§ 42-26.2-2. Legislative findings.
It is hereby found and declared as follows:
(1) Today's international trade agreements have impacts that extend significantly beyond
the bounds of traditional trade matters such as tariffs and quotas, and instead grant
foreign investors and service providers certain rights and privileges regarding operations
within a state's territory, subject various state non-trade related laws to challenge
as "barriers to trade� in the binding dispute resolution bodies that accompany the
pacts, and place limits on the future policy options of state legislatures.
(2) The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), for example, grants foreign firms
new rights and privileges for operating within a state that exceed those granted to
U.S. businesses under state and federal law. NAFTA has already generated "regulatory
takings� cases against state and local land use decisions, state environmental and
public health policies, adverse state court rulings, and state and local contracts
that would not have been possible in U.S. courts.
(3) When states agree to be bound by government procurement provisions contained in trade
agreements such as World Trade Organization (WTO), NAFTA and various NAFTA-expansion
agreements such as Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), common economic
development and environmental policies, such as buy-local laws, policies to prevent
off-shoring of state jobs, as well as recycled content laws could be subject to challenge
as "barriers to trade� as they contradict the obligations in the trade agreements.
(4) Today's trade agreements also curtail state regulatory authority by placing constraints
on future policy options. The WTO services agreement undermines state efforts to expand
healthcare coverage and rein in healthcare costs, and places constraints on state
and local land use planning. New negotiations in the services area will have additional
implications for state regulation of energy, higher education, professional licensing,
and more.
(5) Despite the indisputable fact that today's international trade agreements have far-reaching
impacts on state and local law and policy, federal government trade negotiators have
failed to provide state legislatures with necessary information and documents regarding
provisions directly affecting state jurisdiction, have failed to consult with state
legislatures when seeking the consent of states to be bound to trade agreement procurement
obligations, and have sought neither governor nor legislature consent before binding
states to comply with numerous other trade agreement provisions.
(6) The current encroachment on state regulatory authority by international trade agreements
has been exacerbated because U.S. trade policy is being formulated and implemented
under "Fast Track� Trade Authority procedures. Fast Track eliminates any meaningful
role for states and limits Congress's role to a yes or no vote with no amendments
after negotiations are completed and a final agreement is signed. When Fast Track
sunsets in 2007, it should be replaced with a more democratic model for negotiating
trade agreements, one which ensures that the prior informed consent of states is secured
before states are bound to the regulatory terms of any trade agreement.
(7) This law is enacted to protect the state's sovereignty; the state's ability to safeguard
the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens; and the Founders' system of federalism
in the current era of globalization.