Hey Folks,

Just so you know, Mike Michaud was scheduled to testify tomorrow, but will
be hung up with votes in Washington. He will be submitting testimony,
however, through Andrea Quaid in our Lewiston Office.

Good luck tomorrow!
Rachel

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2004 10:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ftaadelegation] taking a stand in Maine - free trade
legislation


>
 Hey all - Just one more thing. I did'nt know if I mentioned specifically
 that you could email me with any writtten comments for the labor
 committeee hearing and I can bring them in, or you can fax them to the
 committee (Oops, i guess i have to forward you one more email) Your
 comments don't have to be long, or have some deep analysis - the purpose
 of the commission is to facilitate analysis as a effected state. Sarah
 and Katie have both said they can make it to Augusta - I'll call you guys
 later! cheers, and keep up the good work, MEREDITH






[PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY]



Public Hearing on the Maine Jobs, Trade and Democracy Act
(LD 1815)

Thursday, February 12 at 1:30 p.m.
Room 220, Cross State Office Building
Augusta

Come to the public hearing to support the bill that PICA has been spending
nearlythe past year working on.  This is a crucial time in our fair trade
work.

Please spread the word.

The public hearing will be followed within a week or two by a Labor
Committee worksession, and then the legislature will vote on the bill
shortly after that.

Please let us know if you are planning to attend the public hearing.

To find out what else you can to to support this legislation go here:
http://www.pica.ws/mftc/L.D.1815takeaction2-03-04.htm

For more information:  Maine Fair Trade Campaign, 947-4203 (Bangor),
777-6387
(Lewiston)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.pica.ws/mftc

THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 Overview of the Maine Jobs, Trade, and Democracy Act (LD 1815)

                     See at
 
http://www.mainelegislature.org/legis/bills/CommitteeInfo.asp?LD=1815



Summary of Bill:

This act aims to strengthen Maine's voice in the debate over current and
futuretrade agreements and their effect on local democracy and the economy
of
Maine.  Itdoes so by creating a Citizen  Jobs, Trade, and Democracy
Commission,
which willassess the legal and economic impact of trade agreements, hold
public
hearingsthroughout the state, interact with elected leaders in Maine and
other
states, andmake recommendations to the legislature, the congressional
delegation and
the U.S.trade negotiators.



Why This Legislation is Important:



Free trade agreements, such as NAFTA, GATS, the proposed FTAA, and
agreements withinthe WTO are having profound impacts on Maine's economy and
laws. Here are
a fewexamples:



·         Maine lost 17,300 manufacturing jobs between July 2000 and June
2002(Maine Dept. of Labor), the highest per capita loss in the country. US
trade policyis one major factor contributing to the loss of manufacturing
businesses
and jobs.


·         Free trade agreements threaten the entire balance of power in our
federalist system of government by taking constitutionally granted powers
away fromlocal, state, and federal governments.   According to the National
Association ofAttorney Generals, and Maine Attorney General Steve Rowe,
these trade
agreementshave "profound implications for the states' constitutionally
reserved
authority andresponsibility to protect public health, safety and welfare."



·        Free trade agreements set up their own court systems, outside of
our local,state and federal system, under which corporations can sue
national
governments tooverturn national, state and local laws. Numerous Maine laws,
such as the
MaineEthical Purchasing Act, the Dirigo Health Plan and many others, could
be
challengedunder international trade law.



What this Legislation Will Do:



Given the profound impacts of trade agreements on Maine's laws, economy, and
environment we need a mechanism for greater public input and better
oversight of theimpacts on Maine.  We need to be well positioned and
prepared to
proactively respondto rapid changes in the global economy. This legislation
will help us do
so bycreating an inclusive citizen-legislator commission with
representatives
from thebusiness, labor, public health, agricultural and human rights
community. 
Thiscommission will gather information, solicit public input, assess
impacts,
publishresults, educate the public, advise policy makers, and  recommend
legislation thatwould strengthen Maine's economy and uphold Maine's laws



Bi-Partisan Support with the following co-sponsors (Pat Colwell is the
sponsor)




·    Sponsor: Representative Pat Colwell, Speaker of the House (D Gardiner)

·    Senator Beverly Dagget (D- Androscoggin), Senate President

·    Senator Paul Davis (R- Piscataquis), Minority Leader

·    Senator Beth Edmonds (D- Cumberland), Chair Labor Committee

·    Senator Ed Youngblood (R- Penobscot)

·    Senator Peggy Rotundo (D- Lewistion), Chair State and Local
Government Committee
·    Representative William Smith (D- Caribou), Chair of Labor Committee

·    Representative Roger Sherman (R- Houlton)

·    Representative Russell Treadwell (R- Carmel)

·    Representative John Patrick (D- Rumford



****************************************
Bjorn Skorpen Claeson, Organizer
Peace through Interamerican Community Action (PICA)
170 Park Street
Bangor, ME 04401
USA
Ph: 207-947-4203
Fax: 603-457-6036
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: www.pica.ws, www.cleanclothesconnection.org













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