19 CFR Part 19 - CUSTOMS WAREHOUSES, CONTAINER STATIONS AND CONTROL OF MERCHANDISE THEREIN
- § 19.1 — Classes of customs warehouses.
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General Provisions
- § 19.2 — Applications to bond.
- § 19.3 — Bonded warehouses; alterations; relocation; suspensions; discontinuance.
- § 19.4 — CBP and proprietor responsibility and supervision over warehouses.
- § 19.5 — [Reserved]
- § 19.6 — Deposits, withdrawals, blanket permits to withdraw and sealing requirements.
- § 19.7 — Expenses of labor and storage.
- § 19.8 — Examination of goods by importer; sampling; repacking; examination of merchandise by prospective purchasers.
- § 19.9 — General order, abandoned, and seized merchandise.
- § 19.10 — Examination packages.
- Manipulation in Bonded Warehouses and Elsewhere
- Accounts
- Manufacturing Warehouses
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Smelting and Refining Warehouses
- § 19.17 — Application to establish warehouse; bond.
- § 19.18 — Smelting and refining; allowance for wastage; withdrawal for consumption.
- § 19.19 — Manufacturers' records; annual statement.
- § 19.20 — Withdrawal of products from bonded smelting or refining warehouses.
- § 19.21 — Smelting and refining in separate establishments.
- § 19.22 — Withdrawal of metal refined in part from imported crude metal and in part from crude metal produced from imported materials.
- § 19.23 — Withdrawal for exportation from one port to be credited on warehouse entry account at another port.
- § 19.24 — Theoretical transfer without physical shipment of dutiable metal.
- § 19.25 — Credit to be applied under various forms of withdrawals.
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Space Bonded for the Storage of Wheat
- § 19.29 — Sealing of bins or other bonded space.
- § 19.30 — Domestic wheat not to be allowed in bonded space.
- § 19.31 — Bulk wheat of different classes and grades not to be commingled in storage.
- § 19.32 — Wheat manipulation; reconditioning.
- § 19.33 — General order; transportation in bond.
- § 19.34 — Customs supervision.
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Duty-Free Stores
Source:Sections 19.35 through 19.39 issued by T.D. 92-81, 57 FR 37698, Aug. 20, 1992, unless otherwise noted.
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Container Stations
Source:Sections 19.40 through 19.49 issued by T.D. 72-68, 37 FR 4186, Feb. 29, 1972, unless otherwise noted.
- § 19.40 — Establishment, relocation or alteration of container stations.
- § 19.41 — Movement of containerized cargo to a container station.
- § 19.42 — Application for transfer of merchandise.
- § 19.43 — Filing of application.
- § 19.44 — Carrier responsibility.
- § 19.45 — Transfer of merchandise, approval and method.
- § 19.46 — Employee lists.
- § 19.47 — Security.
- § 19.48 — Suspension or revocation of the privilege of operating a container station; hearings.
- § 19.49 — Entry of containerized merchandise.
Title 19 published on 2012-04-01
no entries appear in the Federal Register after this date.
This is a list of United States Code sections, Statutes at Large, Public Laws, and Presidential Documents, which provide rulemaking authority for this CFR Part.
This list is taken from the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules provided by GPO [Government Printing Office].
It is not guaranteed to be accurate or up-to-date, though we do refresh the database weekly. More limitations on accuracy are described at the GPO site.
Title 19 published on 2012-04-01
The following are ALL rules, proposed rules, and notices (chronologically) published in the Federal Register relating to 19 CFR 19 after this date.
GPO FDSys XML | Text type regulations.gov FR Doc. 2012-18187 RIN 1515-AD81 USCBP-2012-0002 DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Notice of proposed rulemaking; correction. Comments must be received on or before August 27, 2012. 19 CFR Parts 4, 10, 18, 19, 113, 122, 123, 141, 142, 143, 144, 146, 151, and 181 U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) published a notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register on February 22, 2012, proposing various changes to the in-bond regulations to enhance CBP's ability to regulate and track in-bond merchandise and to ensure that the in-bond merchandise is properly entered and duties are paid or that the in-bond merchandise is exported. In that document, CBP published a summary of its analysis under the Regulatory Flexibility Act and stated that the complete Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was posted on the regulations.gov Web site. As CBP inadvertently failed to post the IRFA on the docket when the NPRM was published, CBP is notifying the public that the IRFA has now been posted and is seeking comments on the conclusion in the NPRM and the IRFA that the rule may have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.