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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Contact:
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Dara Klatt
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September 3, 2002
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The PBN Company
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Tel. 202-466-6210
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WISCONSIN-AREA COMPANIES TO REP. SENSENBRENNER:
STEEL TARIFFS THREATEN LOCAL ECONOMY
Brookfield, WI - Wisconsin members of the Consuming
Industries Trade Action Coalition (CITAC) Steel Task Force met Friday
with Congressman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI-9) to detail the serious and
growing crisis they are facing as a result of both the 201 tariffs on
steel imports imposed by the Bush Administration and anti-dumping suits
filed by steel producers.
Steel-consuming company representatives of CITAC and the Precision Metalforming
Association (PMA), met with Rep. Sensenbrenner in his district office
to discuss the problems they are experiencing with inadequate steel supplies
and price gouging by domestic steel producers as well as competitive threats
they are facing from overseas manufacturers.
Most of these problems are a result of the 30 percent tariffs imposed
by President Bush on steel imports and/or the onslaught of anti-dumping
cases brought by domestic U.S. steel producers. Together, these actions
isolate the domestic steel industry from competition, driving up steel
prices and causing supply shortages for American steel users. These American
steel users in turn must compete with imports of finished products produced
overseas with locally priced steel and therefore, are unable to pass on
price increases to their customers, who are also under market pressures
to contain prices.
"I wanted the Congressman to understand that, as our industry continues
to struggle in this recession, the last thing we needed were tariffs,"
said Timothy Clark of Mayville Engineering Company in Mayville, Wisconsin.
Clark's company, which produces metal components for the marine, agricultural
and computer industries, has been forced to eliminate a third of its employees
in the last eighteen months and fears more due to the impact of the steel
price increases.
"We have seen 30-50% increases in steel prices since the imposition
of the tariffs, and it has been difficult, if not impossible, to pass
the increases on to our customers," said Clark. "Even as steel
prices for us have skyrocketed, our U.S. customers continue to demand
price decreases to match prices from Asia."
In Wisconsin, there are approximately 366,000 steel-consuming jobs and
2,300 steel-producing jobs, or 162 steel-consuming jobs for every one
steel-producing job. In Rep. Sensenbrenner's district, there are nearly
78,000 steel-consuming jobs and barely any steel-producing jobs.
Another steel-consuming participant in Friday's meeting was William Jens,
the President of Ataco Steel Products Corporation in Cedarburg, Wisconsin,
a producer of metal components used for lawn and garden and electrical
companies. "Steel import restrictions have resulted in my overseas
competitors gaining an advantage over our company. Unless something changes,
our business will continue to deteriorate and ultimately, our entire 90-person
staff may be out of work."
Jeffrey Clark, President of Waukesha Tool and Stamping in Sussex, Wisconsin,
also had the same concerns. According to Clark, countries such as China
are now able to offer even more competitive prices than his company can.
His company manufactures precision metal products for industries ranging
from electrical and automotive, to appliances and tools. In August, Clark
was informed that one of his largest customers is taking their business
overseas, a loss for his company of about a million dollars.
"We are just watching manufacturing jobs run away from the U.S.,"
said Clark. "The tariffs are making it more difficult for us to compete
in a global environment and we are trying to figure out how we will survive
if we can't get to a level playing field."
The meeting with Rep. Sensenbrenner is one of a series of Congressional
meetings held by consumers to inform their representatives of the unintended
negative effects of the steel tariffs. Friday's visit follows the July
23rd House of Representatives Small Business Committee Hearing held by
Chairman Donald Manzullo (R-IL) in which CITAC member companies testified
about steel shortages and massive price increases caused by the 201 steel
tariffs and anti-dumping duties. Chairman Manzullo invited the steel users
to testify before the Committee after receiving more than a hundred letters
from downstream users suffering serious dislocations from the Bush Administration's
decision to impose up to 30% tariffs on imported steel.
Similarly, on September 3, the House Small Business Committee held a
field hearing near Los Angeles to hear from area businesses about the
government's efforts to meet the needs of small businesses, including
local steel consumers who have been impacted by the 201 tariffs.
CITAC is a coalition of companies and organizations committed to promoting
a trade arena where U.S. consuming industries and their workers have access
to global markets for imports that enhance the international competitiveness
of American firms.
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