

UNITE! 

Textile/Fiber
Coalition and 165 Senators and Representatives Urge Action on China Safeguard
October 29, 2003
WASHINGTON,
DC – 139 U.S. Representatives and 26 U.S. Senators signed letters urging the
Administration to invoke the special textile China safeguard and to not include exceptions, such as tariff preference
levels (TPLs), in CAFTA that would allow China and other free-rider foreign
suppliers to benefit from agreements designed to promote trade and investment
between signatory countries at the expense of U.S. and regional
manufacturers.
In addition, other U.S. Senators and U.S.
Representatives sent individual letters to the Administration supporting
implementation of the China safeguard.
Congressmen
Howard Coble (R-NC), John Spratt (D-SC), Virgil Goode (R-VA), and Bill Pascrell
(D-NJ) sponsored the House letter.
Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Ernest F. Hollings (D-SC) sponsored
the Senate letter.
Allen
E. Gant, Jr., CEO of Glen Raven Inc., said, “The united textile/fiber coalition
would like to thank the Senators and Representatives who signed these
letters. These letters show there is a
strong, bipartisan, geographically diverse, coalition on Capitol Hill
supporting the industry’s China safeguard petitions. The time for the Administration to act on the textile industry’s
China safeguard petitions is now ”
Bruce
Raynor, President of UNITE stressed, “The catastrophic jobs losses in the
textile and apparel industry must stop.
Many of the 314,000 textile and apparel workers who have lost their jobs
since January 2001 are and were UNITE members.
The continued job losses highlight the immediate need for implementation
of the China safeguard. America’s
working families are crying out for relief from the free trade policies that
are exporting their jobs to China.”
Jim Chesnutt, CEO of the National Spinning Co.
and Vice Chairman of American Textile Manufacturers Institute (ATMI), remarked,
“We are gratified that Members of
Congress from 36 different states, representing every region of the country,
have joined in urging the Administration to take these actions. When elected officials from three-fourths of
the states are sounding the alarm, it sends a powerful message about the impact
trade policies will have on the 2004 election for Congress and the White
House. And if we don’t get the actions
we need from our own government, I would expect that the American textile
industry, which has embarked on a massive voter registration drive to get our workers
to the polls, will be looking for new leadership. We need public officials who will make sure we have an American
trade policy that promotes American manufacturing first and foremost.”
Steve
Dobbins, CEO of Carolina Mills and Chairman of the American Yarn Spinners
Association stated, “The 60-day window for the U.S. government to approve or
deny the industry’s China safeguard petitions closes on November 17. Any delay beyond that date in making a
decision will be viewed as continued indifference to the economic plight of the
U.S. textile industry. A timely and
correct decision on all three China safeguard petitions is critical to the
health of the industry.”
Many
textile and apparel companies have engaged in letter writing campaigns and
voter registration drives to drive home their concerns over the surge of
low-cost imports flooding America’s shores.
Roger
Milliken, CEO of Milliken & Co. and Co-Chair of American Manufacturing
Trade Action Coalition said, “Milliken & Co. associates actively have
lobbied their congressmen, senators and President Bush in support of the
textile industry’s China safeguard petitions and have encouraged their friends
and families to do the same. These
combined efforts have resulted in the transmission of approximately 30,000
e-mails and letters to Washington, DC.
Milliken & Co. has also begun a company-wide voter registration
drive.”
William
Giblin, CEO of Tweave Inc. and Chairman of the National Textile Association,
explained, “Textile companies in the Northeast have been hit just as hard as
the Carolinas by the surge of low-cost imports. Recently, there have been announcements of major plant closings
in Massachusetts and Maine. The crisis
in the textile and apparel industry isn’t regional; it’s national. That’s why Members of Congress from
California to Maine have signed letters released today.”
Geoff Schofield, President
of Drake Extrusion, Inc. and Executive Committee Member of the American Fiber
Manufacturers Association, added, “China continues to flaunt accepted norms for
competition in international trade. The manipulation of its currency is an
attack on American manufacturing and this alone calls for immediate use of
quota safeguards.”
Woody
Anderson, Vice Chairman of the National Cotton Council concluded, “Cotton
growers are extremely concerned about the surge of imports hurting U.S. textile
and apparel manufacturers. Textile
production has fallen 10 percent in just the past twelve months. The companies that manufacture those
products are our best customers and they deserve a responsive and aggressive
government response to these petitions.”
The
united textile/fiber coalition filed China safeguard petitions on knit fabric,
brassieres and dressing gowns on July 24, 2003. If the U.S. government approved the petitions, it could limit the
growth of Chinese imports to 7.5 percent over current trade.
China’s exports of the
products on the safeguard petitions have increased dramatically. Since 2001, exports of dressing gowns from
China have increased by 905%, exports of brassieres by 382% and knit fabric by
28,000%. Overall, Chinese exports to
the U.S. textile and apparel market more than doubled in 2002, growing by
117%. China’s exports surged in 2003,
up an additional 75% through August.
China is now the largest textile and apparel exporter to the United
States. In August, China accounted for
21% of textile and apparel imports, up from 7% in 2001.
There
are currently 730,000 textile and apparel manufacturing workers in the United
States. Approximately 30 percent of all
textile and apparel manufacturing jobs in the United States have been lost
since January 2001.
Copies
of the House and Senate letters and the letters sent by individual members of
Congress are attached.
Members
of the textile/fiber coalition include:
·
American Manufacturing
Trade Action Coalition (AMTAC)
·
American Textile
Manufacturers Institute (ATMI)
·
National Textile
Association (NTA)
·
UNITE
·
American Yarn Spinners
Association (AYSA)
·
American Fiber
Manufacturers Association (AFMA)
·
National Cotton Council
(NCC)
·
American Sheep Industry
Association (ASI)
·
American Textile
Machinery Association (ATMA)
·
The Carpet and Rug
Institute (CRI)
·
The Association of
Georgia’s Textile, Carpet & Consumer Products Manufacturers (GTMA)
·
USA Domestic Manufacturers
Committee of the Hosiery Association
·
Industrial Fabrics
Association International (IFAI)
·
North Carolina
Manufacturers Association (NCMA)
·
Textile Distributors
Association
·
South Carolina
Manufacturers Alliance (SCMA)
·
American Flock
Association
Press Conference Attendees
Media Contact Information
AMTAC
– Lloyd Wood at (202) 452-0866 or lwood@amtacdc.org;
NCC
– Marjory Walker at (800) 377-9030 or mwalker@cotton.org;
NTA
– David Trumbull at (617) 542-8220, extension 2 or dtrumbull@nationaltextile.org;
ATMI
– Robert DuPree at (202) 862-0526 or rdupree@atmi.org;
UNITE
– Patricia Westwater at (646) 872-1617 or pwestwater@uniteunion.org;
AYSA
– Mike Hubbard at (704) 718-0222 or mshaysa@aol.com.
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