I. CBP PROCEDURES FOR BTA PROCESSING
Purpose: The purpose of
this document is to provide interim guidance to trade partners engaged in the
entry and release of imported food products, which are subject to the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness
and Response Act of 2002 (BTA), which will be implemented on December 12,
2003. This document is a work in
progress. As procedural, technical and
other changes take place during the implementation process, this document will
be amended to reflect them.
Background: The BTA was intended to protect the health and safety of the people of the United States from an intended or actual terrorist attack on the nation’s food supply. Under the Prior Notice (PN) requirements of the BTA, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) must receive prior notice for all food imported or offered for import into the United States. Any imported food products that are not in compliance with the PN requirements of the BTA, must be held at either the port of arrival or a secure facility until such time that they are either brought into compliance with the BTA or are exported from the United States with CBP approval. FDA and CBP have agreed to phase in the implementation over a several month period in order to reduce the impact on trade.
NOTE: No merchandise will be held on December 12, 2003 unless a threat is identified and FDA working in conjunction with CBP at the National Targeting Center (NTC) orders a hold. An inadequate PN submission (or untimely) will not provide the sole cause to hold any shipment until further notice from CBP Headquarters.
Food: Under the BTA, “food” is defined as any of the following:
·
Articles of food or
drink used for man or other animals (human and animal food including dietary
supplements)
·
Chewing gum
·
Articles used as
components of any such article, except for food contact substances and
pesticides
BTA-Regulated
Importations: The PN requirements of the
BTA apply to all of the
following regardless of value:
·
All food imported or
offered for import into the United States
·
Imported food, which
is stored or distributed in the United States
·
Imported food, used as
gifts, trade items, and quality assurance/control samples
·
Imported food
transshipped through the United States to another country
·
Food imported into the
United States for future export
·
Imported Food admitted
into a U.S. Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ)
BTA PN
Exemptions: FDA has exempted the following classes of food products from the PN
reporting requirements of the BTA:
·
Meat, poultry and egg
products subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the USDA.
·
Homemade goods shipped
as gifts
·
Personal use food
accompanying a traveler
· Food that is immediately exported (IE, in-bond type 63)
Required PN Data: PN must include the following data elements:
·
Product (by FDA
Product Code)
·
Manufacturer/Shipper/Grower
·
Country of Origin
·
Country from which the
product is shipped
·
Anticipated port of
arrival
·
Anticipated date of
arrival
·
ACS entry type and
date
·
Bill of Lading/Air
Waybill and/or in-bond number as appropriate
Required PN Timeframes: For
all imported shipments of BTA-regulated food products, PN must be provided to
FDA within the following timeframes:
·
Land Border: PN must be submitted 2 hours prior to arrival for
shipments arriving at the border by commercial or passenger vehicles and
pedestrians including permit ports, and 4 hours prior to arrival if arriving at
the border by rail
·
Air: PN must be submitted 4 hours prior to arrival for
shipments arriving by air
·
Vessel: PN must be submitted 8 hours prior to arrival for
shipments arriving by vessel
·
International
Mail: PN must be submitted at the time of
mailing in the foreign country
PN Submission: Any person
or entity possessing the required knowledge can make the submission of PN data
to FDA. However, the PN submission must
be complete and filed within the required timeframes to satisfy the PN
reporting requirements of the BTA. PN
data can either be submitted via:
·
ACS at the time of
entry via the Automated Broker Interface (ABI) – This method uses the current
FDA OASIS interface and adds data elements for PN submission. This is designed to work with ABI entries
filed by ABI filers.
·
ACS/ABI independent PN
(via the WP transmission) – This is a new interface with FDA that allows ABI
filers to submit PN data independent of any entry data. For PN submissions made via the ABI
independent interface, the submitter will receive a confirmation number from
FDA, which must be provided with the entry documentation by the entry
filer. Any ABI filer (including in-bond
only filers) may use this interface to submit a PN for use with in-bond
shipments, informal entries, Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) admissions and any other
entry type that is not fully automated.
·
FDA Prior Notice
System Interface (PNSI) – This is an Internet based system that allows anyone
to supply PN information directly to FDA.
For PN submissions made through PNSI, the submitter will receive a
confirmation number from FDA, which must be provided with the entry
documentation by the entry filer. This
may be used for informal entries filed by non-automated importers (walk-up
entries), in-bond shipments, FTZ admissions, carnets, Section 321 releases and
any other type of non-automated entry or release.
Data from the PNSI and
the ABI systems will be sent to an ACS prior notice database and will be
regularly updated as to status. CBP
Officers may query this confirmation number in the ACS prior notice database to
determine any further actions that must be taken.
PN Enforcement Guidelines: Although
the BTA will be implemented on December 12, 2003, enforcement of the PN
reporting requirements of the BTA will be phased in over three separate
phases. These enforcement phases can
best be described as:
·
Initial Phase:Education
and Communication (Begins December 12, 2003)
·
Intermediate Phase(s):
Informed Compliance and Penalties and/or refused admission for egregious
violators (timeframes to be announced)
·
Final Phase: Full
Enforcement of refused admission and penalties (timeframes to be announced)
Initial phase enforcement
will begin with the implementation of the BTA on December 12, 2003. However, the timeline for moving to the
ensuing phases of enforcing the PN reporting requirements of the BTA has not
yet been finalized.
During the initial phase
of enforcing the BTA, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) working with FDA
at the NTC will generally only withhold the release of BTA-regulated
merchandise if a BTA related threat or concern exists regarding the
shipment. As this is not expected to
occur for most imported food shipments processed during the initial BTA
enforcement phases, the vast majority of such shipments will continue to be
processed by CBP and released into the commerce of the United States.
During the initial phase,
CBP and FDA will generally focus their collective enforcement resources on
informed compliance and educational initiatives rather than enforced compliance
in order to achieve voluntary compliance with the PN reporting requirements of
the BTA. This means that as long as a “BTA
Hold” has not been placed against a shipment of imported food, it may be
released from CBP custody even if no PN was provided to FDA or the PN provided
is considered inadequate by FDA.
During the intermediate
phase(s), CBP and FDA will continue educating the public and the trade
community about the PN reporting requirements of the BTA, but will also begin
making targeted informed compliance efforts and issuing penalties to egregious
violators. During this phase, CBP will
still process and release most shipments of imported food products that violate
the PN reporting requirements, provided that a “BTA Hold” has not been placed
against the shipment by NTC/FDA.
Once full enforcement
begins, all shipments of imported food that violate the PN reporting requirements
of the BTA will be either held at the port of arrival or sent to a secure
facility until they can be brought into full compliance with the reporting
requirements of the BTA or are exported from the United States with CBP
approval. In addition, penalties may
continue to be issued for egregious violators.
Determining PN Compliance: For
all entry types that are processed through ACS Cargo Selectivity using a CF
3461 or CF 3461 ALT, CBP Officers will be able to review any necessary PN
compliance information in ACS. During
the initial phases of enforcing PN reporting requirements, only “BTA Holds”
will prevent the release of most imported food products. The release of shipments that do not satisfy
PN reporting requirements will not be withheld until the later phases, when
additional messages will be added to ACS and further instructions issued to
field personnel.
For all entry types that
are not processed through ACS Cargo Selectivity, the entry filer must provide a
copy of the FDA confirmation number from either the FDA Prior Notice System
Interface (PNSI) or ABI with the entry.
This may be a screen print of the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or
the number may be written or printed on the entry or release documents. CBP Officers may query this number in the
ACS prior notice database using new function codes. These databases will contain a status field that will provide the
current status of the prior notice. The
release of shipments that do not satisfy PN reporting requirements will not be
withheld in initial phases of enforcing the PN requirements of the BTA. Release should only be withheld for
shipments that are under a “BTA Hold”.
Important Changes on December 12, 2003: Although CBP will continue to process and release
most shipments of imported food, the ways in which it processes some shipments
of imported food will change significantly on December 12, 2003. On that date, the following important
changes will occur:
·
Border Release
Advanced Screening & Selectivity (BRASS): Beginning on December 5, 2003 and complete by December 12, 2003, BRASS
and Rail AMS Line Release processing will no longer be allowed for the entry
and release of imported food products that are subject to the PN reporting
requirements of the BTA. All
BTA-affected BRASS C-4 codes will be revoked by that date. Any subsequent shipments will be required to
be processed through ACS Cargo Selectivity using either a CF 3461 or CF 3461
Alt (including PAPS).
·
Permit Ports:
Effective December 12, 2003, BTA-regulated
merchandise will no longer be allowed to be released strictly under a permit
with subsequent release processing via the ACS BREL function code, as is
currently done for merchandise entering the country through permit ports along
the Northern Border.
Importers
holding a current valid permit for shipments of imported food will still be
allowed to be entered and released at Northern Border permit ports after
December 12, 2003, but they must also be processed through ACS Cargo
Selectivity using either a CF 3461 or CF 3461 ALT. In addition, importers of food products entered at a Northern
Border permit port must continue to maintain a valid permit on file with the
appropriate Port Director. This is not
to be construed as an expansion of the use of these ports to include
merchandise not covered by the current permits. The only requirement of this change is that food products covered
by the BTA must file entry using Cargo Selectivity. However, CBP will attempt to accommodate any permit holder who
wishes to use Selectivity for any entry at permit ports on a case-by-case
basis.
Facsimile
transmissions of CF 3461 or CF 3461 ALT documents will be accepted by CBP
Officers at permit ports as long as the shipment is accompanied by a manifest
and invoice. Port Directors are
authorized to determine other methods of communicating CF 3461 information to
CBP Officers at permit ports.
Most
permit ports do not have the equipment or space to perform examinations of
imported merchandise, and lack secure facilities in which imported merchandise
can be held until it can be brought into compliance with the BTA. In the case of a shipment, which is under a
“BTA Hold”, CBP Officers will hold the shipment at the permit port of arrival
and arrange for examination. If
necessary the merchandise will remain at the permit port of arrival until the
examination can be completed. Depending
on the nature of required examinations, some of these may be performed at a
permit port. However, if this is not
possible, the shipment should be sent under a CBP bond (including in-bond) to
the nearest port of entry with adequate equipment and facilities with which to
perform the examination. In
consultation with permit ports and FDA, a comprehensive examination policy for
permit ports will be developed.
In
addition, most permit ports do not have sufficient secure storage facilities
located in close proximity to the port, which can be used to hold BTA-regulated
merchandise until it can be brought into compliance with the BTA. In instances when BTA-regulated merchandise
must be held at a secure facility and no such facility is available, the
merchandise must be sent under a CBP bond (including in-bond) to the nearest
port with an available secure facility or exported (see secure facility
section). Shipments of BTA-regulated
merchandise cannot be held at the importer’s premises, which also include any
storage facilities owned by the importer.
New ACS Functionality and Messaging: New ACS
functionality has been developed and will be available on December 12,
2003. These include:
· New ACS Function Codes
·
BTA Holds: A “BTA Hold” can be placed on an entry or it
can be placed on a bill of lading or air waybill in ACS. In either case, when a “BTA Hold” is placed
on a shipment, it removes an existing release date, or prevents ACS from
establishing a release date. However,
“BTA Holds” do not cause an entry to be designated as “Intensive” by ACS Cargo
Selectivity.
·
BTA Hold Messages: During
the initial phases of enforcing the PN requirements of the BTA, only a “BTA
Hold” will prevent the release of a shipment.
The trade will receive a generic type 12 (other government agency) hold.
·
Downtime Policy:
Whenever ACS Cargo Selectivity processing is not operational, CBP Officers may
have to release imported merchandise with manual release methods. However, when ACS Cargo Selectivity
processing becomes operational again, any entries that were manually released
during such a period of “downtime” must be processed through ACS Cargo
Selectivity after the fact.
When
the resulting Selectivity results are viewed any shipments with a “BTA Hold”
that were inadvertently released during the downtime period may require further
action as necessary. CBP will provide
the necessary instructions.
·
Redelivery Policy: CBP
will only order the redelivery of BTA-regulated merchandise that is suspected
by the FDA of posing a high threat to public safety. In such instances, which are expected to rarely occur, CBP will
provide further instructions on how to best handle the redelivery of the
merchandise in order to protect the safety of all involved.
Changes Planned for Later Phases – Prior to the final phase of implementation there will be some
additional changes programmed into ACS that will impact processing. CBP Officers will be notified of these
changes as they occur.
·
“Pen & Ink
Changes”: For entries transmitted to CBP through the Automated Broker Interface
(ABI), changes to the ABI entry data, also known as “Pen & Ink Changes”,
will not be permitted if there is a “BTA Hold or a BTA Hold Unset” associated
to the shipment. This applies to all existing entry header and line level data,
as well as bill of lading or air waybill data. If such changes are necessary,
CBP must cancel the original entry and the filer must submit a new entry with
the corrected entry data. It will be permissible for CBP users to add a line(s)
if the tariff number does not have a BTA indicator in the harmonized file.
For
entries transmitted to CBP through the Automated Broker Interface (ABI),
changes to the ABI entry data, also known as “Pen and Ink Changes”, will not be
permitted on entry header and line item data if there is BTA merchandise on the
entry. It will be permissible to make
corrections on the bill of lading or air waybill data.
·
ABI LN Bill of
Lading Corrections: For entries
transmitted to CBP via ABI that have a “BTA Hold” or a “BTA Hold Unset”,
changes to bill of lading data cannot be made with the “ABI LN Bill of Lading
Correction” capability. However, such
changes can be made on entries with BTA-regulated merchandise that does not
have a “BTA Hold or a “BTA Hold Unset.”
·
“On Screen
Changes”: If
the entry has a “BTA Hold” or a “BTA Hold Unset”, field personnel will not be
allowed to use the ACS onscreen change function to make any changes to header,
line level, or to bill of lading or air waybill data. If there is BTA merchandise on the entry but there is not a “BTA
Hold or a “BTA Hold Unset” on the shipment, the ACS onscreen change function
can be used to make changes to bill of lading or air waybill data. It will be
permissible to add a line(s) if the tariff number does not have a BTA indicator
in the harmonized file if system edits and OFO policy allows line item adds.
II. ENTRY PROCESSING PROCEDURES
BTA-Regulated Merchandise Processing Procedures: The following paragraphs contain specific procedures
for processing BTA merchandise with specific types of entries.
Verifying PN Status:
As stated earlier, for all entry types
that are processed through ACS Cargo Selectivity using a CF 3461 or CF 3461
ALT, CBP Officers will be able to review any necessary PN compliance
information in ACS. Most in-bond
entries will provide automated results as well (see in-bond section). For all non-automated entries or fully paper
entry or release processes, the FDA confirmation number (and/or envelope
number) must be provided with the entry.
This may be a screen print of the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or
the number may be written or printed on the entry or release documents.
Verification by CBP
Officers will be affected by the implementation phases as follows:
·
In the initial phase
of implementation, CBP Officers will generally allow shipments to leave the
port of arrival unless a “BTA Hold” is placed on the shipment. If a confirmation number is provided, CBP
Officers should query ACS to determine if a “BTA Hold” has been placed on the
shipment. If no confirmation number is
provided, CBP Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other entry
requirements are met. Carriers, importers
and others presenting documents should be given a copy of information flyers.
·
In the intermediate
phases of implementation, CBP Officers will generally allow shipments to leave
the port of arrival unless a “BTA Hold” is placed on the shipment. If a confirmation number is provided, CBP
Officers should query ACS to determine if a “BTA Hold” has been placed on the
shipment. If no confirmation number is
provided, CBP Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other
entry requirements are met. Carriers,
importers and others presenting documents should be given a copy of the
information flyers. Penalties and
informed compliance will be handled at a national level.
·
In the final phase
(full enforcement) of implementation, the shipments may be held at the port of
arrival, moved to a secure facility or exported with CBP concurrence if a
confirmation number is not provided at the time of movement. If the confirmation number is provided, the
CBP officer will query the number using ACS to determine the PN status. If the status is “not satisfied”, the
shipment may be held at the port of arrival, moved to a secure facility or
exported with CBP concurrence.
CF 3461 & CF 3461 ALT: In all phases of implementation
and for all entry types that are processed through ACS Cargo Selectivity using
a CF 3461 or CF 3461 ALT, CBP Officers must determine if there is a “BTA Hold”
on the shipment. If there is a “BTA
Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment.
·
In the initial phases
of implementation, if the PN is not satisfied Selectivity processing will occur
and the shipment will be released unless a “BTA Hold” is placed on the
shipment. A warning message will be
sent to the ABI filer indicating that PN is required and not satisfied for this
shipment.
·
In the final phase of
implementation, if the prior notice is not satisfied the processing will not be
completed and a “PN Not Satisfied” message will be sent.
For any entries that
utilize a CF 3461 or CF 3461 Alt, but are not processed through ACS Cargo
Selectivity, the entry filer must provide the FDA confirmation number with the
entry. This may be a screen print of
the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be written or printed
on the entry or release documents.
·
In the initial phases,
CBP Officers should query the confirmation number (if provided) in the ACS
prior notice database. If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the shipment. If no confirmation number is provided, CBP
Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other entry requirements
are met. Carriers, importers and others
presenting documents should be given a copy of the information flyers. Penalties and informed compliance will be
handled at a national level.
·
In the final phases,
CBP Officers must query the confirmation number in the ACS prior notice
database. If the status is “Not
Satisfied” the shipment should not be released (see PN not satisfied section). If there is a “BTA Hold” on the shipment,
CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the shipment.
CF 7501: In all phases of
implementation, when a CF 7501 is used to simultaneously file the entry and
entry summary for a shipment, CBP Officers must determine if there is a “BTA
Hold” on the shipment. If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment.
·
In the initial phases
of implementation, if the PN is not satisfied Selectivity processing will occur
and the shipment will be released unless a “BTA Hold” is placed. A warning message will be sent to the ABI
filer indicating that PN is required and not satisfied for this shipment.
·
In the final phase of
implementation, if the prior notice is not satisfied the processing will not be
completed and a “PN Not Satisfied” message will be sent. The shipment should not be released (see PN
not satisfied section). If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment.
Non-ABI Informal Entries: For
all informal entries (CF 368, CF 3299, CF 3311, etc) that are not processed
through ACS Cargo Selectivity, CBP Officers must first determine if the
merchandise is subject to the BTA and whether it qualifies for any listed
exemption to the PN reporting requirements of the BTA. After having accomplished this, CBP Officers
should check that the FDA confirmation number is provided with the entry. This may be a screen print of the ABI screen
or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be written or printed on the entry or
release documents.
·
In the initial phases,
CBP Officers should query the confirmation number (if provided) in the ACS
prior notice database. If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment. If no confirmation number is
provided, CBP Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other
entry requirements are met. Carriers,
importers and others presenting documents should be given a copy of the
information flyers. Penalties and
informed compliance will be handled at a national level.
·
In the final phases,
if the confirmation number is provided, CBP Officers shall query the number in
the ACS prior notice database. If there is a “BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP
Officers must arrange to hold and examine the shipment. If the number is not provided or the status
is “Not Satisfied”, the shipment should not be released (see PN not satisfied
section).
Carnets: Since carnets are used for the temporary importation
of merchandise that will be re-exported in the same form as when it was
originally imported, food products are not generally imported under the cover
of a carnet. To the extent that carnets
are used to temporarily import BTA-regulated merchandise, the carnet should be accompanied
by the FDA confirmation number showing that PN has been submitted for the
shipment. This may be a screen print of
the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be written or printed
on the entry or release documents.
·
In the initial phases,
CBP Officers should query the confirmation number (if provided) in the ACS
prior notice database. If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment. If no confirmation number is
provided, CBP Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other
entry requirements are met. Carriers,
importers and others presenting documents should be given a copy of the
information flyers. Penalties and
informed compliance will be handled at a national level.
·
In the final phases,
if the confirmation number is provided, CBP Officers shall query the number in
the ACS prior notice database. If there is a “BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP
Officers must arrange to hold and examine the shipment. If the number is not provided or the status
is “Not Satisfied”, the shipment should not be released (see PN not satisfied
section).
FTZ & Warehouse Withdrawal Entries: Foreign trade zone entries (06) and warehouse
withdrawals and rewarehouse entries (22) are not performed at the time of
arrival and are exempt from the PN reporting requirements of the BTA. PN must be satisfied before the admission to
the FTZ (or movement in-bond) or prior to filing a warehouse entry (Type 21).
FAST/NCAP Shipments: Due
to NCAP rules that do not allow shipments subject to other government agency
requirements, there should be no FAST/NCAP shipments subject to PN.
FAST/PAPS Shipments:
PAPS is a release process that accesses
ACS Selectivity through a manifest number.
The processing steps for CF 3461 and CF 3461 ALT apply to FAST/PAPS
shipments as well.
Section 321 Releases: Section
321 releases from the manifest are allowed for BTA-regulated merchandise, but
each line item requiring PN must be accompanied by the PN confirmation number
issued by ABI or the FDA PNSI. This may
be a screen print of the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be
written or printed on the entry or release documents.
·
In the initial phases,
CBP Officers should query the confirmation number (if provided) in the ACS
prior notice database. If there is a
“BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP Officers must arrange to hold and examine the
shipment. If no confirmation number is
provided, CBP Officers may allow the shipment to move as long as all other
entry requirements are met. Carriers,
importers and others presenting documents should be given a copy of the
information flyers. Penalties and
informed compliance will be handled at a national level.
·
In the final phases,
if the confirmation number is provided, CBP Officers shall query the number in
the ACS prior notice database. If there is a “BTA Hold” on the shipment, CBP
Officers must arrange to hold and examine the shipment. If the number is not provided or the status
is “Not Satisfied”, the shipment should not be released (see PN not satisfied
section).
Monthly Manifest: There
should be no Monthly Master Manifest shipments subject to PN.
III. FDA/BTA EXPRESS CONSIGNMENT PROCEDURES
The Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (the Bioterrorism Act or the Act) requires that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) receive prior notice of food imported or offered for import into the U.S. beginning on December 12, 2003. While most of the information required by the Act is invoice data currently provided by express consignment operators prior to arrival, the Act requires that FDA also receive advanced information on import shipments. The purpose of this requirement is to provide FDA personnel with time to review, evaluate, and assess information before a food product arrives allowing for better targeting and interception of contaminated food products.
The prior notice provision of the Act covers food and beverages for human or animal consumption. This includes all express consignment shipments, for both commercial and personal use, regardless of value. Shipments containing gifts other than homemade, samples, food for transshipment through the United States, food imported for future export, or food for use in a foreign trade zone are also covered by the Act.
The implementation of the
BTA regulations will be phased in over a period of months. The phases will affect express consignment
facilities as follows:
·
During the initial phase of implementation (after December 12, 2003) - most shipments arriving
by express couriers will be allowed to move to their destination without having
a properly submitted prior notice unless shipments are determined by targeting
to pose a risk to the food supply will be held as they are identified. Carriers, shippers, importers and others
will be given automated and paper reminder notices. CBP and FDA will use informed compliance during this time in an
attempt to gain full compliance with the new regulations.
·
In the intermediate phases, refusal of admission and targeted penalties may be
generated for some shipments if compliance has not improved.
·
In the final phase (full enforcement), all shipments for which PN is inadequate will be
refused admission and penalties may be issued for egregious violators. In all phases of implementation, shipments
that are determined by targeting to pose a risk to the food supply will be held
as they are identified.
Processing Procedures:
In the initial phase of implementation, law and regulation require PN for all food shipments. During this phase however, CBP Officers will release most shipments unless they are identified as a threat to the food supply. Release processing will be performed under current guidelines until the final phases of implementation requires refusal of admission for shipments where PN is inadequate. PN confirmation numbers should be provided for each shipment where they are available. This may be a screen print of the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be written or printed on the entry or release documents. In this initial phase, CBP Officers may be asked to spot check PN confirmation numbers. These spot checks will be random and assigned at the national level to measure compliance. Informed compliance and education efforts will be conducted nationally and by local BTA coordinators.
In the intermediate phase, CBP Officers will continue to use current processing guidelines and allow release of most shipments unless they are identified as a threat to the food supply. PN confirmation numbers should be provided for each shipment where they are available. This may be a screen print of the ABI screen or the FDA PNSI screen or the number may be written or printed on the entry or release documents. In this phase, CBP Officers will be asked to spot check PN confirmation numbers. These random spot checks will be assigned at the national level and increased in frequency to measure and ensure compliance. Informed compliance and education efforts will be conducted nationally and by local BTA coordinators. Penalties and targeted refusals will be ordered as needed to enforce compliance for egregious violators.
In the final phase (full enforcement), CBP processing in express consignment facilities will change as follows:
· There is no de minimus for merchandise subject to BTA, therefore, all shipments regardless of value, must meet the Prior Notice (PN) requirement. This includes samples, mail, household goods, gifts and etc. CBP Officers will be required to validate each PN in ACS. Individual manual checks from the manifest to the PN file in ACS will be extremely inefficient and will threaten the completion of work during the regular sort time periods in many ECCF/ECCH operations. Compliance with the BTA may require that separate ABI entries be filed for each shipment. CBP’s authority for this action resides in 19 CFR 143.22 in which formal entry may be required for import admissibility enforcement purposes. CBP is currently working with industry representatives to determine how Section 321 clearances from the manifest and consolidated informal entries might be retained under BTA.
· CBP inspectors assigned to manifest or entry review will ensure that a Prior Notice Confirmation Number (PNCN) is listed on the manifest or other entry documentation for all applicable food shipments.
· All applicable food shipments found not to have a properly assigned PNCN number listed, at the time of entry or manifest review, will be refused admission under Section 801(m)(1) of the Act (21 U.S.C. 381(m)(1) and held by the carrier at the express consignment facility or other secure storage location.
· All applicable food shipments will be refused admission under Section 801(m)(1) of the Act (21 U.S.C. 381(m)(1)) and held at the express consignment facility or other secure storage location if FDA reports the following to CBP:
· The shipment received a confirmation number based on the submission of inaccurate data
· The PN was not submitted to FDA within the established time frame (no less than four hours prior to arrival)
· CBP will notify the carrier of each shipment held under the auspices of the Bioterrorism Act citing the applicable reason.
· A held shipment may not be released to the importer, owner or consignee until FDA has notified CBP that the refusal is rescinded. If the express consignment carrier is the importer of record for release purposes they will not be considered as the importer or ultimate consignee for release or for storage issues.
· All shipments found non-compliant by FDA may be immediately exported from the port of arrival under CBP supervision.
· If an article of food that is refused is part of a shipment that contains other articles that are admissible, the refused articles may be segregated from the rest of the shipment under FDA or CBP supervision.
· Any article of food that has been refused under Section 801(m)(1) shall immediately be considered general order merchandise as described in Section 490 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended. Follow the Inadequate PN section of this publication for more information.
IV. FDA/BTA IN-BOND PROCEDURES
General Processing Information
Immediate Export (IE)
movements are exempt from prior notice (PN) reporting requirements of the
Bioterrorism Act (BTA).
For all transportation
(IT and T&E) in-bond movements regardless of mode or method of transmission
the carrier must provide an indicator that the shipment contains “merchandise
subject to FDA/BTA”. In the automated
environment, AMS, ABI (QP) and CAFES have been modified to accept a Y or N
field labeled BTA. For CBP input using
the INBE screen, the indicator field has been created. The party preparing the in-bond document
will be responsible to provide notice with the CF 7512 that merchandise on the
shipment is subject to the prior notice requirements of the BTA. Someone (shipper, importer, broker etc) will
file prior notice (PN) using ABI or
FDA’s Prior Notice System Interface (PNSI) that references the in-bond number,
bill of lading, air waybill or other unique identifier. No messages will be sent authorizing
movement of the in-bond until prior notice is satisfied. In most cases ACS/AMS will query a newly developed
ACS PN database to find PN information on file and return a status message to
the CBP Officer, AMS and the trade.
During the initial implementation of the regulations
(after December 12, 2003) most IT and T&E movements will be allowed to move
to their destination without having a properly submitted prior notice. This phased-in implementation will last for a
limited period of time. Carriers,
shippers, importers and others will be given reminders. CBP and FDA will use informed compliance
during this time in an attempt to gain full compliance with the new
regulations. Eventually, hold messages
may be generated and penalties may be issued for some in-bond shipments if
compliance has not improved. In
addition, shipments that are determined by targeting to pose a risk to the food
supply will be held as they are identified.
After the initial phases
of implementation are complete, IT and T&E in-bonds will be handled
differently. No shipments will be
allowed to move from the port of arrival without submitting any prior notice.
If the PN is inadequate or not filed timely (no response received from FDA)
T&E movements will be held at the port of arrival until the prior notice is
satisfied. IT in-bond movements may be
allowed to move to their intended port of entry where the PN can be satisfied
by the entry filer if no enforcement reasons exist to hold at the port of
arrival.
Fully Automated In-bond Movements
Sea/Rail/Truck:
The indicator that shipment contains merchandise subject to the FDA/BTA should
be set to “yes” by the carrier. AMS
(and QP) will query the ACS prior notice database by in-bond number and bill of
lading. If the in-bond number/BOL (IT
or T&E) is not in the database:
·
Initial phase (IT and T&E) – The in-bond record will be created and the movement
will be authorized unless a “BTA Hold” is ordered.
·
Intermediate phase (IT and T&E) – The in-bond record will be created and the movement
will be authorized unless a hold is ordered by the NTC/FDA. A “Warning - Prior Notice Submission is
Required” message will be sent to the carrier and posted in the public remarks.
·
Full enforcement phase, IT and T&E movement – A “PN not satisfied, Hold” will be created and sent
to public remarks. No movement
authorization will be granted and the shipment will be held until the PN is
satisfied. When the PN is satisfied,
the hold will be automatically removed.
If the in-bond record is
in the database the status of the prior notice will be checked.
·
If the status is “PN
Satisfied”, a movement authorization message will be generated and the shipment
will be allowed to move. This is true
for IT and T&E movements.
If the status is “PN
incomplete” or “PN not timely” (within time frames):
·
Initial phase (IT and T&E) – The in-bond record will be created and the movement
will be authorized unless a “BTA Hold” is ordered.
·
Full enforcement phase, IT movement - The in-bond record will be created. A “Warning, FDA/BTA prior notice not
satisfied” message will be created and sent to public remarks and the movement
will be authorized unless a “BTA Hold” is ordered. The prior notice will be required prior to entry and the
merchandise may not proceed to the importer’s premises but must be held at a
secure facility at the port of entry.
·
Full enforcement phase, T&E movement – A “PN not satisfied, Hold” will be created and sent
to public remarks. No movement
authorization will be granted and the shipment will be held at the port of
arrival until the PN is satisfied. When
the PN is satisfied, the hold will be automatically removed.
If the status is “BTA
Hold”:
·
A generic type 12
(Other Government Agency) hold will be sent to the carrier. CBP or FDA (or both) will coordinate to
examine or sample the merchandise in accordance with policies to be
developed. If the merchandise is
rejected or not allowed to move, the in-bond transaction will be cancelled.
Air: The indicator
that shipment contains merchandise subject to the FDA/BTA should be set to
“yes” by the carrier. AMS will query
the ACS prior notice database by in-bond number and air waybill. If the in-bond number/AWB (IT or T&E) is
not in the database:
·
Initial phase (IT and T&E) – The in-bond record will be created and the movement
will be authorized unless a “BTA Hold” is ordered.
·
Full enforcement phase, IT and T&E movement – A “PN not satisfied, Hold” will be created and sent
to public remarks. No movement
authorization will be granted and the shipment will be held until the PN is
satisfied. When the PN is satisfied,
the hold will be automatically removed.
If the in-bond record is
in the database the status of the prior notice will be checked.