Jamieson Greer, chief of staff at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative from May 2017, is joining King & Spalding as a partner in its international trade practice. The law firm said that Greer was involved in negotiations for the phase one deal with China and the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. “He also played a key role for USTR in the legislative reform of U.S. foreign investment reviews and implementation of the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act by [the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S.],” the firm said. Last year, King & Spalding hired Steven Vaughn, the general counsel at USTR.
Export license applications may be delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic as the Commerce Department prioritizes COVID-19-related applications, a top Commerce official said. Not all government agencies have remote access to Commerce’s unclassified system for license applications, which is also causing longer processing times, said Matt Borman, Commerce’s deputy assistant secretary for export administration.
The COVID-19 pandemic is causing “significant disruption” for the Wassenaar Arrangement, leading to the cancelation of at least one meeting and creating uncertainty about whether the group can remotely vote on new export controls, two Commerce Department officials said. Wassenaar was forced to cancel its April Experts Group meeting -- which normally addresses issues related to its lists of controlled items -- and is unsure if global travel restrictions will force cancellations of future meetings in June and its annual plenary session in December.
The Commerce Department has drafted a regulation that will address the ability of U.S. companies to participate in 5G standards setting bodies involving Huawei, a top Commerce official said. The rule is still being discussed within Commerce and has not yet been cleared for interagency review, Matt Borman, Commerce’s deputy assistant secretary for export administration, said during an April 29 Information Systems Technical Advisory Committee meeting.
Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., said that many of his colleagues think “that we can pull back and do everything ourselves,” and that he thinks they may look at the shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic response as evidence that reshoring is the way to go. “You will see more capacity building in the United States, and that makes sense; the idea we can do it all ourselves is pure folly.” Schneider, who was speaking on a webinar hosted by the Washington International Trade Association on April 28, also thinks there needs to be redundancy in supply chains, and more warehousing and less “just-in-time” delivery.
The Treasury Department announced fees for filing certain transactions with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., according to a notice. The interim rule, which will apply to formal written voluntary notices filed with CFIUS and not transactions submitted through declarations, establishes a range of possible fees, depending on the value of the transaction, with $300,000 being the highest fee. The rule takes effect May 1, but Treasury is accepting public comments through June 1. The agency also issued a fact sheet and a guidance for paying filing fees.
The Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security is working on guidance to help industry comply with the expanded licensing requirements for exports to China announced earlier this week (see 2004270027). The guidance will address new restrictions on exports intended for military users and uses, said Matt Borman, Commerce deputy assistant secretary for export administration. The rule expands the definition for military end-use and will cover military end-users in China, placing more of a compliance burden on industry.
The chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee and the top Republican on the committee want to authorize up to $750 million in grants to accelerate the deployment of “open interfaced, standards-based, and interoperable 5G networks.” Because the leadership of the committee supports the telecommunications bill introduced April 24, it's likely to pass the House. There is a companion bill in the Senate with bipartisan support.
The Commerce Department changed some details for its inaugural Emerging Technology Technical Advisory Committee meeting in May (see 2003050004), in a notice. Commerce clarified that the meeting will be held only through a remote teleconference and will take place from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. EDT on May 19. The meeting was previously scheduled for 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
The Commerce Department’s unclear rollout of an export control on geospatial imagery software is causing industry confusion and could lead to broad, unintended impacts on exports of certain artificial intelligence, industry representatives said in interviews. If unchanged, the rule could severely impact a range of companies in the geospatial field, they said, creating the type of broad consequences Commerce officials hoped to avoid (see 1911070014).