Rule 18 Jul 2025 compliance, agriculture, regulation, customs duties and inspection, imports, exports, trade agreements, canada, business efficiency, foreign trade, vegetables, fruits, agricultural commodities, cost reduction

🥕Regulatory Update

FAS is in the process of reviewing all regulations within its purview to reduce regulatory burdens and costs. Pursuant to this review, FAS has identified the following obsolete, unnecessary, and outdated provisions in title 7 of the Code of Federal Regulation (CFR). FAS is removing these provisions to streamline and update title 7.

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Rule 1 Jul 2025 federal acquisition regulation, regulation, government contracts, customs duties and inspection, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, business compliance, claims, vessels, maritime, insurance, surety bonds, wages, seamen, national defense, agency agreements, uniform system of accounts

⚓Rescinding Maritime Regulations

MARAD is deleting 46 CFR parts 317, 324, 325, 326, 328, 329, 330, 332, 335, 336, 337, 338, and 339, which pertain to terms under agreements with agents. While MARAD is retaining its 46 CFR part 315 regulation addressing agency agreements and the appointment of agents, other regulations that simply provide static procedures to serve as terms of agreement are obsolete and are being rescinded because they are covered by clauses contained in the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR). In the more than 30 years since MARAD last updated its regulations, the development of its service agreements has benefited from the uniformity and transparency provided by FAR clauses, and MARAD has increased reliance on them.

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Rule 16 Jun 2025 compliance, agriculture, usda, transportation, customs duties and inspection, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, environmental impact statements, biotechnology, packaging and containers, quarantine, plant diseases and pests, genetically-engineered-organisms

🌱Overview of Amendments to Genetically Engineered Organism Regulations

On December 2, 2024, a Federal court vacated the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) final rule issued on May 18, 2020 (the May 2020 final rule) that revised APHIS' regulations governing the movement of certain genetically modified organisms and was issued under the authority of the Plant Protection Act. APHIS is therefore amending the CFR to conform the CFR to the Federal Court's vacatur of that rule. The Court's vacatur was effective December 2, 2024, and had the legal effect of vacating the May 2020 final rule in its entirety and restoring the legal effect of the pre-May 2020 regulations. These technical conforming amendments revise the CFR to reflect the court's vacatur of the May 2020 final rule.

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Rule 14 May 2025 customs duties and inspection, imports, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, u.s. customs and border protection, import restrictions, archaeological materials, customs compliance, ethnological materials, lebanon

🏺Emergency Import Restrictions on Lebanese Cultural Materials

This document amends the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations to reflect the imposition of emergency import restrictions on categories of archaeological and ethnological material of Lebanon, pursuant to a determination made by the United States Department of State under the terms of the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act. The emergency import restrictions will be in effect until January 23, 2029, unless extended. This document contains the Designated List of Archaeological and Ethnological Material of Lebanon that describes the types of objects or categories of archaeological and ethnological material to which the import restrictions apply.

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Rule 5 May 2025 customs duties and inspection, imports, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, trade regulations, customs, cultural property, uzbekistan, import restrictions, archaeological materials

🏺New Import Restrictions on Archaeological Materials from Uzbekistan

This document amends the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations to reflect the imposition of import restrictions on certain archaeological and ethnological materials from the Republic of Uzbekistan (Uzbekistan). These restrictions are imposed pursuant to an agreement between the United States and Uzbekistan, entered into under the authority of the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act. This document amends the CBP regulations by adding Uzbekistan to the list of countries which have bilateral agreements with the United States imposing cultural property import restrictions and contains the Designated List, describing the archaeological and ethnological material to which the restrictions apply.

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Rule 11 Apr 2025 customs duties and inspection, imports, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, customs regulations, el salvador, cultural property, import restrictions, historical artifacts

🏺Import Restrictions on El Salvador's Cultural Material Extended Through 2030

This document amends the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations to extend import restrictions on certain material from the Republic of El Salvador. The Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State, has made the requisite determinations for extending the import restrictions, originally imposed on certain archaeological material by Treasury Decision 95-20, and amended by CBP Decision 20-04 to cover certain ecclesiastical ethnological material. These import restrictions are being extended pursuant to an exchange of diplomatic notes. The CBP regulations are being amended to reflect this further extension through March 2, 2030.

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Rule 26 Mar 2025 customs duties and inspection, imports, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, ecuador, trade policy, import restrictions, archaeological material, customs regulation, ethnological material

⛏️Extension of Import Restrictions on Ecuadorian Cultural Property

This document amends the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations to extend import restrictions on certain archaeological and ethnological material from Ecuador. The Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs, United States Department of State, has made the requisite determinations for extending the import restrictions, which were originally imposed by CBP Decision 20-03. These import restrictions are being extended pursuant to an exchange of diplomatic notes. The CBP regulations are being amended to reflect this extension through January 16, 2030.

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Rule 21 Mar 2025 compliance, trade, customs duties and inspection, imports, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, customs, import restrictions, archaeological material, jordan

🏺Import Restrictions Extended on Jordanian Archaeological Material

This document amends the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations to extend import restrictions on certain archaeological material from the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Educational and Cultural Affairs, United States Department of State, has made the requisite determinations for extending the import restrictions, which were originally imposed by CBP Decision 20-02. These import restrictions are being extended pursuant to an exchange of diplomatic notes. The CBP regulations are being amended to reflect this further extension through January 14, 2030.

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Rule 20 Mar 2025 compliance, regulations, transportation, customs duties and inspection, imports, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, intergovernmental relations, penalties, atf, research, exports, business implications, doj, authority delegations (government agencies), military personnel, organization and functions (government agencies), arms and munitions, seizures and forfeitures, government employees, law enforcement officers, firearms

🔫Regulatory Changes in Firearms - Impacts on Businesses

This interim final rule ("IFR") amends the Department of Justice ("Department") regulations relating to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives ("ATF") by withdrawing effectively moribund regulations regarding how ATF will adjudicate applications for relief from the disabilities imposed by certain firearms laws and withdrawing a related delegation.

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Regulatory Compliance, Consumer Trends 17 Jan 2025 compliance, customs duties and inspection, imports, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, claims, research, freight, exports, excise taxes, surety bonds, grains, labeling, advertising, trade practices, scientific equipment, alcohol and alcoholic beverages, vinegar, wine, liquors, spices and flavorings, electronic funds transfers, fruit juices, packaging and containers, food additives, warehouses, treaties, cosmetics, beer, consumer information, alcohol industry, labeling regulations

🍷New Alcohol Facts Labeling Regulation

The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) proposes to require disclosure of per-serving alcohol, calorie, and nutrient content information in an "Alcohol Facts" statement on all alcohol beverage labels subject to TTB's regulatory authority under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act (FAA Act). This rulemaking responds to the Department of the Treasury's February 2022 report on "Competition in the Markets for Beer, Wine, and Spirits," which recommended that TTB revive or initiate rulemaking on alcohol content, nutritional content, and appropriate serving sizes for alcohol beverage labels. Pursuant to its authorities under both the FAA Act and the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, TTB is also proposing mandatory alcohol content statements for certain types of malt beverages, beer, and wine that are not currently required to be labeled with an alcohol content statement. TTB proposes a compliance date of 5 years from the date that a final rule resulting from this proposal is published in the Federal Register.

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