International Business Committee
Government Affairs Committee
Transportation Committee
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS COMMITTEE
Peter Bordeaux (Chairman)
Charles Nelson (Vice Chairman)
MISSION: To recommend policy positions and programs to
strengthen Louisiana's development of foreign trade, investment and
international services.
1997 Trade Programs:
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1997 Trade Programs details
View selected featured speaches
On January 17, the WTC, the Honorary Consulate of Switzerland and other
co-sponsoring organizations hosted a luncheon program on "Doing
Business in Switzerland" in the Plimsoll Club featuring
the Hon. Alphons N. Mueggler, Consul General of Switzerland in Houston
and Mr. Scot Orgish, Commercial Officer with the Swiss
Consulate General. A total of 49 participants attended the luncheon.
On January 21, the WTC and other organizations sponsored a "Doing
Business in China" luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club for
a high-level 18-member trade delegation from China led by Mr. An Chengxin,
Vice Chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT).
Members of the delegation and local businessmen and women met for a roundtable
discussion prior to the luncheon. The program was very successful, with 105
participants attending the luncheon.
On February 7, the WTC and other organizations hosted a luncheon program for
125 participants on "Doing Business in Latin America and the
Caribbean" in the Plimsoll Club featuring the Hon. Enrique
V. Iglesias, President of the Inter-American Development Bank.
On February 14, the WTC, the New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center and
other co-sponsoring organizations sponsored a "Doing Business in
Azerbaijan" breakfast briefing in the WTC Executive Offices featuring Amb.
Richard D. Kauzlarich, U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan. A total of 30 participants
attended the briefing.
On February 17 - May 29 and September 8 - December 18, the WTC held its two
1997 sessions of Foreign Language Classes. A total of 62 students were enrolled
in French, German, Japanese and Spanish classes.
On February 18, the WTC and the Foreign Relations Association hosted a dinner
program in the Plimsoll Club for 26 participants featuring Amb. Charles R.
Baquet, III, Deputy Director of the U.S. Peace Corps in Washington D.C. who
spoke on "Coping with an Unpeaceful World: Today's Hot Spots."
WTC Managing Director Gene Schreiber toured Saudi Arabia from March 1-6 at
the invitation of the U.S.-Saudi Arabian Business Council. He was part of an
eight-member group, which included the state trade directors of Arizona,
Florida, Illinois, North and South Carolina, and Virginia. The purpose of the
mission was to acquire first-hand knowledge about the Saudi Arabian business
environment, to meet with key business leaders and government officials, and to
establish working relationships that will benefit companies in the U.S. states
represented on the mission.
On March 3-14, the Port of New Orleans, the World Trade Center, LSU National
Ports and Waterways Institute, and the University of New Orleans co-sponsored
the 13th annual International Program for Port Planning and Management. This
intensive two-week training program, attended by 39 international and U.S.
maritime industry officials in all facets of port planning and management, was
held at the WTC. The program was organized by the College of Urban and Public
Affairs at UNO.
On March 6, the WTC and other organizations hosted a "Doing Business in
Austria" dinner program in the Plimsoll Club for 60 participants featuring
H.E. Helmut Tuerk, Ambassador of Austria to the United States.
On March 17, the WTC, the Japan-Louisiana Association, and other
organizations sponsored a luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club for 108
participants featuring H.E. Kunihiko Saito, Ambassador of Japan to the United
States, who spoke on "U.S.-Japan Relations."
On April 7, the WTC, the Business Council for the United Nations, and other
organizations hosted a luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club featuring H.E.
Antonius Eitel, the Permanent Representative of Germany to the United Nations,
who spoke to 42 attendees. The topic of the Ambassador's briefing was "Back
to Business: Leadership and Changed Management at the UN."
On the evening of April 7, the City of New Orleans, the WTC, and the U.S.
Department of State sponsored a "U.S. Foreign Policy Town Meeting"
featuring the Hon. Timothy Wirth, Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs;
Amb. William Twaddell, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs;
and Amb. Richard C. Brown, Director of the Office of Regional Economic Policy
and Coordinator of the Summit of the Americas.
On April 8, the WTC, the U.S. Department of State, and other organizations
sponsored a luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club for 38 attendees featuring Amb.
Richard Brown, Director of the Office of Regional Economic Policy and
Coordinator of the Summit of the Americas, who spoke on "The Advantages of
Hemispheric Integration."
On April 18, former USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev delivered a luncheon
address to 300 guests in a filled Plimsoll Club on "Russia and the World:
Approaching the 21st Century." The luncheon was organized by David Young
& Associates in cooperation with the WTC. A press conference was held in the
Club preceding the luncheon, where 30 students from the Andrew J. Bell School
presented President Gorbachev with a gift.
On April 22, the WTC and other organizations hosted a luncheon program in the
Plimsoll Club for 68 participants featuring the Rt. Hon. Kintu-Musoke, Prime
Minister of the Republic of Uganda, who spoke on "Doing Business in
Uganda."
On April 24, the WTC and other organizations hosted a breakfast program at
the WTC for 20 attendees featuring Mr. Bernd Langeheine, the Trade Counselor for
the Delegation of the European Commission in Washington D.C., who spoke on
"Current US/EU Trade Issues."
On April 30, the WTC, the Transportation Research Institute, and other
organizations sponsored a luncheon program for 68 attendees in the Plimsoll Club
on the New Orleans International Airport featuring Justice Revius O. Ortique,
Chairman of the New Orleans Aviation Board, who spoke on "Expanding the
Airport's International Activity."
On May 1-4, the Hon. Allister Surette, the Nova Scotia Minister for Acadian
Affairs, led a trade mission of 10 companies to Louisiana. As part of his
agenda, Minister Surette and several Nova Scotian tourism and economic
development officials traveled to New Orleans to meet with World Trade Center
and City officials.
On May 2, the WTC, the African World Network Organization, and other
organizations sponsored a luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club for 117
participants featuring H.E. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, Ambassador of Ghana to the
United States, who also now serves concurrently as his government's new Minister
of Information and Communications. Amb. Spio-Garbrah spoke on "Doing
Business in Ghana."
On May 6, the WTC and 10 other trade and transportation organizations honored
Mr. Robert G. Evans, Sr., at a luncheon in the Plimsoll Club for 180 guests. Mr.
Evans was presented the C. Alvin Bertel Award for his lifelong contributions to
the advancement of the Greater New Orleans Port area.
At the Committee's May 7 meeting, Margo Spencer, Public Affairs Officer for
the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), and an eight-member
Haitian delegation attended the Committee Meeting. Ms. Spencer briefed the
Committee on her organization, the Center for International Private Enterprise,
which is an affiliate of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and was established in
1983 to promote private enterprise and market-oriented economic development
worldwide. Following her briefing, Ms. Spencer introduced the Haitian delegates
and explained that the delegates had spent four days in a training program in
Washington D.C. As part of their training in the United States, the group was
required to visit a Port City, and they chose New Orleans.
On May 9, the WTC and the six local directors of the Institute of
International Education hosted a reception in the WTC Executive Offices for 45
guests to welcome 16 Ukrainian business interns on a visit to New Orleans.
On May 13, the WTC and the Korea/Louisiana Business Association hosted a
one-day Korean Catalog & Sample Show at the WTC and a luncheon in the
Plimsoll Club featuring Mr. Young-Joon Gahng, General Director of the Korea
Trade Center in Dallas.
The WTC in conjunction with the International Trade Council-Red River Region,
the Shreveport Chamber of Commerce, and the Bossier Chamber of Commerce
sponsored a May 21 program in Shreveport to celebrate International Trade Day
and highlight the resources available to potential and current exporters in
north Louisiana. The program was largely coordinated by Jack Walker, WTC
Government and Transportation Affairs Manager.
On May 22, the WTC and other organizations sponsored a luncheon program for
48 participants in the Plimsoll Club featuring Mr. David Tsui, Director of the
Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in New York, who spoke on "The
Transition in Hong Kong -- What It Means for U.S. Businesses."
On June 2 - 3 and November 10-11, Bank One held a two-day seminar at the WTC
on "Export Financing 'Must Knows:' Structuring Successful International
Sales" in cooperation with Jones, Walker law firm and the WTC.
On June 3, the WTC and other organizations sponsored a breakfast program for
20 attendees at the WTC featuring Mr. Trevor Gunn, Deputy Director of the U.S.
Department of Commerce's BISNIS, who spoke on "Recent Business Developments
in the NIS," with an emphasis on Russia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and
Kazakhstan.
On June 6, the WTC, the American-Turkish Council, and other organizations
hosted a half-day seminar and luncheon at the WTC on "Doing Business in
Turkey" for 42 participants. The program featured prominent business
leaders from the Turkish-U.S. Business Council of the Foreign Economic Relations
Board in Istanbul. Jeremy Keller, the U.S. Commercial Consul in Istanbul, was
the featured luncheon speaker.
The New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center organized an all-day World
Trade Day conference at the WTC for 50 participants on June 12. The WTC was one
of the co-sponsoring organizations for the event. The program featured MERCOSUR
(the Southern Cone Common Market) and country briefings on Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
On June 16, the WTC and the Tulane/Loyola Public Law Center hosted a
reception in the World Trade Center's Executive Offices for the International
Legislative Drafting Institute. 53 participants from over 20 countries studied
legislative drafting for an intensive two-week period. The group's graduation
ceremony was held in the Plimsoll Club on the evening of June 27.
As a result of WTC Managing Director Gene Schreiber's trade mission to Saudi
Arabia, on June 25, the WTC and other organizations hosted a half-day seminar
for 54 participants on "Doing Business in Saudi Arabia." The program
featured several prominent speakers from SABIC (Saudi Arabian Basic Industries
Corporation), the U.S. Department of Commerce, Transoceanic Shipping, Crystal
International Corp., and other organizations. The luncheon speaker was Alfred
DeCrane, Jr., recently retired Chairman and CEO of Texaco Inc., and Co-Chairman
of the U.S.-Saudi Arabian Business Council. The seminar was the first of its
type to be held by the Council outside of Washington, D.C.
On June 27, the WTC hosted a luncheon program for 32 participants featuring
Nancy Broadhurst, President of the Etiquette and Protocol Centre of Louisiana,
who spoke on "The Importance of International Protocol in a Global
Economy."
On July 7, Amb. Donald Ensenat, Chairman of the WTC, presented the WTC's 1996
Outstanding Achievement in International Business Award at a ceremony at the
BASF plant in Geismar. The recipient of the award was Dr. Jurgen Strube, the
Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors of BASF AG for his achievement in
international business and his contribution to the economy of Louisiana and his
personal efforts in furthering world peace, trade and understanding. BASF's
state-of-the-art Geismar chemical manufacturing complex has created hundreds of
local jobs for almost 40 years. Accepting the award for Dr. Strube was Mr.
Eggert Voscherau, the CEO of BASF's U.S. operation, who was visiting the Geismar
plant. Louisiana Secretary of Economic Development Kevin Reilly and other state
officials participated in the ceremony.
At the Committee's July 9 meeting, a 16-member Belize Trade Mission to New
Orleans led by the Honorable Alfredo Martinez, Minister of Trade and Industry,
attended the Committee meeting as special guests. Preceding the Committee
meeting, members of the delegation attended a briefing given by WTC and City of
New Orleans officials, and then engaged in matchmaking appointments. That
evening, a reception sponsored by Con-Tech International was held in the
Executive Offices of the World Trade Center.
On July 22, as part of the Committee's effort to expand the WTC's statewide
image and activities, the International Business Committee held a special
luncheon meeting in Shreveport with the International Trade Council - Red River
Region, which was preceded by a tour of the Caddo-Bossier Port. A total of 60
local businessmen and women attended the meeting.
On August 25, WTC President John Ochsner presented the WTC's Thomas F.
Cunningham Award for 1996 to U.S. Congressman Bob Livingston at a luncheon in
the Plimsoll Club for 104 guests. Congressman Livingston received the award for
his outstanding service toward better social, educational, economic, cultural
and political understanding and cooperation among the peoples of the Western
Hemisphere.
On August 28, the WTC hosted a 14-member Agricultural Trade Mission from
China's Guangxi Province led by Vice Governor Zhang Wenxue for a morning seminar
and luncheon for 60 participants at the WTC. The delegation presented joint
venture investment opportunities in a wide range of agriculturally-oriented
projects.
On September 17, Steve Lee, Director of the State of Louisiana Office in
Taiwan, conducted a one-hour briefing on "Taiwan: Opportunities for
Louisiana Businesses" in the WTC's Board Room for 20 participants. The
event was co-sponsored by the World Trade Center and the Louisiana Department of
Economic Development.
Also on September 17, in conjunction with a three-day Ex-Im Training Seminar
(see next item), the WTC hosted a luncheon in the Plimsoll Club featuring Edward
J. Casselle, Group Vice President, U.S. Export-Import Bank, who spoke on
"Ex-Im Bank Small Business Programs."
On September 17-19, the U.S. Export-Import Bank, the Louisiana Department of
Economic Development, and the WTC sponsored a three-day Ex-Im Bank Training
Seminar at the WTC for 65 participants from 7 states. The seminar offered a
detailed working knowledge of Ex-Im Bank's programs and qualified as training
for lenders under both the Working Capital Guarantee Program and the Medium-Term
Priority Lender Program. The seminar was designed for loan officers of
commercial banks and other financial institutions, as well as corporate credit
and finance personnel. The seminar was conducted primarily by four senior Ex-Im
Bank officials. On the first evening, four Louisiana banks sponsored a welcoming
jazz reception for the seminar participants in the Plimsoll Club.
On September 22, the WTC hosted a 20-member delegation from WTC Osaka, Japan
for a morning briefing and luncheon. The delegation traveled to New Orleans and
three other U.S. cities to learn about World Trade Center operations in this
country.
The WTC was again one of the co-sponsoring organizations of Encuentro Las
Americas. The 1997 event was held October 8-10 at Gallier Hall in New Orleans.
Presidential Advisor Thomas F. (Mack) McLarty served as the Keynote Speaker.
Other featured speakers included Prime Minister of Belize Manuel Esquivel and
Nicaraguan President Arnoldo Aleman. Two Encuentro-related events were held at
the WTC: (1) the opening dinner at Viewpoint for 120 VIPs, hosted by Mayor Marc
Morial and Aviation Board Chairman Revius Ortique; and (2) a breakfast at the
Plimsoll Club for 46 local guests honoring Prime Minister Esquivel.
On October 6, the WTC and other organizations sponsored a luncheon program
for 82 participants in the Plimsoll Club featuring H.E. Loucas Tsilas,
Ambassador of Greece to the United States who spoke on "Doing Business in
Greece."
On October 6-10, WTC President John Ochsner, along with WTC Membership
Manager Natalie Rideau and WTC members Dr. I.C.A. Okpalobi and Capt. W.M. Ayers,
attended the General Assembly of the World Trade Centers Association in Hong
Kong.
On October 23, the World Trade Center, MetroVision, and other organizations
co-sponsored a "Doing Business in Chile" morning seminar and luncheon
at the WTC for 44 participants. Mr. Alex Fernandez, President of the
Chilean-American Chamber of Commerce, was the featured luncheon speaker. The
morning speakers included senior government officials and business executives
from Chile.
On October 24, which was United Nations Day throughout the world, the WTC and
other organizations sponsored a luncheon program in the Plimsoll Club for 47
attendees featuring Ms. Hilda Paqui of the U.N. Development Programme, who spoke
on "The United Nations at 52: Building for a Sustainable Future." Ms.
Paqui also spoke to groups of students and faculty at Dillard University, Loyola
University, and LSU. The following day she was an honored guest at Baton Rouge's
Annual International Heritage Festival sponsored by the Baton Rouge Center for
World Affairs. Also, a 15-member visiting trade delegation from Guizhou Province
of the People's Republic of China attended the U.N. luncheon as special guests.
The delegation was led by Vice Governor Lou Jiwei. Following the luncheon, the
Chinese visitors were briefed on WTC operations by Managing Director Eugene
Schreiber.
On the evening of October 24, the WTC's Officers and Board of Directors
hosted a Gala Dinner Dance in the Plimsoll Club honoring the Consular Corps on
the occasion of United Nations Day. More than 30 Consuls and their spouses
attended, along with 130 WTC members and their spouses and guests.
On October 29, the Japan/Louisiana Association, the World Trade Center and
other organizations co-sponsored a luncheon briefing in the Plimsoll Club for 35
participants featuring Mr. Teiji Unoki, Deputy Chief Representative of the Japan
Development Bank in Washington, D.C., who spoke on "The Japan Development
Bank: Global Opportunities for Louisiana Companies."
On November 6-8, 8 members of the Consular Corps and their spouses traveled
to Shreveport at the invitation of the International Trade Council - Red River
Region. The trip was suggested to the Council by the WTC and included a tour of
the Port of Shreveport/Bossier, the Frymaster plant, the General Motors plant,
and the Biomedical Center and the Shriner's Hospital for Crippled Children.
Committee Chairman Peter Bordeaux (the Honorary Consul of Hungary) and Susannah
Coolidge, WTC Programs Manager, represented the WTC on the trip.
On November 7, the World Trade Center and other organizations hosted a
luncheon briefing in the Plimsoll Club for 45 participants on "Doing
Business in Georgia" featuring the Deputy Prime Minister of Georgia,
Teimuraz Mosiashvili. Following the luncheon program, participants gathered on
the 19 th floor of the WTC for a ribbon-cutting ceremony dedicating the new
American-Georgian Foundation office.
On November 12, the World Trade Center and the Louisiana Department of
Economic Development co-sponsored an afternoon briefing at the WTC for 25
participants on "Europe: Opportunities for Louisiana Businesses"
featuring Rick Myatt, Managing Director of the Louisiana Department of Economic
Development/European Office.
On November 18, the World Trade Center and 64 other organizations
co-sponsored "A Salute to H.E. Lindy Boggs" luncheon program in the
Plimsoll Club for 165 guests to honor Amb. Corinne Claiborne (Lindy) Boggs upon
her departure for Rome as the new United States Ambassador to the Vatican.
On November 20, the WTC and other organizations held a breakfast seminar for
20 participants at the WTC on "Doing Business in Seoul and Korea"
featuring Mr. Yong-Rae Park, Director General of the Seoul Information Center in
Los Angeles.
On November 20, the WTC, the Consulate General of Venezuela, and other
organizations hosted a luncheon briefing in the Plimsoll Club for 72 attendees
on "Doing Business in Venezuela" featuring H.E. Luis Pedro Echeverria,
Ambassador of Venezuela to the United States. Following the luncheon, the
Ambassador (accompanied by top executives of PEDVASA and CITGO) met with
representatives of Louisiana's oil, oil field service and petrochemical
industries.
At the Committee's December 3 meeting, Billy Coyle and Harvey Koch gave a
brief presentation on the Louisiana International Trade Commission. The
Commission, which was created during the last regular session of the
Legislature, advises the Governor and the Secretary of Economic Development on
matters pertaining to international commerce. Former WTC President Koch was
elected Chairman of the Commission. Amb. Donald B. Ensenat, another past WTC
President, represents the WTC as a Commission member.
On December 5, the WTC and other organizations co-sponsored a luncheon
program in the Plimsoll Club for 60 participants on "Doing Business in the
Czech Republic" featuring H.E. Alexandr Vondra, Ambassador of the Czech
Republic to the United States, Mr. Martin Jahn, Director of CzechInvest in
Chicago, and Mr. Robert Doubek, President of the American Friends of the Czech
Republic in Washington, D.C.
Major On-Going Projects:
The WTC's web site (the Louisiana World Trade Web) continues to expand its
contents, including detailed listings of WTC members who are engaged in
international trade as well as those members who are not involved in
international trade but who would like to be and want to post information about
the goods or services they provide. Several site design changes and
enhancements, as well as the addition of a trade leads page and a government
affairs page, are scheduled for early-1998.
In early-1997, the WTC began a new state trade statistics service, which is
available to members and the public either through hard copy or by accessing the
WTC's Louisiana World Trade Web Site. The statistical reports, which are updated
on a regular basis, compare quarterly figures and annual figures as far back as
1993. The categories include: (1) total state exports for the top ten exporting
states; (2) total Louisiana exports by industry; (3) Louisiana exports by
destination; and (4) Louisiana metropolitan area export statistics. The WTC also
maintains data on exports by country and by industry, including separate figures
by mode of transportation (air or water). The WTC's state export figures are
obtained from the Massachusetts Institute for Social and Economic Research
(MISER), which compiles official export data by place of origin for the U.S.
Department of Commerce. In the future, the WTC will add import statistics as
well.
In mid-November, the WTC, the Louisiana Department of Economic Development,
and the New Orleans U.S. Export Assistance Center published the 1998 edition of
the Louisiana International Trade Directory. The Directory is the most complete
and current source of information in Louisiana's international business sector.
The 175-page Directory includes more than 1,900 detailed listings of exporters
and importers, ports and airports, steamship agencies, freight forwarders,
customs brokers, international banks, chambers of commerce, foreign consulates,
trade consultants, attorneys, and many other categories. The Directory sells for
$55 for WTC members and $65 for non-members. It is available in hard copy,
mailing labels and on diskette.
In addition to taking orders for the new directory, the staff continues to
take orders for recommended books on international trade and foreign language
tapes, as well as taking orders for satellite maps of the industries located
along the lower Mississippi River in Louisiana, and a comprehensive new 1998
Directory of Petrochemical Industries which the Homesite Co. in Baton Rouge has
authorized the WTC to sell. Due to the high demand for these maps and directory,
the WTC expanded its inventory to include Homesite-prepared petrochemical
directories for the following areas: Lake Charles; the Eastern Gulf Coast; the
Houston Ship Channel; and Texas' Golden Triangle, which includes the area
between Beaumont, Orange, and Port Arthur. In addition, overview maps are
available for the Houston Ship Channel, Texas' Golden Triangle, and the Mobile
area.
The WTC is one of the sponsoring organizations of a major survey and analysis
of companies throughout the state of Louisiana to determine which firms are
engaged in international trade and/or investing abroad and, further, to collect
information and views about the companies' international experiences, problem
areas, etc. The study will be carried out by Loyola University's College of
Business Administration, under the direction of Dr. Joseph Ganitsky.
Finally, the WTC is engaged in discussion with Ms. Carol Pettyjohn, President
of International Development Advantage (IDA), a training contractor of foreign
business, government and other groups for the U.S. Agency for International
Development, World Bank and other agencies. Ms. Pettyjohn has been residing in
Maine for a number of years but is planning to spend about one-half of her time
in New Orleans starting up a branch operation at the World Trade Center, in
conjunction with the WTC. Members of the WTC will be given first priority for
opportunities as training consultants, speakers, for site visits and other
aspects of the training programs to be conducted in Louisiana. The WTC itself
will serve as a subcontractor to IDA on the projects.
GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
Frank H. Walk, Sr., Chairman
John P. Laborde, Vice Chairman
MISSION: To work with other organizations throughout the state
and recommend policy and actions on federal and state legislation and issues to
enhance Louisiana's international trade, port development and allied activities.
Each of the following are issues approved by the Government Affairs Committee
and endorsed by the Executive Committee during 1997:
1. Inner Harbor Navigation Canal Lock Replacement Project - In reviewing this
issue, the Committee noted the time delays caused by the current lock. The
Committee unanimously approved a motion that a position in favor of the project
be approved and forwarded to the Executive Committee. The Executive Committee
subsequently approved the GAC's position on this issue, and letters were sent
out by WTC President John Ochsner to the appropriate federal officials, as well
as all Board and Advisory Committee members soliciting their active support.
2. Emergency Dredging Funding for the Mississippi River and the Mississippi
River-Gulf Outlet - The Committee approved requesting federal funds for
emergency dredging on the Mississippi River and Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet,
required by flooding in the first quarter of the year. U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers utilized operating money dedicated to the third and fourth quarters
during the emergency, and additional money could not be obtained from the
federal Harbor Maintenance Fund without authorizing legislation being passed. A
letter from WTC President John Ochsner was forwarded to the Louisiana
Congressional delegation requesting additional funding. A supplemental
appropriation bill was subsequently passed by the Congress providing the
additional money requested by the Corps.
3. Coast Guard's Vessel Documentation Office - The New Orleans office has
provided timely and efficient service to the local maritime community,
maintaining the smooth, uninterrupted flow of vessel commerce. After a
discussion of the matter, the Committee voted to recommend a WTC position in
support of retaining the Vessel Documentation Office in New Orleans. A meeting
hosted by the Coast Guard on the issue was held, and local opposition to the
closure convinced the Coast Guard to retain the New Orleans office for now.
4. Louisiana Tax Free Shopping - The Government Affairs and Executive
Committees passed a motion in support of the reauthorization of the Louisiana
Tax Free Shopping Program by the Louisiana Legislature, which was scheduled to
lose its authorization on July 1, 1997. A letter from WTC President John Ochsner
was sent to the leaders in both the state House and the Senate. Because 1997 was
not a fiscal session, a temporary reauthorization was approved and a full
reauthorization will be required next year.
5. I-69 - The Government Affairs and Executive Committees approved a motion
made at the request of Mr. John Carruthers, Chairman of the I-69 Commission,
affirming the development of trade through the I-69 project, which is expected
to run through Shreveport. A letter was forwarded by WTC President John Ochsner
to Mr. Carruthers highlighting the potential importance of this corridor/project
to trade development in Louisiana.
6. Louisiana Senate Bill 1086, the Forum Non Conveniens Measure - The measure
would have allowed state courts to dismiss suits involving foreign claimants or
incidents occurring outside of the state's boundaries. This initiative was also
endorsed by several maritime associations. A letter from WTC President John
Ochsner was sent to the appropriate legislators, but the bill was not considered
by the full Louisiana House during the session.
7. Louisiana Senate Bill 520 - Proposed during the Louisiana legislative
session, this bill would raise the number of claimants required for a class
action suit from one (1) to thirty (30). A letter from WTC President John
Ochsner supporting the bill was forwarded to the appropriate members of the
legislature, but opposition by the trial lawyers resulted in no action being
taken on the bill.
8. Amendment to the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedures, Article 1732 - Also
advanced during the session, this amendment would have given defendants the
right to request jury trials in maritime cases (thereby offsetting the exclusive
right to forum determination currently enjoyed by plaintiffs). The Committee
reviewed a white paper prepared by the Waterways Operators Association on the
issue, and noted the groups in support (including Governor Foster, LABI, the
Steamship Association of Louisiana, and other transportation industry
associations). A letter from WTC President John Ochsner supporting the amendment
was sent to members of the Louisiana legislature, but the amendment was not
acted on during the session.
9. Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) - The GSP, which reduces U.S.
tariff rates on goods imported from over 90 developing countries worldwide,
expired on May 31. A letter of support for the GSP was forwarded to the
Committee from the Port of New Orleans, and both the Transportation and
International Business Committees had previously endorsed renewal. The Committee
approved a motion in support of GSP, with the proviso that any correspondence on
this matter include some reference to the desirability of establishing
reciprocal treatment for U.S. goods from the countries involved. This
recommendation was subsequently approved by the Executive Committee, and a
letter stating the position was sent from WTC President John Ochsner to the
Louisiana Congressional delegation. The Congress approved an extension of GSP
during the summer, and the legislation was made retroactive to May 31 so that no
monetary impacts were felt by business.
10. Louisiana House Bill 2455 - As approved on the final day of the
legislative session, this bill would exempt state Pilotage Fee Commissions from
the Louisiana Administrative Procedures Act. This would undermine a First
Circuit Court of Appeals decision that overturned a 57% increase in rates
charged by the New Orleans-Baton Rouge Pilots Association. The potential result
of the bill could be increased shipping costs to Louisiana companies, reduced
ship calls, and it could set a dangerous precedent with regard to the three
other pilotage commissions in the state. A letter by WTC President John Ochsner
asking Governor Foster to veto this legislation was forwarded sent. Since
Governor Foster did not veto the bill, it became law.
11. Louisiana Senate Bill 1098, the Private Sector Employee Whistle Blower
Act - As approved in the recent legislative session, this act seeks to protect
Louisiana employees from retaliation or reprisal for disclosing or threatening
to disclose a workplace act or practice they believe to be in violation of law
or for refusing to participate in an employment act or practice they consider to
be in violation of law. The problems with the bill, as discussed by the
Committee, are twofold: (1.) there are currently ample protections under state
and federal law to protect whistle blowers; and, (2.) the bill is vague,
requiring only "good faith" on the part of the employee, with regard
to employees failing to perform their assigned duties. The Government Affairs
and Executive Committees approved sending a letter from WTC President John
Ochsner to Governor Foster expressing the concerns with the bill, but not asking
him to veto the legislation outright. Governor Foster subsequently signed the
bill into law.
12. U.S. House Bill 1432, the African Growth and Opportunity Act -
Congressman William Jefferson, a co-sponsor of this bill, requested WTC support
of this legislation which would promote trade and provide infrastructure funding
to African countries. While a WTC position in support of the bill was approved,
the bill ultimately was not acted on by Congress during 1997.
13. U.S. Senate Bill 877 regarding National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration Commissioned Officer Corps - A WTC letter was sent to Senators
Breaux, Hollings, Lott, and McCain opposing U.S. Senate Bill 877, which sought
to eliminate the Commissioned Officer Corps of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The bill was not acted on during the 1997
Congressional session.
14. "Fast Track" Authorization for the U.S. Trade Representative's
Office - "Fast track" legislation provided that any trade agreements
developed through the U.S. Trade Representative's offices would not be subject
to amendment on the floor of the House and Senate, a device commonly used to
defeat such measures. The Committee endorsed a motion in support of the WTC
joining America Leads on Trade, the private sector initiative created to lobby
for "fast track" authorization. Jack Walker of the WTC staff prepared
a position paper supporting "Fast Track" that was distributed to the
Louisiana Congressional delegation, to chambers of commerce statewide, and to
other organizations and companies with international involvement. "Fast
Track" subsequently won a cloture vote in the Senate, but the House vote
was highly questionable because the President had yet to obtain 60 Democratic
votes in the House to pass the bill. In the end, no vote was held in the House
of Representatives on "Fast Track" because the President requested
that the matter be tabled since he did not have enough firm votes to pass the
bill out of the House. It is not currently clear whether the President will
re-introduce "Fast Track" legislation in 1998.
15. The Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) - the
initial ISTEA had a five-year duration which expired on September 30. The Act
allowed state and local planning officials greater flexibility in their ability
to choose among various transportation alternatives. It also provided the
funding formulas, in the form of trust funds for each mode of transportation, to
allocate federal money to the states. The funding formulas, which have allowed
the Southern states a less than one-for-one return of federal gasoline taxes
collected, are the primary subject of debate. ISTEA reauthorization and an
increase in the current funding formula are crucial elements to improving
Louisiana's transportation infrastructure. The World Trade Center, which
endorsed the initial ISTEA bill, will be advocating reauthorization with
modifications which will bring the more federal dollars to Louisiana to assist
in congestion mitigation, highway construction, and waterway maintenance. Since
the House Transportation Committee could not gain approval from the House
leadership for a full reauthorization bill that would have exceeded the limits
of the budget accord, the House approved a six-month reauthorization at current
funding levels. As a result, a new longer-term bill will have to be submitted
early next year.
16. Steamship Association of Louisiana/New Orleans-Baton Rouge Steamship
Pilots Association - The Steamship Association of Louisiana requested that the
Committee forward to the WTC Executive Committee a recommendation to file an
amicus curiae brief in the Association's ongoing litigation, Hayden et al v. New
Orleans-Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots Association, et al. WTC President John
Ochsner previously had written to the Governor requesting him to veto H.B. 2455,
which exempts the Pilot Fee Commissions from the Louisiana Administrative
Procedures Act. The Governor neither signed nor vetoed the bill, so the law
became effective automatically.
Mr. Hayden stated that representatives of the pilots and the industry had met
together with the Governor over H.B. 2455, and the pilots assured the Governor
that H.B. 2455 would not affect the ongoing litigation over a proposed 57%
increase in pilots fees during the 1995-99 contract period. The pilots were
arguing that with passage of H.B. 2455, the Court should dismiss the case
because the law was retroactive to include Hayden v. NOBRA. On September 19, the
Louisiana Supreme Court granted the writs to the pilots. The Steamship
Association is now back in litigation in the Louisiana Supreme Court on the
issue of the Baton Rouge Pilots Fee Commission, arguing that proper procedure
was not followed in the Commission's determination of a 57% increase in tariff
rates for the 1995-99 period.
Following discussion, the Government Affairs Committee decided to refer this
matter to the WTC's Transportation Committee in view of their members' greater
technical knowledge of the various issues involved. The Transportation Committee
subsequently discussed and approved a recommendation to file an amicus curiae
brief on behalf of the Steamship Association of Louisiana. This recommendation
was then considered by the Executive Committee, which decided to maintain the
WTC's longstanding practice of not filing such briefs. It did, however, pass a
resolution encouraging both parties to settle the dispute, and a letter from WTC
President John Ochsner was forwarded to the presidents of both parties to the
lawsuit.
17. Louisiana Processing Tax - Mr. Ed Bee, President of Taimerica
Corporation, made a presentation to the Committee on behalf of the Alliance for
a Strong Louisiana Economy and requested that the WTC oppose a proposed
processor tax on Louisiana production facilities that process hydrocarbons. The
WTC's International Business Committee had previously approved such a motion on
the basis of its adverse impact on Louisiana's international trade, since
approximately one-third of organic chemicals produced in Louisiana are exported.
The proposed tax would mean a $1 billion tax on the refining industry in
Louisiana, reducing average profits at Louisiana refineries from 55 cents per
barrel to an average loss of 36 cents a barrel. Following discussion, the
Government Affairs Committee unanimously approved a motion opposing the
processor tax, and the Executive Committee also endorsed a WTC position in
support of the Alliance for a Strong Louisiana Economy on this issue.
18. Louisiana Port Priority Program - The Committee reviewed a WTC position
recommended by the Transportation Committee supporting an increase in the
funding for the Louisiana Port Priority Program from $15 million to $24.5
million annually. The Port Priority Program is one of the few state programs
nationally dedicated to funding of port improvement projects. It requires that
port improvement projects have a company committed to using the facility upon
its completion in order for that project to be funded (no speculative building
is allowed). The Government Affairs Committee unanimously approved a motion in
support of increased funding for the Louisiana Port Priority Program. This
proposed WTC position was subsequently approved by the Executive Committee at
its November meeting, and letters from WTC President John Ochsner were sent to
the appropriate officials.
TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE
Francis E. Lauricella, Chairman
George W. Healy, III, Vice Chairman
MISSION: To recommend policy and projects which will increase
usage of Louisiana's transportation system and increase public understanding of
the system's impact on the state's economic development.
At its meetings during 1997, Transportation Committee members reported on the
following matters:
Port of Greater Baton Rouge - Final tonnage statistics for 1996 showed that
the Port did slightly better than in 1995. The Port dealt throughout the year
with contractors and engineers responsible for the Inland Marine Terminal, which
had a structural failure late in 1996 that rendered the facility inoperable. By
the end of the year, construction had begun on replacing the terminal.
Port of New Orleans - The Nashville Avenue "C" Wharf was completed
in January and two dockside cranes were put in place at the end of July. Total
cargo for the Port in 1996 was 40.55 million tons, a 9% increase over 1995; most
of the increase was in dry and liquid bulk cargo. The Port handled 10.04 million
tons of general cargo, a slight decrease of 3% from 1995. In November, Sea-Land
agreed to a five-year extension of their lease and an expansion of their
operation at the Port. In addition, four new shiplines will begin calling on the
Port in 1998.
Port of South Louisiana - Trade with Latin America accounted for 54 percent
of all imports into the Port of South Louisiana in 1995, which amounted to
approximately 10 percent of the Port's exports and nearly 24 percent of the
Port's total foreign trade in that year. The Port also saw a new cement
production plant built at the Port's Globalplex facility, and two major
iron-reduction plants went through an extended environmental review process
during the year.
Ports Association of Louisiana - In December, the Committee heard a report on
the Louisiana Port Priority Program. A motion was made that the Committee
support an increase in the money committed by the Legislature to the Port
Priority Program, from $15 million to $24.5 million annually beginning in 1998.
The Committee approved this motion unanimously, and it was also subsequently
approved by the WTC's Executive Committee.
Governor's Task Force on the Maritime Industry - The lack of dredge funding
necessary to maintain project dimensions on both the Mississippi River and the
Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet were issues of major concern during the first half
of 1997. The federally-owned dredge Wheeler was laid up by the end of the year,
but the Task Force will continue lobbying Congress to keep the dredge in
operation.
The Task Force Chairman also stated to the Committee that the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers study on the Minimum Dredge Fleet was invalid due to the lack of
statistical information used to form its conclusions. Since over 85% of all U.S.
dredging occurs on the Gulf Coast, it is imperative to Louisiana's maritime
community that any study of the Minimum Dredge Fleet be as accurate as possible
to maintain commercial shipping activity on the waterways. After discussion, the
Committee unanimously approved a motion to forward a letter to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers and the Louisiana Congressional delegation stating that the
data set used in the Minimum Dredge Fleet study was inadequate to make a final
determination on this issue.
New Orleans International Airport - 1996 was a record year for the airport.
Although operations were down 9%, more cargo and passengers were transported via
the airport than ever before. 8.4 million passengers, an increase of 3% over
1995, and 179.5 million pounds of cargo, also an increase of 3%, moved through
NOIA. The airport is currently constructing a perishable cargo center. The
perishable cargo facility that the airport completed in 1997 was fully leased to
Federal Express, who planned to establish a "mini-hub" with the
facility. The new center is projected to come on line in March 1998. The Airport
Board was able to reach an agreement to utilize an existing facility for
perishable goods until the Airport's new facility is ready in 1998.
The Aviation Board purchased a main deck loader for 747 freighter-type
aircraft, allowing the airport to attract large cargo aircraft. Three airlines
that announced future international service to New Orleans during the year are:
Air Aruba, TransBrasil and LTU. New flights are also to be added to Jamaica and
Grand Cayman Island. Also during 1997, the Duncan Canal project, the re-flooring
of Concourses A & B, and the Concourse D and main terminal projects were all
either completed or are nearing completion.
U.S. Coast Guard - Intensive efforts were made during the year investigating
the Bright Field incident, in which a grain ship lost power on the River and ran
into the Riverwalk. A Coast Guard report focusing only on the incident came out
during the year; the National Transportation Safety Board report will come out
shortly and is expected to highlight a broader spectrum review of port and
waterway safety issues. The number of incidents investigated by the Coast Guard
decreased as the water level on the River went down. A study was begun to
determine the effects of having the Bonnet Carre Spillway opened during the
months of March and April.
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - The Corps was busy with River flooding during
the first half of 1997 that required opening the Bonnet Carre Spillway. River
dredging required by the flooding necessitated utilizing funds budgeted for the
entire year during the first half of the year, but a supplemental appropriation
was approved by Congress to reimburse the Corps. In addition, the Corps held the
public comment process related to the modernization of the Inner Harbor
Navigation Canal Lock in New Orleans, which is currently awaiting final approval
from the Office of Management and Budget in Washington.
Maritime Administration - The Committee was kept informed of regional efforts
by MARAD, in conjunction with the various state transportation departments, to
develop a systemic approach to utilizing/enhancing the U.S. Gulf ports. A
meeting of the Secretaries of Transportation for the multi-state region will be
held at the World Trade Center on January 28-29, 1998.
University of New Orleans - Information was distributed to the Committee on
the International Program for Port Planning and Management, co-sponsored by the
WTC, UNO, Port of New Orleans, and LSU National Ports and Waterways Institute,
which is held at the WTC every April. Dr. Joder also indicated that the
University is working to develop a Transportation Logistics Institute, and UNO
has contracted with the Louisiana Transportation Research Center at LSU and the
Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development to consult on
implementation of the Statewide Intermodal Transportation Plan.
UNO officials worked with the World Trade Center on a exploring the
possibility of submitting a grant application for the U.S. Department of
Commerce's Market Development Cooperator Program. The grant would have been used
for establishing a marketing initiative to promote the state's transportation
infrastructure, but there was not enough time to develop a proposal in 1997,
though there may be an application made in 1998.
On August 15, the WTC hosted a meeting of the region's senior transportation
executives with Senator John Breaux. The purpose of the meeting was to impress
upon Senator Breaux the importance of developing a center dedicated to
intermodal transportation planning at one of the state's public universities.
Top UNO administrators briefed the assembled group on the University's proposal
to establish a federally-designated Intermodal Planning and Policy Institute at
UNO's College of Urban and Public Affairs within the ISTEA reauthorization bill
currently being reviewed on Capitol Hill. The transportation leaders who
attended the meeting at the WTC were invited to reflect that the selection of
New Orleans as the site of the proposed Institute would help ensure the area's
continued standing as an important trade and transportation hub into the 21st
century.
New Orleans Public Belt Railroad - In February, the Committee was informed
that the NOPB had a 22% increase in cargo in 1996 over 1995, largely due to
imported steel slabs. Burlington Northern-Santa Fe Corp. completed a purchase of
190 miles of Union Pacific line between Iowa Junction (just outside Lake
Charles) to Avondale, allowing BNSF to compete for Louisiana freight traffic.
The BNSF acquired from NOPB trackage rights from the Huey P. Long bridge to the
CSX Gentilly Yard in New Orleans East. Representatives of the CSX made a report
to the Committee on the importance of CSX operations in Louisiana after a local
jury awarded a $3.4 billion settlement to Gentilly residents for a 1987 rail car
accident; the award was subsequently overturned by the Louisiana Supreme Court.
A rail study is being conducted to establish the impact of the railroad traffic
currently going though Metairie.
Steamship Association of Louisiana - The Committee was informed that the
Port's Safety Council and the Maritime Navigation Association worked together in
Washington to have a moratorium declared on new paging licenses which transmit
in the marine bands, thereby causing a black-out of bridge-to-bridge
communications between ships.
The Steamship Association requested that the World Trade Center file an
amicus curiae brief in support of the Association in its ongoing litigation with
the New Orleans-Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots Association (NOBRA). The lawsuit in
question, Hayden et al v. NOBRA et al, asks that the NOBRA Fee Commission, which
oversees the NOBRA pilots, present documentation and findings of fact to support
the Commission's ruling in favor of a 57% fee increase to the NOBRA pilots over
the five-year contract period 1995-99. The Committee held a meeting dedicated to
a debate between Mr. Channing Hayden, President of the Steamship Association,
and Capt. Joe Clayton, President of NOBRA. The Committee endorsed supporting the
Steamship Association by filing an amicus curiae brief, the Executive Committee
decided instead to send each party a letter from WTC President John Ochsner
indicating the concerns expressed over the issue and urging them to amicably
resolve the dispute.
International Freight Forwarders and Customs Brokers of New Orleans - Two
major issues of interest to the freight forwarders and customs brokers during
1997 were renewal of the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) and the
proposed shipping reform legislation currently under review on Capitol Hill.
Trucking - Early in the year, the Committee was informed that the 19 southern
states were requesting that Congress require some uniformity in truck permitting
and licensing to allow unobstructed movement through the South from Virginia to
Texas. The southern states were also lobbying to spend down the cash balances in
federal transportation trust funds. Trucking interests also indicated concern
over the lack of an effective local Incident Management System in New Orleans.
Barge - River flooding resulted in a poor first quarter in 1997 for the barge
industry; grain transport was off, and it took months for normal operations to
resume. Barge operators reported that low water upriver and several lock
closures kept grain shipments from coming down from the Midwest during the
latter half of the year, and the export market remained relatively weak. As a
result, barge operators are looking for a better year in 1998.
Chamber's Regional Intermodal Advisory Council - This Council was created in
1997 and will serve as the Chamber's primary outlet for developing suggested
transportation improvements for the region (the WTC's Transportation Committee
Chairman, Mr. Francis Lauricella, serves as co-chair of this important Chamber
Council, along with Mr. Quentin Dastugue). The Council will have input from
special committees to be developed in four key areas: Aviation, Personal
Mobility, Freight Commerce, and Agency Management. The WTC's Transportation
Committee will serve as the Chamber's Freight Commerce arm.