ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:97072301.ECO DATE:07/23/97 TITLE:23-07-97 ENCRYPTION EXPORT DEREGULATION BILL ADVANCES IN HOUSE TEXT: (Bills on trademarks, Mexican duties also move) (500) By Bruce Odessey USIA Staff Writer Washington -- A bill that would overturn Clinton administration policy on encryption software export controls has advanced further in the House of Representatives. The bill approved by voice vote July 22 in the House International Relations Committee would essentially eliminate controls on encryption software, which uses mathematical formulas to scramble electronic communications. By 13-22 the committee rejected an amendment offered by its own chairman, New York Republican Benjamin Gilman, that would have allowed the president to waive provisions of the bill for national security reasons. The bill was already approved in the House Judiciary Committee in May, but before it goes for a vote in the full House, the National Security, Commerce and Intelligence committees could also claim jurisdiction to consider portions of it. Under Clinton administration policy of October 1996, U.S. companies can get licenses to export encryption software up to a level of 56 bits, but only if they pledge to work on developing key recovery systems, or systems that unscramble the scrambled data, for the market. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies want the ability, under court order, to use key recovery systems to collect information the same way they use wiretaps now. Those agencies oppose the House bill, arguing it would harm public safety, but supporters of the bill argue that current policy is harming U.S. industry's ability to compete in the global market. A compromise bill having administration support was approved in the Senate Commerce Committee in June, but supporters of complete deregulation there could challenge that bill in another committee or on the Senate floor. Both the House and Senate must pass a bill before it goes to President Clinton for his signature or veto. No bill is likely to reach the floor of the House or Senate soon. In another trade-related development, the full House voted 425-0 July 22 to pass a law implementing the Trademark Law Treaty, which harmonizes procedures of national trademark offices. The treaty establishes maximum requirements a member state can impose for trademark applications or for granting filing dates and eliminates many formal requirements like the legalization of signatures on documents. In another development, the Senate passed the Treasury appropriations bill, which included an amendment related to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The amendment concerns the disparity between the United States, which allows U.S. residents duty-free exemption on goods they bring home from foreign travel valued up to $400, and Mexico, which allows its residents residing within 25 kilometers of the border an exemption on goods up to only $50. The amendment would direct the administration to begin discussions with Mexican and Canadian officials to achieve NAFTA parity on duty-free allowance and would require the administration to submit a legislative remedy if the dispute was unresolved after six months. NNNN