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Trade Bill Dies In Eleventh Hour
Import Tariff Remains High For Snowboard Boots
By Robyn Hakes 1/7/99
"We died on the Senate floor," says J.O. Ratliff, owner of New West
International and government-affairs representative for SnowSports
Industries America.
The death Ratliff is referring to was bill HR 4342, The Miscellaneous
Trade and Technical Corrections Act of 1998, which contained provisions
drafted to reduce punitive tariffs on numerous products-including
snowboard boots.
Approximately 180 tariff conditions were included as riders to the bill.
(A rider is additional clause appended to a legislative bill to secure
some distinct objective.) One of these riders would have temporarily
suspended the 21-percent duty on snowboard boots with textile uppers.
Other industry-related clauses within the bill affected steel for
snowboard or ski edges, and base materials.
The bill, already approved by the House, reached the Senate one hour
before the 105th Congress closed for the year. Unfortunately, the bill
failed to pass because of other non-industry related matters within HR
4342.
"Now we have to go back to square one," Ratliff says. "I've been looking
into some administrative avenues, but I don't think it's going to happen.
Tariff and import duties belong to the Congress. I had hoped customs
could bypass the legislation, but they're by the book."
Ratliff adds that the United States Customs Department recognizes that
the 21-percent tariff is unfair and it would consent to breaking
snowboard boots out of the category they currently fall under.
Though the fight began with the support of only one domestic
snowboard-boot brand, Ratliff says he now has support from others who are
affected by the tariff. "We've got the West Coast and the East Coast
involved in this now," he adds.
Unfortunately there are no guarantees that the new legislation will speed
through Congress. Ratliff says it could take up to two years before a
similar bill comes to the Senate floor for approval.
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