View stories by State
HOME RSS FEEDS ARCHIVES ABOUT US SITE MAP PUBLICATIONS
Search using      Advanced
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
or Browse All States
CRIME & COURTS
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
EDUCATION
ELECTIONS
ENERGY
ENVIRONMENT
GOVS' SPEECHES
HEALTH CARE
HOMELAND SECURITY
POLITICS
RECESSION & RECOVERY
SOCIAL POLICY
TAXES & BUDGET
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSPORTATION
ARCHIVES
COMMENTARY
PUBLICATIONS
RSS FEEDS
STATE SPEECHES
NEWS ALERTS
PUBLIC POLICY LINKS
TOOLBARS
STATE BLOGS
ISSUE BLOGS


Register to comment on Stateline.org Stories

Monday, May 05, 2008

Oh say, is that banner made in the U.S.A.?

Comments Write the editor Print this story

Image courtesy of Annin & Co
Following Tennessee's lead, seven states have moved to guarantee domestic production of all U.S. flags purchased by the state government. One other state seeks to bar all foreign-made flags.
It was seeing foreign-made American flags at a veteran’s memorial ceremony that inspired a West Virginia legislator to act.

State Del. Jack Yost (D), a former Army reservist, recently proposed a bill that would require that all flags purchased with state funds be made in the U.S.A.. He’s not alone — lawmakers in nine other states also have moved to restrict sales of foreign-made flags.

“Our veterans, they’re made in the United States,” Yost said. “I saw that flag, and a red flag went up in my mind. I thought, ‘This isn’t right.’”

Yost’s proposal, which will go into effect this summer, is modeled on a Tennessee law passed in 2005. Legislators in Florida, Missouri, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Wisconsin took up similar proposals this spring. The bills in Florida, Missouri and Oklahoma remain in the legislature, while Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter (D) and Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle (D) signed their states bills into law in March.

“One of the most important products that we should have made in the U.S.A. is our flag,” said Colorado state Sen. Lois Tochtrop (D), who sponsored the Colorado measure.

A new Minnesota law goes even further. It forbids the sale of any foreign-made U.S. flags in the North Star State.

Supporters say patriotism is the driving force behind the measures, but they cite other benefits, too.

Colorado state Rep. Sara Gagliardi (D) backed the idea, in part, because it would boost local production of flags.

A similar proposal in the Iowa General Assembly also sought to ban sales of foreign-made Iowa state and P.O.W./M.I.A. flags.

Iowa state Rep. Ray Zirkelbach (D), an Iraq War veteran who sponsored the bill in the Iowa House, told The Des Moines Register that it was a deeply personal matter for him. According to the paper, Zirkelbach said he wanted to make sure it would be a U.S.-made flag covering his coffin at his funeral.

Zirkelbach did not return calls for comment. His bill passed in the House, but did not make it out of the Senate State Government committee before the Legislature adjourned last month.

A bill pending in Illinois originally sought to ban the sale of all foreign-made U.S. flags, as Minnesota’s law does, but was amended to apply only to flags purchased with state funds.

Getting these laws through legislatures is not the only hurdle facing states that follow Minnesota’s example. Laws barring the sale of foreign-made products in the United States are in direct conflict with international trade treaties.

“It would violate all of our trade agreements,” including the North and Central American Free Trade Agreements, said Steve Charnovitz, a law professor at the George Washington University Law School. “It violates NAFTA, Peru, Oman, Chile CAFTA, Morocco."

Charnovitz said that the laws would run afoul of the principle of “national treatment.” 

“An imported product cannot be treated less favorably than the domestically produced product” under these rules, Charnovitz said, and laws barring foreign-made U.S. flags clearly do.

Still, it isn’t clear that laws banning foreign-made flags will ever be challenged under international treaties. While governments — not companies — can bring such challenges, only Minnesota currently restricts all flags made outside of the U.S.

Also, arguing in support of an American flag that is “Made in China” is not an easy thing for a politician to do.

What is still unclear is the effect the embargo on foreign-made U.S. flags in Minnesota will have on U.S. retailers.

The nation’s flag manufacturers shipped $349.2 million worth of flags and similar emblems in 2005, according to the most recent U.S. Census data. At the same time, the United States imports $5.5 million in flags a year.

The vast majority of flags made outside the United States are produced in China, where labor and materials are significantly less expensive. Vendors are concerned that higher production costs for flags made here will force them to raise their prices.



Comment on this story in the space below by registering with Stateline.org.

Issues: Economy and Business    Homeland Security    Politics    Taxes and Budget   
Topics: Governor    state policymaker    new bills    state economy    state lawmaker    Economy and Business    state policy    state law    legislature    Tax and Budget    National Guard    legislative actions    Politics    veteran    Democrat    Homeland Security    state revenue   

COMMENTS (2)
Most Recent Comments
Foriegn made flags
By mark tack on May 8, 2008 8:20:45 AM

As I am extemely For American Made products, It is my heart felt duty to remind the people of this great country that it was also other countries that helped this country to be free(France during our own Revolutionary war, without them, we would be bowing to a monarcy right now), and during the Korean war, look at all the other countries that aided us, even though most of them did not feel it was right, but did so because they believe as very much in our wonderful freedoms, and look to us as the SINGLE MOST Shining example of freedom. So, maybe we should ban those products, mainly our U.S. flags, from countries that do not believe in and share freedom for their peoples. As I am retired from the United States navy, It was heartwrenching to visit these poor countries that absolutely Love our way of life and only want that for themselves. If you want to blame the bad reputation of cheap made foriegn products, you only have to go as far as looking at all the low life companies that closed up shop in the U.S. to move to Mexico, canada, and all the other countries because they can pay those people SLAVE wages, all the while crashing their hopes of the "Freedom Dream", as they are exploited and abused.

Report as Offensive
which flag was foreign made
By Deborah Hendrick on May 5, 2008 9:41:03 PM

Kim Mendelsohn:

I do not understand which flag at this veteran's memorial service was foreign made.

Please clarify.

Report as Offensive
Read More Comments

The seventh annual Hal Hovey Award was presented Feb. 3 to Marc Perrusquia, an enterprise and investigative reporter for The Commercial Appeal, the daily newspaper in Memphis Tenn. The award is made jointly by Stateline.org, which is part of the Pew Center on the States, and Governing Magazine for outstanding coverage of state and local government.
Recession and Recovery
Read the latest news, analysis and research on the economic crisis in the states in Stateline.org's new Recession and Recovery special section.
The Stimulus and the StatesThe Stimulus and the
States

Follow how states are managing the stimulus money and which programs are receiving funding as part of the recovery effort using Stateline.org's stimulus special section.
Stateline Blogs
Stateline.org has compiled an extensive list of state issue political blogs to make it convenient for you to follow state government.

If a blog you find interesting and informative is not on our list, tell us about it by sending an email to editor@stateline.org.
Blogs organized by Issue
lineBlogs organized by State
State Public Policy Resources
Stateline.org has put together a list of state public policy resources organized by issue. Here, you will find useful links to essential information from government, academia, and think tanks. If you have a link to add, please email us.


The Pew Charitable Trusts applies the power of knowledge to solve today’s most challenging problems. Pew's Center on the States identifies and advances state policy solutions.