Sugar Workers Union, Local 1660 v. Dole

14 Ct. Int'l Trade 861, 755 F. Supp. 1071, 14 C.I.T. 861, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 598
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedDecember 21, 1990
DocketCourt No. 88-08-00670
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 Ct. Int'l Trade 861 (Sugar Workers Union, Local 1660 v. Dole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of International Trade primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sugar Workers Union, Local 1660 v. Dole, 14 Ct. Int'l Trade 861, 755 F. Supp. 1071, 14 C.I.T. 861, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 598 (cit 1990).

Opinion

Background

Musgrave, Judge:

Plaintiffs in this action challenge the refusal of the Department of Labor (“Labor”) to certify as eligible to apply for worker adjustment assistance the former employees of the Amstar Sugar Corporation’s Bunker Hill sugar refining plant in Charlestown, Massachusetts. Before it was closed in 1988 the plant refined raw sugar for sale to producers of various sugar-containing products. Plaintiffs challenged Labor’s prior final determination that the plaintiffs’ separation from employment was not attributable to increased imports into this country of raw or refined sugar during the relevant time period. In Slip Opinion 89-119 of 25 August 1989, this Court remanded the matter to Labor with instructions that Labor consider the effect, if any, on plaintiffs separations of imports of sugar blends and sugar substitutes during the period; in particular the Court directed Labor’s attention to a report by the General Accounting Office (“Report”) alleged by plaintiffs to describe increases in imports of such items competing with the items produced by plaintiffs.

On remand, Labor determined that the Report “contained very little that could be considered in Labor’s determination”, Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiffs Motion Pursuant to Rule 56.1 (“Opposition”) at 13, and that in any event the available data on imports of sugar blends and substitutes during the relevant period provided no basis to alter Labor’s prior determination of ineligibility. With respect to the former argument, Labor emphasizes that the Report estimated the level of 1987 imports of sugar-containing products “irrespective of whether domestic production was displaced”, id., and also that the Report “concerned allegations of illegal activities whereby sugar was imported ostensibly for use in the manufacture of sugar blended products [863]*863either for export or for entry into the U.S. market.1” With respect to the latter, Labor states that the data on sugar blends and substitutes presented in the Report suggests that imports of such products during the relevant period were not substantial enough to have contributed importantly to plaintiffs’ separation from employment as required to qualify plaintiffs for adjustment assistance.

Plaintiffs dispute Labor’s remand determination on several grounds. First, plaintiffs contest Labor’s finding that the Report did not address the magnitude of U.S. imports of sugar blends and substitutes. Plaintiffs assert that the Report and several of its appendices indeed contain such information in the form of statistical estimates and data on the imports of sugar-containing articles, including sugar substitutes. Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Support of its Rule 56.1 Motion (“Memorandum”) at 17-24. Plaintiffs also propose a somewhat different, more complex analysis of the information contained in the Report. Plaintiffs argue that it was the combination of imports of sugar-containing or sugar-substitute products along with alleged market perversions wrought by the system of quantitative restrictions on sugar imports maintained by the U.S. Government that caused or contributed importantly to the termination of operations at the Bunker Hill refinery. Plaintiffs argue that the situation of their industry is unlike the normal situation in which “the absence of substantial increases of purchases of imported like or directly competitive articles by customers of the closed plant” would disqualify its former workers from eligibility. In the sugar industry, plaintiffs claim, the increase in imports of sugar blends and substitutes, even if those imports were not for the most part purchased by the customers of plaintiffs’ plant, resulted in a reduction in the overall domestic demand for raw sugar, which reduction in turn led to a decrease in the amount of sugar allowed to enter the country under the quota program; thus, less raw sugar was available, and at higher prices, for domestic refineries like Bunker Hill, and such refineries were therefore forced to reduce production. This result was compounded, plaintiffs assert, by the fact that the high support prices forced many manufacturers to switch from sugar to other sweeteners such as corn sweeteners in their products, and by the fact that the lower quota levels induced even greater imports of high-sugar-content articles (to circumvent the quota on raw sugar) which repeated the above process, further exacerbating the problem. Plaintiffs’ Memorandum at 11-17.

Related to this mode of analysis, plaintiffs contend that “[a]ll imports of high sugar content articles should be considered like or directly competitive articles [with those produced by plaintiffs] * * * because the increase in the importation of these articles is due solely to the substantial [864]*864advantage of the imported refined sugar created by U.S. government regulation.” Id. at 24. That is,

the increase in sugar imported in all high sugar content articles, including that in mixtures of sugar and one or more other ingredients such as tea, flavoring and gelatin should be considered directly competitive products because there is substantial evidence that the sole reason for the increase in these imports was the inducement to obtain access to the substantially lower cost refined sugar in these mixtures.

Id. (emphasis added). In response to the Government’s position that because of their different uses, many of these imported high sugar content items are not like or directly competitive with the refined sugar products formerly produced by the Bunker Hill refinery, plaintiffs state that in the case cited by the Government in relying on use as the determining factor, there was no evidence that government regulatory policy caused the domestic item to be “far more costly” than the imported item. Id.

Analysis

It is necessary in deciding between these contending positions first to examine the statute at issue establishing the eligibility criteria for worker adjustment assistance. Section 2272 of Title 19 U.S.C. numerates the requirements for “group eligibility” for worker adjustment assistance benefits, directing Labor to certify a group of workers as eligible to apply for such assistance if Labor determines

(1) that a significant number or proportion of the workers in such workers’ firm or an appropriate subdivision of the firm have become totally or partially separated, or are threatened to become totally or partially separated,
(2) that sales or production, or both, of such firm or subdivision have decreased absolutely, and
(3) that increases of imports of articles like or directly competitive with articles produced by such workers’ firm or an appropriate subdivision thereof contributed importantly to such total or partial separation, or threat thereof, and to such decline in sales or production.

The dispute in this action concerns only the third requirement. Further distilled, this requirement establishes two criteria: first, the imported articles involved must be “like or directly competitive with” those produced by plaintiffs’ firm, i.e., with refined sugar; second, those imports must have “contributed importantly” to the plaintiffs’ separation from employment. Both elements must be established to meet the third requirement.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ct. Int'l Trade 861, 755 F. Supp. 1071, 14 C.I.T. 861, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugar-workers-union-local-1660-v-dole-cit-1990.