Cross-border food shipments worry CTA

Oct 13, 2003 12:00 PM, from staff and wire reports

The Canadian Trucking Alliance (CTA) has expressed concern about the difference in United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) interim final rules for food that is moved across the borderÑand rules that are part of US customs and border protection (CBP).

"Carriers are the ones who will bear the brunt of border delays if there is any breakdown in the information flow among food importers, customs brokers, the CBP, and the FDA," said David Bradley, CTA chief executive officer.

The FDA rules requires prior notice of imported food shipments and registration of food facilities. In addition, pre-notification at least two hours before arrival at the border will be required for cross-border food shipments. FDA has advised that the final regulation could see time frames further reduced as part of the FDA-CBP plan to coordinate border-management activities more efficiently.

Under the CBP proposal, shipments qualified under the Free and Secure Trade (FAST) program would be subject to a pre-notification interval of only 30 minutes and one hour for all other imports. Carriers with transport vehicles that hold food only in the usual course of transportation do not have to register with the FDA.







Directories

Newsletter

Events

Visit Our Directories

Access our growing list of guides and directories:

· Refrigeration Unit Repair Directory
· LTL Routing Guide
· Warehousing and Distribution Directory
· Gross Revenue Reports




Subscribe to our Newsletter

Refrigerated Transporter’s Business Picture is a weekly update of news and trends in refrigerated transportation and logistics.

Check out our calendar

Come here to see upcoming events in the Refrigerated Transport Industry. Mark your calendars early!

Search 2.5+ million listings
Browse Back Issues