Click
HERE for photos from Claire’s recent meeting with Missouri Steel Pipe and Tube Manufacturers.
Keeping up her fight to protect American manufacturers’ ability to compete fairly, McCaskill
last month submitted testimony on behalf of Bull Moose, which has 85
employees in the St. Louis area and 80 in Gerald, Mo., and EXLTUBE,
which employs 103 in their North Kansas City pipe and tube mill. These
companies provide quality pipe and tube products
which are used in building applications that are essential to the
construction industry.
“Companies
in Missouri and across America that manufacture critical infrastructure
for use at home and abroad should have a level playing field to
complete in the global
market,” said McCaskill, a member of the Senate’s Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation. “The Commission’s decision helps
prevent further harm to companies that have already been penalized by
the dumping of pipe and tube products from foreign
countries—and is a welcome step in giving folks at companies like Bull
Moose and EXLTUBE the certainty they need for their employees and their
bottom line.”
“Bull
Moose and our employees in Missouri and throughout the country rely on
the enforcement of the trade laws and that is why we are seeking relief
from unfairly traded
imports of steel tubing products from Korea, Mexico and Turkey,” said
Michael Blatz, President of Bull Moose Tube, when McCaskill submitted
testimony. “We certainly appreciate the support that Senator McCaskill
has provided to the industry and workers on this
important matter.”
“Our
company and its employees in N. Kansas City are ready to compete in the
global trade environment, but we need to ensure that trade is conducted
fairly in the ongoing
investigation on imports of structural tubing from the subject
countries,” said Bill Snyder, President of EXLTUBE, when McCaskill
submitted testimony. “Having the support of Senator McCaskill and others
in Congress is instrumental in ensuring that trade laws
are enforced and that relief is provided to the industry and its
workers.”
The
International Trade Commission had preliminarily acknowledged that
dumping was occurring. The allegations brought before the Commission by
U.S. manufacturers claimed
that Korean companies are selling to the U.S. at below the cost to
produce. The Department of Commerce
has found that Korean, Mexican, and Turkish companies are selling to
the U.S. at dumped prices and that Turkish producers receive government
subsidies. Now that the International Trade Commission has made an
affirmative determination that these imports
are causing material injury to the U.S. producers, the Department of
Commerce can issue final orders implementing duties on the illegally
subsidized foreign imports.
McCaskill
has consistently advocated for a trade system that empowers U.S.
manufacturers to compete abroad and holds foreign competitors
accountable for gaming the system.
She supported the Leveling the Playing Field Act, legislation
signed into law in June 2015, which gives the Commerce Department clear
discretion to use adverse facts available in its trade investigations
as a trade remedy measure.
In
2010 and 2012,
McCaskill testified before the Commission in support of Missouri
companies, endorsing trade policies that protect jobs in Missouri auto
part manufacturing facilities, and in 2013 she
introduced a
proposal to target foreign companies that smuggle products into the
U.S. to avoid paying import fees. Last year she introduced the
bipartisan,
Duty Suspension Process Act, now law, which would simplify trade processes for America’s manufacturers.
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