Applications for Inclusion on the Binational Panels Roster Under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, 64835-64837 [2022-23261]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 206 / Wednesday, October 26, 2022 / Notices
be determined, are of cultural
significance, and, further, that their
temporary exhibition or display within
the United States as aforementioned is
in the national interest. I have ordered
that Public Notice of these
determinations be published in the
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elliot Chiu, Attorney-Adviser, Office of
the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of
State (telephone: 202–632–6471; email:
section2459@state.gov). The mailing
address is U.S. Department of State, L/
PD, 2200 C Street NW (SA–5), Suite
5H03, Washington, DC 20522–0505.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
foregoing determinations were made
pursuant to the authority vested in me
by the Act of October 19, 1965 (79 Stat.
985; 22 U.S.C. 2459), E.O. 12047 of
March 27, 1978, the Foreign Affairs
Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998
(112 Stat. 2681, et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 6501
note, et seq.), Delegation of Authority
No. 234 of October 1, 1999, Delegation
of Authority No. 236–3 of August 28,
2000, and Delegation of Authority No.
523 of December 22, 2021.
Stacy E. White,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Professional
and Cultural Exchanges, Bureau of
Educational and Cultural Affairs, Department
of State.
[FR Doc. 2022–23248 Filed 10–25–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–05–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. EP 771]
Report: Alternatives to URCS
Surface Transportation Board.
Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (Board) seeks written public
comments on the independent report
prepared by Laurits R. Christensen
Associates, Inc. (Christensen
Associates), entitled, Alternatives to
URCS. The report may be accessed via
the Board’s website at www.stb.gov.
DATES: Comments are due by February
23, 2023. Replies to comments are due
by May 24, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may
be filed with the Board either via efiling on the Board’s website at
www.stb.gov, or in writing addressed to:
Surface Transportation Board, Attn:
Docket No. EP 771, 395 E Street SW,
Washington, DC 20423–0001. Filings
will be posted to the Board’s website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Boyles at (202) 245–0336.
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SUMMARY:
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17:37 Oct 25, 2022
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Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Board
is authorized, under 49 U.S.C. 11161, to
maintain cost accounting rules for rail
carriers. In 1989, the Board’s
predecessor, the Interstate Commerce
Commission, adopted the Uniform
Railroad Costing System (URCS) as its
general purpose costing system.
Adoption of the Unif. R.R. Costing Sys.
as a Gen. Purpose Costing Sys. for All
Regul. Costing Purposes, 5 I.C.C.2d 894
(1989). The Board uses URCS for a
variety of regulatory functions. URCS is
used in rate reasonableness proceedings
as part of the initial market dominance
determination, and at later stages is
used in parts of the Board’s
determination as to whether the
challenged rate is reasonable, and, when
warranted, the maximum rate
prescription. URCS is also used to,
among other things, develop variable
costs for making cost determinations in
abandonment proceedings, to provide
the railroad industry and shippers with
a standardized costing model, to cost
the Board’s Carload Waybill Sample to
develop industry cost information, and
to provide interested parties with basic
cost information regarding railroad
industry operations.
In 2020 the Board commissioned
Christensen Associates to perform a
study and write a report to identify and
evaluate alternatives to URCS that could
be used as a replacement general
purpose costing methodology to
generate railroad-specific variable costs
for regulatory purposes. That report has
been completed and is posted on the
Board’s website at https://www.stb.gov/
reports-data/reports-studies/ and in this
docket. The Board now seeks public
comments and replies from all
interested persons on the report’s
recommendations. The Board has not
made any determinations on whether it
will propose changes to its general
purpose costing system. Given the
preliminary and exploratory nature of
this request for comments, the Board
will not release supporting materials,
such as the Confidential Carload
Waybill Sample data or underlying
workpapers developed by Christensen
Associates, at this time. Should the
Board move forward with a proposal to
modify its general purpose costing
system, a further opportunity for
comment will be provided.
It is ordered:
1. Comments are due by February 23,
2023; reply comments are due by May
24, 2023.
2. Notice of this decision will be
published in the Federal Register.
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3. This decision is effective on its
service date.
Decided: October 21, 2022.
By the Board, Mai T. Dinh, Director, Office
of Proceedings.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2022–23322 Filed 10–25–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
[Docket Number USTR–2022–0015]
Applications for Inclusion on the
Binational Panels Roster Under the
United States-Mexico-Canada
Agreement
Office of the United States
Trade Representative.
ACTION: Invitation for applications.
AGENCY:
The United States-MexicoCanada Agreement (USMCA) provides
for the establishment of a roster of
individuals to serve on binational
panels convened to review final
determinations in antidumping or
countervailing duty (AD/CVD)
proceedings and amendments to AD/
CVD statutes of a USMCA Party. The
United States annually renews its
selections for the roster. The Office of
the United States Trade Representative
(USTR) invites applications from
eligible individuals wishing to be
included on the roster for the period
April 1, 2023, through March 31, 2024.
DATES: USTR must receive your
application by November 30, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You should submit your
application through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov (regs.gov), using
docket number USTR–2022–0015.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Philip Butler, Associate General
Counsel, Philip.A.Butler@ustr.eop.gov,
(202) 395–5804.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
A. Binational Panel AD/CVD Reviews
Under the USMCA
Article 10.12 of the USMCA provides
that a party involved in an AD/CVD
proceeding may obtain review by a
binational panel of a final AD/CVD
determination of one USMCA Party
with respect to the products of another
USMCA Party. Binational panels decide
whether AD/CVD determinations are in
accordance with the domestic laws of
the importing USMCA Party using the
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standard of review that would have
been applied by a domestic court of the
importing USMCA Party. A panel may
uphold the AD/CVD determination, or
may remand it to the national
administering authority for action not
inconsistent with the panel’s decision.
Panel decisions may be reviewed in
specific circumstances by a threemember extraordinary challenge
committee, selected from a separate
roster composed of fifteen current or
former judges.
Article 10.11 of the USMCA provides
that a USMCA Party may refer an
amendment to the AD/CVD statutes of
another USMCA Party to a binational
panel for a declaratory opinion as to
whether the amendment is inconsistent
with the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT), the GATT
Antidumping or Subsidies Codes,
successor agreements, or the object and
purpose of the USMCA with regard to
the establishment of fair and predictable
conditions for the liberalization of trade.
If the panel finds that the amendment is
inconsistent, the two USMCA Parties
must consult and seek to achieve a
mutually satisfactory solution.
B. Roster and Composition of
Binational Panels
Annex 10–B.1 of the USMCA
provides for the maintenance of a roster
of at least 75 individuals for service on
Chapter 10 binational panels, with each
USMCA Party selecting at least 25
individuals. A separate five-person
panel is formed for each review of a
final AD/CVD determination or
statutory amendment. To form a panel,
the two USMCA Parties involved each
appoint two panelists, normally by
drawing upon individuals from the
roster. If the Parties cannot agree upon
the fifth panelist, one of the Parties,
decided by lot, selects the fifth panelist
from the roster. The majority of
individuals on each panel must consist
of lawyers in good standing, and the
chair of the panel must be a lawyer.
When there is a request to establish a
panel, roster members from the two
involved USMCA Parties will complete
a disclosure form that is used to identify
possible conflicts of interest or
appearances thereof. The disclosure
form requests information regarding
financial interests and affiliations,
including information regarding the
identity of clients of the roster member
and, if applicable, clients of the roster
member’s firm.
C. Criteria for Eligibility for Inclusion
on Roster
The United States bases the selection
of individuals for inclusion on the
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Chapter 10 roster on the eligibility
criteria set out in Annex 10–B.1 of the
USMCA. Annex 10–B.1 provides that
Chapter 10 roster members must be
citizens of a USMCA Party, must be of
good character and of high standing and
repute, and are to be chosen strictly on
the basis of their objectivity, reliability,
sound judgment, and general familiarity
with international trade law. Aside from
judges, roster members may not be
affiliated with the governments of any of
the three USMCA Parties. Annex 10–B.1
also provides that, to the fullest extent
practicable, the roster shall include
judges and former judges.
USTR is committed to diversity,
equity, inclusion, and accessibility, and
encourages all qualified individuals to
apply.
D. Adherence to the USMCA Code of
Conduct for Binational Panelists
The Code of Conduct under Chapter
10 and Chapter 31 (Dispute Settlement)
(see https://can-mex-usa-sec.org/
secretariat/agreement-accord-acuerdo/
usmca-aceum-tmec/code-code-codigo.
aspx?lang=eng), which was established
pursuant to Article 10.17 of the
USMCA, provides that current and
former Chapter 10 roster members
‘‘shall avoid impropriety and the
appearance of impropriety and shall
observe high standards of conduct so
that the integrity and impartiality of the
dispute settlement process is
preserved.’’ The Code of Conduct also
provides that candidates to serve on
Chapter 10 panels, as well as those who
ultimately are selected to serve as
panelists, have an obligation to
‘‘disclose any interest, relationship or
matter that is likely to affect [their]
impartiality or independence, or that
might reasonably create an appearance
of impropriety or an apprehension of
bias.’’ Annex 10–B.1 of the USMCA
provides that roster members may
engage in other business while serving
as panelists, subject to the Code of
Conduct and provided that such
business does not interfere with the
performance of the panelist’s duties. In
particular, Annex 10–B.1 states that
‘‘[w]hile acting as a panelist, a panelist
may not appear as counsel before
another panel.’’
E. Procedures for Selection of Roster
Members
Section 412 of the United StatesMexico-Canada Agreement
Implementation Act (Pub. L. 116–113
(19 U.S.C. 4582)), establishes
procedures for the selection by USTR of
the individuals chosen by the United
States for inclusion on the Chapter 10
roster. The roster is renewed annually,
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Sfmt 4703
and applies during the one-year period
beginning April 1st of each calendar
year.
Under Section 412, an interagency
committee chaired by USTR prepares a
preliminary list of candidates eligible
for inclusion on the Chapter 10 roster.
After consultation with the Senate
Committee on Finance and the House
Committee on Ways and Means, the
U.S. Trade Representative selects the
final list of individuals chosen by the
United States for inclusion on the
Chapter 10 roster.
F. Applications
USTR invites eligible individuals who
wish to be included on the Chapter 10
roster for the period April 1, 2023,
through March 31, 2024, to submit
applications. In order to be assured of
consideration, USTR must receive your
application by November 30, 2022.
Submit applications electronically to
regs.gov, using docket number USTR–
2022–0015. For technical questions on
submitting comments on regs.gov,
please contact the regs.gov help desk at
1–877–378–5457. If you need an
alternative to online submission, please
contact Sandy McKinzy at (202) 395–
9483 before transmitting your
application and in advance of the
deadline.
In order to ensure the timely receipt
and consideration of applications, USTR
strongly encourages applicants to make
on-line submissions, using regs.gov. To
apply via regs.gov, enter docket number
USTR–2022–0015 on the home page and
click ‘search.’ The site will provide a
search-results page listing all documents
associated with this docket. Find a
reference to this notice by selecting
‘notice’ under ‘document type’ on the
left side of the search-results page, and
click on the ‘comment now’ link. For
further information on using the
regs.gov website, please consult the
resources provided on the website by
clicking on ‘How to Use
Regulations.gov’ on the bottom of the
page.
Regs.gov allows users to provide
comments by filling in a ‘type comment’
field, or by attaching a document using
an ‘upload file’ field. USTR prefers that
applications be provided in an attached
document. If a document is attached,
please type ‘‘Application for Inclusion
on USMCA Chapter 10 Roster’’ in the
‘upload file’ field. USTR prefers
submissions in Microsoft Word (.doc) or
Adobe Acrobat (.pdf). If the submission
is in an application other than those
two, please indicate the name of the
application in the ‘type comment’ field.
Applications must be typewritten,
and should be headed ‘‘Application for
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Inclusion on USMCA Chapter 10
Roster.’’ Applications should include
the following information, and each
section of the application should be
numbered as indicated:
1. Name of the applicant.
2. Business address, telephone
number, fax number, and email address.
3. Citizenship(s).
4. Current employment, including
title, description of responsibility, and
name and address of employer.
5. Relevant education and
professional training.
6. Spanish language fluency, written
and spoken.
7. Post-education employment
history, including the dates and
addresses of each prior position and a
summary of responsibilities.
8. Relevant professional affiliations
and certifications, including, if any,
current bar memberships in good
standing.
9. A list and copies of publications,
testimony, and speeches, if any,
concerning AD/CVD law. Judges or
former judges should list relevant
judicial decisions. Submit only one
copy of publications, testimony,
speeches, and decisions.
10. Summary of any current and past
employment by, or consulting or other
work for, the Governments of the United
States, Canada, or Mexico.
11. The names and nationalities of all
foreign principals for whom the
applicant is currently or has previously
been registered pursuant to the Foreign
Agents Registration Act, 22 U.S.C. 611
et seq., and the dates of all registration
periods.
12. List of proceedings brought under
U.S., Canadian, or Mexican AD/CVD
law regarding imports of U.S., Canadian,
or Mexican products in which the
applicant advised or represented (for
example, as consultant or attorney) any
U.S., Canadian, or Mexican party to
such proceeding and, for each such
proceeding listed, the name and country
of incorporation of such party.
13. A short statement of qualifications
and availability for service on Chapter
10 panels, including information
relevant to the applicant’s familiarity
with international trade law and
willingness and ability to make time
commitments necessary for service on
panels.
14. On a separate page, the names,
addresses, telephone and fax numbers of
three individuals willing to provide
information concerning the applicant’s
qualifications for service, including the
applicant’s character, reputation,
reliability, judgment, and familiarity
with international trade law.
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17:37 Oct 25, 2022
Jkt 259001
G. Current Roster Members and Prior
Applicants
Current members of the Chapter 10
roster who remain interested in
inclusion on the Chapter 10 roster only
need to indicate that they are reapplying
and submit updates (if any) to their
applications on file. Current members
do not need to resubmit their
applications. Individuals who
previously have applied but have not
been selected must submit new
applications to reapply. If an applicant,
including a current or former roster
member, has previously submitted
materials referred to in item 9, such
materials need not be resubmitted.
H. Public Disclosure
Applications are covered by a Privacy
Act System of Records Notice and are
not subject to public disclosure and will
not be posted publicly on regs.gov. They
may be referred to other federal agencies
and Congressional committees in the
course of determining eligibility for the
roster, and shared with foreign
governments and the USMCA
Secretariat in the course of panel
selection.
I. False Statements
False statements by applicants
regarding their personal or professional
qualifications, or financial or other
relevant interests that bear on the
applicants’ suitability for placement on
the Chapter 10 roster or for appointment
to binational panels, are subject to
criminal sanctions under 18 U.S.C.
1001.
Juan Millan,
Assistant United States Trade Representative
for Monitoring and Enforcement, Office of
the United States Trade Representative.
[FR Doc. 2022–23261 Filed 10–25–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3390–F3–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
[Docket No. FMCSA–2017–0054]
Hours of Service; United Parcel
Service Inc.; Application for Exemption
Renewal
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of provisional renewal of
exemption; request for comments.
AGENCY:
FMCSA announces its
decision to provisionally renew a
United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS)
exemption from various provisions of
SUMMARY:
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64837
the mandate to use electronic logging
devices (ELD). FMCSA previously
granted the exemption to allow (1) all
motor carriers and drivers that use
portable, driver-based ELDs to record
engine data only when the driver is in
a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) and
the engine is powered, and (2) all motor
carriers to configure an ELD with a yardmove mode that does not require a
driver to re-input yard-move status
every time the tractor is powered off.
The Agency has determined that
renewal of the temporary exemption
would not have an adverse impact on
safety, and that a level of safety
equivalent to or greater than that
provided by the regulation would be
maintained. The exemption renewal is
for 5 years.
DATES: This renewed exemption is
effective October 21, 2022 and expires
on October 21, 2027. Comments must be
received on or before November 25,
2022.
You may submit comments
identified by Federal Docket
Management System (FDMS) Number
FMCSA–2017–0054 by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
www.regulations.gov. See the Public
Participation and Request for Comments
section below for further information.
• Mail: Dockets Operations, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building,
Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. E.T., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
Each submission must include the
Agency name and the docket number
(FMCSA–2017–0054) for this notice.
Note that DOT posts all comments
received without change to
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information included in a
comment. Please see the Privacy Act
heading below.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments, go to www.regulations.gov at
any time or visit Room W12–140 on the
ground level of the West Building, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., ET,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. To be sure someone is there to
help you, please call (202) 366–9317 or
(202) 366–9826 before visiting Dockets
Operations.
Privacy Act: In accordance with 49
U.S.C. 31315(b), DOT solicits comments
ADDRESSES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 206 (Wednesday, October 26, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64835-64837]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-23261]
=======================================================================
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OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
[Docket Number USTR-2022-0015]
Applications for Inclusion on the Binational Panels Roster Under
the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement
AGENCY: Office of the United States Trade Representative.
ACTION: Invitation for applications.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) provides for
the establishment of a roster of individuals to serve on binational
panels convened to review final determinations in antidumping or
countervailing duty (AD/CVD) proceedings and amendments to AD/CVD
statutes of a USMCA Party. The United States annually renews its
selections for the roster. The Office of the United States Trade
Representative (USTR) invites applications from eligible individuals
wishing to be included on the roster for the period April 1, 2023,
through March 31, 2024.
DATES: USTR must receive your application by November 30, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You should submit your application through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov (regs.gov), using docket
number USTR-2022-0015. Follow the instructions for submitting comments
below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Philip Butler, Associate General
Counsel, [email protected], (202) 395-5804.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Binational Panel AD/CVD Reviews Under the USMCA
Article 10.12 of the USMCA provides that a party involved in an AD/
CVD proceeding may obtain review by a binational panel of a final AD/
CVD determination of one USMCA Party with respect to the products of
another USMCA Party. Binational panels decide whether AD/CVD
determinations are in accordance with the domestic laws of the
importing USMCA Party using the
[[Page 64836]]
standard of review that would have been applied by a domestic court of
the importing USMCA Party. A panel may uphold the AD/CVD determination,
or may remand it to the national administering authority for action not
inconsistent with the panel's decision. Panel decisions may be reviewed
in specific circumstances by a three-member extraordinary challenge
committee, selected from a separate roster composed of fifteen current
or former judges.
Article 10.11 of the USMCA provides that a USMCA Party may refer an
amendment to the AD/CVD statutes of another USMCA Party to a binational
panel for a declaratory opinion as to whether the amendment is
inconsistent with the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),
the GATT Antidumping or Subsidies Codes, successor agreements, or the
object and purpose of the USMCA with regard to the establishment of
fair and predictable conditions for the liberalization of trade. If the
panel finds that the amendment is inconsistent, the two USMCA Parties
must consult and seek to achieve a mutually satisfactory solution.
B. Roster and Composition of Binational Panels
Annex 10-B.1 of the USMCA provides for the maintenance of a roster
of at least 75 individuals for service on Chapter 10 binational panels,
with each USMCA Party selecting at least 25 individuals. A separate
five-person panel is formed for each review of a final AD/CVD
determination or statutory amendment. To form a panel, the two USMCA
Parties involved each appoint two panelists, normally by drawing upon
individuals from the roster. If the Parties cannot agree upon the fifth
panelist, one of the Parties, decided by lot, selects the fifth
panelist from the roster. The majority of individuals on each panel
must consist of lawyers in good standing, and the chair of the panel
must be a lawyer.
When there is a request to establish a panel, roster members from
the two involved USMCA Parties will complete a disclosure form that is
used to identify possible conflicts of interest or appearances thereof.
The disclosure form requests information regarding financial interests
and affiliations, including information regarding the identity of
clients of the roster member and, if applicable, clients of the roster
member's firm.
C. Criteria for Eligibility for Inclusion on Roster
The United States bases the selection of individuals for inclusion
on the Chapter 10 roster on the eligibility criteria set out in Annex
10-B.1 of the USMCA. Annex 10-B.1 provides that Chapter 10 roster
members must be citizens of a USMCA Party, must be of good character
and of high standing and repute, and are to be chosen strictly on the
basis of their objectivity, reliability, sound judgment, and general
familiarity with international trade law. Aside from judges, roster
members may not be affiliated with the governments of any of the three
USMCA Parties. Annex 10-B.1 also provides that, to the fullest extent
practicable, the roster shall include judges and former judges.
USTR is committed to diversity, equity, inclusion, and
accessibility, and encourages all qualified individuals to apply.
D. Adherence to the USMCA Code of Conduct for Binational Panelists
The Code of Conduct under Chapter 10 and Chapter 31 (Dispute
Settlement) (see https://can-mex-usa-sec.org/secretariat/agreement-accord-acuerdo/usmca-aceum-tmec/code-code-codigo.aspx?lang=eng), which
was established pursuant to Article 10.17 of the USMCA, provides that
current and former Chapter 10 roster members ``shall avoid impropriety
and the appearance of impropriety and shall observe high standards of
conduct so that the integrity and impartiality of the dispute
settlement process is preserved.'' The Code of Conduct also provides
that candidates to serve on Chapter 10 panels, as well as those who
ultimately are selected to serve as panelists, have an obligation to
``disclose any interest, relationship or matter that is likely to
affect [their] impartiality or independence, or that might reasonably
create an appearance of impropriety or an apprehension of bias.'' Annex
10-B.1 of the USMCA provides that roster members may engage in other
business while serving as panelists, subject to the Code of Conduct and
provided that such business does not interfere with the performance of
the panelist's duties. In particular, Annex 10-B.1 states that
``[w]hile acting as a panelist, a panelist may not appear as counsel
before another panel.''
E. Procedures for Selection of Roster Members
Section 412 of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement
Implementation Act (Pub. L. 116-113 (19 U.S.C. 4582)), establishes
procedures for the selection by USTR of the individuals chosen by the
United States for inclusion on the Chapter 10 roster. The roster is
renewed annually, and applies during the one-year period beginning
April 1st of each calendar year.
Under Section 412, an interagency committee chaired by USTR
prepares a preliminary list of candidates eligible for inclusion on the
Chapter 10 roster. After consultation with the Senate Committee on
Finance and the House Committee on Ways and Means, the U.S. Trade
Representative selects the final list of individuals chosen by the
United States for inclusion on the Chapter 10 roster.
F. Applications
USTR invites eligible individuals who wish to be included on the
Chapter 10 roster for the period April 1, 2023, through March 31, 2024,
to submit applications. In order to be assured of consideration, USTR
must receive your application by November 30, 2022. Submit applications
electronically to regs.gov, using docket number USTR-2022-0015. For
technical questions on submitting comments on regs.gov, please contact
the regs.gov help desk at 1-877-378-5457. If you need an alternative to
online submission, please contact Sandy McKinzy at (202) 395-9483
before transmitting your application and in advance of the deadline.
In order to ensure the timely receipt and consideration of
applications, USTR strongly encourages applicants to make on-line
submissions, using regs.gov. To apply via regs.gov, enter docket number
USTR-2022-0015 on the home page and click `search.' The site will
provide a search-results page listing all documents associated with
this docket. Find a reference to this notice by selecting `notice'
under `document type' on the left side of the search-results page, and
click on the `comment now' link. For further information on using the
regs.gov website, please consult the resources provided on the website
by clicking on `How to Use Regulations.gov' on the bottom of the page.
Regs.gov allows users to provide comments by filling in a `type
comment' field, or by attaching a document using an `upload file'
field. USTR prefers that applications be provided in an attached
document. If a document is attached, please type ``Application for
Inclusion on USMCA Chapter 10 Roster'' in the `upload file' field. USTR
prefers submissions in Microsoft Word (.doc) or Adobe Acrobat (.pdf).
If the submission is in an application other than those two, please
indicate the name of the application in the `type comment' field.
Applications must be typewritten, and should be headed
``Application for
[[Page 64837]]
Inclusion on USMCA Chapter 10 Roster.'' Applications should include the
following information, and each section of the application should be
numbered as indicated:
1. Name of the applicant.
2. Business address, telephone number, fax number, and email
address.
3. Citizenship(s).
4. Current employment, including title, description of
responsibility, and name and address of employer.
5. Relevant education and professional training.
6. Spanish language fluency, written and spoken.
7. Post-education employment history, including the dates and
addresses of each prior position and a summary of responsibilities.
8. Relevant professional affiliations and certifications,
including, if any, current bar memberships in good standing.
9. A list and copies of publications, testimony, and speeches, if
any, concerning AD/CVD law. Judges or former judges should list
relevant judicial decisions. Submit only one copy of publications,
testimony, speeches, and decisions.
10. Summary of any current and past employment by, or consulting or
other work for, the Governments of the United States, Canada, or
Mexico.
11. The names and nationalities of all foreign principals for whom
the applicant is currently or has previously been registered pursuant
to the Foreign Agents Registration Act, 22 U.S.C. 611 et seq., and the
dates of all registration periods.
12. List of proceedings brought under U.S., Canadian, or Mexican
AD/CVD law regarding imports of U.S., Canadian, or Mexican products in
which the applicant advised or represented (for example, as consultant
or attorney) any U.S., Canadian, or Mexican party to such proceeding
and, for each such proceeding listed, the name and country of
incorporation of such party.
13. A short statement of qualifications and availability for
service on Chapter 10 panels, including information relevant to the
applicant's familiarity with international trade law and willingness
and ability to make time commitments necessary for service on panels.
14. On a separate page, the names, addresses, telephone and fax
numbers of three individuals willing to provide information concerning
the applicant's qualifications for service, including the applicant's
character, reputation, reliability, judgment, and familiarity with
international trade law.
G. Current Roster Members and Prior Applicants
Current members of the Chapter 10 roster who remain interested in
inclusion on the Chapter 10 roster only need to indicate that they are
reapplying and submit updates (if any) to their applications on file.
Current members do not need to resubmit their applications. Individuals
who previously have applied but have not been selected must submit new
applications to reapply. If an applicant, including a current or former
roster member, has previously submitted materials referred to in item
9, such materials need not be resubmitted.
H. Public Disclosure
Applications are covered by a Privacy Act System of Records Notice
and are not subject to public disclosure and will not be posted
publicly on regs.gov. They may be referred to other federal agencies
and Congressional committees in the course of determining eligibility
for the roster, and shared with foreign governments and the USMCA
Secretariat in the course of panel selection.
I. False Statements
False statements by applicants regarding their personal or
professional qualifications, or financial or other relevant interests
that bear on the applicants' suitability for placement on the Chapter
10 roster or for appointment to binational panels, are subject to
criminal sanctions under 18 U.S.C. 1001.
Juan Millan,
Assistant United States Trade Representative for Monitoring and
Enforcement, Office of the United States Trade Representative.
[FR Doc. 2022-23261 Filed 10-25-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3390-F3-P