Five Separate Records Move Today's Compliance Queue
Good morning. Today's records do not point to one enforcement campaign. They are separate file movements across trade-remedy litigation, CAFTA-DR textile availability, North Korea sanctions licensing, Section 337 import-exclusion procedure, and FTZ production activity.
Five source records moved in the same cycle: a CIT remand order in the Xiamen Dalle low-speed vehicle AD/CVD litigation; a CITA CAFTA-DR commercial-availability determination for double weave nylon/polyester/spandex fabric; an OFAC North Korea sanctions list identifying medical devices that require specific authorization; a USITC Section 337 review on LCD glass substrates, including remedy, public-interest, and bonding submissions; and an FTZ 207 proposed production activity notice for Lutron window shades in Ashland, Virginia.
The practical read is record by record. Match each notice to the operating file it actually touches.
This is a queue-management issue. The records share a publication cycle, not a policy theory. Trade-remedy teams should refresh the Xiamen Dalle docket and any related cash-deposit or reserve assumptions. Apparel and sourcing teams should check whether the CAFTA-DR short-supply addition affects origin planning or duty treatment. Sanctions teams should update North Korea medical-device screening. Section 337 teams should track remedy, public-interest, and bonding submissions. FTZ users should check production-authority monitoring, component status, and comment deadlines.
The risk is procedural but operational. A remand can change duty modeling. A CAFTA-DR short-supply addition can change apparel sourcing economics. An OFAC list can change whether a shipment needs specific authorization. A Section 337 review can move toward an exclusion-order posture. An FTZ notice can affect admission records, privileged foreign status elections, and production-authority planning.
Watch the next concrete dates in each file: Commerce's remand redetermination in Xiamen Dalle; CAFTA-DR short-supply implementation effective June 11, 2026; OFAC list updates or licensing guidance; USITC initial submissions due June 22, 2026 and reply submissions due June 29, 2026 in 337-TA-1441; and the FTZ 207 comment window closing July 21, 2026.
Do not turn these records into one story. The risk is narrower and more useful. One deadline, one filing, or one notice may change an active compliance file.
CIT Remands Commerce Determination in Xiamen Dalle Low-Speed Vehicle AD/CVD Case
The U.S. Court of International Trade granted Commerce's motion to remand the Xiamen Dalle New Energy Automobile case, ordering Commerce to file a redetermination within 75 days.
It may affect remand strategy, AD/CVD duty modeling, cash-deposit assumptions, reserve treatment, and client-facing landed-cost guidance.
CITA CAFTA-DR Commercial Availability Determination: Double Weave Nylon/Polyester/Spandex Fabric
The Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements (CITA) determined that certain double weave nylon/polyester/spandex fabric, classified under HTSUS 5407.72.00.60, is not commercially available in a timely manner in CAFTA-DR countries and added it to the Annex 3.25 short-supply list in unrestricted quantities, effective June 11, 2026.
It may affect CAFTA-DR short-supply planning, apparel origin analysis, fabric sourcing, and duty-free treatment for qualifying apparel made with the covered fabric.
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