Skip To Main Content
DHS Seal Navigates to CBP homepage
CBP.gov Logo Navigates to CBP homepage

GO
  About CBP    Newsroom    Border Security    Trade    Travel    Careers  
Newsroom
Report Suspicious Activity to 1-800-BE-ALERT
Whats New In Newsroom
in Newsroom

Printer Friendly Page Link Icon
see also:
right arrow
 CBP Air and Marine Acquires Helicopters for Border Security Mission
 CBP Officers At El Paso Port Nab 50 Pounds Of Cocaine; Two Juveniles Taken Into Custody
 CBP Border Patrol Agent Dies In the Line of Duty
 Hong Kong to Scan U.S.-Bound Goods for Radiation as Part of Secure Freight Initiative
 Border Patrol Assists in Third Canal Rescue in a Week
 CBP Officers Apprehend Fugitive Wanted For Murder, Rape, Burglary
 Operation Streamline Nets 1,200-Plus Prosecutions in Arizona
...more
right arrowon cbp.gov:
 CBP News Releases
 Press Officers
 ACE: Modernization Information Systems
 Federal Register Notices 2007 - GPO Access
CBP to Require Use of ACE Truck Manifest System at Maine, Minnesota Ports of Entry

(Thursday, July 19, 2007)

contacts for this news release

Washington - U.S. Customs and Border Protection on July 18 announced in the Federal Register that trucks entering the United States through the land border ports of entry in the states of Maine and Minnesota will be required to transmit electronic manifests through the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) effective October 16.

ACE is the next generation of U.S. Customs and Border Protection technology designed to protect the United States from terrorism while expediting lawful trade.

CBP has now either required the use of ACE for the transmission of advance electronic truck cargo information, or provided 90 days notice that it intends to do so, at every land border port in which CBP originally planned to require the use of ACE, with the exception of the land border ports in the state of Alaska.

Currently, filing of ACE e-manifests is required at land border ports on the southern border, in the state of Washington, North Dakota, Michigan, New York, Vermont and New Hampshire. Eventually, the transmission of e-manifest through ACE will be required at all land border ports of entry.

Before e-manifest, truck drivers have arrived at the border and presented CBP officers with a paper manifest that details information on the cargo being transported, the truck and trailer carrying the cargo and the driver. The manifest must then be processed by CBP while the driver waits. With e-manifest, CBP officers are able to pre-screen trucks and shipments, and dedicate more time to inspecting suspicious cargo without delaying the border crossings of legitimate carriers.

For more information on this announcement, visit the CBP legal Web site. ( Federal Register Notices 2007 - GPO Access ) For information on ACE, please e-mail CBP.CSPO@dhs.gov or visit the CBP modernization Web. ( ACE: Modernization Information Systems )

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is the unified border agency within the Department of Homeland Security charged with the management, control, and protection of our Nation's borders at and between the official ports of entry. CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S. laws.

Contacts For This News Release


no address available at this time

Erlinda Byrd
Agriculture Inspections, Trade and Trade Relations
Phone: (202) 344-1593
Fax: (202) 344-1393
CBP Headquarters
Office of Public Affairs
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Room 3.4A
Washington, DC 20229
Phone:(202) 344-1770 or
(800) 826-1471
Fax:(202) 344-1393

go to previousprev | nextgo to next    (17 of 52)

back to July 2007 News Releases

How to
Use the Website

Featured RSS Links
What's New Contacts Ports Questions Forms Sitemap EEO | FOIA | Privacy Statement | Get Plugins | En Español
Department of  
Homeland Security  

USA.gov  
  Inquiries (877) CBP-5511   |   International Callers (703) 526-4200   |   TTD (866) 880-6582   |   Media Only (202) 344-1780