Monday, July 27, 2009
We've Moved!
We’ve moved. You can continue to get foreign-trade zone news by visiting us at our new location – http://www.integrationpoint.comglobaltradenews/
Friday, June 12, 2009
FTZ Board Grants Port of Houston Expansion of FTZ #84
The Foreign-Trade Zones Board has published a notice in the Federal Register announcing the result of its consideration of an application, filed Sept.10, 2008, submitted by the Port of Houston Authority, to expand its zone to include six additional sites in the Houston, Texas area. The board therefore is granting authority to expand FTZ #84 as described in the application and Federal Register notice. The grant is subject to the FTZ Act and the board's regulations of a 2,000-acre activation limit for the overall general-purpose zone project and further subject to a sunset provision that would terminate authority on May 31, 2014 for Sites 17 - 22, where no activity has occurred under FTZ procedures before that date.
To view this article, please visit Export Industry News.
To view this article, please visit Export Industry News.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Strategic Plan and Location for Famous Footwear Provider
Brown Shoe Company, Inc. recently marked the completion of its 350,000-square foot Famous Footwear Distribution Center, adding time savings and cost efficiencies to the process of shipping footwear to the chain's stores and consumers on the West Coast.
The Famous Footwear DC is located within Tejon Industrial Complex (TIC), a 1,450-acre master-planned business park anchoring California's central trade corridor at the junction of Interstate 5 and Highway 99 in Central California. TIC is part of the 270,000-acre Tejon Ranch, the largest contiguous expanse of private land in California. This strategic location, approximately 90 minutes north of the Los Angeles ports and four hours south of Oakland, gives warehouse operators efficient access to the state's two major port complexes and the ability to serve consumers from San Francisco to San Diego and east to Las Vegas in a one-day truck turn.
The Famous Footwear DC currently employs about 75 people, and is expected to create approximately 40 additional jobs in upcoming months. TIC provides access to the qualified workforce of the Bakersfield area, a 24-hour operating environment critical to warehouse operators, Foreign Trade Zone designation, efficient access to all the transit corridors of the 11 Western States, and has ample room for future expansion and customization.
To read the full article, visit Business Facilities.
Friday, June 5, 2009
FTZ Board Grants ZF Lemforder Corporation Authority for FTZ #38 Subzone Status
In a notice published in the Federal Register on June 3, the Foreign-Trade Zones (FTZ) Board granted authority for subzone status for activity related to assembly of automotive suspension systems at the ZF Lemforder Corporation facility located in Spartanburg, SC (Subzone 7), as requested by the South Carolina Ports Authority, grantee of FTZ #38. The application was formally filed on April 30, 2008.
To read the full article, please visit Export Industry News.
To read the full article, please visit Export Industry News.
International Business to Bring Growing Green Operation to Anderson, IN
A five-person team from Variety Global Business (VGB) Group spent the past three days in Anderson, IN where the company is considering a manufacturing and distribution center. At a time when much U.S. manufacturing has moved to Asia, John Lin, Founder of VGB, said he wants to bring his Chinese company to Anderson because of the skilled work force and to bring his product closer to his customers.
John Pitre, CEO of VGB’s “starchware” division, said the company has accelerated its timeline and could be operational in Anderson in nine months. VGB has also expanded the scope of the project from 120-140 jobs to around 450 jobs.
VGB produces “starchware,” an alternative to plastic foam products such as Styrofoam, made from corn starch. Pitre said tableware is the kind used at a picnic, while industrial starchware is used for food packaging. VGB claims its starchware is 97.7 percent compostable, and breaks down in just 120 days in a landfill.
Economic Development Director Linda Dawson said city officials put VGB in contact with creative banking experts and an architectural firm. The city also explained Anderson’s foreign trade zones as a designated area of the city that is like a foreign country, noting that most of the former automotive plants have been designated as FTZs. “Plant 9, for example, is not in an FTZ, but if we have an area already designated as an FTZ, we have the ability to swap properties.”
Officials from VGB haves expressed interest in the former General Motors Corp. Plant 20, off 38th Street near Scatterfield Road. But Plant 9, across from the former Guide Corp. property near 38th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, is also being considered for short-term operations.
For more information on the decision to manufacture out of Anderson, IN please visit The Herald Bulletin.
John Pitre, CEO of VGB’s “starchware” division, said the company has accelerated its timeline and could be operational in Anderson in nine months. VGB has also expanded the scope of the project from 120-140 jobs to around 450 jobs.
VGB produces “starchware,” an alternative to plastic foam products such as Styrofoam, made from corn starch. Pitre said tableware is the kind used at a picnic, while industrial starchware is used for food packaging. VGB claims its starchware is 97.7 percent compostable, and breaks down in just 120 days in a landfill.
Economic Development Director Linda Dawson said city officials put VGB in contact with creative banking experts and an architectural firm. The city also explained Anderson’s foreign trade zones as a designated area of the city that is like a foreign country, noting that most of the former automotive plants have been designated as FTZs. “Plant 9, for example, is not in an FTZ, but if we have an area already designated as an FTZ, we have the ability to swap properties.”
Officials from VGB haves expressed interest in the former General Motors Corp. Plant 20, off 38th Street near Scatterfield Road. But Plant 9, across from the former Guide Corp. property near 38th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, is also being considered for short-term operations.
For more information on the decision to manufacture out of Anderson, IN please visit The Herald Bulletin.
Labels:
foreign trade zones,
FTZ,
manufacturing authority
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Enid City, Oklahoma Gets the OK for a FTZ
A foreign trade zone can be a significant economic development for the city of Enid because it can allow participating businesses to defer or eliminate taxes on imported items.
Matthew S. Weaver, director of marketing and business development for Oklahoma City Free Trade Zone, discussed the benefits during the Enid City Commission study session Tuesday night. Weaver said a foreign trade zone is a customs duty management program created by the federal government in 1934 as part of the New Deal. Its purpose is to expedite trade and help increase global competitiveness of U.S.-based companies.
FTZ 106, located at Will Rogers World Airport, is a grantee and can grant the status to Enid. The city’s plan is to establish the zone at Enid Woodring Regional Airport, to aid in the development of an industrial park there. Weaver said there are cash flow advantages, including lower inventory costs, deferred, reduced or eliminated customs duties (taxes), savings distribution, preferential duty rates and other advantages.
An item allowing the establishment of a foreign trade zone was approved during the regular commission meeting.
To read the full article, please visit Enid News.
Matthew S. Weaver, director of marketing and business development for Oklahoma City Free Trade Zone, discussed the benefits during the Enid City Commission study session Tuesday night. Weaver said a foreign trade zone is a customs duty management program created by the federal government in 1934 as part of the New Deal. Its purpose is to expedite trade and help increase global competitiveness of U.S.-based companies.
FTZ 106, located at Will Rogers World Airport, is a grantee and can grant the status to Enid. The city’s plan is to establish the zone at Enid Woodring Regional Airport, to aid in the development of an industrial park there. Weaver said there are cash flow advantages, including lower inventory costs, deferred, reduced or eliminated customs duties (taxes), savings distribution, preferential duty rates and other advantages.
An item allowing the establishment of a foreign trade zone was approved during the regular commission meeting.
To read the full article, please visit Enid News.
Labels:
customs duties,
foreign trade zone,
FTZ
Charlotte Regional Partnership Named Grantee for FTZ 57
The Charlotte Regional Partnership has become the grantee and administrator for Foreign Trade Zone 57. Although designated "Mecklenburg County," FTZ 57 extends beyond the county's borders, including sites in Alexander, Cabarrus and Catawba counties.
The N.C. Department of Commerce requested that the public/private economic development organization provide the zone's oversight, so there was more direct regional involvement. Although FTZ 57 is the oldest in the state, it was the only one of the six North Carolina foreign trade zones that wasn't under local control.
"Although we always have promoted the FTZ as one of our regional assets, as the zone's administrator, we can more directly market and grow the foreign trade zone, as we work with existing industry and recruit new businesses to Charlotte USA," said Ronnie Bryant, Charlotte Regional Partnership president and chief executive officer.
Foreign trade zones offer tax and duty advantages to the existing industry and serve as an incentive to attract companies. Since FTZs are legally outside U.S. Customs territory, merchandise from anywhere in the world may enter a foreign trade zone without a formal customs entry or the payment of customs duties or government excise taxes.
Foreign trade zones can be a building or just a room, but they must be within 90 miles of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry. FTZ 57 includes 16 general purpose sites for public use, as well as two subzones that are company exclusive. Several additional sites are pending approval by the U.S. Foreign Trade Zones Board.
The N.C. Department of Commerce requested that the public/private economic development organization provide the zone's oversight, so there was more direct regional involvement. Although FTZ 57 is the oldest in the state, it was the only one of the six North Carolina foreign trade zones that wasn't under local control.
"Although we always have promoted the FTZ as one of our regional assets, as the zone's administrator, we can more directly market and grow the foreign trade zone, as we work with existing industry and recruit new businesses to Charlotte USA," said Ronnie Bryant, Charlotte Regional Partnership president and chief executive officer.
Foreign trade zones offer tax and duty advantages to the existing industry and serve as an incentive to attract companies. Since FTZs are legally outside U.S. Customs territory, merchandise from anywhere in the world may enter a foreign trade zone without a formal customs entry or the payment of customs duties or government excise taxes.
Foreign trade zones can be a building or just a room, but they must be within 90 miles of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry. FTZ 57 includes 16 general purpose sites for public use, as well as two subzones that are company exclusive. Several additional sites are pending approval by the U.S. Foreign Trade Zones Board.
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