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Home Our meetings are open to all
3rd Wednesday of each month
7:00 pm Note: Usually we meet in Brunswick, but ocassionally at other locations around the state, so contact us just to be sure.Contact us: (207) 743-2183 (207) 273-3247 (207) 443-2899 mail (at) letcubalive.org Let Cuba Live
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GUIDANCE ON IMPLEMENTATION OF CUBA TRAVEL AND TRADE-RELATED PROVISIONS OF THE OMNIBUS APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2009 This guidance outlines the actions taken by the Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control to implement provisions related to Cuba sanctions in the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009.Travel to Visit Relatives in Cuba Congress has directed that none of the funds made available in the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009, may be used to administer,implement, or enforce the June 16, 2004 amendments made to sections 515.560 and515.561 of Title 31, Code of Federal Regulations, related to travel to visit relatives in Cuba. In consultation with the Department of State, today Treasury has implemented this provision of the Act by issuing a general license authorizing persons subject to the jurisdiction of the United States to travel to Cuba to visit an expanded category of family members who are nationals of Cuba, defined as "close relatives," once every 12 months for an unlimited length of stay and at the same expenditure limits as all other authorized travel to Cuba. This general license thus reinstates the authorization for family travel to Cuba that existed prior to the June 16, 2004 amendments. Travel to, from, or within Cuba for the Marketing and Sale of Agricultural and Medical Goods In another provision of the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009,Congress has directed Treasury to promulgate regulations authorizing, by general license,travel- related transactions for travel to, from, or within Cuba for the marketing and sale of agricultural and medical goods. Treasury will implement this provision in the coming weeks. Until promulgation of new regulations, these travel-related transactions must be authorized by specific license, as set forth in section 515.533(e) of Title 31, Code of Federal Regulations. Congress also has directed that none of the funds made available in the Act may be used to administer, implement, or enforce the February 25, 2005amendment to section 515.533 of Title 31, Code of Federal Regulations. That amendment clarified the agency's view that the term "cash in advance" — a term used in the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 ("TSRA") — should be given its ordinary commercial meaning, which requires payment to be received by the seller or the seller's agent in advance, prior to shipment of goods from the port at which they are loaded. Because the Act does not amend the requirement in TSRA that agricultural exports to Cuba be either paid for by "cash in advance" or financed using a third-country bank, TSRA's statutory provisions remain in place. |
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