The US International Trade Commission scheduled an in-person hearing for May 19 on fresh tomatoes from Mexico as part of its review investigation tied to the long-running antidumping case.
The U.S. International Trade Commission scheduled an in-person hearing on fresh tomatoes from Mexico for Tuesday, May 19, at 9:30 a.m., moving forward with a review investigation tied to the long-running antidumping case.
The hearing notice says the proceeding relates to the Commission’s affirmative determination in investigation No. 731-TA-747 (Final). The review was instituted in January, and the hearing is part of the next procedural step in that process.
The case has been active since last year, when the U.S. Department of Commerce said it was withdrawing from the 2019 suspension agreement on fresh tomatoes from Mexico and that antidumping duties would apply to most imports.
The May 19 hearing keeps the case moving as the Commission continues its review of the underlying determination. No new outcome was included in the notice itself.
What comes next
The Commission may issue additional procedural notices or updated deadlines after the hearing. The research available for this report does not show any schedule changes or new testimony beyond the posted hearing notice.
Revision note
Initial automated publication.
