In a message dated 99-03-02 08:54:31 EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Los Angeles Times
 February 28, 1999
 Sunday, Home Edition

 SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Foreign Desk

 LENGTH: 2286 words

 HEADLINE: TRADE PACTS ACCUSED OF SUBVERTING U.S. POLICIES;

 COMMERCE: CRITICS SAY AGREEMENTS SUCH AS NAFTA GIVE FOREIGN INTERESTS LEGAL
 AMMUNITION TO INFLUENCE ECONOMY AS WELL AS SAFETY, HEALTH AND OTHER ISSUES.

 BYLINE: EVELYN IRITANI, TIMES STAFF WRITER

 BODY: The global push toward a "borderless economy," already blamed for the
 turmoil that has impoverished millions from Seoul to Sao Paulo, is
 increasingly accused of another sin: undermining the sovereignty of
 governments.

 Sweeping free-trade initiatives of the 1990s, such as NAFTA and the World
 Trade Organization, are coming under attack for handing foreign interests
 the legal firepower to undercut public policy on economic, health, safety
 and other issues.

 Under the umbrella of international trade pacts, a spate of recent lawsuits
 by outsiders has toppled environmental laws in Canada and so-called
 selective purchasing laws in Massachusetts. In Mississippi, a Canadian
 funeral home operator is using NAFTA to challenge an unfavorable court
 verdict.

 The unexpected volume of legal tumult inspired by the tearing down of trade
 barriers has given fresh ammunition to critics who have long portrayed
 international trade deals as sacrificing local political control on the
 altar of unbridled capitalism.

 "As concerned as we were, we underestimated the potential power grab and
 damage potential to the fundamentals of governance," said Lori Wallach,
 director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, a Washington-based
 advocacy group.

 U.S. suspicion of foreign influence is hardly new, of course: The Founding
 Fathers used fear of economic colonialism as a rallying cry, and it's
 always been easy to stir up protectionist sentiment or criticism of, say,
 the United Nations.

 Congress saw threats to sovereignty when it adopted the hotly debated WTO
 trade agreement in 1994, and sought to limit the damage by specifying that
 only the U.S. government--and not foreigners or private firms--could use
 U.S. courts to enforce WTO agreements.

 As trade has exploded in the '90s, however, the traditional notions of
 nation-states and economic sovereignty are increasingly challenged by a
 maze of international rules and regulatory bodies.

 U.S. and Canadian critics are particularly worried about an obscure
 provision of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, that gives
 foreign investors a powerful weapon to attack laws they deem
 discriminatory, particularly in the environmental and health safety arenas.

 Last fall, the U.S.-based Ethyl Corp. successfully used NAFTA to overturn a
 Canadian ban on the import of a controversial Ethyl gasoline additive, MMT,
 on grounds that the ban discriminated against a foreign company.

 Funeral home operators, hazardous-waste management firms and others have
 filed similar complaints challenging Canadian and Mexican environmental
 regulations and even the courts of Mississippi.

 Canada Wants Part of NAFTA Reconsidered

 Canada, since hit with three more NAFTA cases, decries the complaints as an
 attack on its sovereign rights. It has now asked the U.S. and Mexican
 governments to reconsider the part of NAFTA that caused the problem--an
 investor protection provision known as Chapter 11. That review is now
 underway.

 But NAFTA isn't the only worry.

 The 4-year-old World Trade Organization, while opening up lucrative export
 opportunities for U.S. telecommunication firms, toy makers and chemical
 manufacturers, has also created new legal levers that can be used to
 challenge federal, state and local laws.

 To date, Uncle Sam has been the biggest beneficiary of the WTO system,
 racking up the most successful complaints against foreign trading partners.

 After years of fruitless bilateral talks, the U.S. used the WTO dispute
 settlement system to attack the European Union's ban on hormone-treated
 beef and Japan's onerous fumigation process for imported fruit, arguing
 that those health regulations were thinly disguised protectionist barriers.
 It won both cases, though the EU is still balking at lifting its beef
 hormone ban.

 The U.S. has also been on the receiving end of a few successful WTO
 complaints, including challenges to a toughened U.S. environmental standard
 for gasoline and a ban on tuna imported from countries that fail to use
 dolphin-safe fishing techniques.

 As such challenges gain momentum, the United States increasingly finds
 itself on the defensive, caught between obligations to its trading partners
 and corporations and the concerns of state and local authorities and
 citizen groups.

 Thus, even trade advocates are now taking these concerns more seriously.

 After all, shouldn't the democratically elected leaders of Canada--or
 Mexico or the United States or anywhere else--be free to ban gasoline
 additives they consider harmful?

 Or shouldn't the Commonwealth of Massachusetts be free to decide whose
 products to buy with taxpayers' money? Not according to a federal judge,
 who just overturned the state's ban on buying goods from companies that do
 business in the military-controlled nation of Myanmar, formerly Burma.

 For officials like Heidi Heitkamp, the attorney general of North Dakota,
 which boasts an extensive, and sometimes prickly, trading relationship with
 Canada, these worries are far from theoretical.

 "From my perspective, NAFTA and other trade agreements present the greatest
 challenge to state sovereignty that we have," Heitkamp said.

 Lower Barriers Have Helped U.S. Most

 The United States, whose Fortune 500 firms are increasingly global and rely
 heavily on foreign operations for their profits, has always had the most to
 gain by pushing other nations to lower trade barriers and adopt
 Western-style business practices.

 In fact, trade has been one of the fastest-growing parts of the U.S.
 economy--a big reason for today's low joblessness and minuscule inflation
 rate.

 Rising criticism of these inroads against local control comes even as the
 United States seeks to expand NAFTA's controversial investor protections by
 including them in the WTO and other proposed regional trade agreements.
 Similar protections already are built into many U.S. bilateral trade deals.

 The high emotion that surrounds the issue of local control, along with the
 fragility of today's world economy, has made officials squeamish about even
 discussing it. The Justice Department and the Office of the U.S. Trade
 Representative refused to address the issue on the record. Canadian and
 Mexican officials also declined to discuss the subject.

 Chapter 11 of NAFTA provides that foreign investors who believe that they
 have been discriminated against or that their assets have been unfairly
 "expropriated" can demand compensation from the country where they are
 doing business.

 These cases are heard by a three-member international trade tribunal whose
 proceedings are confidential to protect the corporations and governments
 involved. However, the participants are allowed to make their claims public
 if they choose.

 There is good reason for some sort of protection, particularly in countries
 with weak judicial systems and a history of government expropriation,
 according to Newport Beach-based Metalclad Corp.

 Two years ago, after Mexican officials invited Metalclad to build a $
 22-million waste disposal plant in the state of San Luis Potosi, the local
 government succumbed to pressure from environmentalists and declared the
 site an ecological preserve, according to the U.S. firm.

 Metalclad filed a NAFTA claim seeking $ 90 million in compensation. The
 final hearing on the case is scheduled for July 1.

 "Neither Canada nor Mexico has internal protections for private property,
 and there is tremendous justification for a treaty to override federal,
 state or local law to provide protections for foreign investment," said
 Grant Kesler, president of Metalclad.

 But critics argue that the Chapter 11 provision invites abuse because it
 defines the rights of foreign investors too broadly and gives multinational
 firms--whose first obligation is to shareholders, not the public--a legal
 weapon that was historically reserved for governments.

 Legal experts say Canada is particularly vulnerable to NAFTA challenges
 because of its tough environmental laws.

 Gasoline Additive Prompted Reversal

 In the Ethyl case, Canada was concerned about the health effects of MMT, a
 manganese-based gasoline additive also banned in California, and banned its
 import and transport. Ethyl produces the additive in the U.S. and processes
 it in Canada.

 But after Ethyl Corp. filed its NAFTA complaint, the Canadian government
 conducted a study that determined it lacked sufficient scientific data to
 support its MMT ban. Rather than risk losing the case before a NAFTA
 tribunal, the government revoked the ban and settled with Ethyl.

 Emboldened by Ethyl's success, other firms are following suit. Canada
 lifted a ban on the export of PCB-contaminated waste after U.S. firms
 threatened to challenge the law under NAFTA. Ohio-based S. D. Meyers Inc.,
 a PCB treatment company, then sued under NAFTA to recover profits lost
 while the ban was in place.

 In a third case, Santa Barbara-based Sun Belt Water Inc. sued after British
 Columbia enacted a moratorium on the export of water that invalidated a
 1991 water contract Sun Belt had signed with a Canadian firm.

 Jack Lindsey, Sun Belt's chairman and chief executive, insisted that he is
 not challenging the Canadian government's right to control its water
 resources. However, he said the government should compensate his firm for
 "destroying this business," which he values at between $ 105 million to $
 200 million.

 The S. D. Meyers and Sun Belt cases are still pending.

 Even Barry Appleton, the Canadian attorney who represented Ethyl in the
 NAFTA proceeding, agrees that the trade agreement has created an
 unexpectedly broad avenue for legitimate domestic regulations to be
 challenged in a court governed by international law.

 "No one quite understood or anticipated where it would go," he said.

 Canadian and Mexican courts are not the only arena for these NAFTA
 disputes. NAFTA is also being used to put the Mississippi judicial system
 on trial, according to trade experts.

 That's what Loewen Group, a troubled Canada-based funeral home operator,
 did last summer when it filed the first Chapter 11 complaint in the United
 States, seeking $ 725 million in damages.

 Loewen's troubles began in 1991, when Jeremiah O'Keefe, a Biloxi, Miss.,
 funeral home operator, took the Canadian firm to court for allegedly
 orchestrating an illegal campaign to drive local competitors out of
 business. In 1995, a Mississippi jury sided with O'Keefe and awarded him $
 500 million in damages.

 In response, the Canadian firm sought compensation from the U.S. government
 through the NAFTA process. Loewen alleges that its investor rights were
 violated because the Mississippi courts subjected its officials to
 "invidious discrimination because they were Canadians."

 Loewen claims that the U.S. government is liable because it is required to
 "ensure that state governments comply with NAFTA."

 If Loewen wins, damages will come from U.S. taxpayers, not the plaintiffs
 in the Mississippi lawsuit.


 "The absolute frightening part of this thing is that in this particular
 instance, the United States government has surrendered its sovereignty over
 a matter of fraud and tort and predatory and illegal practices within its
 own boundaries," said O'Keefe's attorney, Michael Allred.

 The WTO's clout is also evident in a high-profile case that brought the
 legal wrath of the European Union, Japan and other nations down on a
 campaign by several dozen state and local governments to send a political
 message.

 In October, a federal judge in Boston overturned a Massachusetts law that
 restricted the state's business dealings with companies involved in Myanmar.

 The judge found that the law was unconstitutional because it interfered
 with the federal government's right to regulate foreign commerce.

 Massachusetts Official Decries a U.S. Stance

 Thomas Barnico, an assistant state attorney general in Massachusetts,
 blames the U.S. commitment to the WTO for creating the legal ammunition to
 overturn his state's Myanmar law.

 The EU, backed by Japan and the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations, used the
 WTO system to challenge the Massachusetts statute because it affects
 foreign as well as domestic firms doing business in Myanmar. In his ruling,
 Judge Joseph Tauro cited the WTO tensions as an example of the state law's
 "disruptive impact on foreign relations."

 Massachusetts officials, who have appealed the case, claim that the ruling
 violates their sovereign right to control where and how the state spends
 its money.

 Legal experts say the ruling imperils dozens of state and local laws,
 including selective purchasing laws aimed at the governments of Nigeria and
 Cuba, "Buy local" programs and recycled-content requirements.

 "If the Tauro decision is allowed to stand, it would enable private
 corporations to avoid the sovereignty protections that kept state
 governments from opposing the WTO," said Bob Stumberg, an international
 legal expert at the Harrison Institute for Public Law at Georgetown
 University.

 In the coming months, officials such as Tom Gede, a California state
 assistant attorney general, will be testing the loyalties of the Clinton
 administration.

 California has joined North Dakota and eight other states in filing a
 friend of the court brief backing Massachusetts' appeal. Similar
 expressions of support have also been filed by city officials, labor
 organizations and citizen groups.

 "These trade agreements can offer a platform from which claimants can
 attack state laws that are protective of our health, safety and our
 environment," Gede said. "The United States has pledged to support the
 states in protection of those kinds of laws in the international tribunal.
 But we will be vigilant."

 LANGUAGE: English

 LOAD-DATE: February 28, 1999
 **********************************
  >>



Many of you will have already seen this excellent article.
********************
Los Angeles Times
February 28, 1999
Sunday, Home Edition

SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Foreign Desk

LENGTH: 2286 words

HEADLINE: TRADE PACTS ACCUSED OF SUBVERTING U.S. POLICIES;

COMMERCE: CRITICS SAY AGREEMENTS SUCH AS NAFTA GIVE FOREIGN INTERESTS LEGAL
AMMUNITION TO INFLUENCE ECONOMY AS WELL AS SAFETY, HEALTH AND OTHER ISSUES.

BYLINE: EVELYN IRITANI, TIMES STAFF WRITER

BODY: The global push toward a "borderless economy," already blamed for the
turmoil that has impoverished millions from Seoul to Sao Paulo, is
increasingly accused of another sin: undermining the sovereignty of
governments.

Sweeping free-trade initiatives of the 1990s, such as NAFTA and the World
Trade Organization, are coming under attack for handing foreign interests
the legal firepower to undercut public policy on economic, health, safety
and other issues.

Under the umbrella of international trade pacts, a spate of recent lawsuits
by outsiders has toppled environmental laws in Canada and so-called
selective purchasing laws in Massachusetts. In Mississippi, a Canadian
funeral home operator is using NAFTA to challenge an unfavorable court
verdict.

The unexpected volume of legal tumult inspired by the tearing down of trade
barriers has given fresh ammunition to critics who have long portrayed
international trade deals as sacrificing local political control on the
altar of unbridled capitalism.

"As concerned as we were, we underestimated the potential power grab and
damage potential to the fundamentals of governance," said Lori Wallach,
director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, a Washington-based
advocacy group.

U.S. suspicion of foreign influence is hardly new, of course: The Founding
Fathers used fear of economic colonialism as a rallying cry, and it's
always been easy to stir up protectionist sentiment or criticism of, say,
the United Nations.

Congress saw threats to sovereignty when it adopted the hotly debated WTO
trade agreement in 1994, and sought to limit the damage by specifying that
only the U.S. government--and not foreigners or private firms--could use
U.S. courts to enforce WTO agreements.

As trade has exploded in the '90s, however, the traditional notions of
nation-states and economic sovereignty are increasingly challenged by a
maze of international rules and regulatory bodies.

U.S. and Canadian critics are particularly worried about an obscure
provision of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, that gives
foreign investors a powerful weapon to attack laws they deem
discriminatory, particularly in the environmental and health safety arenas.

Last fall, the U.S.-based Ethyl Corp. successfully used NAFTA to overturn a
Canadian ban on the import of a controversial Ethyl gasoline additive, MMT,
on grounds that the ban discriminated against a foreign company.

Funeral home operators, hazardous-waste management firms and others have
filed similar complaints challenging Canadian and Mexican environmental
regulations and even the courts of Mississippi.

Canada Wants Part of NAFTA Reconsidered

Canada, since hit with three more NAFTA cases, decries the complaints as an
attack on its sovereign rights. It has now asked the U.S. and Mexican
governments to reconsider the part of NAFTA that caused the problem--an
investor protection provision known as Chapter 11. That review is now
underway.

But NAFTA isn't the only worry.

The 4-year-old World Trade Organization, while opening up lucrative export
opportunities for U.S. telecommunication firms, toy makers and chemical
manufacturers, has also created new legal levers that can be used to
challenge federal, state and local laws.

To date, Uncle Sam has been the biggest beneficiary of the WTO system,
racking up the most successful complaints against foreign trading partners.

After years of fruitless bilateral talks, the U.S. used the WTO dispute
settlement system to attack the European Union's ban on hormone-treated
beef and Japan's onerous fumigation process for imported fruit, arguing
that those health regulations were thinly disguised protectionist barriers.
It won both cases, though the EU is still balking at lifting its beef
hormone ban.

The U.S. has also been on the receiving end of a few successful WTO
complaints, including challenges to a toughened U.S. environmental standard
for gasoline and a ban on tuna imported from countries that fail to use
dolphin-safe fishing techniques.

As such challenges gain momentum, the United States increasingly finds
itself on the defensive, caught between obligations to its trading partners
and corporations and the concerns of state and local authorities and
citizen groups.

Thus, even trade advocates are now taking these concerns more seriously.

After all, shouldn't the democratically elected leaders of Canada--or
Mexico or the United States or anywhere else--be free to ban gasoline
additives they consider harmful?

Or shouldn't the Commonwealth of Massachusetts be free to decide whose
products to buy with taxpayers' money? Not according to a federal judge,
who just overturned the state's ban on buying goods from companies that do
business in the military-controlled nation of Myanmar, formerly Burma.

For officials like Heidi Heitkamp, the attorney general of North Dakota,
which boasts an extensive, and sometimes prickly, trading relationship with
Canada, these worries are far from theoretical.

"From my perspective, NAFTA and other trade agreements present the greatest
challenge to state sovereignty that we have," Heitkamp said.

Lower Barriers Have Helped U.S. Most

The United States, whose Fortune 500 firms are increasingly global and rely
heavily on foreign operations for their profits, has always had the most to
gain by pushing other nations to lower trade barriers and adopt
Western-style business practices.

In fact, trade has been one of the fastest-growing parts of the U.S.
economy--a big reason for today's low joblessness and minuscule inflation
rate.

Rising criticism of these inroads against local control comes even as the
United States seeks to expand NAFTA's controversial investor protections by
including them in the WTO and other proposed regional trade agreements.
Similar protections already are built into many U.S. bilateral trade deals.

The high emotion that surrounds the issue of local control, along with the
fragility of today's world economy, has made officials squeamish about even
discussing it. The Justice Department and the Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative refused to address the issue on the record. Canadian and
Mexican officials also declined to discuss the subject.

Chapter 11 of NAFTA provides that foreign investors who believe that they
have been discriminated against or that their assets have been unfairly
"expropriated" can demand compensation from the country where they are
doing business.

These cases are heard by a three-member international trade tribunal whose
proceedings are confidential to protect the corporations and governments
involved. However, the participants are allowed to make their claims public
if they choose.

There is good reason for some sort of protection, particularly in countries
with weak judicial systems and a history of government expropriation,
according to Newport Beach-based Metalclad Corp.

Two years ago, after Mexican officials invited Metalclad to build a $
22-million waste disposal plant in the state of San Luis Potosi, the local
government succumbed to pressure from environmentalists and declared the
site an ecological preserve, according to the U.S. firm.

Metalclad filed a NAFTA claim seeking $ 90 million in compensation. The
final hearing on the case is scheduled for July 1.

"Neither Canada nor Mexico has internal protections for private property,
and there is tremendous justification for a treaty to override federal,
state or local law to provide protections for foreign investment," said
Grant Kesler, president of Metalclad.

But critics argue that the Chapter 11 provision invites abuse because it
defines the rights of foreign investors too broadly and gives multinational
firms--whose first obligation is to shareholders, not the public--a legal
weapon that was historically reserved for governments.

Legal experts say Canada is particularly vulnerable to NAFTA challenges
because of its tough environmental laws.

Gasoline Additive Prompted Reversal

In the Ethyl case, Canada was concerned about the health effects of MMT, a
manganese-based gasoline additive also banned in California, and banned its
import and transport. Ethyl produces the additive in the U.S. and processes
it in Canada.

But after Ethyl Corp. filed its NAFTA complaint, the Canadian government
conducted a study that determined it lacked sufficient scientific data to
support its MMT ban. Rather than risk losing the case before a NAFTA
tribunal, the government revoked the ban and settled with Ethyl.

Emboldened by Ethyl's success, other firms are following suit. Canada
lifted a ban on the export of PCB-contaminated waste after U.S. firms
threatened to challenge the law under NAFTA. Ohio-based S. D. Meyers Inc.,
a PCB treatment company, then sued under NAFTA to recover profits lost
while the ban was in place.

In a third case, Santa Barbara-based Sun Belt Water Inc. sued after British
Columbia enacted a moratorium on the export of water that invalidated a
1991 water contract Sun Belt had signed with a Canadian firm.

Jack Lindsey, Sun Belt's chairman and chief executive, insisted that he is
not challenging the Canadian government's right to control its water
resources. However, he said the government should compensate his firm for
"destroying this business," which he values at between $ 105 million to $
200 million.

The S. D. Meyers and Sun Belt cases are still pending.

Even Barry Appleton, the Canadian attorney who represented Ethyl in the
NAFTA proceeding, agrees that the trade agreement has created an
unexpectedly broad avenue for legitimate domestic regulations to be
challenged in a court governed by international law.

"No one quite understood or anticipated where it would go," he said.

Canadian and Mexican courts are not the only arena for these NAFTA
disputes. NAFTA is also being used to put the Mississippi judicial system
on trial, according to trade experts.

That's what Loewen Group, a troubled Canada-based funeral home operator,
did last summer when it filed the first Chapter 11 complaint in the United
States, seeking $ 725 million in damages.

Loewen's troubles began in 1991, when Jeremiah O'Keefe, a Biloxi, Miss.,
funeral home operator, took the Canadian firm to court for allegedly
orchestrating an illegal campaign to drive local competitors out of
business. In 1995, a Mississippi jury sided with O'Keefe and awarded him $
500 million in damages.

In response, the Canadian firm sought compensation from the U.S. government
through the NAFTA process. Loewen alleges that its investor rights were
violated because the Mississippi courts subjected its officials to
"invidious discrimination because they were Canadians."

Loewen claims that the U.S. government is liable because it is required to
"ensure that state governments comply with NAFTA."

If Loewen wins, damages will come from U.S. taxpayers, not the plaintiffs
in the Mississippi lawsuit.


"The absolute frightening part of this thing is that in this particular
instance, the United States government has surrendered its sovereignty over
a matter of fraud and tort and predatory and illegal practices within its
own boundaries," said O'Keefe's attorney, Michael Allred.

The WTO's clout is also evident in a high-profile case that brought the
legal wrath of the European Union, Japan and other nations down on a
campaign by several dozen state and local governments to send a political
message.

In October, a federal judge in Boston overturned a Massachusetts law that
restricted the state's business dealings with companies involved in Myanmar.

The judge found that the law was unconstitutional because it interfered
with the federal government's right to regulate foreign commerce.

Massachusetts Official Decries a U.S. Stance

Thomas Barnico, an assistant state attorney general in Massachusetts,
blames the U.S. commitment to the WTO for creating the legal ammunition to
overturn his state's Myanmar law.

The EU, backed by Japan and the Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations, used the
WTO system to challenge the Massachusetts statute because it affects
foreign as well as domestic firms doing business in Myanmar. In his ruling,
Judge Joseph Tauro cited the WTO tensions as an example of the state law's
"disruptive impact on foreign relations."

Massachusetts officials, who have appealed the case, claim that the ruling
violates their sovereign right to control where and how the state spends
its money.

Legal experts say the ruling imperils dozens of state and local laws,
including selective purchasing laws aimed at the governments of Nigeria and
Cuba, "Buy local" programs and recycled-content requirements.

"If the Tauro decision is allowed to stand, it would enable private
corporations to avoid the sovereignty protections that kept state
governments from opposing the WTO," said Bob Stumberg, an international
legal expert at the Harrison Institute for Public Law at Georgetown
University.

In the coming months, officials such as Tom Gede, a California state
assistant attorney general, will be testing the loyalties of the Clinton
administration.

California has joined North Dakota and eight other states in filing a
friend of the court brief backing Massachusetts' appeal. Similar
expressions of support have also been filed by city officials, labor
organizations and citizen groups.

"These trade agreements can offer a platform from which claimants can
attack state laws that are protective of our health, safety and our
environment," Gede said. "The United States has pledged to support the
states in protection of those kinds of laws in the international tribunal.
But we will be vigilant."

LANGUAGE: English

LOAD-DATE: February 28, 1999
**********************************



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