who qualify for a payment. The Farm Bill
explicitly requires exclusion of ``duty, shipping, and related costs''
from the reported dollar value of imported woven cotton shirting
fabric. Of the costs ``related'' to shipping that are separate from the
freight cost itself, insurance is generally the largest. As payments to
manufacturers are based on a production ratio incorporating the
intrinsic dollar value of the imported fabric, excluding ``duty,
shipping, and related costs'' in both parts of the ratio, to limit
``related costs'' to insurance gives effect to the purpose of the
statute and affords simplicity of calculation.
To apply for a payment, claimants are required to submit an
affidavit by March 15 of the calendar year of the application for a
payment. Payments will be made not later than April 14.
Persons applying for a payment must provide information required by
the Secretary through annual affidavits.
Subpart B. Agriculture Wool Apparel Manufacturers Trust Fund
(Agriculture Wool Trust)
The Agriculture Wool Trust was established in section 12315 of the
Farm Bill. The Agriculture Wool Trust is a funding mechanism for four
payments: (1) Payments to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted Wool
Fabrics; (2) Monetization of the Wool Tariff Rate Quota; (3) Wool Yarn,
Wool Fiber, and Wool Top Duty Compensation Payment; and (4) Refund of
Duties Paid on Imports of Certain Wool Products.
(1) Payments to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted Wool Fabrics
OTEXA has administered the Grants to Manufacturers of Certain
Worsted Wool Fabrics program through calendar 2014. Section 4002(c)(6)
of the Miscellaneous Trade and Technical Corrections Act of 2004, as
amended, authorizes OTEXA to administer this payment through 2014.
Section 12315(b)(1) of the Farm Bill directed the Secretary to continue
to administer this payment for the 2015-2019 calendar years. The title
is changed to ``Payments to Manufacturers of Certain Worsted Wool
Fabrics'' to avoid confusion with competitive grant programs also
administered by the Secretary.
The purpose of this payment is to provide financial assistance to
persons in the U.S. that manufactured worsted wool fabrics during 1999,
2000, and 2001. Section 12315 of the Farm Bill authorizes the Secretary
to continue to make these payments to the same persons that, during the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment and during calendar
years 1999, 2000, and 2001, were manufacturers of at least one of two
kinds of worsted wool fabrics: (1) Subheading 9902.51.11 of the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS) containing 85
percent or more by weight of wool, with average fiber diameters greater
than 18.5 microns; and (2) subheading 9902.51.15 of the HTS containing
85 percent or more by weight of wool, with average fiber diameters of
18.5 microns or less.
All references to subheadings of the HTS in the context of this
payment are to the subheadings as described in the HTS in 2014.
As specified by the Miscellaneous Trade and Technical Corrections
Act of 2004, an amount of $2.666 million is available each year for
each HTS subheading of wool fabric, to be divided between persons based
on the percentage of each person's total actual manufacturing of that
type of worsted wool fabric during each of calendar years 1999, 2000,
and 2001 in relation to the total manufacturing of such fabric by all
persons who qualified for payments in those years.
Persons applying for a payment must provide information required by
the Secretary through annual affidavits.
(2) Monetization of the Wool Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ)
The Wool TRQ was established in Title V of the Trade and
Development Act of 2000, and provided for temporary duty reductions--
i.e., lower duty rates--on limited quantities of two categories of
worsted wool fabrics suitable for use in making suits, suit-type
jackets, or trousers for men and boys. The TRQ has been administered
since 2004 by OTEXA, and the authority for the TRQ expired on December
31, 2014.
This worsted wool fabric is of the kind described in subheading
9902.51.11 of the HTS with average fiber diameters greater than 18.5
microns, and subheading 9902.51.15 of the HTS with average fiber
diameters of 18.5 microns or less. A third worsted wool fabric HTS
subheading was added to the TRQ by the Miscellaneous Trade Act of 2004,
subheading 9902.51.16 of the HTS, with average fiber diameters of 18.5
microns or less.
All references to subheadings of the HTS in the context of this
payment are to the subheadings as described in the 2014 HTS. The
subheading references are to a past HTS because these subheadings have
expired and have been subsumed under other HTS headings in 2015.
Congress also used these now expired HTS subheadings in the Farm Bill,
further necessitating their use here. The term ``duty paid'' means the
dollar amount of the duty actually paid by an importer in the calendar
year immediately preceding the payment. In other words, duty paid
equals the applicable duty rate multiplied by the quantity of worsted
wool fabric imported. The term ``lower duty rate'' means the rate of
duty that would have been applied under the 2014 HTS because of the
duty reduction percentage required by the Wool TRQ that ended on
December 31, 2014.
On February 7, 2014, Congress created in section 12315(e) of the
Farm Bill a new payment that ``monetizes'' OTEXA's Wool TRQ. Because
the lower duty rate is no longer available to importers after December
31, 2014, when authority for the TRQ expired, Congress decided to
monetarily compensate importers of worsted wool fabric of the kind
covered by the three HTS subheadings for the additional cost of the
increased tariff. Congress accomplished this in section 12315(e) by
requiring that in the event that the Wool TRQ administered by OTEXA
should expire during the administration of the Agriculture Wool Trust
by the Secretary (through 2019), the Secretary shall determine an
amount ``. . . that is equal to the amount the manufacturer or
successor-in-interest would have saved during the calendar year of the
payment if the suspension [or reduction] of duty on wool fabrics were
in effect.'' The Secretary has delegated this function to FAS at 7 CFR
2.43.
Section 12315(e) provides that only the person (or a successor-in-
interest to the person) that imported worsted wool
[[Page 12323]]
fabric involving one or more of the three HTS subheadings covered by
this payment is eligible for the payment. To be eligible for a payment,
the person must also have used the imported worsted wool fabric to
produce in the U.S. suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers for men and
boys (or, in the case of imported wool of the kind described in HTS
subheading 9902.51.16, must have manufactured the wool fabric) during
the calendar year immediately preceding the payment.
The worsted wool fabric covered by the three HTS subheadings under
this payment are either imported directly by persons (i.e., importing
manufacturer), in which case the person directly purchased the imported
worsted wool fabric and paid the duty, or imported indirectly (i.e.,
non-importing manufacturer) through a third party broker that had
directly paid the duty. The payment applies to persons that either
directly or indirectly imported worsted wool fabric.
The calendar year immediately preceding the payment is the time
period that will be used to establish the basis for calculating a
payment. This historical basis applies to the duty paid and to the
production or processing by the person applying for a payment. The duty
paid arises from application of the duty rate applicable to imports of
one or more of the three worsted wool fabrics of the kind described in
the three subheadings covered by the payment. To be eligible for a
payment, during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment a
person must have imported, directly or indirectly, one or more of these
HTS subheadings of worsted wool fabric, and used such worsted wool
fabric in the U.S. to make men's and boy's suits, suit-type jackets, or
trousers (or, in the case of subheading 9902.51.16, manufactured such
worsted wool fabric).
Section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill anticipates a time when the TRQ's
lower duty rate is no longer in effect, acknowledges that duty rates
will have increased upon expiration of the TRQ, and focuses on the
savings that an importer (direct or indirect) of worsted wool fabric
would have realized had the lower duty rate remained in effect. Section
12315(e) states that the savings is ``. . . an amount . . . equal to
the amount the manufacturer or successor-in-interest would have saved
during the calendar year . . . if the suspension [or reduction] of duty
on wool fabrics were in effect.'' The focus of the savings is on the
difference between the duty paid for the worsted wool fabric in the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment, and the duty that
would have been paid on the same quantity of worsted wool fabric if the
lower duty rate had applied. This allows the payment to address the
``savings'' contemplated in 12315(e) of the Farm Bill as close to the
real time experience of the person as is administratively possible. For
example, a person's import of worsted wool fabric in calendar year 2016
will be the basis for calculating the person's payment in 2017. This is
consistent with the statute's focus on the savings that would have been
realized if a TRQ were still in effect, and is also consistent with
OTEXA previously basing a TRQ allocation on a period of time
immediately prior to the allocation.
The payment will be made to eligible persons by April 15 of the
calendar year subsequent to the year of the person's reported wool
fabric imports. This allows the Secretary to base the payment on the
person's total actual imports of wool fabric during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment.
The savings involves three factors spread over two time periods:
(1) The duty paid at the higher duty rate applicable to the worsted
wool fabric described in the applicable 2014 HTS subheadings in the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment; (2) the production or
further processing of the imported worsted wool fabric in the calendar
year immediately preceding the payment; and (3) the duty paid at the
lower duty rate applicable to that HTS subheading of worsted wool
fabric in 2014, the last year the TRQ was effective. The higher value
of duty paid in the calendar year immediately preceding the payment is
used to calculate the 2016-2019 payments. However, for the 2015
payment, the higher duty rate in the 2015 HTS will be used instead of
the duty rate applicable in the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment, which would be 2014. The reason for this exception for the
2015 payment is that 2014 is both the last year in which the TRQ's
lower duty rate was still in effect, and is also the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment (2015). As a result, for the 2015
payment, a proxy is necessary to serve as the higher duty rate in the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment. It is necessary to
create such a proxy and generate a 2015 payment, because the statute
requires that this payment be made in any year in which the wool TRQ is
not in effect. The first year the TRQ is not in effect is calendar year
2015. Notwithstanding this proxy for the higher duty rate for a 2015
payment, the calendar year immediately preceding the payment (2014)
will still be used to establish that production or processing by the
eligible person occurred (which is an eligibility requirement).
There were three essential data components of the wool TRQ that
terminated at the end of the 2014 calendar year: (1) The quantity of
imported wool fabric subject to the lower duty rate; (2) the price of
the imported wool fabric; and (3) the person's actual production of
worsted wool suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers for men and boys
(or, in the case of wool under HTS subheading 9902.51.16, manufactured
the wool fabric). This information has been annually collected by OTEXA
by means of affidavits supplied by persons applying for a payment. The
Secretary will continue to collect this information through annual
affidavits to ensure that the person, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment, (1) imported, either directly or
indirectly, the quantity of worsted wool fabric of the kind described
under one or more of the HTS subheadings covered by this payment, and
(2) produced in the U.S. suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers for men
and boys (or, in the case of wool under HTS subheading 9902.51.16,
manufactured the wool fabric).
The dollar value and quantity of such imports are also factors in
determining the savings that would have been realized because of the
TRQ. Dollar value data effectively captures the price of such fabric
and the dollar amount paid by the person. OTEXA has collected data
about the dollar value and quantity of such imports by requiring the
person to report the dollar value and quantity of the imports during
the first six months of the calendar year of the license allocation.
The Secretary will continue to collect the person's reported dollar
value and quantity of imports of worsted wool fabric, but will require
information about imports for the entire calendar year immediately
preceding the payment. The savings in the context of the payment can be
restated accordingly. In any calendar year in which the lower duty rate
on worsted wool fabric of the kind described in subheadings 9902.51.11,
9902.51.15, and 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS is not in effect, a person
(or a successor-in-interest of the person) that, during the calendar
year immediately preceding the payment, in the U.S., (1) directly or
indirectly imported worsted wool fabric of the kind described under one
or more of the three HTS subheadings covered by this payment, and (2)
used the worsted wool fabric to produce suits, suit-type jackets, or
[[Page 12324]]
trousers for men and boys (or, in the case of worsted wool fabric
covered by subheading 9902.51.16, manufactured the worsted wool
fabric), is eligible for a payment that is equivalent to the difference
between the higher duty paid on such worsted wool fabric in the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment and the reduced duty
that would have been payable under the TRQ (in 2014) on the quantity of
worsted wool fabric imported in the calendar year immediately preceding
the payment. For the purpose of calculating the payment for each of the
2015-2019 calendar years, it will be assumed that 100% of the person's
imports were covered by the lower duty. The rationale for this
assumption is that under the wool TRQ that expired on December 31,
2014, persons that received licenses to import up to specific amounts
of worsted wool fabric at reduced duty rates never used the entire
license allotment, and the excess allotment was left unused. In those
cases, because 100% of the person's imports were in fact covered by the
available lower duty rate under the TRQ, the savings referenced in
section 12315(e) should also apply to 100% of a person's imports.
The duty rate codified in the 2014 HTS applicable to imports of
worsted wool fabric in the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment fall into one of three categories: (1) The general duty rate
that is applicable to worsted wool fabric covered by the subheading
unless one of the other two categories applies; (2) the duty rate is
0%, because imports from certain listed countries are duty free; and
(3) duty rates applicable to imports from specific countries (e.g.,
7.5% duty rate for imports of worsted wool fabric under subheading
9902.51.11 of the HTS from Oman in 2015). Because the HTS is statutory,
one of the three categories must be applied when calculating a monetary
payment. Similarly, in years following 2014, the applicable duty may
vary as a function of the country of origin of the imported fabric. In
any given year, the country of origin of the worsted wool fabric will
affect the applicable duty rate and resulting duty paid used to
calculate the payment. The duty rate applicable to worsted wool fabric
under subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS was 0%, and
for subheading 9902.51.11 of the 2014 HTS was 10%. Thus, in any given
year, duty rates may vary based on the country of origin of the
imported fabrics, and as a result, the amount of the payment may be
significantly affected.
The payment will be annually calculated for each of the 2015-2019
calendar years as follows. For each HTS subheading, the savings of the
person for any given calendar year will be the difference between the
higher duties paid in the calendar year preceding the payment and the
duties that would have been payable at the lower 2014 duty rate. The
savings for each of the three subheadings will then be added together,
the sum of which will equal the annual payment for that person.
Two simple examples, the first involving imports in 2017 and the
other in 2015, illustrate how this calculation will work.
The first example applies to a payment in 2017. Under the TRQ that
expired on December 31, 2014, worsted wool fabrics entering the United
States under HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16 were assessed
zero duty, and worsted wool fabrics from Oman entering under 9902.51.11
were assessed a 10% duty. Starting on January 1, 2017, assume that
imports entering the United States of worsted wool fabrics previously
described under HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16 (but in 2017
actually entering under a different HTS subheading, because of the
expiration of the particular subheadings under HTS chapter 99) are
assessed a 20% duty, and worsted wool fabrics from Oman previously
described under 9902.51.11 are assessed a 10% duty.
A person imports 200 square meters of worsted wool fabric in 2017,
100 square meters of which is of the kind described by HTS subheadings
9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16, and the remaining 100 square meters is of
the kind described in HTS subheading 9902.51.11, imported from Oman.
The person reports a dollar value of $1 per square meter. For the 100
square meters of worsted wool described under HTS subheadings
9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16, the calculation would be 0.20 (20% converted
to a numeric value), which is the duty rate in 2016, minus 0 (2014 duty
rate, 0%, converted to a numeric value), multiplied by 100 (dollar
value), which would equal $20 ((0.20-0) x 100). For the 100 square
meters of worsted wool fabric described under HTS subheading 9902.51.11
and imported from Oman, the calculation would be 0.10 (10% converted to
a numeric value), the duty rate in 2015, the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, minus 0.10 (10%, the 2016 duty rate when Oman is
the country of origin) multiplied by 100 (dollar value), which would
equal $0 ((0.10-0.10) x 100).
The second example applies to a payment in 2015 using the ``2015
proxy'' discussed above. Recall that under the applicable TRQ that
expired on December 31, 2014, worsted wool fabrics entering the United
States under HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16 were assessed
zero duty, and worsted wool fabrics from Oman entering under 9902.51.11
were assessed a 10% duty. Starting on January 1, 2015, imports entering
the United States of worsted wool fabrics previously described under
HTS subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16 are assessed a 25% duty, and
imports of worsted wool fabrics from Oman previously described under
9902.51.11 are assessed a 20% duty.
A person imports 200 square meters of worsted wool fabric in 2015,
100 square meters of which is of the kind previously described by HTS
subheadings 9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16, and the remaining 100 square
meters is of the kind previously described in HTS subheading 9902.51.11
imported from Oman. The person reports a dollar value of $1 per square
meter. For the 100 square meters of worsted wool under HTS subheadings
9902.51.15 and 9902.51.16, the calculation would be 0.25 (25% converted
to a numeric value), which is the 2015 higher duty proxy used when the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment is 2014, minus 0 (2014
duty rate, 0%, converted to a numeric value), multiplied by 100 (dollar
value), which would equal $25 ((0.25-0) x 100). For the 100 square
meters of worsted wool fabric under HTS subheading 9902.51.11 imported
from Oman, the calculation would be 0.20 (20% converted to a numeric
value), the 2015 higher duty proxy when the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment is 2014, minus 0.10 (10%, the 2014 duty rate when
Oman is the country of origin) multiplied by 100 (dollar value), which
would equal $10 ((0.20-0.10) x 100). The statutory language of section
12315 directs the Secretary to determine the savings that the person
would have realized if the lower duty rate had been in effect. Thus, it
is not necessary to determine what the person would have done with the
savings realized from the lower duty rate. Nor is it necessary to
inquire about the person's imports in a year that also include imported
worsted wool fabric that is of the kind under HTS subheadings other
than those covered by this payment, imported worsted wool fabric not
subject to the duty reduction, or domestic wool.
As discussed earlier, the payment applies to direct and indirect
imports of
[[Page 12325]]
worsted wool fabric of the kind described in the three specific HTS
subheadings. If the import was through a third party broker, the person
must so state in the affidavit prior to the payment, and provide any
other information required by FAS. For persons that are indirect
importers of worsted wool fabric, the dollar value of the imports
reported in their affidavit will be subject to a 10% reduction by the
Secretary. The reason for this reduction is that the broker that
directly imported the worsted wool fabric is assumed to sell it to the
person who submits the affidavit for an amount higher than the tariff
price. The 10% reduction is intended to compensate for that higher
price, and make the reported price paid by indirect importers more
equivalent to the price paid by direct importers. OTEXA also
administered this 10% reduction in the reported price paid by indirect
importers as part of its administration of the wool TRQ.
Persons that imported worsted wool fabric directly are required to
submit to FAS as part of the affidavit package scanned copies of the
CBP Form 7501 ``Entry Summary'' for the relevant calculations made in
the affidavit. Persons that imported worsted wool fabric indirectly are
required to submit to FAS as part of the affidavit package invoices
from third party brokers for the relevant calculations made in the
affidavit.
Persons applying for a payment must provide information required by
the Secretary through annual affidavits.
(3) Wool Yarn, Wool Fiber, and Wool Top Duty Compensation Payment
All references to subheadings of the HTS in the context of this
payment are to the subheadings as described in the 2014 HTS.
The duty on imported wool yarn of the kind described in subheading
9902.51.13 of the HTS, and the duty on wool fiber and wool top of the
kind described in subheading 9902.51.14 of the HTS were suspended in
their entirety in section 503 of the Trade and Development Act of 2000.
The total duty suspension for both subheadings has been extended three
times since then, most recently through December 31, 2014. Section
12315(e) of the Farm Bill requires the Secretary to make payments to
processors of wool yarn, fiber, and top of the kind described in
subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14 of the HTS, respectively, in
amounts that the processors would have saved if the duty suspension had
been in effect.
To be eligible for a payment, during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment a person must have imported into the U.S.,
directly or indirectly, wool yarn, fiber or top of the kind described
in subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14, and manufactured such wool
yarn, fiber, or top in the U.S.
The duty rates in chapter 99 of the HTS for subheadings 9902.51.13
and 9902.51.14 are listed in three categories: (1) The general duty
rate applicable to wool yarn covered by the subheading, unless one of
the other two categories applies; (2) the duty rate is 0 because
imports from certain listed countries are duty free; and (3) duty rates
applicable to imports from specific countries (e.g., 2.4% duty rate for
imports of wool yarn from Oman in calendar year 2014). Because the HTS
is statutory, one of the three categories must be applied when
calculating a monetary payment equivalent to the savings that a person
would have realized if the suspension of the duty rate had been in
effect. Thus, the country of origin of the wool yarn, wool fiber, or
wool top, may significantly affect the duty rate used to calculate a
person's payment. The general duty rate applicable to subheading
9902.51.13 in 2000 was 6% of the import price of the imported wool yarn
at the time the duties were suspended. The general duty rate reverted
to 6% of the import price of the imported wool yarn in 2015.
However, subheading 9902.51.14, which expired at the end of 2014,
applied to wool fiber and top now described in eight subheadings of
chapter 51 of the HTS, and the duty applicable to each subheading in
chapter 51 varies. Thus, a determination of the applicable duty is
subject to the determination of the Secretary in accordance with duty
rates applicable to the specific sub-subheading of wool fiber or top
imported.
The difference between the 0% duty in effect during the duty
suspension and the duty applicable in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment for the two HTS subheadings of wool yarn, fiber,
and top (which is 100% of the duty) will be used to calculate duty
compensation payments. Section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill anticipates a
time when the total duty suspension is no longer in effect,
acknowledges that duty rates will have increased upon expiration of the
total duty suspension, and focuses on the savings that an importer
(direct or indirect) of wool yarn, fiber, or top would have realized
had the 0% duty rate remained in effect. Section 12315(e) of the Farm
Bill states that the annual payment is ``. . . an amount . . . equal to
the amount the manufacturer or successor-in-interest would have saved
during the calendar year . . . if the suspension . . . of duty on wool
fabrics were in effect.'' The focus of the savings is on the difference
between the duty paid for the wool yarn, fiber or top of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14 in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment, and the 0% duty that would have been
paid for such wool imported into the U.S., directly or indirectly, if
the total duty suspension were still in effect. This allows the payment
to address the ``savings'' contemplated in 12315(e) of the Farm Bill as
close to the real time experience of the person as is administratively
possible. For example, a person's import of wool yarn, fiber or top in
calendar year 2016 will be the basis for calculating the person's
payment in 2017. This is consistent with the statute's focus on the
savings that would have been realized if a duty suspension were still
in effect, and is also consistent with CBP's treatment of wool yarn,
fiber or top in its Wool Duty Refund Program, in which it based the
Duty Refund payment on the prior year. The payment will be made to
eligible persons by April 15 of the calendar year subsequent to the
year of the person's reported imports. This allows the Secretary to
base the payment on the person's total actual imports of wool yarn,
fiber or top during the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment.
The savings involves three factors spread over two time periods:
(1) The higher duty rate applicable to the wool yarn, fiber or top
described in the applicable 2014 HTS subheadings in the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment; (2) the further processing of the
imported wool yarn, fiber or top in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment; and (3) the total duty suspension applicable to
that HTS subheading of wool yarn, fiber or top in 2014, the last year
the duty suspension was effective. The higher duty rate paid by the
eligible person in the calendar year immediately preceding the payment
is used to calculate the 2016-2019 payments. However, for the 2015
payment, the higher duty rate in the 2015 HTS will be used instead of
the total duty suspension effective through the 2014 calendar year. The
reason for this exception for the 2015 payment is that 2014 is both the
last year in which the total duty suspension was still in effect and
the calendar year immediately preceding the payment (in 2015). As a
result, for the 2015 payment, a proxy is necessary for the higher duty
rate. It is necessary to create this proxy for the 2015 payment because
Congress
[[Page 12326]]
requires that this payment be made when the duty suspension is no
longer in effect. The first year the duty suspension is not in effect
is calendar year 2015. Finally, for a 2015 payment, the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment will still be used to establish the
dollar value of the imported wool yarn, fiber, or top by the eligible
person.
The dollar value of the wool yarn, fiber or top imported into the
U.S. is also a factor in determining the savings that would have been
realized because of the TRQ. Dollar value data effectively captures the
price of such fabric and the dollar amount paid by the person. CBP has
not been collecting this data in the context of its Wool Duty Refund
Program. But in light of the statutory requirement to capture the
savings that would have been realized for wool yarn, fiber or top
imported into the U.S. had the duty suspension been in effect, the
Secretary will collect the person's reported dollar value and quantity
of imports of wool yarn, fiber or top imported into the U.S. during the
entire calendar year immediately preceding the payment.
The Secretary has determined that the intent of the savings
language in section 12315 of the Farm Bill can be best realized by
looking at what the person would have saved during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment. For example, the dollar value of the
person's imports wool yarn, fiber, or top in calendar year 2014 will be
the basis for calculating the payment in 2015 (in contrast to the proxy
duty used for the 2015 payment). This allows the payment to address the
``savings'' in section 12315(e) of the Farm Bill as close to the real
time experience of the person as is administratively possible yet still
cover the full prior year's imports.
Other than with respect to the 2015 payment calculated using a
proxy duty rate as described above, the duty compensation payment under
this section will be equal to 100% of the duty paid for wool yarn,
fiber, or top of the kind described in subheadings 9902.51.13 and
9902.51.14 imported in the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment.
The two HTS subheadings of imported wool yarn, fiber, or top
covered by this payment are either imported directly by persons, in
which case the person also directly paid the duty, or imported
indirectly through a third party broker that directly paid the duty.
The payment applies to persons that either directly or indirectly
imported wool yarn, fiber, and top. If the import was through a third
party broker, the person must so state in the affidavit prior to the
payment, and provide any other information required by FAS. For persons
that are indirect importers of wool yarn, fiber, or top, the dollar
value of the imports reported in their affidavit will be subject to a
10% reduction by the Secretary. The reason for this reduction is that
the broker that directly imported the wool yarn, fiber, or top is
assumed to sell it to the person who submits the affidavit for an
amount higher than the price merely increased by the applied duty. The
10% reduction is intended to compensate for that higher price, and make
the reported price paid by indirect importers more equivalent to the
price paid by direct importers. CBP also administers this 10% reduction
in the reported price paid by indirect importers as part of its
administration of the Wool Duty Refund Program (which includes
subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14).
Persons that imported wool yarn, fiber or top directly are also
required to submit to FAS as part of the affidavit package scanned
copies of the CBP Form 7501 ``Entry Summary'' for the relevant
calculations made in the affidavit. Persons that imported wool yarn,
fiber or top indirectly are required to submit to FAS as part of the
affidavit package invoices from third party brokers for the relevant
calculations made in the affidavit.
Persons applying for a payment must provide information required by
the Secretary through annual affidavits.
(4) Refund of Duties Paid on Imports of Certain Wool Products
CBP is administering this payment to U.S. manufacturers and
processors of wool for duties paid on the imported wool in 2000, 2001,
and 2002 through calendar year 2015. FAS will continue this payment for
calendar years 2016-2019, and will publish regulations later next year.
The regulations for this payment will be published at 7 CFR 1471.12.
Effective Date and Notice and Comment
We are issuing this final rule without prior notice and opportunity
for comment. The Administrative Procedure Act exempts rules ``relating
to agency management or personnel or to public property, loans, grants,
benefits, or contracts'' from the statutory requirement for prior
notice and opportunity for comment 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2). Accordingly,
this rule may be made effective less than 30 days after publication in
the Federal Register. However, we invite you to participate in this
rulemaking by submitting written comments, data, or views. We will
consider the comments we receive and may conduct additional rulemaking
based on the comments. This rule allows FAS to provide adequate notice
to eligible manufacturers about the new Pima Agriculture Cotton and
Wool Apparel Manufacturers Trusts regulation so that they will be ready
to begin filing for payments by March 15 in the case of Agriculture
Pima Trust payment, and by March 1 in the case of the several
Agriculture Wool Trust payments.
Executive Order 12630
This Executive Order requires careful evaluation of governmental
actions that interfere with constitutionally protected property rights.
This rule does not interfere with any property rights and, therefore,
does not need to be evaluated on the basis of the criteria outlined in
Executive Order 12630.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule is issued in conformance with Executive Order 12866
and Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553). It has been determined
to be not significant for the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and was
not reviewed by OMB for this purpose. A cost-benefit assessment of this
rule was not completed.
Executive Order 12372
This final rule is not subject to Executive Order 12372, which
requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials.
See the notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, published at 48
FR 29115 (June 24, 1983).
Executive Order 12988
This final rule has been reviewed in accordance with Executive
Order 12988. This rule would not preempt State or local laws,
regulations, or policies unless they present an irreconcilable conflict
with this rule. This rule would not be retroactive.
Executive Order 13132
This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 13132,
``Federalism.'' The policies contained in this final rule do not have
any substantial direct effect on States, on the relationship between
the Federal government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government, nor does
this final rule impose substantial direct compliance costs on State and
local governments. Therefore, consultation with the States is not
required.
[[Page 12327]]
Executive Order 13175
This final rule has been reviewed for compliance with E.O. 13175.
The policies contained in this final rule do not have tribal
implications that preempt tribal law.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act does not apply to this rule because
FAS is not required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or any other law to publish a
notice of proposed rulemaking with respect to the subject matter of
this rule.
Civil Rights Impact Statement
No major civil rights impact is likely to result from the
announcement of this notice. It will not have a negative civil rights
impact on very-low income, low income, and moderate income and minority
populations.
Environmental Assessment
The environmental impacts of this rule have been considered in a
manner consistent with the provisions of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347), the regulations of the Council
on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and FAS regulations
for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 799). FAS has determined that NEPA
does not apply to this rule and that no environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement will be prepared.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This final rule does not impose any enforceable duty or contain any
unfunded mandate as described under Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA). Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
E-Government Act Compliance
FAS is committed to complying with the E-Government Act to promote
the use of the internet and other information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen access to Government information,
services and for other purposes. The forms, regulations, and other
information collection activities required to be utilized by a person
subject to this rule are available at: https://www.fas.usda.gov.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1471
Agricultural commodities, Imports.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 7 CFR part 1471 is added
to read as follows:
PART 1471--PIMA AGRICULTURE COTTON TRUST FUND (AGRICULTURE PIMA
TRUST) AND AGRICULTURE WOOL APPAREL MANUFACTURERS TRUST FUND
(AGRICULTURE WOOL TRUST)
Subpart A--Agriculture Pima Trust
Sec.
1471.1 Provisions common to this subpart.
1471.2 Pima cotton payments.
1471.3 Affidavit of producers of ring spun pima cotton yarn.
1471.4 Affidavit of manufacturers of pima cotton shirts.
1471.5 Affidavit of pima cotton trade association.
Subpart B--Agriculture Wool Trust
1471.10 Provisions common to this subpart.
1471.11 Payments to manufacturers of certain worsted wool fabrics.
1471.12 [Reserved]
1471.13 Monetization of the wool tariff rate quota.
1471.14 Wool yarn, wool fiber, and wool top duty compensation
payment.
Authority: Sections 501-506, Pub. L. 106-200, (114 Stat. 299-
304); Section 4002, Pub. L. 108-429 (7 U.S.C. 7101 note); Section
1633, Pub. L. 109-280 (120 Stat. 1166); Section 325, Pub. L. 110-343
(122 Stat. 3875); Sections 12314 and 12315, Pub. L. 113-79 (7 U.S.C.
2101 note and 7101 note).
Subpart A--Agriculture Pima Trust
Sec. 1471.1 Provisions common to this subpart.
(a) Agriculture Pima Trust--(1) Establishment. The Agriculture Pima
Trust has been established to provide funding for payments under this
part.
(2) Purpose. The purpose of the Agriculture Pima Trust is to reduce
the injury to domestic manufacturers resulting from tariffs on cotton
fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain apparel articles made of
cotton fabric.
(3) Funding availability. $16,000,000 will be available annually
for eligible payments authorized under subpart A of this part.
(4) Definitions. As used in this subpart:
Agriculture Pima Trust means the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust
Fund.
CCC means the Commodity Credit Corporation.
FAS means the Foreign Agricultural Service.
Secretary means the Secretary of Agriculture.
Agriculture Pima Trust means the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust
Fund.
U.S. means the United States of America.
(b) Other provisions common to subpart A of this part--(1)
Affidavits. FAS shall annually, not later than February 15 of the year
of the applicable payment, make affidavits available on the FAS Web
site, which can be found at https://www.fas.usda.gov/. Affidavits must
be submitted electronically to pimawool@fas.usda.gov.
(2) Filing deadline. Any person filing an affidavit under this part
for a particular year must file the affidavit for such calendar year,
during calendar years 2015 through 2018, not later than March 15 of the
applicable calendar year.
(3) Basic information. In addition to information required in
Sec. Sec. 1471.3, 1471.4, and 1471.5, as applicable, every person
applying for a payment must provide the following information,
applicable to the year for which a payment is sought:
(i) The current company name, address, contact, phone number of the
person;
(ii) The name and address of each plant or location of the person
during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment; and
(iii) A W-9 providing the Federal tax identification number of the
person;
(4) Standard Form 1199A. Every person claiming a payment must
provide Standard Form 1199A, a direct deposit sign-up form, to
facilitate any transfer of funds.
(5) Affirmation. Every person applying for a payment must affirm in
its affidavit that ``all information contained in the application is
complete and correct and that the information does not contain a false
claim, statement, or representation.''
(6) Document retention. All persons receiving a payment under this
part must maintain all pertinent documentation for 3 years after the
year of receipt of the payment.
(7) False statements. Persons providing false or fraudulent claims,
or persons making materially false statements or representations in
their affidavit, are subject to civil or criminal penalties pursuant to
18 U.S.C. 1001.
(8) Confidentiality. Specific business information that is marked
``business confidential'' will be protected from disclosure to the full
extent permitted by law.
(9) Review of affidavits. Affidavits will be reviewed to determine
whether they are complete and responsive to the content and form of
affidavit requirements under this part.
(10) Finality of determinations by Secretary. A determination by
the Secretary about a payment under this part shall be final and is not
subject to appeal or protest.
(11) Timing of payments. A payment for which a person is eligible
under this part will be disbursed in each of
[[Page 12328]]
calendar years 2015 through 2018, not later than April 15 of the
applicable year.
(12) Sequester. Payments covered by this part shall be subject to
sequester of payments, if required by law.
Sec. 1471.2 Pima cotton payments.
From available funds in the Agriculture Pima Trust, CCC will
annually make payments for each of calendar years 2015 through 2018 as
follows:
(a) Twenty-five percent of the amounts in the Agriculture Pima
Trust shall be paid to one or more nationally recognized associations
established for the promotion of pima cotton for use in textile and
apparel goods, as determined by the Secretary, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment.
(b) Twenty-five percent of the amounts in the Agriculture Pima
Trust shall be paid to yarn spinners of pima cotton that produce ring
spun cotton yarns in the U.S. during 2013 and the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment, to be allocated to each yarn spinner
in an amount that bears the same ratio as
(1) The yarn spinner's production of ring spun cotton yarns in
2013, measuring less than 83.33 decitex (exceeding 120 metric number)
from pima cotton in single and plied form during calendar year 2013,
bears to
(2) The production of the yarns described in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section during calendar year 2013 by all yarn spinners that
qualify under this paragraph (b).
(c) Fifty percent of the amounts in the Agriculture Pima Trust
shall be paid to manufacturers that, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment, certify, pursuant to the affidavit
under Sec. 1471.4, they used imported pima cotton fabric during
calendar year 2013 to produce such shirts, to be allocated to each
manufacturer in an amount that bears the same ratio as
(1) The dollar value (excluding duty, shipping, and insurance of
imported woven pima cotton shirting fabric of 80s or higher count and
2-ply in warp used by the manufacturer during calendar year 2013 to
produce men's and boys' pima cotton shirts, bears to
(2) The dollar value (excluding duty, shipping, and insurance of
the fabric described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section used to
manufacture men's and boy's pima cotton shirts in 2013 by all
manufacturers that qualify under this paragraph (c).
Sec. 1471.3 Affidavit of producers of ring spun pima cotton yarn.
In addition to reporting and information requirements in Sec.
1471.1, the affidavit of a yarn spinner that is a producer of ring spun
cotton yarn must be an affidavit provided annually by an officer of the
yarn spinner that produces ring spun yarns affirming that:
(a) During the calendar year immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar year 2013, the yarn spinner used pima cotton to produce
ring spun cotton yarns in the U.S. measuring less than 83.33 decitex
(exceeding 120 metric number), in single and plied form;
(b) During 2013, the yarn spinner actually produced the quantity,
measured in pounds, of ring spun cotton yarns measuring less than 83.33
decitex (exceeding 120 metric number), in single and plied form; and
(c) The yarn spinner continues to maintain supporting documentation
about such production during calendar year 2013 which shows the actual
quantity of such yarns produced, and evidencing the yarns as ring spun
pima cotton yarns, measuring less than 83.33 decitex (exceeding 120
metric number), in single and plied form.
Sec. 1471.4 Affidavit of manufacturers of pima cotton shirts.
(a) In general. In addition to applicable information requirements
in Sec. 1471.1, an affidavit of a manufacturer that is a producer of
men's and boys' pima cotton shirts must be an affidavit provided
annually by an officer of the manufacturer which affirms the following
information
(1) During the calendar year immediately preceding the payment and
during calendar year 2013, the manufacturer used imported pima cotton
fabric to cut and sew men's and boys' pima cotton shirts in the U.S.;
(2) During calendar year 2013, the dollar value of imported woven
pima cotton shirting fabric of 80s or higher count and 2-ply in warp
purchased and used by the manufacturer to cut and sew men's and boys'
woven pima cotton shirts in the U.S.;
(3) The manufacturer continues to maintain invoices and other
supporting documentation (such as price lists and other technical
descriptions of the fabric qualities) showing the dollar value of such
fabric purchased, the date of purchase, and evidencing the fabric as
woven pima cotton fabric of 80s or higher count and 2-ply in warp; and
(4) The imported pima cotton fabric purchased in 2013 and in the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment was suitable for use in
the manufacturing of men's and boys' cotton shirts.
(b) Date of purchase. For purposes of the affidavit under paragraph
(a) of this section, the date of purchase shall be the invoice date,
and the dollar value shall be determined excluding duty, shipping, and
insurance.
Sec. 1471.5 Affidavit of pima cotton trade associations.
In addition to applicable information requirements in Sec. 1471.1,
trade associations filing a claim for a payment must electronically
provide a statement which states whether, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and in calendar year 2014, they were,
as determined by the Secretary, a domestic nationally recognized
association established and operating for the promotion of pima cotton
for domestic use in textile and apparel goods.
Subpart B--Agriculture Wool Trust
Sec. 1471.10 Provisions common to this subpart.
(a) Agriculture wool trust--(1) Establishment. The Agriculture Wool
Trust has been established to provide funding for payments under this
part.
(2) Purpose. The purpose of the Agriculture Wool Trust is to reduce
the injury to domestic manufacturers resulting from tariffs on wool
fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain apparel articles made of
wool fabric.
(3) Funding availability. Not more than $30,000,000 will be
available annually for payments authorized under this part.
(4) Definitions. As used in this subpart:
Agriculture Wool Trust means the Agriculture Wool Apparel
Manufacturers Trust Fund.
U.S. means the United States of America.
CCC means the Commodity Credit Corporation.
FAS means the Foreign Agricultural Service.
HTS means the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States.
Secretary means the Secretary of Agriculture.
TRQ means Tariff Rate Quota.
(b) Provisions common to this part--(1) Affidavits. FAS shall
annually, not later than February 15 of the year of the applicable
payment, make affidavits available on the FAS Web site, which can be
found at https://www.fas.usda.gov/. Affidavits must be submitted
electronically to: pimawool@fas.usda.gov.
(2) Filing deadline. Any person filing an affidavit under this part
for a
[[Page 12329]]
particular year must file the affidavit for such calendar year, during
calendar years 2015 through 2019, not later than March 1 of such year.
(3) Required information. In addition to information required in
Sec. Sec. 1471.11, 1471.13, and 1471.14, as applicable, every person
applying for a payment under this part must provide the following
information applicable to the year for which a payment is sought:
(i) The current company name, address, contact, phone number of the
person;
(ii) The name and address of each plant or location of the person
in the year immediately preceding the payment; and
(iii) A W-9 providing the Federal tax identification number of the
person.
(4) Standard Form 1199A. Every person seeking a payment must also
provide Standard Form 1199A, a direct deposit sign-up form, to
facilitate any transfer of funds.
(5) Affirmation. A person filing an affidavit under this part must
affirm that ``all information contained in the application is complete
and correct and that the information does not contain a false claim,
statement, or representation.''
(6) Document retention. All persons receiving a payment under this
part must maintain all pertinent documentation for three years after
the year of receipt of the payment.
(7) False statements. Persons providing false or fraudulent claims
or making materially false statements or representations are subject to
civil or criminal penalties pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1001.
(8) Confidential information. Specific business information
provided in affidavits that is marked ``business confidential'' will be
protected from disclosure to the full extent permitted by law.
(9) Review of affidavits. Affidavits will be reviewed to determine
whether they are complete and responsive to the content and form of
affidavit requirements in this part.
(10) Finality of determination by the Secretary. A determination by
the Secretary about a payment under this part shall be final and is not
subject to appeal or protest.
(11) Timing of payments. A payment for which a person eligible
under this part will be disbursed in each of calendar years 2015
through 2019 not later than April 15 of the applicable year.
(12) Proration and sequester. Payments covered by this part will be
subject to proration in the event that insufficient funds exist in the
Agriculture Wool Trust during the year of the payment, and will be
subject to sequester, if required by law.
(13) HTS subheadings. All references to subheadings of the HTS in
this part are to the subheadings as described in the HTS in 2014.
Sec. 1471.11 Payments to manufacturers of certain worsted wool
fabrics.
(a) Definitions. In this section the following definitions apply:
Eligible person. The term ``eligible person'' means a manufacturer
in the U.S. of qualifying worsted wool fabric during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment and during each of calendar years
1999, 2000, and 2001.
Qualifying worsted wool fabric. The term ``qualifying worsted wool
fabric'' means a worsted wool fabric containing at least 85% by weight
worsted wool of the kind described in subheading 9902.51.11 or
9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS that, during the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment and during each of calendar years 1999, 2000, and
2001, was manufactured by an eligible person in the United States.
(b) Distribution of funds. From amounts in the Agriculture Wool
Trust, CCC will annually make payments for each of calendar years 2015
through 2019 to eligible persons that manufactured qualifying worsted
wool fabric as provided in paragraphs (b)(1) or (2) of this section.
(1) Payments for production under subheading 9902.51.11 of the
HTS--(i) In general. Eligible persons that manufactured qualifying
worsted wool fabric during calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001 that is
of the kind described in subheading 9902.51.11 of the HTS are eligible
for a payment as provided in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Payment amounts. A total of $2,666,000 will be allocated
annually among eligible persons covered by this paragraph on the basis
of the percentage of each eligible person's total production (actual
production, not estimates) for the calendar year immediately preceding
the payment of qualifying worsted wool fabric described in paragraph
(b)(1)(i) of this section in relation to the total production for the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment of such fabric by all
eligible persons who qualify for payments under this paragraph.
(2) Payments for production under subheading 9902.51.15--(i) In
general. Eligible persons that manufactured qualifying worsted wool
fabric during calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001 that conforms in
composition to subheading 9902.51.15 of the HTS are eligible for a
payment as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Payment amounts. A total of $2,666,000 will be allocated
annually among eligible persons covered by this paragraph on the basis
of the percentage of each eligible person's total production (actual
production, not estimates) for the calendar year immediately preceding
the payment of qualifying worsted wool fabric described in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) of this section in relation to the total production for the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment of such fabric by all
eligible persons who qualify for payments under this paragraph.
(c) Annual affidavit--(1) In general. An eligible person applying
for a payment under this section shall comply with all applicable
reporting requirements of this section and of Sec. 1471.10.
(2) Specific business information. An eligible person shall, for
the calendar year immediately preceding the payment and for each of
calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001, annually report the actual dollar
value and the actual quantity (linear yards) of qualifying worsted wool
fabric that was manufactured.
(3) Manufacturing of wool. When reporting the annual dollar value
and quantity of imports of qualifying worsted wool fabric, and the
annual dollar value and quantity of the qualifying wool fabric that was
manufactured, an eligible person may either have manufactured the
qualifying worsted wool on its own behalf or had another person
manufacture the qualifying worsted wool fabric, provided the eligible
person owned the qualifying worsted wool fabric at the time of
manufacture.
Sec. 1471.12 [Reserved]
Sec. 1471.13 Monetization of the wool tariff rate quota.
(a) Definitions. In this section the following definitions apply:
(1) Lower duty rate. The term ``lower duty rate'' means the duty
rate as codified in the 2014 HTS that would have been applicable to
qualifying worsted wool fabric of the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11, 9902.51.15, and 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS prior to the
expiration of the Wool TRQ on December 31, 2014.
(2) Eligible person--(i) In general. The term ``eligible person''
means a manufacturer (or a successor-in-interest to the manufacturer)
in the U.S. during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment
that:
[[Page 12330]]
(A) Imported qualifying worsted wool fabric; and
(B) Used the imported qualifying worsted wool fabric
(1) In the case of wool of the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11 or 9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS, to produce worsted wool
suits, suit-type jackets and trousers for men and boys; or
(2) In the case of wool fabric of the kind described in subheading
9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS, used such wool fabric in manufacturing.
(ii) Successor-in-interest. If a person satisfies the criteria for
becoming a successor-in-interest to an eligible person under paragraph
(a)(4) of this section, the person shall succeed to the status of the
eligible person and become eligible for the payment.
(3) Qualifying worsted wool fabric. The term ``qualifying worsted
wool fabric'' means imported worsted wool fabric containing at least
85% by weight worsted wool of the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11, 9902.51.15, or 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS that, during the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment was:
(i) Imported by an eligible person in the U.S.; and
(ii) Used by the eligible person in the U.S.
(A) In the case of wool fabric of the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11 or 9902.51.15 of the HTS, to produce worsted wool suits,
suit-type jackets and trousers for men and boys; or
(B) In the case of wool fabric of the kind described in subheading
9902.51.16 of the HTS, was used in manufacturing.
(4) Successor-in-interest. The term ``successor-in-interest'' means
a person that is eligible to claim a payment under this section as if
the person were the original eligible person, without regard to section
3727, title 31, United States Code because of--
(i) An assignment of the claim;
(ii) An assignment of the original eligible person's right to
manufacture under the same trade name; or
(iii) A reorganization of the eligible person.
(b) Purposes. The purposes of a TRQ monetization payment are to
provide an eligible person--
(1) Compensation for termination of the TRQ for qualifying worsted
wool fabric; and
(2) A payment that is equivalent to the amount the eligible person
would have saved during the calendar year for imports of qualifying
worsted wool fabric if the lower duty rate under the applicable 2014
HTS subheading(s) of a qualifying worsted wool fabric were in effect.
(c) Calculation of monetized TRQ payment. A payment will be
established by calculating, as provided in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(4) of this section, the savings that would have been realized by the
eligible person for imports of qualifying worsted wool fabric of the
kind described in one of the three subheadings 9902.51.11, 9902.51.15,
or 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS (as applicable), had the lower duty rate
been in effect.
(1) Payment formula. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, a payment shall be calculated by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar value of imported worsted wool
fabric, for each of the 2014 HTS subheadings of worsted wool fabric,
during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment;
(ii) Subtracting the duty rate (converted to numeric value) for
each applicable 2014 HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric that would
have been paid in calendar year 2014 from the duty rate (converted to
numeric value) that was actually paid in the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment;
(iii) For each applicable 2014 HTS subheading of worsted wool
fabric, multiplying the numeric values described in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section; and
(iv) Adding each product obtained in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this
section.
(2) Exception for 2015 payment. In the case of the payment to be
made in 2015, for purposes of the calculation component described in
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section the duty rate applicable in 2015
shall be deemed the duty rate actually paid in 2014. The reason for
this exception for the 2015 payment is that 2014 is both the last year
in which the lower duty rate was still in effect, and is also the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment (the payment is in
2015). As a result, for the 2015 payment, a proxy is necessary for the
higher duty rate in the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment.
(3) 2015 payment. A payment in 2015 shall be calculated by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar value of imported worsted wool
fabric during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment under
the 2014 HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric;
(ii) Subtracting the lower duty rate (converted to numeric value)
that would have been applicable to the 2014 HTS subheading of worsted
wool fabric from the duty rate applicable to that HTS subheading in
2015 (converted to numeric value);
(iii) Multiplying the numeric values described in paragraphs
(c)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section); and(iv) Adding the product
obtained in paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section to the product
obtained for every applicable subheading of worsted wool fabric.
(4) 2016-2019 payments. A payment in each of years 2016-2019 shall
be calculated by
(i) Establishing the reported dollar value of imported worsted wool
fabric during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment under
the 2014 HTS subheading of worsted wool fabric;
(ii) Subtracting the lower duty rate (converted to numeric value)
that would have been applicable to the 2014 HTS subheading of worsted
wool fabric from the duty rate applicable to the calendar year
preceding the payment (converted to numeric value);
(iii) Multiplying the numeric values described in paragraphs
(c)(4)(i) and (ii) of this section; and
(iv) Adding the product obtained in paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this
section to the product obtained for every applicable subheading of
worsted wool fabric.
(d) Annual affidavit--(1) In general. An eligible person applying
for a payment under this section shall comply with all applicable
reporting requirements of this section and of Sec. 1471.10.
(2) Specific business information--(i) Imports and production.--An
eligible person shall, for the entire calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, report the actual dollar value and the actual
quantity of
(A) Imports into the U.S. of qualifying worsted wool fabric (square
meters); and
(B) The qualifying worsted wool fabric used by the eligible person
in the U.S.
(1) In the case of wool of the kind described in subheadings
9902.51.11 or 9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS, to produce worsted wool
suits, suit-type jackets and trousers for men and boys (units); or
(2) In the case of wool of the kind described in subheading
9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS, such wool that was manufactured (square
meters).
(ii) Direct and indirect importers--(A) In general. Eligible
persons that import qualifying worsted wool fabric through a third
party broker are considered to be indirect importers of the qualifying
worsted wool fabric. Persons that directly import qualifying worsted
wool fabric and pay the import duty for such wool are considered to be
direct importers of the qualifying worsted wool fabric.
(B) Reported dollar value. Eligible persons must state in their
annual affidavit whether, in the calendar year
[[Page 12331]]
immediately preceding the payment, they were direct or indirect
importers, and the dollar value of the imported qualifying worsted wool
fabric. The reported dollar value of such imports by indirect importers
will be subject to a 10% reduction.
(C) Affirmation. An eligible person shall annually affirm in the
affidavit that, in the calendar year immediately preceding the payment,
in the U.S., the eligible person:
(1) Directly or indirectly imported the qualifying worsted wool
fabric into the U.S.;
(2) Used that fabric to produce in the U.S. worsted wool suits,
suit jackets, and trousers for men and boys (or, in the case of
qualifying worsted wool fabric of the kind described in the 2014 HTS
subheading 9902.51.16, for manufactured in the U.S.); and
(3) Imported qualifying worsted wool fabric from the country of
origin identified in the affidavit.
(iii) Import documentation--(A) Direct imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding payment, an eligible person that
directly imported qualifying worsted wool fabric is required to submit
to FAS as part of the affidavit package scanned copies of CBP Form 7501
``Entry Summary'' for the relevant calculations made in the affidavit.
(B) Indirect imports. Applicable to the calendar year immediately
preceding payment, an eligible person that indirectly imported
qualifying worsted wool fabric is required to submit to FAS as part of
the affidavit package invoices from third party brokers as required in
the affidavit.
(3) Production of garments or manufacturing of qualifying worsted
wool fabric--(i) Production of garments--(A) In general. When reporting
the annual dollar value and quantity of imported qualifying worsted
wool fabric, and the annual dollar value and quantity of the qualifying
worsted wool fabric that was cut and sewn, an eligible person may
either have cut and sewn the wool on its own behalf or had another
person cut and sew the wool on behalf of the eligible person, provided
the eligible person owned the wool at the time it was cut and sewn.
(B) Applicability. This paragraph applies to wool of the kind
described in subheadings 9902.51.11 and 9902.51.15 of the 2014 HTS.
(ii) Manufacturing of qualifying worsted wool fabric--(A) In
general. When reporting the annual dollar value and quantity of
imported qualifying worsted wool fabric, and the annual dollar value
and quantity of the qualifying worsted wool fabric that was
manufactured, an eligible person may either have manufactured the wool
on its own behalf or had another person manufacture the wool, provided
the eligible person owned the wool at the time of manufacture.
(B) Applicability. This paragraph applies to wool of the kind
described in subheading 9902.51.16 of the 2014 HTS.
Sec. 1471.14 Wool yarn, wool fiber, and wool top duty compensation
payment.
(a) Definitions. In this section the following definitions apply:
(1) Duty. The term ``duty'' means the duty rate codified in the HTS
for a year that is applicable to qualifying wool of the kind described
in subheadings 9902.51.13 and 9902.51.14 of the 2014 HTS.
(2) Eligible person--(i) In general. The term ``eligible person''
means a manufacturer (or a successor-in-interest to the manufacturer)
in the U.S. during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment;
that
(A) Imported qualifying wool; and
(B) Manufactured the qualifying wool.
(ii) Successor-in-interest. If a person satisfies the criteria for
becoming a successor-in-interest to an eligible person under paragraph
(a)(4) of this section, the person shall succeed to the status of the
eligible person and become eligible for the payment.
(3) Qualifying wool. The term ``qualifying wool'' means imported
wool yarn of the kind described in subheading 9902.51.13 of the 2014
HTS, and imported wool fiber or wool top of the kind described in
subheading 9902.51.14 of the 2014 HTS, that, during the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment was
(i) Imported, directly or indirectly, by an eligible person (or a
successor-in-interest) into the U.S.; and
(ii) Manufactured by the eligible person in the U.S.
(4) Successor-in-interest. The term ``successor-in-interest'' means
a person that is eligible to claim a payment under this section as if
the person were the original eligible manufacturer, without regard to
section 3727, title 31, U.S. Code because of
(i) An assignment of the claim;
(ii) An assignment of the eligible person's right to manufacture
under the same trade name; or
(iii) A reorganization of the eligible person.
(b) Import duties. The duties on imports of qualifying wool were
suspended in their entirety in section 503 of the Trade and Development
Act of 2000. The suspension of the duties for both HTS subheadings of
qualifying wool was extended through December 31, 2014. These duties
were reinstated as of January 1, 2015.
(c) Duty compensation payment--(1) Calculation of payment. For each
of the 2015-2019 calendar years the duty compensation payment of an
eligible person will be established by calculating, as provided in
paragraphs (c)(2) through (5) of this section, the savings that would
have been realized by the eligible person for imports of qualifying
wool had the duty suspension been in effect.
(2) Savings for each subheading. The savings realized by an
eligible person for imports of qualifying wool under a HTS subheading
covered by this section shall be obtained by multiplying
(i) The reported dollar value of imports under a HTS subheading
during the calendar year immediately preceding the payment; and
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(5) of this section, the
duty applicable to that HTS subheading in the calendar year preceding
the payment, converted to numeric value.
(3) Sum of subheading savings. The product obtained in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section for imports of qualifying wool previously
described under each HTS subheading shall be added to the savings
obtained for imports under the other HTS subheading (as applicable).
(4) Duty compensation payment amount. The sum obtained in paragraph
(c)(3) of this section shall equal the annual duty compensation payment
for the eligible person for the applicable calendar year.
(5) Exception for 2015 payment. In the case of the 2015 payment,
for purposes of the calculation component described in paragraph (c)(2)
of this section the duty rate applicable in 2015 shall be deemed the
duty rate actually paid in 2014. The reason for this exception for the
2015 payment is that 2014 is both the last year in which the duty
suspension was still in effect, and is also the calendar year
immediately preceding the payment (the payment is in 2015). As a
result, for the 2015 payment, a proxy is necessary for the higher duty
rate in the calendar year immediately preceding the payment.
(d) Annual affidavit required--(1) In general. An eligible person
applying for a payment under this section shall comply with all
applicable reporting requirements described in this section and Sec.
1471.10.
(2) Specific business information--(i) Imports and production. An
eligible person shall, for the calendar year immediately preceding the
payment, report the actual dollar value and the actual quantity of:
[[Page 12332]]
(A) Imports into the U.S. of qualifying wool by the eligible
person; and
(B) Such qualifying wool that was manufactured in the U.S. by the
eligible person.
(ii) Direct and indirect importers--(A) In general. Eligible
persons that import qualifying wool through a third party broker are
considered to be indirect importers of the qualifying wool. Persons
that directly import qualifying wool and pay the import duty for such
wool are considered to be direct importers of the qualifying wool.
(B) Reported dollar value. Eligible persons must state in their
annual affidavit whether, in the calendar year immediately preceding
the payment, they were direct or indirect importers, and the dollar
value of the imported qualifying wool. The reported dollar value of
imports by indirect importers will be subject to a 10% reduction.
(C) Affirmation. An eligible person shall annually affirm in the
affidavit that, in the calendar year immediately preceding the payment,
the eligible person
(1) Directly or indirectly imported the qualifying wool into the
U.S.;
(2) Manufactured the qualifying wool in the U.S.; and
(3) Imported qualifying wool from the country of origin identified
in the affidavit.
(iii) Import documentation--(A) Direct imports. Applicable to the
calendar year immediately preceding the payment, an eligible person
that directly imported qualifying wool is required to submit to FAS as
part of the affidavit package scanned copies of CBP Form 7501 ``Entry
Summary'' for the relevant calculations made in the affidavit.
(B) Indirect imports. Applicable to the calendar year immediately
preceding the payment, an eligible person that indirectly imported
qualifying wool is required to submit to FAS as part of the affidavit
package invoices from third party brokers for the relevant calculations
made in the affidavit.
(3) Manufacture of qualifying wool. When reporting the annual
dollar value and quantity of imported qualifying wool, and the annual
dollar value and quantity of the qualifying wool that was manufactured,
an eligible person may either have manufactured the qualifying wool on
its own behalf or had another person manufacture the qualifying wool,
provided the eligible person owned the qualifying wool at the time of
manufacture.
Dated: February 25, 2015.
Phil C. Karsting,
Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service, and Vice President,
Commodity Credit Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015-04385 Filed 3-6-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-10-P