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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    U.S. Border Patrol Uniforms Manufactured in Mexico

    U.S. Border Patrol Uniforms Manufactured in Mexico

    March 25, 2013
    By Elizabeth Harrington


    A Customs and Border Protection Border agent pats down a man before he is returned to Mexico. (Photo: CBP/Gerald L. Nino)

    (CNSNews.com) - U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has granted uniform contracts to VF Imagewear, Inc., an apparel company that relies on manufacturing sites in Mexico for a “significant percentage” of its occupational garments.

    The latest contract with the company was awarded on Dec. 20, 2012, to make “uniform and insignia items” for the CBP at an estimated cost of $6,157,997.57, and a ceiling of $8 million.

    The CBP, which is responsible for protecting America’s borders, told CNSNews.com that items from VF Imagewear, a subsidiary of VF Corporation, are manufactured in a number of locations, “including Mexico.”

    “There are no domestic preference regulations or statutes applicable to DHS/CBP that would prohibit the manufacture of uniform items in Mexico,” the CBP said. “In fact, United States obligations under International Agreements require that the Agency accept items manufactured in Mexico.”

    “Consistent with the foregoing, VF is permitted to provide items manufactured in Mexico under the current contract,” the agency said.

    According to the company’s 2012 annual report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), “VF operates manufacturing facilities in Mexico, Central and South America, the Caribbean, Europe and the Middle East.”

    “A significant percentage of denim bottoms and occupational apparel are manufactured in these plants, as well as a smaller percentage of footwear,” the report says. Occupational apparel refers to uniforms made by VF Imagewear. The company supplies uniforms for a variety of industries, including transportation, hospitality, food service and for the NFL, MLB and Harley-Davidson.

    Manufacturing for Major League Baseball uniforms, however, occurs in the United States, according to the annual report.

    VF Imagewear also maintains websites for the uniform programs for the CBP, the Fire Department of New York City, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), and the National Park Service. “These websites provide the employees of our customers with the convenience of shopping for their work and career apparel via the Internet,” the report states.

    According to VF Imagewear’s 2011 annual report, the manufacturing facilities located in Mexico, Central America and the Middle East are responsible for “cutting, sewing and finishing” of denim garments and uniforms.

    The CBP said that they have recently concluded two contracts with VF Imagewear for uniforms, “a limited contract to provide uniforms for training academies and hardship and disaster situations and a contract to provide quartermaster services at the training academies.”

    Currently, VF Imagewear has a contract for the short-term manufacture of uniforms and insignias, awarded in December. The contract is a result of the continuing resolution (CR) passed by Congress last year, which mandated the CBP to maintain specific levels of Border Patrol Agents, Field Officers and Air and Marine Agents.

    The CBP estimated that it needed to enroll an additional 850 students in its academies to comply with the mandate, which would require 3,400 uniforms.

    The agreement will also allow the CBP to replace uniforms for border patrol agents, according to the agency’s justification and approval for the contract.

    “[B]order patrol agents are often called upon to chase illegal aliens into contaminated waters, such as the Rio Grande River,” it reads. “In these situations, CBP's protocol provides that uniforms worn in those situations must be destroyed because they are considered hazardous materials.”

    “This interim uniform contract will allow the uniformed personnel to replace ruined uniforms so that they may continue to perform their duties in the event of a disaster and/or hardship.”

    The CBP adds, “This interim contract will ensure new agents and officers have properly fitted uniforms and therefore can assume their assigned mission-critical work without weakening our national security.”

    VF Imagewear also recently secured a $50-million uniform contract with the TSA, which will be manufactured in the United States and Mexico.

    Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) has said manufacturing government uniforms in Mexico poses a threat to national security.

    “There are also national security concerns,” Speier said in a press release in 2011, regarding a prior contract between the TSA and VF Imagewear. “Uniforms have a greater potential of being stolen in Mexico where it is more difficult to provide oversight of factories and cargo.”

    The company does have concerns with its manufacturing sites abroad, according to its annual report, including “political or military conflict” and “heightened terrorism security concerns,” which “could subject imported or exported goods to additional, more frequent or more lengthy inspections, leading to delays in deliveries or the impoundment of goods for extended periods.”

    VF Imagewear declined to comment about its dealings with CBP and the manufacture of items in Mexico, saying “VF does not discuss the specifics of its agreements.”

    U.S. Border Patrol Uniforms Manufactured in Mexico | CNS News
    Last edited by Jean; 03-25-2013 at 10:52 PM. Reason: input photo
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    Lawmakers Demand Answers on $50-Million, Sequester-Eve TSA Uniform Deal

    March 29, 2013
    By Elizabeth Harrington
    CNS News

    Reps. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) and John Mica (R-Fla.) have sent a letter to the administrator of the Transportation and Security Administration John Pistole, demanding answers regarding the $50-million uniform contract the agency sealed just days before the sequester budget cuts took effect.

    First reported by CNSNews.com, the TSA awarded the contract to VF Imagewear on Feb. 27, two days before $44 billion in automatic across-the-board spending cuts, known as the sequester, began being implemented on March 1.

    By Mar. 4, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was warning of long lines at airports due to furloughs at the TSA because of the budget cuts, which are actually reductions in the increase in spending – more money total will be spent in 2013 than in 2012.

    “The rationale behind the timing of TSA’s uniform contract and other uncertainties surrounding the contract award raise concerns,” wrote Chaffetz, the chairman of the House Subcommitee on National Security, and Mica, the chairman of the Subcommittee on Government Operations.

    The lawmakers sent a letter on March 28 to Pistole, asking for documents related to the uniform contract and a committee briefing on the issue “as soon as possible.” (Letter to Pistole.pdf)

    “Recent news stories state that the TSA ‘agreed on a deal [in February] worth as much as $50 million to buy new uniforms for rank-and-file agents, despite concerns that imminent budget cuts would result in furloughs and 90-minute flight delays,’” Chaffetz and Mica said.

    “Just days within the enactment of sequestration, Department of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano commented on sequestration’s effects on airport security operations,” they said.

    On March 4, Napolitano said, "We are already seeing the effect on the ports of entry, the big airports for example. Some of them had very long lines this weekend."

    "Look people, I don't mean to scare, I mean to inform," she said. "If you're traveling, get to the airport earlier than you otherwise would. There's only so much we can do with personnel and please don't yell at the customs officers, the TSA officers. They aren't responsible for sequester."

    The oversight committees are asking the TSA if “any consideration” was made to delay the uniform contract in light of the impending sequester.

    In addition, Chaffetz and Mica want to know: the total anticipated value of the contract; if it includes a “Buy America” provision; the current uniform allowance for TSA employees; how much the TSA has spent on uniforms per year since 2010; and what percentage of the uniforms are made in the United States.

    “[S]ome reports indicate that VF Imagewear’s uniforms are partly made in Mexico,” Chaffetz and Mica said. (Letter to Pistole.pdf)

    As previously reported, the TSA confirmed to CNSNews.com that the uniforms will be "manufactured in the U.S. and Mexico."

    "TSA's contract with VF Imagewear for TSO uniforms, which has some manufacturing facilities in Mexico, complies with the law," the TSA said.

    Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, also known as the “economic stimulus,” the TSA is required to procure uniforms made in the United States. However, uniform products made in Mexico, Canada, or Chile must also be considered due to the North American Free Trade Agreement and the U.S.-Chilean Free Trade Agreement.

    In addition, VF Imagewear has also secured uniform contracts with the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency, which are also partly manufactured in Mexico.

    The TSA has also come under scrutiny from Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) who said it is “deeply disturbing” that DHS Secretary Napolitano would talk of furloughing employees while spending up to $50 million on new uniforms, which amounts to about $1,000 per the agency’s 50,000 employees.

    The TSA has until April 11 to respond to Chaffetz and Mica’s request.

    Lawmakers Demand Answers on $50-Million, Sequester-Eve TSA Uniform Deal | CNS News
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