WASHINGTON — Details of a sweeping Pacific Rim trade deal released Thursday set the stage for a raucous debate in the U.S. Congress but also may provide reassurances to those who worried the agreement could gut protections for the environment, public health and labor.
The text of the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement between the U.S. and 11 other countries including Japan and Mexico runs to 30 chapters and hundreds of pages. It is mind-boggling in its detail, laying out plans for the handling of trade in everything from zinc dust to railway sleepers and live eels.
Governments of the 12 member countries released the complete text online Thursday, making public the specifics of an agreement that critics complain was forged in secrecy.
Read more from Timesunion.
Related News
- WE Have the Power to Protect Jobs in Santa Cruz
- Help TD End Drones In Rail Yards
- Leave Rail Safety to Railroaders
- New CSX CEO, Steve Angel, Needs to Learn How to Railroad
- FRA Picked a Side. And It’s Not Railroaders or Rail Safety
- Senators Hawley and Coons Stopping Tier II Pick-Pockets
- Tentative Agreement Reached With CPKC
- Rail Safety Becomes Public Safety Real Quick
- A Bipartisan Push to Give Railroaders What We Have Earned
- When SMART Speaks, Washington Listens