[Federal Register: January 23, 2004 (Volume 69, Number 15)]
[Notices]
[Page 3394-3395]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr23ja04-94]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training Administration
[NAFTA-6472]
Ericsson, Inc., Brea, CA; Notice of Negative Determination on
Reconsideration on Remand
The United States Court of International Trade (USCIT) granted the
Secretary of Labor's motion for a voluntary remand for further
investigation in Former Employees of Ericsson, Inc. v. Elaine Chao,
U.S. Secretary of Labor (Court No. 02-00809).
The Department's initial negative determination for the workers of
Ericsson, Inc. (hereafter ``Ericsson'') was issued on September 24,
2002 and published in the Federal Register on October 10, 2002 (67 FR
63160). The determination was based on the finding that workers did not
produce an article within the meaning of Section 250(a) of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended. The Department determined that the workers
develop computer software for other Ericsson units. The petitioners did
not appeal to the Department for administrative reconsideration.
By letter to the U.S. Court of International Trade, filed on
December 18, 2002, the petitioner requested judicial review. The
petitioner asserted that the Department did not conduct a full
investigation of the petition, that the workers were misclassified as
service providers, and that the Department incorrectly applied the
eligibility criteria.
On remand, the Department conducted an investigation to determine
whether the petitioners were production workers and, if so, whether the
workers were eligible to apply for NAFTA-TAA. The remand investigation
consisted of independent research and analysis of software as a
commodity and multiple requests of additional information from the
petitioners and the subject company regarding the functions of the
subject worker group.
The initial investigation revealed that Ericsson is a global
supplier of mobile communication systems and solutions, that the
subject facility developed software applications for other Ericsson
units, the absence of production at the subject facility, and that the
petitioning worker group developed software components which enable
base station units (controllers) to route cellular phone calls for
customers with service contracts with Ericsson. The investigation also
revealed that the subject facility did not support an affiliated
facility covered by an existing certification.
The remand investigation revealed that the petitioning workers
designed and programmed software which enabled base stations (routing
equipment) to properly route cellular phone messages pursuant to
customers' telecommunication needs. The software was not sold as
manufactured products to the general public or sold as a component to
an article that is available to the general public.
While the Department considers workers who are engaged in the mass
copying of software and manufacturing of the medium upon which the
software is stored, such as compact disks and floppy disks, to be
production workers, the Department does not consider the design and
development of the software itself to be production and, therefore,
does not consider software designers and developers to be production
workers.
The U.S. Customs Service does not regard software design and
development
[[Page 3395]]
as a tangible commodity and determines the value of software based only
on the cost of the carrier media, such as compact discs, floppy disks,
records, and tapes. Further, computer software is not listed on the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), a code that
represents an international standard maintained by most industrialized
countries as established by the International Convention on the
Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding.
Throughout the Trade Act, an article is often referenced as
something that can be subject to a duty. To be subject to a duty on a
tariff schedule, an article will have a value that makes it marketable,
fungible and interchangeable for commercial purposes. While a wide
variety of tangible products are described as articles and
characterized as dutiable in the HTS, informational products that could
historically be sent in letter form and that can currently be
electronically transmitted are not listed in the HTS. Such products are
not the type of employment work products that customs officials inspect
and that the TAA program was generally designed to address.
Conclusion
After reconsideration on remand, I affirm the original notice of
negative determination of eligibility to apply for adjustment
assistance for workers and former workers of Ericsson, Inc., Brea,
California.
Signed at Washington, DC this 14th day of January 2004.
Elliott S. Kushner,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. 04-1438 Filed 1-22-04; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-30-P