Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America (SPP):
The SPP is a White House-led initiative among the
United States and the two nations it borders – Canada
and Mexico – to increase security and to enhance
prosperity among the three countries through greater
cooperation. The SPP is based on the principle that our
prosperity is dependent on our security and recognizes
that our three great nations share a belief in freedom,
economic opportunity, and strong democratic
institutions. The SPP outlines a comprehensive agenda
for cooperation among our three countries while
respecting the sovereignty and unique cultural heritage
of each nation. The SPP provides a vehicle by which the
United States, Canada, and Mexico can identify and
resolve unnecessary obstacles to trade and it provides a
means to improve our response to emergencies and
increase security, thus benefiting and protecting
Americans.
The SPP is meant to:
- Coordinate our security efforts to better
protect U.S. citizens from terrorist threats and
transnational crime and promote the safe and
efficient movement of legitimate people and goods;
- Expand economic opportunity for all our
people by making our businesses more competitive in
the global marketplace, cutting red tape, and
providing consumers with safe, less expensive, and
innovative products; and
- Enhance our common efforts to combat
infectious diseases, develop responses to man-made
or natural disasters to enhance our citizens’
quality of life, protect our people and our
environment, and improve consumer safety.
The SPP benefits the American people in many
ways, and much progress has already been made.
For example (see
www.spp.gov for more
information):
- To save lives, prevent injuries, and make
consumer goods safer, the United States, Canada and
Mexico signed separate agreements for advance
notifications when consumer goods violate one
country's safety standards or pose a danger to
consumers.
- To strengthen border security, Mexican and U.S.
agencies are exchanging information and establishing
protocols to detect fraud and smuggling, and address
border violence.
- To speed up response times when managing
infectious disease outbreaks, the United States and
Canada signed an agreement to enable simultaneous
exchange of information between virtual national
laboratory networks.
- To speed cargo shipping, the three countries are
developing uniform in-advance electronic exchange of
cargo manifest data for maritime, railroad and motor
carriers.
- To develop a coordinated strategy aimed at
combating counterfeiting and piracy, a task force of
senior officials from the three North American
countries has been established
- To reduce the cost of trade, the United States
and Canada decreased transit times at the
Detroit/Windsor gateway, our largest border crossing
point, by 50 percent.
- To reduce market distortions, facilitate trade,
and promote overall competitiveness, the North
American Steel Trade Committee developed a new
strategy that focuses on improving innovation and
market development.
Now
here (just below) is what our government on its own
website has to say about the "RUMORS" regarding the new
North American Union. You will feel much safer
after reading all of their protestations...! I
particularly appreciate their efforts at quelling such
false rumors as
1. North American Union (no more USA)
2.
New judical system that overrides ours (including our
Supreme Court.)
3. New NAFTA highway, yep, they are not spending tax
dollars; very clever; they are turning it over to
'private' contractors and corporations to own and run
(Like I-44 already is in Oklahoma...costs me $7.50 to
drive from Missouri to OKC under cameras all the way.)
4.
New Amero monatary system...no more 'Dollar'...will it
all be electronic?
Security and Prosperity
Partnership of North America (SPP):
Myth vs. Fact
Myth: The SPP was an agreement
signed by Presidents Bush and his Mexican and Canadian
counterparts in Waco, TX, on March 23, 2005.
Fact: The SPP is a dialogue to
increase security and enhance prosperity among the three
countries. The SPP is not an agreement nor is it a
treaty. In fact, no agreement was ever signed.
Myth: The SPP is a movement to merge
the United States, Mexico, and Canada into a North
American Union and establish a common currency.
Fact: The cooperative efforts under
the SPP, which can be found in detail at
www.spp.gov, seek to
make the United States, Canada and Mexico open to
legitimate trade and closed to terrorism and crime. It
does not change our courts or legislative processes and
respects the sovereignty of the United States, Mexico,
and Canada. The SPP in no way, shape or form considers
the creation of a European Union-like structure or a
common currency. The SPP does not attempt to modify
our sovereignty or currency or change the American
system of government designed by our Founding Fathers.
Myth: The SPP is being undertaken
without the knowledge of the U.S. Congress.
Fact: U.S. agencies involved with
SPP regularly update and consult with members of
Congress on our efforts and plans.
Myth: The SPP infringes on the
sovereignty of the United States.
Fact: The SPP respects and leaves
the unique cultural and legal framework of each of the
three countries intact. Nothing in the SPP undermines
the U.S. Constitution. In no way does the SPP infringe
upon the sovereignty of the United States.
Myth: The SPP is illegal and
violates the Constitution.
Fact: The SPP is legal and in no way
violates the Constitution or affects the legal
authorities of the participating executive agencies.
Indeed, the SPP is an opportunity for the governments of
the United States, Canada, and Mexico to discuss common
goals and identify ways to enhance each nation’s
security and prosperity. If an action is identified,
U.S. federal agencies can only operate within U.S. law
to address these issues. The Departments of Commerce
and Homeland Security coordinate the efforts of the
agencies responsible for the various initiatives under
the prosperity and security pillars of the SPP. If an
agency were to decide a regulatory change is desirable
through the cooperative efforts of SPP, that agency is
required to conform to all existing U.S. laws and
administrative procedures, including an opportunity to
comment.
Myth: The U.S section of the SPP is
headed by the Department of Commerce.
Fact: The SPP is a White
House-driven initiative. In the United States, the
Department of Commerce coordinates the ‘Prosperity’
component, while the Department of Homeland Security
coordinates the ‘Security’ component. The Department of
State ensures the two components are coordinated and are
consistent with U.S. foreign policy.
Myth: The U.S. Government, working
though the SPP, has a secret plan to build a "NAFTA
Super Highway."
Fact: The U.S. government is not
planning a NAFTA Super Highway. The U.S. government
does not have the authority to designate any highway as
a NAFTA Super Highway, nor has it sought such authority,
nor is it planning to seek such authority. There are
private and state level interests planning highway
projects which they themselves describe as "NAFTA
Corridors," but these are not Federally-driven
initiatives, and they are not a part of the SPP.
Myth: The U.S. Government, through
the Department of Transportation, is funding secretive
highway projects to become part of a “NAFTA Super
Highway”.
Fact: Many States in the American
Midwest are proposing or undertaking highway projects to
improve or build roads as Federal-aid and State or
private sector revenue becomes available. All projects
involving Federal-aid funds or approvals are subject to
normal Federal-aid requirements, such as review under
the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), including
public involvement. This public involvement, the common
thread among all these activities, makes them anything
but “secret.” In addition, Congress directs Department
of Transportation funding for specific highway projects.
The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) will
continue to cooperate with the State transportation
departments as they build and upgrade highways to meet
the needs of the 21st century. Rather than evidence of
a secret plan to create a NAFTA Super Highway that would
undermine our national sovereignty, the FHWA’s efforts
are a routine part of cooperation with all the State
transportation departments to improve the Nation’s
highways.
Myth: U.S. Government officials
sponsored a secret SPP planning meeting in Banff,
Alberta in September 2006.
Fact: The U.S. Government did not
sponsor the meeting in Banff. The North American Forum,
a private initiative that is separate from the U.S.
Government, hosted the September 12-14, 2006 conference
“Continental Prosperity in the New Security
Environment.” Academics, businesspersons, private
citizens, and government officials from the U.S.,
Mexican, and Canadian governments attended the
conference. The North American Forum is not a product
of the SPP.
Myth: The SPP will cost U.S.
taxpayers money.
Fact: The SPP is being implemented
with existing budget resources. Over the long-term, it
will save U.S. taxpayers money by cutting through costly
red tape and reducing redundant paperwork. This
initiative will benefit the taxpayers through economic
gain and increased security, thereby enhancing the
competitiveness and quality of life in our countries.
Myth: The working groups and SPP
documents are a secret and not available to the public.
Fact: The SPP’s initiatives and
milestones with timelines can be found by clicking the
Report to Leaders link at
www.spp.gov. The Web site contains a section to
enable interested persons to provide input directly to
the various working groups.
Myth: The SPP seeks to lower U.S.
standards through a regulatory cooperation framework.
Fact: The framework will support and
enhance cooperation and encourage the compatibility of
regulations among the three partners while maintaining
high standards of health and safety.
Any regulatory changes will require agencies to conform
to all U.S. administrative procedures, including an
opportunity to comment. Enhanced cooperation in this
area will provide consumers with more affordable, safer,
and more diversified and innovative products.
Myth: The SPP is meant to deal with
immigration reform and trade disputes.
Fact: Immigration reform is a
legislative matter currently being debated in Congress
and is not being dealt with in the SPP. Likewise, trade
disputes between the United States, Canada, and Mexico
are resolved in the NAFTA and WTO mechanisms and not the
SPP.
Myth: The SPP will result in the
loss of American jobs.
Fact: The SPP seeks to create jobs
by reducing transaction costs and unnecessary burdens
for U.S. companies, which will bolster the
competitiveness of our firms globally. These efforts
will help U.S. manufacturers, spur job creation, and
benefit consumers.
Myth: The SPP will harm our quality
of life.
Fact: The SPP improves the safety
and well-being of Americans. It builds on efforts to
protect our environment, improves our ability to combat
infectious diseases, such as avian influenza, and
ensures our food supply is safe through the exchange of
information and cooperation ─ improving the quality of
life for U.S. citizens. Americans enjoy world class
living standards because we are engaged with the world.
Myth: The SPP creates a NAFTA-plus
legal status between the three countries.
Fact: The SPP does not seek to
rewrite or renegotiate NAFTA. It creates no NAFTA-plus
legal status.
I
really do feel safer now, don't you?