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Forwarders slow to get on board screening program

The Airforwarders Association has found that direct participation by smaller forwarders in the Air Cargo Advanced Screening program remains minimal.

   Many freight forwarders are struggling to get on board the U.S. government’s Air Cargo Advanced Screening (ACAS) program.
   According to the Washington, D.C.-based Airforwarders Association, direct participation in ACAS among its smaller forwarder members is minimal at best.
   “As of today, most of our small to medium-sized members report their agents overseas are using the airlines to complete the filing on their behalf with only a few directly connected to CBP (Customs and Border Protection) for the purpose,” said Brandon Fried, the associations executive director.
   Fried said the association has supported regulatory measures to enhance air cargo security since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and generally backs the purpose of ACAS. 
   CBP has stated that it wants ACAS data from the most knowledgeable party in the air cargo transaction and who can provide that data accurately and on time.
   “Unfortunately, relying on the carrier at the airport to complete the filing may reduce the ACAS value proposition of providing advanced data for targeting purposes as early in the process as possible,” Fried said. “Hopefully, CBP can devise other pathways for smaller forwarders to easily submit their data earlier to meet the requirements original intent.” 
   Philadelphia-based BDP International, one of the program’s earliest forwarder participants which prepares and files its own ACAS filings to CBP, often runs into problems convincing airlines not to file on its behalf and then billing it for the service. 
   “The forwarder is the best source of the data, a comment that CBP has already stated,” said Michael Ford, BDP’s vice president of government and regulatory affairs. “What happens if the forwarder’s data is correct and the airline incorrectly files the wrong data on the exact shipment? Who does CBP believe? This causes double work and does not help the forwarder in any way.”
   ACAS was developed jointly by CBP and the Transportation Security Administration as a pilot program in late 2010 after terrorists in Yemen attempted to plant printer cartridges laden with explosives on board cargo aircraft. 
   The first participants were the express carriers and the pilot grew to include all facets of the air cargo industry, including passenger and all-cargo plane operators and forwarders. ACAS shifted from pilot to full implementation on June 12, 2018.
   According to figures obtained from CBP by the Airforwarders Association in advance of its Air Cargo 2019 Conference in Las Vegas, taking place Sunday through Tuesday, there are nine operational forwarders in ACAS and another 24 that are either in the discussion or testing phases with the agency. Participation by the airlines in the program is far greater.
   ACAS participants must provide CBP seven shipment data elements, including names and addresses of the shipper and consignee, total package count and weight, and cargo description, as well as the air waybill number. The information, which does not have to be 100 percent clean of typos, is transmitted much earlier than other data required for regular customs clearance. ACAS data should be transmitted prior to consolidation and loading the cargo on an aircraft.  
   The goal of ACAS is to allow CBP to perform “risk-based” targeting on the data well before the cargo is placed on board a U.S.-bound aircraft.
   Asset-based express carriers and large forwarders with their own global networks have generally had an easier time implementing ACAS for their inbound air cargo operations.
   On its website, CBP said the benefits for forwarders participating in ACAS include:
   • Avoiding reduced cut-off times that may result from airlines requesting earlier data submission from forwarders that are not ACAS filers;
   • Facilitating forwarder business operations by increasing consolidation lead times through improved visibility into which shipments require enhanced screening;
   • And increasing security by leveraging Department of Homeland Security threat data and other information to use a risk-based approach through targeted screening.
   If a shipment requires additional screening, CBP said the forwarder will receive an email or phone call “as soon as possible” to pull and screen the shipment under its National Cargo Screening Program or through authorized representative of the airline. 
   “Where a freight forwarder is not able to perform the enhanced screening, the forwarder should communicate the ACAS disposition of the cargo to the carrier and the carrier will perform the screening,” CBP said.
   The agency said it’s using a “common sense approach” to enforcement and will not generally issue liquidated damages claims for the first 12 months after the rule’s publication. 

Chris Gillis

Located in the Washington, D.C. area, Chris Gillis primarily reports on regulatory and legislative topics that impact cross-border trade. He joined American Shipper in 1994, shortly after graduating from Mount St. Mary’s College in Emmitsburg, Md., with a degree in international business and economics.