In the Media
Papavizas Discusses the Jones Act’s Impact on European Dredging
In the Media
Papavizas Discusses the Jones Act’s Impact on European Dredging
August 14, 2014
Winston & Strawn maritime and admiralty practice chair Charlie Papavizas, based in the firm’s Washington, D.C. office, was quoted in Inside U.S. Trade on August 14, 2014. In the article “EU Dredgers Hope TTIP Can Skirt ‘Jones Act’ Barriers, But Face Hurdles,” Mr. Papavizas discusses the European dredging industry’s endeavor to remove legal restrictions that block access to the U.S. market. The article addresses whether the EU can use the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) to widen Jones Act exemptions to include dredging.
Mr. Papavizas explains that one of the difficulties the EU faces is the shorthand use of the “Jones Act,” as it refers to a much larger body of laws aimed at protecting domestic maritime service suppliers. These include the Dredging Act of 1906, the Towing Statute of 1940, the Passenger Vessel Services Act of 1886, and the Cargo Preference Act of 1954.
“The Jones Act community tends to look at [maritime policy] as a whole, not something that can be pieced up,” he said. “Because if they let someone take one piece away, the rest could follow.”
Mr. Papavizas cast doubt on the notion that by weaving around the Merchant Marine Act and targeting the Dredging Act, a deal to liberalize the U.S. dredging market could somehow escape political scrutiny. Domestic dredging firms have come to count on the restriction and will defend it vigorously, he added.
For more information on the Jones Act, visit Winston's maritime blog: MaritimeFedWatch.