To: All District 9 Rapid Response Local Union Members
Which paper mill will close next?
We have over 6,000 USW production workers at 20 plants in 7 states that produce coated paper products and CHINA is
trying to take over out coated paper Industry.
We will have an Action Call coming out within a week and we need all of our District 9 Local participation. We have
to make the public aware of what is going on in the coated paper industry by sending a Letter to the Editor of you
Local City and Town news paper.
We will send the details out in an Action Call soon.
In Solidarity,
Greg
For Immediate Release: July 28, 2010
Contact: Gary Hubbard, 202-778-4384 (O); 202-256-8125 (C); ghubbard@usw.org
USW Cites Congressional Effort Asking Obama Administration to Address Chinese Subsidies of Paper Industry
Threatening U.S. Jobs
Washington, D.C. (Jul. 28, 2010) – The United Steelworkers (USW) joins Appleton Coated LLC, NewPage
Corporation, and Sappi Fine Paper North America in applauding the efforts of more than 100 Members of Congress who
wrote to President Obama today, asking for action on Chinese subsidies to that nation’s paper producers.
The letter to the U.S. President urges he “carefully examine the practices employed by the Chinese government to
provide its paper industry an artificial and unfair advantage in the U.S. market, and determine the extent to which
these practices cause or threaten to cause harm to American producers.” The letter was spurred by the devastating
impact that Chinese unfairly-priced paper exports are having on the industry all across the country.
USW President Leo W. Gerard said: "We commend the action taken by this bipartisan group of U.S. Senators and
Congressional members demanding that China obey international trade laws. Too many jobs and too many
companies are being destroyed because of how China subsidizes production and violates free trade principles in
paper manufacturing as well as in other industries."
The letter points to a study recently released by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) which highlighted the
continuing efforts of the Chinese government to promote the development of its paper producers at almost any
expense. The academic study, authored by Dr. Usha Haley, identified roughly $33 billion in subsidies provided to
China’s paper producers in a variety of forms that have stimulated enormous capacity increases and jeopardized
production and jobs in the U.S.
Jon Geenen, USW International Vice President at Large and Chair of the union’s paper industry bargaining, observed
that the congressional signatories come from thirty-one states representing more than half of the country where
paper manufacturing is a critical industry and employer. He adds, “Our industry has experienced capacity reductions
resulting in the loss of jobs in communities all across the country. The petitions show that unfairly traded
imports from China and Indonesia are a significant contributor to mill closures and resultant job losses.”
The companies and the United Steelworkers filed unfair trade cases on September 23, 2009 with the U.S. Department
of Commerce (DOC) and the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) alleging that certain coated paper from China
and Indonesia had been dumped and subsidized, resulting in injury to the domestic industry and its employees.
The three companies employ about 6,000 production workers represented by the USW at 20 paper mills operating in
seven states. The USW represents a total of 130,000 workers employed in the North American paper industry.
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