logo
American Combat Boot Alliance welcomes introduction of BOOTS Act

American Combat Boot Alliance welcomes introduction of BOOTS Act

Fibre2Fashion9 hours ago
The American Combat Boot Alliance (ACBA) recently welcomed introduction of the Better Outfitting Our Troops (BOOTs) Act to ensure that all combat boots supplied to the US military are indigenously made in accordance with the Berry Amendment.
The Berry Amendment requires the department of defense to purchase certain items, primarily clothing and food, from domestic sources.
'Over the past several years, there has been a concerning influx of poorly made, non-Berry Amendment-compliant, foreign-sourced footwear procured by United States Army and United States Air Force service members,' ACBA, a coalition comprising US manufacturers committed to the readiness and combat effectiveness of warfighters, said in a letter to Nikki Budzinski from the House of Representatives and Tammy Duckworth from the Senate.
The American Combat Boot Alliance has welcomed introduction of the Better Outfitting Our Troops (BOOTs) Act to ensure that all combat boots supplied to the US military are indigenously made in accordance with the Berry Amendment. Over the past several years, there has been a concerning influx of poorly made, non-Berry Amendment-compliant, foreign-sourced footwear procured by US military staff.
'The growing reliance on foreign products has led to the further erosion within the domestic footwear industrial base that supports the warfighter, resulting in over 750,000 pair of non-US manufactured combat boots being sold to Army and Air Force personnel each year,' the letter noted.
These inferior products are subject to import tariffs, leaving vendors no choice but to pass the additional costs onto service members. These increased costs may exceed retail prices of domestically manufactured combat footwear, the ACBA letter said.
Military service members receive annual Congressionally-appropriated uniform allowances for non-issued uniform items. The BOOTs Act will ensure that they can effectively use their taxpayer-funded uniform allowance to purchase American-made combat footwear, the letter said.
This legislation also helps secure the challenged combat footwear supply chain industrial base, diversify the selection of domestic combat boots and ensure that US companies can meet surge demands in times of crisis, it added.
ACBA member entities include the American Apparel & Footwear Association, the National Council of Textile Organisations, the US Footwear Manufacturers Association and several other private manufacturers.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why the US Dollar Slumped to a 50-year-low  Vantage with Palki Sharma
Why the US Dollar Slumped to a 50-year-low  Vantage with Palki Sharma

First Post

time17 minutes ago

  • First Post

Why the US Dollar Slumped to a 50-year-low Vantage with Palki Sharma

Why the US Dollar Slumped to a 50-year-low | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G Why the US Dollar Slumped to a 50-year-low | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G As US President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk spar in public - the state of the US economy is fuelling concerns. Amid volatile remarks, economic policy reversals, and investor concerns, the US dollar has lost over 10% in value—its worst performance since 1973. Global confidence in American debt and currency appears to be waning, with rising interest costs and a downgraded credit rating intensifying the pressure. See More

Colombia, Uzbekistan join BRICS Bank
Colombia, Uzbekistan join BRICS Bank

Hans India

time22 minutes ago

  • Hans India

Colombia, Uzbekistan join BRICS Bank

Colombia and Uzbekistan have joined the New Development Bank (NDB), expanding the membership of the multilateral lender commonly known as the BRICS Bank, the institution's president, Dilma Rousseff, announced on Sunday. The announcement came at a press conference held after the 10th meeting of the NDB's Board of Directors, ahead of the 17th BRICS Summit scheduled for Sunday and Monday. The bank's Board of Governors approved the accession of the two countries, bringing the total membership to 11. Current members include Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Bangladesh, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Algeria, Colombia and Uzbekistan. "We have several other countries under observation and review, and they may join the bank in the future," said Rousseff, adding that negotiations remain confidential as per the board's decision. Noting that the bank's mission is to serve the Global South, she said the NDB aims to finance innovation, science and technology to help BRICS countries meet the demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, reported Xinhua news agency. Stressing that the NDB respects member countries' sovereignty and development priorities, and does not impose projects or lending conditions, Rousseff said: "One of our key differences is that all members are equal, and every voice is heard." The bank is a 21st-century institution rooted in solidarity, equity and respect for national sovereignty, she added. Established in 2015 by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, the NDB is a multilateral development bank aimed at mobilizing resources for infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging market economies and developing countries. Headquartered in Shanghai, the NDB has approved over 120 investment projects totaling 40 billion US dollars and spanning several key areas, including clean energy and energy efficiency, transport infrastructure, environmental protection, water supply and sanitation, social infrastructure and digital infrastructure.

Bullish on international expansion, IndiGo says Amsterdam important point for connecting rest of Europe, America
Bullish on international expansion, IndiGo says Amsterdam important point for connecting rest of Europe, America

Economic Times

time28 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Bullish on international expansion, IndiGo says Amsterdam important point for connecting rest of Europe, America

Expanding its international wings, IndiGo CEO Pieter Elbers has said Amsterdam will be an important point to connect with the rest of Europe and North America and highlighted it is a "fit for purpose" airline. IndiGo, India's largest airline with a domestic market share of 64 per cent, is fast expanding its overseas reach with new routes and partnerships. Marking the foray into Europe, IndiGo this week, commenced direct services from Mumbai to Manchester and Amsterdam, with Elbers describing the launches as a "momentous occasion". "I think the story now is by touching in Europe. The change is much more profound than just two new destinations. It's a change of product. It's a change in some of the partnerships. It's a change of profile," Elbers told PTI. With a fleet of more than 400 planes, IndiGo flies to over 90 domestic and 40 overseas destinations, with the latest additions being the start of services to Manchester and Amsterdam on July 1 and 2, respectively. Elbers said Amsterdam airport is great for connectivity and it certainly will become an important point to connect from here to the rest of Europe and North America. The airline plans to add 10 new international destinations to its network in the current fiscal year ending March 2026. Other planned destinations include London, Copenhagen, and Athens. In an interview with PTI in Amsterdam, a day after its inaugural flight landed in the Dutch city, the IndiGo CEO said the launches mark a new chapter in the airline's wonderful book and that more chapters are to come. Elaborating on the internal changes in moving to long haul services, Elbers said IndiGo is a "fit-for-purpose airline" and the carrier had one clear sort of product from the start. "What we have now done is we have made kind of groups of products depending on the routes we operate. So the product we have now on Manchester, we can also use the same for London or for Copenhagen. "And the product we have on domestic sectors, we can just keep adding domestic sectors. So there's some change internally," he noted. According to him, the aim is to make Indian passengers feel at home and non-Indian passengers have a flight on IndiGo that will also be the start of their journey to India. "So, it should be sort of contemporary Indian or Indian with a global twist type of approach. I think that is what's the objective," Elbers said. For the long haul operations, IndiGo is damp leasing six wide-body Boeing 787-9 aircraft from Norway's Norse Atlantic Airways. Currently, one of them is being used for the three weekly flights each to Manchester and Amsterdam from Mumbai. Elbers said IndiGo expects to take three more planes from Norse Atlantic in October-November time frame and the remaining two are expected to come in the first quarter of 2026. The airline is set to induct long range narrow-body A321 XLR planes by the end of this year or early 2026 and this aircraft will allow the carrier to add destinations like Athens. "It (A321 XLR) will allow us to add new destinations such as Athens. It will also allow us to do destinations from different points in India... "Today, we fly to Nairobi from Mumbai. Perhaps in the future, given the huge Gujarati community in that part of Africa, we may operate out of Ahmedabad. I'm not saying we do, but we may," Elbers said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store