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quarantine for inspection purposes is not required. If inspection is made at a pier, wharf, or mole, the master or other responsible ship's officer shall not permit the unloading of any cargo, stores, baggage, or other personal belongings of the passengers and crew until he receives the written notification referred to above from the inspector. Inspection shall be made only between the hours of sunrise and sunset, and any ship, vessel, or other surface craft arriving after sunset shall remain at anchor in the quarantine or inspection area until inspection can be made on the following morning: Provided, That inspection between the hours of sunset and sunrise may be made when the inspector has been furnished advance information of the approximate hour of arrival, and the number of passengers carried, if any, and when facilities satisfactory to the inspector are provided both aboard the ship, vessel, or other surface craft and on the pier for adequate lighting and availability of stores, quarters, and baggage for inspection, as well as transportation to and from the ship, vessel, or other surface craft in the quarantine or inspection area, if necessary. [33 F.R. 14622, Oct. 1, 1968]

§ 318.13-9

Disinfection of vessels.

Any ship, vessel, or other surface craft arriving from Hawaii at a port in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, which is found upon inspection to contain articles which are subject to the quarantine and regulations in this subpart infected or infested with any of the injurious insects designated in the quarantine or to be contaminated with any article or plant pest prohibited movement by said quarantine and regulations or Part 330 of this chapter shall be immediately disinfected by the person in charge or possession of such ship, vessel, or other surface craft under the supervision of an inspector and in the manner prescribed by him.

[33 F.R. 14622, Oct. 1, 1968]

§ 318.13-10 Inspection of aircraft.

All aircraft arriving from Hawaii at a port within the territorial limits of the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States shall be subject to examination by inspectors for the purpose of ascertaining by inspection if any ar

ticle or plant pest the movement of which is prohibited by the quarantine and regulations in this subpart or Part 330 of this chapter is contained in any such aircraft, or if any infestation from such prohibited articles or pests remains. Except in the case of forced landings, all aircraft moving between Hawaii and the continental United States, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, shall, upon coming within the territorial limits of the continental United States, Puerto Rico, or said Virgin Islands, land at an airport of entry, unless permission to land elsewhere than at an airport of entry is first granted by the Commissioner of Customs, Washington, D.C., with concurrence of the Plant Quarantine Division, and shall remain there until inspected and released by the inspector. No baggage, cargo, or other articles shall be removed from the aircraft until such removal has been authorized by an inspector: Provided, That in the case of forced landings by such aircraft, the aircraft commander or operator shall not allow any baggage, cargo, or other articles to be removed therefrom, unless such removal is necessary for purposes of safety or the preservation of life or property. As soon as practicable, the aircraft commander, or a member of the crew in charge, or the owner of the aircraft shall communicate with the nearest plant quarantine officer and make a full report of the circumstances of the flight and of the forced landing: Provided further, That aircraft proceeding from Hawaii to or through the continental United States, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States may, at the discretion of an inspector, be inspected immediately prior to the departure of such aircraft from Hawaii in lieu of inspection at the port of arrival, and when such aircraft, its cargo, stores, and baggage and other personal effects of passengers and crew members have been inspected and found free of articles or plant pests, the movement of which is prohibited by the quarantine and regulations in this subpart or Part 330 of this chapter, the inspector shall issue a certificate to that effect for delivery to the pilot or person in charge of the aircraft as evidence for later presentation at the port of arrival that such inspection has been made. [33.F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968]

§ 318.13-11

Disinfection of aircraft. Any aircraft arriving from Hawaii at a port in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, which is found upon inspection to contain articles subject to the quarantine and regulations in this subpart that are infested or infected with any of the injurious insects designated in § 318.13 or which is found to be contaminated with any articles or plant pests prohibited movement by said quarantine and regulations or Part 330 of this chapter shall be immediately disinfected by the person in charge or possession of such aircraft, under the supervision of an inspector and in the manner prescribed by him; and any aircraft found upon inspection pursuant to the second proviso in § 318.13-10 prior to its departure from Hawaii for a port in the continental United States, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, to contain or to be contaminated with any articles or plant pests as aforesaid, shall be disinfected by the person in charge or in possession of such aircraft, under the supervision of an inspector and in a manner prescribed by him, before it will qualify for the certificate referred to in the said second proviso, in § 318.13--10. [33 F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968]

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(a) Baggage inspection. All baggage and other personal effects of passengers and members of crews on ships, vessels, other surface craft or aircraft moving from Hawaii shall be subject to examination by an inspector to ascertain if they contain any of the articles or plant pests prohibited movement by the quarantine and regulations in this subpart or Part 330 of this chapter. Such baggage inspection shall be made, at the discretion of the inspector, on the dock or on the ship, vessel, other surface craft or aircraft while in a quarantine or inspection area, either at the port of departure in Hawaii or at the first or any subsequent port of arrival in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, and no baggage or other personal effects of passengers or crew members from Hawaii shall be released until said effects have been inspected and passed.

Baggage inspections will not be performed until the person in charge or possession of the carrier ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft provides sufficient space and adequate facilities thereon, or on piers or landing fields for such inspection.

(b) Container inspection. Inspectors may require that any box, bale, crate, bundle, package, trunk, bag, suitcase, or other container, carried as ships' stores, cargo, or otherwise, by any ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft moving between Hawaii and the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, be opened for inspection to determine whether any article or plant pest prohibited movement by the quarantine and regulations in this subpart or Part 330 of this chapter is present. If any such prohibited article, or any plant pest or any fruit or vegetable infested with plant pests, is found, the inspector may order the return of the article to the place of origin under safeguards satisfactory to him, or otherwise dispose of it, or such part thereof as in his judgment is necessary to comply with the quarantine and regulations in this subpart and Part 330 of this chapter, in accordance with section 10 of the Plant Quarantine Act and section 105 of the Federal Plant Pest Act (7 U.S.C. 164a, 150dd) and instructions issued by the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division.

(c) Cargo loading or unloading. No cargo shall be loaded on or unloaded from any ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft arriving from Hawaii at a port in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, either at the first or any subsequent port of arrival where passengers are disembarked, without authorization of the inspector in charge of the inspection of passengers' baggage. [33 F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968] § 318.13-13

Posting of warning notice and distribution of baggage declarations.

(a) Before any ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft from Hawaii arrives within the boundaries of the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States, the master, or other responsible officer thereof, shall cause to

be distributed to each adult passenger thereon a baggage declaration to be furnished by the United States Department of Agriculture, calling attention to the provisions of the Plant Quarantine Act, and the quarantine and regulations in this subpart. These baggage declarations shall be executed and signed by the passengers and shall be collected and delivered by the master or other responsible officer of the ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft, to the inspector on arrival at the quarantine or inspection area: Provided, That in the case of aircraft inspected and certified as set forth in the second proviso of § 318.13–10 no baggage declarations will be required.

(b) Every person owning or controlling any dock, harbor, or landing field in Hawaii from which ships, vessels, other surface craft, or aircraft leave for ports in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States shall post, and keep posted at all times, in one or more conspicuous places in passenger waiting rooms on or in said dock, harbor, or landing field a warning notice directing attention to the quarantine and regulations in this subpart. Every master, or other responsible officer of any ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft leaving Hawaii destined to a port in the continental United States, Guam, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States shall similarly post, and keep posted at all times, such a warning notice in the ship, vessel, other surface craft, or aircraft under his charge. § 318.13-14 Shipments for experimental or other scientific purposes. Articles subject to the requirements of the regulations in this subpart may be moved under this subpart for experimental or other scientific purposes on such conditions and under such safeguards as may be prescribed by the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division to carry out the purposes of this subpart. The container or, if there is none, the article itself shall bear, securely attached to the outside thereof, an identifying tag from the Plant Quarantine Division.

Form No. PQ-132.

'An acceptable warning notice appears on Form PQ-132.

§ 318.13-15 Parcel post inspection.

Inspectors are authorized in accordance with the postal laws and regulations and in cooperation with employees of the U.S. Post Office Department, to inspect parcel post packages placed in the mails in Hawaii and destined to other parts of the United States, to determine whether such packages contain fruits, vegetables, or other regulated articles, the movement of which is not authorized under this subpart, to examine such articles for plant pests, and to notify the postmaster in writing of any violation of this subpart or Part 330 of this chapter in connection therewith.

[33 F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968]

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Services of the inspector during regularly assigned hours of duty at the usual places of duty shall be furnished without cost to the one requesting such services. The Division will not assume responsibility for any costs or charges, other than those indicated in this section, in connection with the inspection, treatment, conditioning, storage, forwarding, or any other operation of any character incidental to the physical movement of regulated articles or plant pests.

[33 F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968]

§ 318.13-17 Cancellation of certificates, limited permits, or compliance agree

ments.

Any certificate, limited permit, or compliance agreement that has been issued in accordance with this subpart may be withdrawn or canceled by the Director, after notice and reasonable opportunity to present views has been accorded to the party to whom such document has been issued, if the Director determines that such party has failed to comply with any condition for the use of any such document imposed by this subpart. [33 F.R. 14623, Oct. 1, 1968]

Subpart-Sweetpotatoes

§ 318.30 Notice of quarantine.

(a) The Administrator of the Agricultural Research Service has determined that it is necessary to quarantine Hawaii and Puerto Rico to prevent the spread to other parts of the United States of the sweetpotato scarabee (Euscepes postfasciatus Fairm.) and the sweetpotato stem borer (Omphisa anastomosalis

Guen.), dangerous insect infestations new to and not widely prevalent or distributed within or throughout the United States, and that it is necessary also to quarantine the Virgin Islands of the United States to prevent the spread to other parts of the United States of the sweetpotato scarabee.

(b) Under the authority conferred by section 8 of the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912, as amended (7 U. S. C. 161), and after public hearing as required thereunder, the Administrator of the Agricultural Research Service therefore has quarantined Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands of the United States to prevent the spread of the sweetpotato scarabee (Euscepes postfasciatus Fairm.) and the sweetpotato stem borer (Omphisa anastomosalis Guen.).

(c) No variety of sweetpotatoes (Ipomoea batatas Poir.) shall be shipped, offered for shipment to a common carrier, received for transportation or transported by a common carrier, or carried, transported, moved, or allowed to be moved by any person from Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States into or through any other State, Territory, or District of the United States: Provided, That the prohibitions of this section shall not prohibit the movement of sweetpotatoes in either direction between Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands of the United States; nor prohibit the movement of sweetpotatoes by the United States Department of Agriculture for scientific or experimental purposes; nor prohibit the movement from Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands of the United States of sweetpotatoes which the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division may authorize under permit or certificate to such northern ports of the United States as he may designate in such permit or certificate, conditioned upon the fumigation of such sweetpotatoes under the supervision of an inspector of said Division either in Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands of the United States or at the designated port of arrival, in a manner approved by the said Director; nor prohibit the movement from Hawaii of sweetpotatoes which the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division may authorize under permit or certificate to such ports of the United States as he may designate in such permit or certificate, conditioned upon the fumigation of such

sweetpotatoes in Hawaii under the supervision of an inspector of said Division, in a manner approved by the said Director: Provided further, That whenever the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division shall find that facts exist as to pest risk involved in the movement of sweetpotatoes or any classification thereof to which this subpart applies, making it safe to modify, by making less stringent, the requirements contained therein, he shall set forth and publish such finding in administrative instructions specifying the manner in which the subpart should be made less stringent, whereupon such modification shall become effective.

(d) As used in this section, the term "State, Territory, or District of the United States" means "Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the United States, or the continental United States."

§ 318.30a Administrative

instructions

authorizing movement from Puerto Rico of certain sweetpotatoes grown under specified conditions.

The Director of the Plant Quarantine Division hereby finds that facts exist as to the pest risk involved in the movement of sweetpotatoes to which § 318.30 applies, making it safe to modify by making less stringent the requirements of 318.30 with respect to washed sweetpotatoes graded by inspectors of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico in accordance with Puerto Rican standards which do not provide a tolerance for insect infestation or evidence of insect injury and found by such inspectors to comply with such standards. Hereafter, in addition to movement authorized under § 318.30 (c), such sweetpotatoes will be eligible for inspection by a Branch inspector to determine whether they are free of the sweetpotato scarabee (Euscepes postfasciatus Fairm.) and for certification for movement from Puerto Rico to Baltimore, Maryland, and Atlantic Coast ports north thereof if found free of such insect, provided the sweetpotatoes are certified by an inspector of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico as having been so washed and graded and as having been grown in accordance with the following procedures:

(a) Fields in which the sweetpotatoes have been grown shall have been given a preplanting treatment with an approved soil insecticide.

(b) Before planting in such treated fields, the sweetpotato draws and vine

cuttings shall have been dipped in an approved insecticidal solution.

(c) During the growing season an approved insecticide shall have been applied to the vines at prescribed intervals. The sweetpotatoes shall be inspected by an inspector of the Plant Quarantine Division prior to shipment from Puerto Rico.

Subpart Territorial Cotton, Cottonseed, and Cottonseed Products QUARANTINE

§ 318.47 Notice of quarantine.

(a) The Secretary of Agriculture having previously quarantined Hawaii and Puerto Rico on account of the pink bollworm of cotton (Pectinophora gossypiella Saunders) and the cotton blister mite (Eriophyes gossypii Banks), insect pests new to and not widely prevalent or distributed within and throughout the United States, now determines that it is necessary to extend the quarantine to prevent the spread of these insects from the Virgin Islands of the United States, where they are known to occur.

(b) Under authority conferred by section 8 of the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912, as amended (7 U. S. C. 161) and having given the public hearing required thereunder, the Secretary of Agriculture hereby quarantines the Territory of Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands of the United States to prevent the spread of the said insect pests.

(c) All parts and products of plants of the genus Gossypium, such as seeds including seed cotton; cottonseed; cotton lint, linters, and other forms of cotton fiber; cottonseed hulls, cake, meal, and other cottonseed products, except oil; cotton waste; and all other unmanufactured parts of cotton plants; and all second-hand burlap and other fabric which have been used, or are of the kinds ordinarily used, for wrapping or containing cotton, are hereby prohibited movement from the Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands of the United States into or through any other State, Territory or District of the United States, in manner or method or under conditions other than those prescribed in the regulations hereinafter made or amendments thereto: Provided, That whenever the Director of the Plant Quarantine Division shall find that existing conditions as to the pest risk

involved in the movement of the articles to which the regulations supplemental hereto apply, make it safe to modify, by making less stringent, the restrictions contained in any such regulations, he shall set forth and publish such findings in administrative instructions, specifying the manner in which the regulations should be made less stringent, whereupon such modification shall become effective.

(d) As usea in this subpart, unless the context otherwise requires, the term "State, Territory, or District of the United States" means State, the District of Columbia, Alaska, Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United States.

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The plants, products and articles specified in § 318.47 (c) may be moved from Hawaii into or through Guam without restriction under this subpart.

RULES AND REGULATIONS

CROSS REFERENCE: For rules and regulations governing the importation of cotton and cottonseed products into the United States, see §§ 319.8 to 319.8–27 of this chapter. § 318.47-1 Definitions.

For the purpose of the regulations in this subpart the following words, names, and terms shall be construed, respectively, to mean:

(a) Cotton. Parts and products of plants of the genus Gossypium, including seed cotton; cottonseed; cotton lint, linters and other forms of cotton fiber; cottonseed hulls, cake, meal, and other cottonseed products, except oil; cotton waste; and all other unmanufactured parts of cotton plants; and second-hand burlap and other fabric which have been used, or are of the kinds ordinarily used, for wrapping or containing cotton.

(b) Seed cotton. The unginned lint and seed admixture, just as it is picked from the cotton boll.

(c) Cottonseed. The seed of the cotton plant, either separated from the lint or as a component part of seed cotton.

(d)` Lint. All forms of raw or unmanufactured ginned cotton, either baled or unbaled, including all cotton fiber, except linters, which has not been woven or spun, or otherwise manufactured.

(e) Linters. All forms of unmanufactured cotton fiber separated from cottonseed after the lint has been removed,

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