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on a letter to go to the corosponding letter in the glossary
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A-1: First Class Condition.
A.A.R.: Against all Risks.
ABANDONED GOODS: Articles declared by an importer, consignee,
or representative to be abandoned and therefore the property of the
U.S. Government. Also applies to goods left too long in a bonded warehouse
and therefore becomes the property of the U.S. Government. (19CFR127.11-127.13)
ABI: Automated Broker Interface
ACCELERATED DISPOSITION: A formal supplication to the district
director requesting that the review be hastened and a response received
within the allotted time. (19CFR174.22)
ACCEPT/REJECT ADVISE: A standard notice sent to vendors advising
that a shipment has been accepted or rejected.
ACCEPTANCE: An agreement to purchase goods at a stated price
and under stated terms.
ACCOUNT: An individual, institution, or organization that purchases
a company's products, or the general category of customer service
as listed on the company books.
ACCRUAL: The accounts maintained for services rendered, or
the sum of the amount due.
ACH: Automated Clearing House
ACQUIESCENCE: When a bill of lading is accepted or signed by
a shipper or his agent without protest as to the conditions which
appear thereon, silent consent is assumed.
ACTUAL USE: When the classification of an article is dependent
upon its actual use after importation. (19CFR10.137)
AD. VALOREM: (According to value) A tariff calculated as a
percentage of the value of goods cleared through Customs.
ADDED VALUE: A term implying that at each production and distribution
function, a product's value is increased in terms of time, place,
and form.
ADJUSTER: An individual charged with the responsibility of
determining if a particular loss is covered by the insurance policy
and, if so, the amount which should be paid to the claimant.
ADVANCE: An agreed percentage applied against a total.
ADVICE SHIPMENT: A form provided by the shipper to a freight
forwarder that contains shipping instructions.
AES: Automated Export System
A.E.V.: Articles of extraordinary value.
AFFREIGHTMENT, CONTRACT OF: An agreement by the steamship
line to provide cargo space on a vessel at a specified price to accommodate
an exporter or importer, who then becomes liable for payment even
though he is later unable to make the
shipment.
AGENT: One who negotiates contracts, or acts in the legal capacity
of another party.
AGGRAVATING FACTORS: Factors which when proven to exist, increase
the severity of a penalty. (19CFR171)
AIR CARGO: Any property carried or to be carried in an aircraft,
not including passenger baggage.
AIR CARGO GUIDE: Basic reference publication for shipping freight
by air. It contains current domestic and international cargo flight
schedules, including pure cargo, wide body and combination passenger-air
cargo flights. Each monthly issue contains information on air carriers'
special services, labeling, airline and aircraft decodings, air carriers
and freight forwarders directory, cargo charter information, US and
Canadian city directory small package service, interline air freight
agreements, aircraft loading charts and more.
AIR TRANSPORT ASSOCIATION: The trade and service organization
of the U.S. scheduled airlines. TA acts on behalf of the airlines
to serve the Government and public in activities ranging from improvement
in air safety to planning for the airlines' role in national defense.
AIR TRANSPORT COMMITTEE: A Canadian government agency responsible
for the economic and general welfare of air transport within Canada.
AIR WAYBILL: A bill of lading issued by the airline acknowledging
receipt of merchandise and indicating conditions of cartage.
AIRWORTHINESS CERTIFICATION: Documentation to show that aircraft
or components comply with all the airworthiness requirements related
to its use as laid down by the regulatory authorities of the country
in which the aircraft is registered.
ALL RISK CLAUSE: An insurance provision that all loss or damage
to goods is insured except those self caused.
ANTI-DUMPING CLAUSE: A special tariff imposed to discourage
the sale of foreign goods in the U.S. at prices below what they sell
for in the home market.
APPARENT GOOD ORDER: When freight or inventory appears to be
free of damage and in proper condition as far as can be determined
from a general survey.
APPRAISEMENT: The act of reaching a conclusion concerning the
value for customs purposes of imported merchandise.
ARBITRAGE: The practice of exchanging the currency of one
country for that of another or a series of countries to gain an advantage
from the differences in exchange rates.
ARBITRATION CLAUSE: A clause in a contract outlining the method
under which disputes will be settled.
ARRIVAL NOTICE: A document sent to a consignee or their agent
by a carrier informing them that a shipment has arrived.
A/S: After sight Term of sale. Payment due upon arrival.
ASSET: A property of tangible value.
ASSIST: Technical instructions for manufacture or materials,
parts, tools, dies, molds, merchandise consumed in the production,
etc., supplied directly or indirectly, and free of charge or at a
reduced cost by the buyer for use in connection with the production
or the sale for export to the U.S..
A.T.A.: American Trucking Association.
A.T.A. CARNET: An international Customs document that is recognized
as an internationally valid guarantee. It may be used in lieu of national
Customs documents and as security for import duties and taxes to cover
the temporary admission of goods.
AT SIGHT: A payment term meaning that a negotiable instrument
is to be paid upon presentation or demand.
AUDIT TRAIL: The routine of inspecting to ensure that all functions
adhere to a stated standard.
AUTHORITY TO PAY: An advice from the buyer's bank to the seller's
bank authorizing the seller's bank to pay the seller's draft up to
a given amount. The seller has no protection against cancellation
or modification of the instrument until the issuing bank makes the
payment on the draft drawn on it.
AUTHORITY TO PURCHASE: Similar to above except the seller's
drafts are drawn directly on the buyer. The buyer's bank purchases
them with or without recourse to the drawer.
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BACKHAUL: Transport of materials from suppliers back to the
operator's facility.
BACK ORDER: Items ordered that aren't shipped due to stockout.
Scheduled for shipment as available.
BACK TO BACK LETTERS OF CREDIT: Two letters of credit with
identical documentary requirements, except for a difference in the
price of the merchandise as shown by the invoice and draft.
BAIL: Metal handle.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS: A statement which indicates a country's
foreign economic transactions over a specified time.
BALANCE OF TRADE: The difference between a country's total
imports and exports over a given period. A favorable balance of trade
results from exports exceeding imports.
BALLAST: Material used to stabilize an empty or partially empty
vessel.
BALLOON FREIGHT: Freight taking up considerable space in comparison
to weight.
BANDING: Material used to wrap around the shipment to hold
it in place.
BANKER'S ACCEPTANCE: A time bill of exchange, or acceptance,
which has been drawn on and accepted by a bank.
BAR CODE: A symbol consisting of a series of printed bars representing
values. A system of optical character reading, scanning, and tracking
of units by reading a series of printed bars.
BARRIER MATERIALS: Materials that can withstand water, oil,
vapor, and various gases.
BARTER: The direct exchange of goods for other goods without the use
of money and without third party involvement.
BAUD RATE: The speed at which you can transmit and receive data from
one computer to another.
B.B.L.: Barrel.
B.D.I.: Both dates inclusive.
B/E: Bill of exchange.
BENEFICIARY COUNTRY: Any country, territory, or successor political
entity to which there is, in effect, a proclamation by the President
designating such as a beneficiary country entitled to special tariff
treatment.
BILL OF LADING: A contract between a shipper and a carrier
that provides proof that the merchandise was transferred from the
shipper to the consignee and that the carrier has assumed responsibility
for the cargo until it is delivered.
BILL OF LADING NUMBER: A unique number shown on a bill of lading
at the time the merchandise is accepted for shipment.
BILL OF MATERIALS: The list of materials and components necessary
to support planned production runs.
BILL OF SALE: A written contract that transfers ownership from
one party to another.
BINDING RULING: A Ruling by US Customs that certifies a commodity
classification and duty rate
B/L: Bill of lading.
B.O.: Buyer's option.
BOND: An acceptable, written financial guarantee required
to be given to Customs to secure a transaction by specifically binding
the obligatory to certain covenants for certain amounts. (19CFR113)
BONDED GOODS: Goods in charge of Customs officers on which
bonds instead of cash have been given. The goods in question have
not "cleared Customs".
BONDED WAREHOUSE: A warehouse approved by the U.S. Treasury
department into which non-cleared goods may be placed. There are several
classes of bonded facilities.
BREAK BULK: The splitting up of one consolidated shipment into
smaller ones for ultimate delivery to various consignees.
BU:: Bushel.
BULK PACKING: Packing a number of small containers into a single
larger container to facilitate movement.
bx: Box.
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C.A.D.: Cashing against documents.
CARGO AGENT: An agent appointed by an airline to solicit and
process international air freight for shipments.
CARNET: A document with a dual purpose: An entry document used
within the scope contemplated by the applicable convention where the
carnet was created, and a document used as a bond for the performance
of acts in compliance with the provisions of such convention and the
Customs laws. (19CFR114.3)
CARRIER: One who undertakes to transport goods, merchandise
or people. (19CFR112.1)
CARRIER LIABILITY: The obligation to deliver merchandise to
its proper destination with reasonable speed and in the same condition
it was in when received from the shipper.
CARTAGE AGENT: Ground service operator who provides pickup
and delivery in areas not served directly by air carrier.
CASE LOT PICKING: Selection of full cases of a product when
the order is less than a full pallet load.
CASUAL LABOR: Temporary workers used to meet peak workloads.
C.B.I.: Caribbean Basin Initiative.
C.C.: Current cost.
C.E.: Consumption entry.
CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN: A document certified as to the origin
of goods.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION: A document used to authenticate
the description of the contents, the means of conveyance, and the
date of departure of merchandise exported from the U.S..
C.F.: Customs Form.
cf: Cubic foot.
C & F NAMED PORT (C.F.R.): Cost and freight. The seller
must pay the cost and freight necessary to bring the goods to the
port of destination, not including insurance. The goods must be cleared
for export.
CHARTER: The renting of an entire vessel, or part of its space,
for a particular trip or period of time.
CHARGEABLE WEIGHT: The weight of the shipment used in determining
air freight charges. The chargeable weight may be the dimensional
weight or on container shipments, the gross weight of the shipment
less the tare weight of the container.
CHOCKS: Triangular blocks of rubber, wood, or metal placed
in front, between, or behind truck wheels to prevent accidental trailer
movement.
C.I.: Cost and insurance.
C.I.A.: Cash in Advance.
C.I.F.: Cost, insurance, and freight. Same as C.F.R. plus insurance.
C.I.F. NAMED PORT: Same as C.F.R. plus insurance.
C.I.F.&C.: Same as C.I. F. plus commission.
C.I.F.&E.: Same as C.I.F. plus the exchange of currency
from U.S. to foreign money.
C.I.P.: Carriage and insurance paid to... Same as C.P.T. plus
cargo insurance.
CITY TERMINAL SERVICE: A service provided by some airlines
to accept shipments at the terminals of their cartage agents or other
designated in-town terminals or to deliver shipments to these terminals
at lower rates than those charged for door to door pickup and delivery
service.
C.L.: Car load, the minimum weight necessary to fully load
a forty-foot rail car.
CLASS RATING: A single freight rate applicable to a group of
commodities with similar attributes.
CLEAN BILL OF LADING: Document of receipt issued by the carrier
when the goods are received in good order.
CLEAN DRAFT: A draft to which there are no attachments.
CLERICAL ERROR: An error made by a clerical level employee
which does not involve knowledge of Customs matters. An error by a
classifier would not fall into this area. An example would be number
transposition, etc.
C/O. : Country of Origin
C.O.D.: Cash on delivery.
C.O.S.: Cash on shipment
COLLECT BILL OF LADING: A bill of lading calling for charges
to be paid by the consignee.
COLLECTION: Item received by a bank subject to collection of
proceeds before being credited to the depositors' account.
COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS: The representative of the U.S. Treasury
Department acting in connection with foreign traffic.
COMMERCIAL INVOICE: An invoice required to be presented to
Customer representing one shipment of merchandise by one consignor
to one consignee by one vessel or conveyance, which clearly identifies
the product for classification and appraisement purposes.
COMMINGLED GOODS: The combining of merchandise in a shipment
that makes the normal determination of duty impossible unless the
importer segregates the merchandise or provides other proper evidence
of the quantities of the various merchandise. (19CFR152.13)
COMMISSION: An amount paid to the seller's agent or the buyer's
agent. May be dutiable.
COMMISSIONER: Commissioner of Customs. (19CFR114.1)
COMMODITY: A collection of materials or items with similar
characteristics.
COMMODITY RATES: Fees applicable to a described commodity without
regard to other freight classifications. Carriers typically charge
commodity rates for a large movement made on a routine basis.
COMMON CARRIER: A carrier that transports goods at any time
to any location for any shipper on a non-discriminatory basis.
COMPUTED VALUE: Approved additions of dutiable amounts accumulated
to reach a value of merchandise for purposes of appraisement by Customs.
(19CFR152.106)
CONCEALED DAMAGE: Damage to merchandise that is not discovered
until the shipment is unpacked.
CONDITIONAL SALES CONTRACT: Merchandise that is sold under
the condition that the title to the goods will not be transferred
until full payment is received.
CONDITIONS OF CONTRACT: The terms and conditions established
for a contract. These conditions are usually printed on the back of
a waybill and include such items as limits of liability, claim limitation,
indemnity, and dimensional weight rules.
CONSIGNED STOCK: Finished goods. Inventories in the hands of
agents or dealers which are still the property of the supplier.
CONSIGNEE: A party to whom goods are delivered.
CONSIGNEE MARKS: A symbol placed on packages for export for
identification purposes.
CONSIGNMENT: A movement in which the title to goods remains
with the shipper until the buyer sells the goods.
CONSIGNOR: The party who originates a shipment of goods.? (Shipper)
CONSOLIDATOR: An entity that provides service also provided
by a carrier, independent from that carrier, and derives income from
package consolidation of others for tender to the carrier. A forwarder
performs the functions of a consolidator.
CONSTRUCTIVE TRANSFER: A legal function that permits acceptance
of a Customs entry for merchandise in a zone before its physical transfer
to the Customs territory. (19CFR146.1)
CONSUL: A government official residing in a foreign country
who is charged with the representation of the interests of their country.
CONSULAR DECLARATION: A formal statement describing goods to
be shipped, made to the consul of the country of destination. Approval
must be obtained prior to shipment.
CONSULAR INVOICE: An invoice for merchandise shipped from one
country to another, prepared by the shipper and certified at the shipping
point by a consul of the country of destination. The consul's certification
applies to the value of the merchandise, the port of the shipment,
the destination, and the place of actual origin of the merchandise.
CONSULATE: The jurisdiction, terms of office, or official premises
of a consul.
CONSUMPTION ENTRY: An official form used for declaration of
reported goods also showing the total duty due.
CONTAINER: An article of transport equipment, lift van, movable
tank or similar structure.
CONTAINER STATION: A building, or part of a building, designated
by the district director to serve as a receiving areas for containerized
cargo moved from the place of unlading for the purpose of breaking
bulk and redelivering the cargo. (19CFR19.40, 19.41)
CONTAINERIZATION: The practice or technique of using a boxlike
device in which a number of packages are stored, protected, and handled
as a single unit in transit.
CONVERTIBILITY: The ability of a currency to be exchanged for
another.
CO-PRINCIPAL: When two people (eg: individual, partnership,
corporation) join together with the same legal status to become the
entity accepting primary liability for all government debts secured
by a bond. (19CFR113.34)
COUNTERVAILING DUTY: The imposition of a special duty by the
Customs service after the finding of foreign subsidies which influence
the price paid or payable in the U.S. adversely affecting the domestic
manufacturers.
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: The country where the goods are considered
to have originated for customs purposes. The factors besides the cost
of the materials involved are the cost of freight, insurance, packing,
and all other costs of transferring the materials to the plant, waste,
taxes and duty, etc..
COUNTRY OF EXPORTATION: Usually but not necessarily the country
in which merchandise was manufactured or produced and from which it
was first exported.
COURIER: Attendant who accompanies a shipment. Also, some courier
companies provide a full transportation function, without accompanying
attendants, offering door-to-door service for time sensitive documents
or small packages on a same-day or next-day basis.
C.P.T.: Carriage paid to. The seller pays the freight to the
named destination.
C.P.U.: That part of the computer that executes the instructions
of a program.
C.R.: Carrier's risk.
CREDIT RISK INSURANCE: A form of insurance which protects the seller
against loss due to default on the part of the buyer.
CUBIC CAPACITY: The carrying capacity within a conveyance or container
according to the measure in cubic feet.
CULPABILITY: The degree to which an individual is responsible for
a wrongdoing. The various degrees are Negligence, Gross negligence,
and Fraud.
CUSTODIAL BOND: A basic covenant entered into by the obligators on
a surety bond taken to secure the lawful activities of a custodian
of any bonded articles, which describes the requirements of conveyance,
protection, and general compliance in the handling of bonded merchandise.
(19CFR113.63)
CUSTOMHOUSE: The government office where duties and/or taxes are placed
on imports or exports and are paid.
CUSTOMHOUSE BROKER: A person or firm licensed by the Treasury department
engaged in entering and clearing goods through Customs.
CUSTOMS: A Government authority designated to regulate the flow
of goods to and from a country and to collect duties levied by a country
on imports and or exports. The terms also applies to the procedures
involved in such collection.
CUSTOMS COURT: A U.S. Customs Services court based in New York, N.Y.,
consisting of three 3-part divisions to which importers may appeal
or "protest" classification and value decisions and certain
other actions taken by the U.S. Customs Service.
CUSTOMS DECLARATION: A statement, oral or written, attesting to the
correctness of description, quantity, value, use, etc., or merchandise
offered for importation into the United States.
CUSTOMS INVOICE: A document that contains a declaration by the seller
as to the value of the goods.
CUSTOMS TARIFF: A schedule of charges assessed by the federal government
on imported and/or exported goods.
C.W.O.: Cash with order.
C.W.T.: Hundredweight.
D: A penny or pence.
D.A.: Documents for acceptance.
D/A: Discharged afloat.
D/A SIGHT DRAFT: Documents against acceptance.
DANGEROUS GOODS: Articles or substances that are capable of posing
a significant risk to health, safety, or property when transported
and which are classified according to the most current editions of
the ICAO Technical Instructions for the Safe Transport of Dangerous
Goods and the IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations.
DATA BASE: Data stored in a form that allows for flexible sorting
and report generation.
DATA TERMINAL: Point for sending and receiving of information by computer.
D.B. & B.: Deals, battens and brands.
D.C.: Distribution center.
D.D.: Double deck: demand draft.
D/D: Data drafted.
D.D.P.: Delivered, duty paid.
D.D.U.: Delivered, duty unpaid.
DEAD STORAGE: Product which does not move in or out of its storage
location once it has been received.
DECK: The upper or lower surface of a pallet.
DECK OPENING: The space between the deckboards of a pallet.
DECKBOARDS: The plants of a pallet deck.
DECLARED VALUE (CARTAGE): The value of goods declared to the carrier
by the shipper for the purposes of determining charges or of establishing
the limit of carriers liability for loss, damage, or delay.
DECLARED VALUE (CUSTOMS): The selling price of the contents or the
replacement cost if the contents are not for resale. The value must
be equal to or greater than the declared value above.
DEDUCTIVE VALUE: A method of determining value for appraisement purposes
if transaction value doesn't apply. From the "sale price"
various things are deducted to arrive at the appraised value. (19CFR152.105)
DEFERRED FREIGHT: Freight requiring dependable, reliable service,
but at a less time sensitive nature, with delivery provided over a
period of days.
DEFERRED PAYMENT L.C.: A letter of credit under which payment is deferred
to a determinable future date.
DELAY: The amount of time in excess of the scheduled time for a movement.
DELIVERED PRICE: A price for the merchandise that includes
transportation charges to a delivery point agreed upon by the seller
and buyer.
DELIVERY CYCLE: The time from receipt of an order to the time
of customer receipt of the product.
DELIVERY RECEIPT: A carrier prepared form that is signed by
the consignee at the time of delivery.
DEMURRAGE: Excess time taken for loading or unloading of a vessel
not caused by the vessel operator, but due to the charterer or shipper.
DEPRECIATION: An accounting term that signifies the process of allocating
the costs of plant and equipment to the accounting periods in which
they are used.
D.E.Q.: Delivered ex quay-duty paid. Ownership changes on the wharf
after entry has been made and duty paid.
D.E.S.: Delivered ex ship. Take possession at the port of arrival,
on the ship, un-cleared.
DETERIORATION: Any reduction in the quality, value or usefulness of
merchandise.
DETRIMENTAL RELIANCE: A "reasonable reliance" upon either,
a ruling letter or "treatment previously accorded by Customs
to substantially identical transactions" over a period of at
least 2 years. As a direct consequence of that "reasonable reliance"
the party must have suffered to their detriment.
DEVALUATION: A government decision to lower the trade value of nation's
currency with respect to other currencies by reducing the gold content
or by revising the ratio to a new standard.
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: A term used to distinguish the more industrialized
nations.
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A broad range of countries that lack a high
degree of industrialization, infrastructure and other capital investment,
sophisticated technology, widespread literacy, and advanced living
standards.
DIFFERENTIATION: The strategy of producing a unique product that is
clearly distinct form, and superior in performance than competing
products.
DILIGENCE: A requirement of a broker, to handle all financial settlements,
correspondence, or the filing of documents relating to their brokerage
business with due diligence. (19CCFR111.29)
DIMENSION: A measured distance between two ends of a scrap or bulk
piece of wood that is to be remanufactured into a piece of pallet.
DIMENSIONAL WEIGHT: Refers to weight per cubic foot, etc.. The weight
of a shipment per cubic foot is one of the most important transportation
characteristics, directly involving such factors as the efficient
loading and economy of freight traffic. Some commodities have a high
density, such as machinery, while others have a low density, such
as ladies hats. Hence, the dimensional weight rule as developed as
a practice applicable to low density shipments under which the transportation
charges are based on a cubic dimensional weight rather than upon the
actual weight.
DISTRIBUTION: The activities and planning required to move product
from the end of a production line to the final user.
DISTRIBUTION CENTER: A warehouse for finished goods.
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM. The system and processes of transporting goods,
within and between plants, warehouses, and other facilities.
DISTRIBUTOR: A foreign agent who sells directly for a manufacturer
and maintains an inventory on hand.
D.L.O.: Dispatch Loading Only.
dm: Decimenter.
DM: Dekameter.
DOCK: The sorting or staging platform to where shipments are loaded
or unloaded.
DOCK FACING: The protective large timbers that re found immediately
to the sides of a dock door at floor level.
DOCK LEVELER: A manually or hydraulically operated plate, located
at the dock entrance, that can be raised or lowered approximately
one foot to accommodate varying trailer floor heights.
DOCK PLATE: A moveable metal ramp allowing access to a rail car or
trailer.
DOCK RECEIPT: A receipt given for a shipment received or delivered
at a shipment pier. When delivery of a foreign shipment is completed,
the dock receipt is surrendered to the vessel operator or his agent
and serves as the basis for the preparation of the ocean bill of lading.
DOCUMENTARY DRAFT. A draft to which documents are attached, which
are to be delivered to the drawee when he/she accepts or pays the
accompanying draft, and which ordinarily controls title to the merchandise
indicated thereon.
D/P: Documents against payment.
d/p: Direct port.
DRAFT: Demand for payment. A signed order by one party, the drawer,
addressed to another, the drawee, directing the drawee to pay a specified
sum to the order of a third party, the payee, at a certain date.
DRAWBACK: A refund or remission in whole or part of a Customs duty,
revenue tax, or fee lawfully assessed or collected because of a particular
use made of the merchandise on which the duty, tax, or fee was assessed
or collected. (19USE191.2)
D/S: Days after sight.
DUNNAGE: Packing materials used on board a vessel solely for the purpose
of blocking, bracing or otherwise securing cargo while in transit
and subject to shifting.
DUMPING: Under U.S. law, the sale of an imported commodity in the
United States at "less than fair market value" - usually
considered to be a price lower than that at which it is sold within
the exporting country or to third countries.
DUTY: customs duties and internal revenue taxes which attach upon
importation.
D.W.: Deadweight ton (2240 pounds).
D.W.C.: Deadweight for cargo.
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E.A.O.N.: Except as otherwise noted.
E. & O.E.: Errors and omissions excepted.
E.B.: Eastbound.
E.D.I.: Electronic data interchange.
E.E.: Errors accepted.
ELECTRONIC MAIL: Available on a computer network, either intercompany,
or intracompany. It allows for the distribution of messages to one
or several recipients.
ELECTRONIC PROTECTION: A security system using electronic detertion
such as motion sensors, door and window contacts, and light beams
to notify a monitoring station of unauthorized entry to a building
or on the grounds.
ELKINS ACT: A law prohibiting the offering or receipt of any rebate,
concession, or discrimination in the transportation fees charged to
the shipper. It makes the carrier and the shipper equally responsible
for violations to the Interstate Commerce Act.
E.L.Q.: Economic logistics quantity. That order quantity which will
minimize total logistics costs in the shipment. It must minimize any
combination of purchasing costs, traffic costs, and storage costs
in the shipment.
EMBARGO: Temporary refusal by a government or governments to allow
goods to or from a country or location. Also a temporary suspension
of trade of a particular commodity.
ENTRY: The documentation to be filed with the appropriate Customs
officer to secure the release of imported merchandise from Customs
custody or the act of filing that documentation . (19CFR141.0)
E.O.Q.: Electronic order quantity. A concept which determines the
optimal order quantity on the basis of ordering and carrying costs.
EST: Estimated.
EST. WT.: Estimated weight.
E.T.A.: Estimated time of arrival.
ET. AL.: And other.
EURODOLLAR: A currency market in which U.S. dollar deposits are accepted
by banks in other countries, generally in Western Europe and Japan,
and made available for lending or investing.
EXCELSIOR: A material made of shredded or curled pieces of wood used
for cushioning a package.
EXCEPTION RATE: Rates set at a certain percentage above the general
commodity rates because they apply to commodities that require special
handling such as live animals, human remains, automotive vehicles,
etc..
EXCISE TAX: A selective tax, sometimes called a consumption tax, on
certain goods produced within or imported to a country.
EX DOCK: The seller is obligated to place the specified goods at the
specified price on the import dock clear of all customs and duty requirements.
EXEMPT CARRIER: A carrier that is non-regulated and participates in
interstate commerce of commodities that have been declared exempt
of regulation.
EX FACTORY: The buyer is obligated to pick the goods up from
the seller at his dock and move the goods as well as pay all charges
from that point forward.
EXIMBANK: Export-Import Bank of the United States in Washington,
D.C. An independent corporate agency of the U.S. Government which
assists the financing of U.S. export trade.
EX MILL: The seller is obligated to place the specified quantity
of goods at the specified price at this mill loaded on trucks, railroad
cars, or any other specified means of transport.
EXPEDITING: The activity of tracing and reducing time for the
transportation of merchandise.
EXPORT: The sending of goods to a foreign country.
EXPORT BROKER: One who brings together the buyer and seller
for a fee and then withdraws from the transaction.
EXPORT DECLARATION: A formal statement made to the collector
of customs at a port of exit declaring full particulars about goods
being exported.
EXPORT LICENSE: A permit required to engage in the export of
certain commodities to certain destinations. Lists of such goods are
found in the comprehensive Export Schedules issued by the Bureau of
Foreign Commerce.
EXPORT MERCHANT: A producer or merchant who sells directly
to a foreign purchaser without going through an
intermediary.
EXPORT RATE: A freight rate specially established for application
on export traffic and generally lower than the domestic rate.
EXTENSION FORKS: Attachments placed on the forks of a lift
truck which lengthen the forks for moving longer items.
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F/A: Free astray.
F.A.A.: Free of all averages.
F.A.K.: Freight of all kinds. The broadest of the generic class
rates published by carriers. FAK rates allow shippers to mix loads
that under other rate category agreements would have to be shipped
under separate rates.
F.A.S.: Free along side. The seller fulfills his obligation to deliver
when the goods have been placed alongside the vessel, on the quay,
or inlighters at the named port of shipment.
F/B: Freight bill.
F.C.I.A.: Foreign Credit Insurance Association. An association
of leading insurance companies operating in cooperation with, and
as agent of, the Export-Import Bank of the United States. It offers
insurance policies protecting U.S. exporters against the risk of nonpayment
by foreign debtors.
F.C.S.: Free of capture and seizure.
F.D.: Free discharge.
FEDERAL AVIATION ADMIN.: The Federal Aviation Agency charged
with the responsibility of promulgating operational standards and
procedures for all classes of aviation in the United States.
F.F.A.: Free from average.
F.I.A.: Full interest admitted.
F.I.F.O.: First in, first out. A method of inventory rotation
in which the oldest items are shipped out before the newer arrivals.
FILL RATE: A measurement of how well a given inventory is meeting
service objectives. It is calculated commonly by dividing the number
of orders filled by the total orders within a given period.
FIRE CURTAIN: Curtain made of fire-resistant material to prevent
a fire from spreading from one side of the curtain to the other.
FIRE PALLET: Portable platform designed to hold fire extinguishers
and other fire-fighting equipment to be moved by lift truck to the
scene of a fire.
FIRE WALL: A wall made of fire-retardant material to prevent
the spreading of a fire.
FIRING POINT: The temperature required for the vapor of a liquid
to be in sufficient quantity to provide a continuous flame.
F.I.W.: Free in wagon.
FIXED BEAM SCANNER: A bar code scanner that is stationary and
which reads codes as items pass by it.
FIXED INVENTORY SYSTEM: An inventory reordering system in which
goods are supplied at fixed intervals. The size of the lot varies
according to replenishment needs.
FIXED LOCATION SYSTEM: An inventory system in which the location
of a product never varies.
FIXED ORDER QUANTITY: An inventory reordering system where
the order size is constant, but the time interval between orders vary.
FLASH POINT. The minimum temperature at which, the vapors of a volatile
liquid or solid will ignite.
FLOATING SLOT SYSTEM: A merchandise locator and storage system
in which stock locations are assigned on a random basis according
to space availability.
FLOOR LOAD: Goods are stacked just one pallet or container
high in a warehouse.
FLOOR LOAD RATING: The maximum weight that can safely be supported
by a warehouse floor (pounds per square foot).
F.M.: Fine measurement.
F.O.B.: Free on board. Seller is obligated to have the goods
packaged and ready for shipment from the agreed point. The buyer normally
assumes the burden of all inland transportation costs and risks in
the exporting country, as well as all subsequent transportation costs,
including the costs of loading the merchandise on the vessel. Seller
fulfills his obligation to deliver when the goods have passed over
the ship's rail at the named port of shipment.
FOREIGN BUYING OFFICE: a separate buying office reporting to
the headquarters' purchasing department. This department buys all
foreign-purchased items, for all the company's operations, direct
form the foreign suppliers.
FOREIGN SALES AGENT: An agent in a foreign country who acts
as a salesman for a domestic manufacturer.
FOREIGN TRADE ZONES: An isolated, enclosed, and policed area,
operated as a public utility in or adjacent to a port of entry. It
is furnished with facilities for loading, unloading, handling, sorting,
manipulating, manufacturing, and exhibiting goods and for reshipping
them by land, sea, or air. Any foreign and domestic merchandise, except
those prohibited by law, may be brought into a zone without being
subject to U.S. custom law.
FORK POCKETS: Space under containers to allow entry of the
forks of a forklift truck.
FORKLIFT TRUCK: A motorized load carrying device which can
raise and lower freight for stacking and move freight to different
locations.
FORKS: The flat metal appendages mounted on lift trucks to
facilitate the movement of merchandise on pallets.
FOUL BILL OF LADING: A receipt for goods issued by a carrier
bearing a notation that the outward containers or goods have been
damaged.
F.O.W.: First open water.
F.R.&C.C.: Free of riot and civil commotion.
FREE CARRIER: The seller fulfills his obligation to deliver
when he has handed over the goods, cleared for export, into the charge
of the carrier named by the buyer at the named place or point.
FREE DOMICILE: A term used in international transportation
where the shipper pays all transportation charges and any applicable
duties and/or taxes.
FREE IN AND OUT: Cost of loading and unloading a vessel is
born by the shipper.
FREE OF CAPTURE AND SEIZURE: An insurance clause providing
that loss is not insured if due to capture, seizure, confiscation
and like actions, whether legal or not, or from such acts as piracy,
civil war, rebellion, and civil strife.
FREE OF PARTICULAR AVERAGE: A marine insurance clause providing
that partial loss or damage is not insured.
FREE OUT: The cost of unloading a vessel is borne by the shipper.
FREE TRADE ZONE: A predetermined area or region declared and
secured by or under governmental authority where certain operations
may be performed with respect to articles without such articles having
entered into the commerce of the country maintaining the free trade
zone. (19CFR10.175)
FREIGHT: Property, commodities of all kinds, including small
package service tendered for transportation. Does not include mail,
express, or passenger baggage.
FREIGHT BROKER: A person or company licensed by the ICC that
arranges for the transportation of goods between points in interstate
commerce by motor carrier.
FREIGHT FORWARDER: One who engages in the business of dispatching
shipments on behalf of other persons, for consideration in foreign
or domestic commerce between the U.S., its territories or possessions,
and foreign countries, and of handling the formalities incident to
such shipments, and who is authorized to so operate by any agency
of the U.S.. (19CFR112.1)
ft: Foot.
F.T.Z.: Free trade zone.
FUNGIBLE MERCHANDISE: Merchandise, which, for commercial purposes,
is identical and interchangeable in all situations. (19CFR191.2)
FURTHER REVIEW: A request for review of the decision which
is the subject of the protest by Customs officers on a higher level
than the district, and in Region II by Customs officers who did not
participate directly in the decision which is the subject of the protest.
(19CFR174.1)
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GATT: General agreement on tariffs and trade. Also known as
the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations comprising a
comprehensive set of trade agreements between parties tot his agreement.
Parties include the U.S. and numerous Asian Pacific and European countries.
GANTRY CRANE: Used in the warehouse facilities where oversized
or very heavy items such as pipe, steel, and heavy machinery must
be loaded onto trucks or rail cars.
GENERAL COMMODITIES: Any commodity that does not include the
following: household goods, commodities in bulk form, and class A
and B explosives.
GENERAL DECLARATION: A CF 7505 certification which is required
to be filled by the commander or authorized person of an aircraft
arriving from outside the U.S.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE WARE: The most common type of warehouse.
These warehouses store almost every kind of merchandise and may be
public or private.
GENERAL ORDER: Articles taken into Customs custody and placed
in a public store or general order warehouse by the district director
at the risk and expense of the consignee. (19CFR127.1)
GIRTH: The measurement around the sides of a container.
GLUED LOADING: A method of loading pallets that involves applying
glue to the touching sides of containers on a pallet.
GM: Gram.
G.O.: General order. (19CFR127) Merchandise not entered within
5 working days after arrival of the carrier with intent to unload,
and then stored at the risk and expense of the importer.
G.O.H.: Goods on hangers.
GRAVITY CHUTE: A chute or trough used to load commodities by
gravity.
GROSS WEIGHT: The weight of both the container and its contents.
G.S.P.: General system of preferences. Provides for duty free
treatment for eligible articles imported directly from designated
beneficiary developing countries. These countries must be designated
by the President, by executive order.
G.T.: Gross ton.
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HAND TRUCK: A device used to manually transport goods in which
a metal plate is slid under the load, then truck and load are tilted
and/or lifted toward the operator and moved.
HANDLING: The movement of materials or merchandise.
HAZARDOUS COMMODITY: Material that may be dangerous to move
or to store. It may be subject to explosion , burn, emit dangerous
fumes, or be caustic in nature.
HEPBURN ACT: This act allowed the ICC to prescribe the maximum
rates that carriers could charge.
HHD: Hogshead.
HOLD ORDER: A directive to interrupt or terminate certain operations,
pending a change in process.
HOT LOAD: A rush shipment.
HT: Height.
H.T.S.: Harmonized Tariff Schedules. A multipurpose international
goods classification system designed to be used by manufacturers,
transporters, exporters, importers, Customs, statisticians, and others
in classifying goods moving in international trade under a single
commodity code.
HUNDREDWEIGHT PRICING: Special pricing for multiple-piece shipments
traveling to one destination which are rated on the total weight of
the shipment as opposed to rating on a per package basis.
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I.A.T.A.: International Air Transport Association. The trade
and service organization for airlines of more than 100 countries serving
international routes.
I.C.C.: Interstate Commerce Commission. A federal agency formed
to administer the Interstate Commerce Act to ensure fair competition.
IDENTICAL MERCHANDISE: Merchandise identical in all aspects
to, and produced in the same country and by the same person as the
merchandise currently being appraised. (19ZCFR152.102)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY: A procedure allowing more rapid release
to importers of imports arriving into the United States each year.
Under the immediate delivery program, an importer can take delivery
almost immediately of virtually all of the incoming shipments.
IMMEDIATE TRANSPORT. ENTRY: A Customs form declaring goods
for transportation by a bonded carrier from a port of entry to a bonded
warehouse at an inland port.
IMPORT BROKER: For a fee, the "broker" or "agent"
will locate vendors and handle the required paperwork. Title passes
directly to the buying organization.
IMPORT LICENSE: A document required and issued by some national
governments authorizing the importation of goods into their individual
countries.
IMPORT MERCHANT: A merchant who buys overseas for his own account
for the purpose of later resale, handling all details if import documentation
and transportation.
IMPORT QUOTA: A fixed amount of goods that a government will
allow to be imported within a specified period of time. An amount
that usually reflects balance of trade and other political and economic
considerations.
IMPORT RATE: A rate established specifically for application
on import traffic and generally less, when published, than a domestic
rate.
IMPORTED DIRECTLY: The direct shipment of goods from a designated
country to the U.S. without passing through the territory of any nom-member
country.
IMPORTER: The person primarily liable for the payment of duties
on imported merchandise, or an authorized agent working on his behalf.
(19CFR101.1)
IMPROVED IN CONDITION: Generally, a substantial transformation
in a product other than a change incidental to an operation of assembly
or other incidental action, including cleaning, lubricating, or painting,
but does include any substantial advancement in the product.
IN APPARENT GOOD ORDER: A shipment not showing any visible
loss or damage.
IN-AND-OUT COSTS: The total labor costs associated with receiving,
moving to storage, retrieving, preparing for shipping, and loading
merchandise.
IN-BOND: The transfer of materials that are to be forwarded
"in-bond" from the importing carrier at the port of entry
to the on-forwarding carrier. (19CFR18.2)
INBOUND LOGISTICS: The portion of the logistics operations
that involves the movement of materials and products into a company's
production processes or storage facilities.
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES: Damages other than the physical loss or
damage to goods. These include overhead, lost cash opportunity, employee
time, and filing costs that are generally not recouped in the claims
process.
INDENT: A requisition for goods enumerating conditions of sale.
INDEPENDENT CARRIER: An individual who si the owner and operator
of his own trucking equipment and provides transportation services
to others.
INDIRECT EXPORTING: Sale by the exporter to the buyer through
a domestically located intermediary.
INFORMAL ENTRY: A simplified import entry procedure accepted
at the option of Customs for any noncommercial shipment and any commercial
shipment not over $1,250 in value.
INHERENT NATURE OF THE GOODS: A freight claim term indicating
that the goods have a potential risk of deteriorating while en-route.
INLAND CARRIER: A transportation line which hauls export or
import traffic between two ports and inland points.
INTERCITY FREIGHT: Merchandise which is transported from one
city to another.
INTERLINE FREIGHT: Merchandise which is transported by two
or more carriers.
INTERMODEL COMPATIBILITY: The capability which enables a shipment
to be transferred from one form of transport to another.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE: The transportation of merchandise across
state lines. Regulatory matters fall under the jurisdiction of the
federal government through the Interstate Commerce Commission.
IN-TRANSIT STORAGE: A warehouse to store merchandise while
in transit to the final destination.
INSTRUMENTS OF INTER. TRAFFIC: An article of transport equipment,
such as lift-van, movable tank and normal accessories and equipment,
or similar structures of a permanent character and accordingly strong
enough to be suitable for repeated use.
INVOICE: A commercial document in a form consistent with the
trade identifying both buyer and seller, reflecting the price actually
paid or payable, the terms of sale, the currency used for payment,
the articles sold, and other specific information required to substantiate
the statistical reporting requirements and to arrive at the transaction
value of the product for duty assessment purposes. (19CFR141.83)
I.R.R.: Internal rate of return.
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J-LIST: A specific list of articles which are exempted from
the requirements of country of origin marking requirements. (19CFR134.33)
J.I.T.: Just in time. The principle of production and inventory
control that prescribes precise controls for the movement of raw materials,
component parts, and work in progress. Goods arrive when needed for
production or use rather than becoming expensive inventory that occupies
costly warehouse space.
JOINT RATE: A single rate applied to transportation services
when two or more carriers share responsibility for transporting a
shipment.
JUDICIAL REVIEW: A civil action filed in the United States
Court of International Trade by a protestant after a protest has been
denied in whole or in part. (19CFR174.31)
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K.D.F. CARTONS: Knock down flat carton. Unassembled packages.
KEG: A small barrel.
KG: Kilogram.
KILOGRAM: A metric measure of weight equal to 2.2046 pounds.
KITTING: Light assembly of component parts, often performed
in a warehouse.
KNOCK-DOWN: When articles are taken apart for the purpose of
reducing the cubic space of the shipment.
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L.A.: Letter of authority.
L &D: Loss and damage. This term usually applies to a loss
or damage that is discovered at the time of delivery.
L&R: Lake and rail.
L/C: Letter of credit.
LABOR COSTS: The hourly labor costs associated with the operation
in question.
LANDING REQUIREMENTS: The stipulation that the first landing
of an aircraft entering the U.S. must be at an international airport
unless the aircraft is landing due to an emergency or is forced to
land.
LASER SCANNER: Bar-code reading devices that range in size
from small hand-held units to larger, fixed beam scanners.
LASH VESSEL: A lighter-abroad ship used to transport product
from a mother ship to a nearby destination. (19CFR4.81)
LAT: Latitude.
LATENT DEFECTS: Faults which are not readily apparent through
normal diligence.
LATERAL COLLAPSE: The failure of pallet joints due to extreme
forces.
LAY DAYS: The dates between which a chartered vessel is to
be available in a port of loading.
LAY ORDER: An order issued by the district director allowing
cargo to remain on the wharf or pier where discharged beyond 5 P.M.
on the 5th working day after the day the vessel was entered.
LAYER: One complete row of boxes on a pallet or unitized stock.
LAYOUT: The design and storage areas and aisles of a warehouse.
LAZARETTO: A place set apart in quarantine for fumigating goods.
L.C.L.: Less than carload. The term used for a railroad shipment
that weight less than the minimum necessary for the application of
the carload rate.
LDG: Loading.
LEAD TIME: The period of time elapsing between when an order
is placed and the order is received in storage.
LEGAL WEIGHT: The weight of the goods and the interior packaging
but not the container.
LENGTH BLOCK: A pallet pattern in which package lengths are
loaded parallel to the pallet length.
LETTER OF CREDIT (L.C.): A method of payment for goods in which
the buyer establishes his credit with a local bank, clearly describing
the goods to be purchased, the price, the documentation required,
and the limit for completion of the transaction. Upon receipt of documentation,
the bank is either paid by the buyer or takes title to the goods themselves
and proceeds to transfer funds to the seller. The banks insist upon
complete compliance with the terms of the sale, and will not pay if
there are discrepancies. The L.C. is issued by the buyer's bank and
accepted by the seller's bank.
LIEN: A legal claim placed upon merchandise pending payment.
LIFEO: Last in, first out. A method of inventory rotation where
goods are cycled so that the newest items in inventory are shipped
first.
LIGHT MONEY: A duty of $.50 a ton collected on all non-U.S.
vessels, except vessels owned by U.S. citizens, that arrive at a U.S.
port and become a registered U.S. vessel before leaving. (19CFR4.20)
LIGHTERMAN: One who transports goods or merchandise on a barge,
scow, or other small vessel within the port, or from a place within
a port. (19CFR112.1)
LINE-HAUL RATE: The term refers to the three basic types of
rates charged for transportation services by common carriers: class,
commodity, and exemption rates.
LIQUIDATED DAMAGES: A demand for payment made against both
the principal and surety of a bond taken to insure compliance with
any Customs law or regulation when there is a breach of any of the
bond conditions. (19CFR172.1)
LIQUIDATION: The final computation of the duties or drawback
accruing on an entry.
LOAD: Materials and merchandise being moved in small or large
amounts such as on a pallet, or in a container, etc..
LOAD DESIGN: The designation of a safe load limit based on
a probability of failure of the load platform.
LOAD PLATFORM: The surface of a shelf or pallet on which merchandise
is placed.
LOAD-CARRYING CAPACITY: The capability to support a given weight
that is within design and performance criteria for the load platform
or storage rack.
LOADING SYSTEM: A method of building unitized loads. Some of
the most common systems are: 1) Unit loading (strap loading), 2) Unitization
(topping and strapping many packages), 3) Bonded blocking (loading
like bricks), 4) Cube loading (on pallets or unitized for grab trucks),
5) Glued loading (applying glue in strips on each side of the box
to tie cartons together, usually on a pallet), and 6) Bulk packaging
(loose and in bundles to permit one large fiberboard box as a substitute
for smaller cartons).
LOCAL AREA NETWORK: Workstations that link employees to allow
data sharing, data assembly, and data manipulation. Information can
be passed on with a minimum of effort and paper work associated with
it can be minimized.
LOGISTICS: The management of both inbound and outbound materials,
parts, supplies, and finished goods. Includes such activities as;
production scheduling, forecasting, customer service, order entry,
inventory control, and product allocation among customers.
LTGE: Lighterage.
LTL.: Less than truckload. The term is used for shipment that
weighs less than the minimum necessary for the application of the
truckload rate.
MANIFEST: A detailed summary of the total cargo of a vessel
which is used principally for Customs purposes.
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MANIPULATION: An application to manipulate on Customs Form
CF3499 to clean, sort, repack or otherwise change in condition (not
manufacture) articles that have been entered into a bonded warehouse.
(19CFR.19.11)
MANUFACTURER'S EXPORT AGENT: A firm that acts as an export
sales agent for several non-competing manufacturers. Business is transacted
under the name of the agent firm.
MANUFACTURING WAREHOUSE:
Building or part of a building that is designated by the district
director to produce articles in whole or in part of imported materials,
while under bond, or of materials subject to internal revenue tax,
and intended for exportation without being charged with duty, and
without having an internal revenue stamp affixed thereto. (19CFR19.13)
MAQUILADORA: The Maquiladora (or "in-bond" industry)
program allows foreign manufacturers to ship components into Mexico
duty free for assembly and subsequent re-export.
MARINE INSURANCE: An insurance which will compensate the owner
of goods transported overseas in the event of loss which cannot be
legally recovered form the carrier.
MARKING (MARKS): Letters, numbers and other symbols placed
on cargo packages to facilitate identification.
MARKING (Country of Origin): The requirement for every article
of foreign origin (or its container) imported into the U.S. to be
marked in a conspicuous place as legible, indelibly and permanently
as the nature of the article will permit, in such manner as to indicate
to an ultimate purchaser in the U.S. the English name of the country
of origin of the article. (19CFR134.11)
MASTER AIR WAYBILL: An air waybill issued by the originating
airline when more than one airline is involved with a shipment, or
when a freight forwarder issues a house air waybill.
MATERIALS WAREHOUSE: A warehouse used exclusively for the storage
of raw materials.
MERCHANDISE WAREHOUSE: A public warehouse for the storage and
distribution of products that do not require refrigeration for their
preservation.
MDSE: Merchandise.
M.F.N.: Most favored nation. Preferential duty treatment grated
to countries with M.F.N. status.
MITIGATING FACTORS: Factors which, when proven to exist, lessen
the severity of a penalty. Such factors include: contributory customs
error, cooperation with the investigation, immediate remedial action,
inexperience in importing and/or prior good record.
MODEM: A computer attachment that allows the transmission
of information over normal telephone lines between computers.
MOTOR CARRIER ACT OF 1980: Legislation deregulating the motor
carrier industry. Major provisions include giving carriers the freedom
to adjust rates within a "zone of reasonableness" without
ICC approval greatly reducing authority of rate bureaus, reducing
entry restrictions and barriers allowing for greater competition,
and allowing inter-corporate hauling by private carriers. It also
allows carriers to have both common and contract authority.
M.P.F.: Merchandise Processing Fee. A fee collected by the
U.S. Customs Service representing a service charge for clearing U.S.
Customs.
M.R.O.: Maintenance repair, and operating items and supplies.
Includes all items used in maintaining, repairing and operating a
facility.
M.R.P.: Material requirement planning.
MULTIPLE REGRESSION ANALYSIS: A mathematical technique for
identifying variables, defining work content, and explaining how they
affect the time to perform a task.
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N.A.F.T.A.: North America Free Trade Agreement.
NEGOTIABLE WAREHOUSE RECEIPT: A legal certification that listed
goods are held in a public warehouse. The certificate can be purchased
or sold, thus transferring title to the goods.
NET WEIGHT: Weight of the goods alone without any immediate
wrappings; e.g., the weight of the contents of a can without the weight
of the can.
N.E.S.: Not elsewhere specified.
NESTED: The process of packing articles so that they rest partially
or entirely within one another, thereby reducing the total cubic foot
displacement.
N.I.S.: Not in stock.
N.O.E.: Not elsewhere enumerated.
N.O.H.P.: Not otherwise herein provided.
N.O.I.B.N.: Not otherwise indexed by name. A rate classification
that is similar to F.A.K. but not as broad. It covers all commodities
which are not specifically covered by the tariff.
NONCONTIGUOUS TERRITORY: All the island territories and possessions
of the U.S., but does not include the canal zone. (19CFR4.0)
NONRESIDENT: An individual who does not reside within, or a
partnership without any partners residing within, the Customs territory
of the U.S., or the U.S. Virgin Islands, or a corporation not incorporated
in and not maintaining jurisdiction within the Customs territory of
the U.S., or in the U.S. Virgin Islands. (19CFR141.31)
NON-PERISHABLE: Items that do not spoil or deteriorate rapidly.
NON-VESSEL OPERATING COMMON CARRIER (NVOCC): A cargo consolidator
of small shipments in ocean trade, generally soliciting business and
arranging for or performing containerization functions at the port.
N.O.S.: Not otherwise specified.
N.S.P.F.: Not specifically provided for.
NSTD: Nested.
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O/A: Open Account.
O&R: Ocean and rail.
OBLIGORS: All principals and sureties so shown on a Customs
Bond or other financial guarantees required to be given under the
Customs laws to secure a transaction by specifically binding such
parties to certain described covenants.
OCEAN BILL OF LADING: A receipt for cargo and a contract for
transportation between a shipper and the ocean carrier.
O.E.M.: Original equipment manufacturer.
OFFSET: A government imposed restriction on the amount of certain
goods that can be imported and that must be balanced by an equal amount
of goods exported.
O/N: Order notify.
ON BOARD BILL OF LADING: A bill of lading issued by the steamship
company confirming the receipt of merchandise and the fact that it
was loaded on board the ocean vessel.
ON-HAND NOTICE: A carrier-prepared document used to notify
the consignor and the consignee that a delivery cannot be completed,
usually for reasons beyond the carrier's control.
OPEN INSURANCE POLICY: A marine insurance policy that applies
to all shipments made by an exporter over a period of time rather
than to a single shipment.
OPPORTUNITY COSTS: The expected returns of one activity which
are foregone in order to pursue other activities or projects. This
term is often used in financial evaluation of project feasibility,
and refers to the foregone investment in comparable securities.
OPTICAL SCANNERS: Reading devices used in material handling
to automatically record and count to complete sortation, stocking
and picking.
ORDER BILL OF LADING: A form used by the shipper when payment
is desired before goods are delivered to the consignee. This bill
allows the shipment to be turned over only to the person named specifically
thereon.
ORDER CLERK: The person responsible for reading and ensuring
the accuracy of orders.
ORDER NOTIFY: A document used for goods consigned or destined
to the order of a person or company named on the bill of lading.
ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURER: A manufacturer of products
which become components or parts of the product of a second manufacturer.
ORIGINATING CARRIER: The first carrier to receive a shipment
of merchandise from the shipper.
O.R.M.: Other regulated material.
O.S.: Out of stock.
O.S.&D. REPORT: Over, short, and damage report prepared
by the warehouse receiver. It provides the raw material for settlement
of a potential claim against the shipper and/or the common carrier.
O.S.H.A.: Occupational Safety and Health Act. A federal law
to regulate and inspect safety practices in the workplace. Also Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.
O.T.: On truck or railway.
OUTAGE: A quantity of some item lost in transportation or storage.
OUTSIDE DIMENSION (O.D.): The exterior dimension of a container
or package. In drums it is the diameter measured over the rolling
hoops.
OUTWARD FOREIGN VOYAGE: A vessel's route of progress commencing
at the port where cargo or passengers are first laden for carriage
to a foreign destination and terminating at the port of final discharge
of outbound passengers or cargo. (19CFR4.90)
OVERHEAD COST: The costs which are not directly attributable
to a specific item, but are still part of the total cost. They include
janitorial costs, hat, power, light, maintenance, depreciation, taxes
and insurance.
OVERSHIPMENT: A shipment containing more than originally ordered.
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P.A.: Particular average.
PACKAGING SYSTEM: Designed to provide protection, containment,
information, and utility for the goods.
PACKING: The cost of all containers, coverings of whatever
nature, and packing, whether for labor or materials, used in placing
merchandise in condition, packed ready for shipment to the U.S.
PACKING LIST: Usually issued in conjunction with a supplier's
invoice detailing the types of merchandise, size and quantity per
shipping unit.
PALLET: A device used for moving and storing freight. It is
used as a base for assembling, storing, stacking, handling, and transporting
foods as a unit load.
PALLET JACK: A walk behind fork lift that raises pallet loads
4-6 inches above the floor for movement within a warehouse.
PAR VALUE: The official fixed exchange rate between two currencies.
PARCEL INVENTORY: A count performed on a specific number of
items in stock at regular intervals.
PARCEL RECEIPT: Receipt given by a steamship company for a
parcel shipment.
PARTICULAR AVERAGE: Partial loss or damage to goods.
PATENT: A government grant of certain rights given to an inventor
for a limited time. The most important of these rights is the one
under which the patented invention can be made, used or sold only
with the authorization of the patent owner.
P.D.: Per diem.
PENALTY (notice of): A Notice of Penalty on Customs Form CF5955
is a formal notice that an act or omission has occurred
that is in violation of a law or regulation administered by Customs,
and that retribution has been demanded therefore, in the form of a
fine or forfeiture.
PERILS OF THE SEA: Those causes of loss of goods for which
the carrier is not legally liable. The elemental risk of ocean transport.
PERISHABLE: Merchandise which spoils or decays rapidly and
usually requires specialized containers or temperature control.
PERMIT FILE FOLDER: The up-to-date record of all goods held
in a bonded warehouse by entry. (19CFR19.12)
PERMIT TO PROCEED: A CF 1301, permit to travel between domestic
ports with cargo or passengers on board. (19CFR4.85)
PERMITTED MERCHANDISE: Merchandise is permitted when Customs
authorizes the carrier brining the shipment to the port to make delivery
to the consignee or the next carrier. (19CFR158.1)
PETITION: A formal, written supplication addressed to the Commissioner
of Customs, seeking mitigation or discharge of a fine, penalty, or
forfeiture incurred under any law administered by Customs (19CFR171).
Also, a request for the district director to correct a clerical error,
mistake of fact, or inadvertence in an entry within the legal time
frames (19CFR173.4)
PHYTOSANITARY INSPECTION CERTIFICATE: A certificate issued
by the US Department of Agriculture to satisfy import regulations
of foreign countries indicating that a US shipment has been inspected
and is free from harmful pests and plant diseases.
PICKUP ORDER: The cargo control form specially demanded by
the district director and accompanying a release by U.S. Customs of
imported cargo due to the volume of cargo handled at a particular
port; the incidence of theft or pilferage, or any other factor related
to the protection of merchandise in Customs custody. (19CFR4.38)
PIGGY BACK (PIG): To transport trailers via railway flat cars.
PIN LOCK: Locking device that prevents the attaching of a tractor
to a trailer
P.O.A.: Power of attorney.
P.O.D.: Proof of delivery.
P.O.E.: Point of embarkation.
PORT OF ENTRY: A port at which foreign goods are admitted into
the receiving country.
PORT MARKS: An identifying set of letters, number and/or geometric
symbols followed by the name of the port of destination which are
placed on export shipments. Foreign government requirements may be
exceedingly strict in the manner of port marks.
POWER OF ATTORNEY: A Customs Form (CF5291) document which empowers
one individual or entity to act on behalf of the issuer or principal,
without limited such actions to
specifically designated Customs business, as opposed to a limited
power of attorney granting restricted authority. (19CFR, Sec. 141.31-46).
P.P.: Purchased price.
PPD: Prepaid
PREPAID FREIGHT: Freight paid by the shipper to the carrier
when merchandise is tendered for shipment.
PRICE PAID OR PAYABLE: Most common method of appraisement of
imported merchandise in the currency of the purchase. The actual price
paid, or agreed to be paid, for the goods.
PRIVATE CARRIER: A company that provides its own transportation,
either through leased or owned equipment.
PRINCIPAL: An obligatory, generally the importer of record.
The person(s) or entity accepting primary responsibility for all government
debts secured by a bond as evidenced by the principal's name and authorized
signature on a bond. (19CFR113)
PRO FORMAL INVOICE: An invoice provided by a supplier prior
to the shipment of merchandise, informing the buyer of the kinds and
quantities of goods to be sent, their value, and important specifications
(weight, size, etc.).
PROOF OF DELIVERY: Information supplied to payer container
the name of the person who signed for the package with the time and
date of delivery.
PROTEST: A protest is the legal means by which an importer,
consignee or other designated party may challenge decisions made by
a district director of Customs.
PURCHASE ORDER: A form sent to a supplier that contains all
information relevant to the purchase transaction. It describes the
products including prices, shipping terms, and delivery expectations.
PURCHASE PRICE: A statutory term used to refer to the United
States sales price of merchandise which is sold or likely to be sold
prior to the date of importation by the producer or reseller of the
merchandise for exportation to the United States.
PURCHASING AGENT: An agent who purchases goods in his/her own
country on behalf of large foreign buyers such as government agencies
and private corporations.
P.W.: Packed weight.
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QUALITY CONTROL: The evaluating of an item or process to determine
if it meets predetermined guidelines and specifications.
QUANTITATIVE RESTRICTIONS: Explicit limits or quotas on physical
amounts of particular commodities that can be imported or exported
during a specified time period by volume or value.
QUOTA (absolute): Quota which permits a limited number of units
of specified merchandise to be entered for consumption during specific
periods. (19CFR, Sec. 132.1)
QUOTA (Tariff rate): Quota which permits a specified quantity
of merchandise to be entered for consumption at a reduced duty rate
during a specific period.
QUOTATION: An offer to sell goods at a stated price and under
stated terms.
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R & L: Rail and lake.
R & O: Rail and ocean.
RATE OF EXCHANGE: The rate of currency exchange established
daily as the buying rate of foreign currency by the Federal Reserve
Bank. The daily rate is used only when it varies by more than 5 percent
from the quarterly rate. When applicable, the daily rate is the rate
certified on the day of exportation. (19CFR159.35)
RATE FILES: The collection of transportation rates and arrangements
of various classes and commodities.
R.C. & L.: Rail, canal, and lake.
REACTIVATION: A resumption of the activated status of an entire
area that was previously deactivated without any change in the operator
or the area boundaries. (19CFR146.1)
REASONABLE CARE: A legal doctrine applied in many cases that
states than an individual or company is liable if reasonable care
was not used. Defined as the exercise of care that a reasonably careful
person would exercise under like circumstances.
REBATE: A refund of, or other decrease in, the price actually
paid or payable made or otherwise effected between the buyer and seller
after the date of importation of the merchandise. (19CFR 152.103)
RECEIVING RECORD: A complete listing of all incoming shipments
during a specific period.
RECORDS: The current, correct, orderly, and itemized records
of the brokerage-related financial accounts of a broker as described
in the regulations. (19CFR111.22)
RECOVERY: The actual act of pursuing damages from responsible
parties.
REDELIVERY: A demand by the U.S. Customs via a CF 4647, after
release, for the return of merchandise to Customs custody.
REEFER: A container with temperature controls.
REFG: Refrigerating, or refrigeration.
RELATED BUYER AND SELLER: Buyers and sellers with sufficient
inter-relationship to have influenced the value of the imported articles,
the price paid or payable, or other matters of the transaction, or
to specifically cause such issues to be raised because of their relationship.
(19CFR 152.102)
REPAIR DECLARATION: A CF 226 declaration describing all foreign
equipment purchases by, or repairs to, American vessels.
RESTRICTED ARTICLES: Goods that are admissible only under certain
conditions.
RETURN RECEIPT: A form sent to the shipper, after a consignee
has received a shipment that indicates delivery has been made.
RIDER: An attachment to a surety bond, in a specific format,
used to change information regarding a principal on a CF 301 bond.
(19CFR113.23)
RIGHT TO MAKE ENTRY: The authorization to make entry granted
to any person possessing the articles at the time of entry, or a CF
7529 or other proof required to be presented to U.S. Customs along
with entry documentation which identifies the person or entity that
files for entry as having sufficient interest in the cargo to qualify
as an importer when the merchandise is not released directly to a
carrier. (19CFR 141.11-12)
R.I.T.: Refining in transit.
ROUTING: The process of designating a rote to be followed by
a driver for pick-ups and deliveries.
REVOCABLE LETTER OD CREDIT: A letter of credit which can be
cancelled or altered by the drawee (buyer) after it has been issued
by the drawee's bank.
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SALVAGE: Usually the amount of money realized from the sale
of damaged merchandise.
SAME CLASS AND KIND: Merchandise within a group or range of
merchandise produced by a particular industry or industry sector.
(19CFR 152.102)
S.C. & S.: Strapped, corded, and sealed.
SCHEDULE B: Refers to schedule B statistical classification
of domestic and foreign commodities exported from the United States.
S/D: Sight draft.
SEAL: A metal, steel, aluminum, or plastic device affixed to
the locking mechanism of the door to a truck, rail car, airline igloo,
or container.
SHIPPER: The party who tenders goods for transportation. The
term can refer to a seller, consignee who arranges for transportation
services, or a third party that arranges for the transportation.
SHIPPER'S EXPORT DECLARATION: A form required by the Treasury
Department and completed by the shipper showing the value, weight,
consignee, destination, etc. of export shipments as well as the Schedule
B identification number.
SHIPPER'S LOAD AND COUNT: Freight term indicating that the
carrier has no control of the contents of a shipment because the shipper
loaded the merchandise. May release carrier from liability in the
event improper loading is responsible for cargo damage.
SHIPPING WEIGHT: Shipping weight represents the gross weight
in kilograms of shipment, including the weight of moisture content,
wrapping, crates, boxes and containers.
SHORT FORM BILL OF LADING: A summary-type Bill of Lading which
does not incorporate all obligations and responsibilities of both
parties. Unless a shipper is familiar with the carrier's tariff, he
should request a full Bill of Lading.
SHORTAGE: A term used to indicate non-receipt of a part of
the total quantity shipped. Also known as short shipment.
SIC CODE: See "Standard industrial classification".
SID#: Shipment Identification Number
SIGHT DRAFT: A draft which is payable upon representation to
the drawee.
SINGLE ENTRY BOND: An application to the District Director
requesting that a bond of a certain form and amount, that identifies
the value and nature of the articles, be accepted as adequate surety
for a single transaction.
S.L. & C.: Shipper's load and count.
S.L. & T.: Shipper's load and tally.
SLD: Sailed.
S.O.: Ship's option. Shipping order. Seller's option.
SPECIAL CARGO POLICY: Similar to a certificate of insurance,
except it is an insurance in and of itself and not subject to the
underlying terms of an open policy when title has been transferred
to a third party.
SPECIFIC DUTY: Tax imposed on imported merchandise without
regard to value. Usually based on net weight or number of pieces,
etc.
S.R. & C.C.: Strikes, riots and civil commotion. A term
referring to an insurance clause excluding insurance loss due to these
acts.
S.S.: Shipside.
S/S: Steamship.
S.T.: Short ton (2,000 lbs.)
STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION: The classification system
developed by the Untied States department of Commerce for business
activities. There are eleven primary divisions classified by two digit
codes. Further divisions occur within the primary categories and can
reach up to seven digits for the most specialized categories of business
activity. Also referred to as the SIC code.
STEAMSHIP CONFERENCE: A group of vessel operators joined together
for the purpose of establishing freight rates. A shipper may receive
reduced rates if the shipper enters into contract to ship on vessels
of conference members only.
STORAGE RATE: The price charged for storage of merchandise,
expressed as a cost per unit per month, or as a cost per square foot
(or meter) per month.
STRAIGHT BILL OF LADING: A non-negotiable transportation receipt
that directs the carrier to delivery the shipment to any authorized
person at the destination point.
STUFFING: Loading a shipping container.
SUBAGENT: The regulatory authorization for a holder of a power
of attorney for a nonresident principal to delegate a subagent to
act on behalf of the principal only if the original power of attorney
expressly authorizes the agent to so delegate. (19CFR 141.43).
SUBMISSION: The voluntary delivery to the appropriate Customs
officer of the entry summary documentation for preliminary review
or of entry documentation for other purposes. (19CFR141.0)
SUSPENSION OF LIQUIDATION: The delay in liquidation of entries
affected by U.S. Customs, usually the result of a anti-dumping investigation,
etc..
SURETY: an obligator on a surety bond. Specifically, an individual(s)
or entity providing a guarantee for the payment of all government
debts secured by a bond as evidenced by the sureties name and the
authorized signature on the bond.
SWITCH TRANSACTIONS: The practice of exporting (or importing)
goods through an intermediary country to final destination. This is
done when the destination country is short of U.S dollars and when
the intermediary country has available U.S. dollars and is willing
to exchange for the destination country's currency or goods. Such
transactions must be performed within the various laws concerning
export licenses.
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T.A.C.M.: Transit air cargo manifest.
T & E ENTRY: Transportation and Exportation Entry. A Customs
Form (CF7512) declaring goods which are entering the United States
(e.g. from Canada) for the purpose of exportation through a U.S. port.
Carriers and warehouses involved must be bonded.
TALLY: A notation made by an importing carrier of the quantity
of articles delivered to a cartman.
TARE WEIGHT: The weight of a container and/or packing materials
without the weight of the goods it contains.
TARIFF: A tax assessed by a government on goods as they enter
(or leave) a country. May be imposed to protect domestic industry
and/or to generate revenue. Types include ad valorem, specific, variable,
or some combination.
TARIFF SCHEDULE: A comprehensive list of the goods which a
country may import and the import duties applicable to each product.
T.D.C.C.: Transportation Data Coordinating Committee; organized
in 1976 to develop standards for electronic data interchange. (EDI)
TEMPORARY IMPORT BOND (TIB): Articles not imported for sale,
admitted into the U.S. on a temporary basis without the payment of
duty, under bond for their exportation. (19CFR, Sec. 10.310)
TERMS OF SALE: Usually refers to an internationally accepted
set of definitions which outlines the responsibilities of a buyer
and seller for loss or damage to merchandise during transit.
TERRITORY OF THE U.S.: Includes the 50 states plus the District
of Columbia and Puerto Rico. (19CFR101.1)
THIRD PARTY WAREHOUSE: Public Warehouse. A warehouse facility
that is offered for use to other firms as a storage facility.
THROUGH BILL OF LADING: A single bill of lading covering both
the domestic and international carriage of the export shipment.
THROUGH RATE: A total rate from the point of origin to final
destination.
T.I.B.: See Temporary Import Bond.
TIME DRAFT: A draft which matures in either a certain number
of days after acceptance or a certain number of days after the date
of the draft.
TINE: The horizontal load lifting portion of a fork on a fork
truck that contacts the load.,
TITLE: A written record that evidences ownership.
T.L.: Truck load. The term used for a shipment which weights
at least the minimum necessary for the application of the truckload
rate. Truckload (T.L.) versus less than truck load (L.T.L.)
TOLERANCE: The permitted amount of deviation from the mean
or average of a measure.
TON MILE: One of the most commonly used measures of transportation
service. One ton of cargo moved on mile.
TONNAGE TAX: A tax based upon the net tonnage of a vessel imposed
at each entry of the vessel. (19CFR4.20)\
TONNE (METRIC TON): 1,000 kilograms (2,204 lbs.).
TOUCH AND TRADE: A CF 1370 permit issued by the district director
of Customs allowing a fishing vessel to touch and trade at a foreign
port or place. (19CFR 4.14)
TRACKING AND TRACING: A carrier's system of recording movement
intervals of shipments from origin to destination.
TRACER: A form used, to implement tracing and information gathering,
about a lost shipment.
TRADEMARK: Relates to any work name or symbol which is used
in trade to distinguish a product from other similar goods.
TRADING COMPANY: A large firm which normally handles a wide
spectrum of products from one or a limited number of countries. It
is used extensively by Japanese firms to move products to North America.
TRAFFIC COSTS: The cost associated with the transportation
of goods.
TRANSFORMATION-SUBSTANTIAL: A manufacturing process which
results in a new and different article having a distinctive name,
character, or use which is different from that originally possessed
by the article or material before its subjection to the manufacturing
process. (19CFR10.15)
TRANSPORTATION IN BOND: An entry of articles under the rules
and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury for transporting
those articles in bond without appraisement to any other port of entry
designated. (19CFR18.11)
TRANSSHIPMENT: The transfer of bonded merchandise from one
conveyance to another single conveyance while en-route to the port
of destination or exportation. (19CFR18.3)
T.S.U.S.: Tariff schedules of the United States. The U.S. schedule
of duty rates to be paid, based upon classification of goods, being
imported into the United Stated.
TURNOVER RATE: The frequency with which total inventory or
a specific class of inventory is completely replaced.
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U.C.C.: Uniform Commercial Code. The law used to govern all
business transactions.
U.L.D.: Unit load device. Term commonly used when referring
to containers and pallets.
U.S. EXPRESS: The leading provider in all international &
domestic freight forwarding, customs brokering, warehousing, distribution
and third party logistics.
ULTIMATE CONSIGNEE: The ultimate consignee is the person who
is the true party in interest, receiving the product for the designated
end use.
UNCLAIMED GOODS: Generally all entered or non-entered merchandise,
including merchandise entered for transportation, which remains in
Customs custody for 1 year from the date of importation, or a lesser
period for special merchandise, and without all estimated duties and
storage or other charges having been paid. (19CFR127.11,28)
UNCONCEALED DAMAGE: Damage to merchandise that is clearly evident
when received.
UNIFORM FREIGHT CLASSIFICATION: A system of classifying similar
products into specific rate categories. The rate categories are based
on handling attributes of the products such as bulk, special handling
needs, value, etc.
UNIT LOAD: The process of combining a number of packages by
binding, so the unit package can be moved as a single item.
UNITIZATION: The consolidation of a number of individual items
into one shipping unit for easier handling.
U.S.D.A.: United States Department of Agriculture.
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VAL: Value.
VALIDATED EXPORT LICENSE: A document issued by the U.S. Government
authorizing the export of commodities for which written export authorization
is required by law.
VALUATION: The appraisal of the worth of imported goods by
customs officials to determine the amount of duty due in the importing
country.
VALUATION CHARGES: Transportation charges assessed shippers
who declare a value of goods higher than the value of carriers limits
of liability.
VALUE ADDED TAX: An indirect tax on consumption that is levied
at each discrete point in the production chain and distribution from
raw materials to final consumption.
VES: Vessel.
VOLUNTARY TENDER: the unsolicited notice of and deposit of
the probable amount of unpaid duties, which will be found due on the
entry. It is initiated by the importer record or the actual owner.
(19CFR, Sec. 141.104)
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WALL BUMPERS: 12 to 18 inch concrete filled pipes located
to the side of the dock opening for the purpose of protecting the
building walls adjacent to the dock opening from the impact of a misaligned
truck trailer.
WAND READER: A hand held bar code scanner which resembles a
wand.
WAREHOUSE (bonded): A place used for the storage and custody
of imported merchandise that is subject to duty until duties are paid
or the goods are reshipped without entry from the import country.
Also a public warehouse covered by a surety bond.
WAREHOUSE ACTIVITY REPORT: A report that details all activities
occurring with the warehouse facility,. Items include merchandise
arrivals, loading, unloading movements within the facility, etc..
WAREHOUSE ENTRY: A form declaring goods imported and placed
in a bonded warehouse. Duty payments may not be required until goods
are withdrawn for consumption.
WAREHOUSE RECEIPT: A form that contains information describing
the merchandise received into the warehouse. It is a legal acknowledgment
of responsibility for care of the goods.
WAREHOUSE SHIPPING ADVICE: A document that provides information
concerning the status of shipments departing the warehouse.
WAREHOUSEMAN: A person who receives and ships goods and merchandise
to be stored for hire.
WARRANT: A receipt issued by a public or bonded warehouse.
WAR RISK INSURANCE: Separate insurance covering for losses
which result from any acts of war. This insurance is necessary during
peacetime due to objects, such as floating mines, left over from previous
wars.
WARSAW CONVENTION: An international multilateral treaty which
regulates, in a uniform manner, the conditions of international transportation
by air. It establishes the international liability of air carriers
and establishes the monetary limits for loss, damage, and delay.
WAYBILL (W/B): A document accompanying merchandise while it
is in transit.
WEATHER SEAL: A rubber or canvas covering extending from the
dock face and surrounding a trailer's entrance on the side and top.
They are designed to protect loaders from weather.
WEIGHT BREAK: Levels at which teh freight rate per 100 pounds
decreases because of substantial increases in the weight of a shipment.
W.E.R.C.: Warehousing Education and Research Council, a professional
organization that promotes and emphasizes education and idea exchange
solely in the field of warehousing.
WHARFAGE: A charge assessed by a pier or dock owner for handling
incoming or outgoing cargo.
W.I.N.S.: Warehouse Information Network Standards committee,
formed to develop standards for six types of warehousing messages:
shipping order, inventory status report, activity report, stock transfer
receipt advice, shipping advice, and accept/reject advice.
W.P.A.: with particular average. An insurance term meaning that partial
loss or damage to goods is insured.
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YIELD: Transport revenue derived per unit of traffic carried
in transportation.
ZIP CODE: A numerical code, established by the U.S. Postal
Service, used for the purpose of routing and to identify delivery
zones.
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ZONE LOT: A collection of merchandise maintained under an
inventory control method based upon specific identification by lot
of merchandise admitted to a zone. (19CFR 146.1)
ZONE SITE: The physical location of a zone or subzone. (19CFR146.1)
ZONE STATUS: The status of merchandise admitted into a zone,
i.e., non-privileged foreign, privileged foreign, zone restricted,
or domestic. (19CFR146.4)