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April 2026 NASF Policy Update

Date: May 6, 2026
Category: NASF National, Regulation

 

Issue Highlights

 

Automotive: NASF–AIAG Webinar on Decorative Chromium Transition | Review – NASF and ‎the Automotive Industry Action Group (AIAG) held a virtual roundtable on the transition from ‎hexavalent to trivalent chromium for decorative automotive applications. The session brought ‎together OEM representatives from General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen and Volvo Group ‎with NASF member chemical suppliers and job shops for a discussion on policy direction, ‎industry readiness, and implementation across the supply chain. ‎

 

Trade Policy: CBP Launches Process for IEEPA Tariff Refunds – U.S. Customs and Border ‎Protection (CBP) has launched the first phase of its CAPE process for refunds of duties paid ‎under International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs that were invalidated by ‎the Supreme Court earlier this year. The process follows Court of International Trade orders ‎directing CBP to remove the affected duties and process refunds for eligible importers. ‎Importers of record, or their authorized brokers, must use the process to seek refunds for ‎eligible entries.‎

 

Tax Policy: House Advances Narrow Tax Bills as Midterm Elections Loom – The House in late ‎April advanced a series of bipartisan tax administration measures focused on IRS operations, ‎taxpayer protections and a handful of narrower provisions. The bills are far more limited than ‎last year’s major tax law, but they show that some noncontroversial tax items may still move ‎even as broader tax policy becomes more difficult heading into the midterms. ‎

 

Environmental Policy: EPA Releases Updated PFAS Destruction and Disposal Guidance – EPA ‎published its updated 2026 Interim Guidance in April on the Destruction and Disposal of PFAS ‎and PFAS-Containing Materials. The guidance is non-binding and updates EPA’s 2024 version. ‎There are no requirements for finishing operations.‎

 

Safety Policy: OSHA Publishes Walking-Working Surfaces Proposal – On April 6, OSHA ‎published its proposed update to the walking-working surfaces standard in the Federal ‎Register. As anticipated in last month’s report, the proposal is narrowly focused on fixed ladder ‎requirements and is intended to provide significantly greater compliance flexibility for certain ‎general industry operations.

Environmental Policy: Historic EPA Greenhouse Gas Finding Repeal Takes Effect; Litigation ‎Continues – EPA chief Lee Zeldin’s promised repeal of the Obama-era 2009 greenhouse-gas ‎endangerment finding became effective April 20. That finding had served as the legal basis for ‎federal greenhouse-gas standards for new motor vehicles and engines. EPA’s action also ‎repeals those vehicle standards for light-, medium-, and heavy-duty vehicles and engines and ‎has impacts on a range of other industries and may have broader significance for a range of ‎other industries.‎

 

For more details on these topics, see below…‎

 

Automotive: NASF–AIAG Webinar on Decorative Chromium Transition | April Roundtable ‎Review

 

NASF and the Automotive Industry Action Group (AIAG) held a virtual roundtable in April on the ‎transition from hexavalent to trivalent chromium for decorative automotive applications. The ‎session brought together OEM representatives from General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen and ‎Volvo Group with NASF member chemical suppliers and job shops for a discussion of policy ‎direction, industry readiness and implementation across the supply chain.‎

 

OEM Planning, Specifications and Implementation Issues

 

OEM representatives provided updates on their transition plans, with companies describing ‎new sourcing, approval and validation steps for trivalent or hexavalent-chrome-free decorative ‎finishes. Chemical suppliers and job shops discussed the implementation environment, ‎including color standards, quote activity, line-conversion options, mixed hexavalent/trivalent ‎operations and the practical challenges of meeting evolving OEM requirements.‎

 

Feedback Signals Acceleration

 

Polling during the session confirmed that the transition is no longer theoretical for many ‎companies. Questions addressed operational capacity, customer expectations and investment ‎decisions as automotive planning for trivalent decorative finishes accelerates.‎

 

NASF and AIAG are making a recording of the session available to members and will continue ‎coordination with OEMs, suppliers and applicators as the transition progresses.‎

 

Trade Policy: CBP Launches Process for IEEPA Tariff Refunds

 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has launched the first phase of its CAPE process for ‎refunds of duties paid under International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs that ‎were invalidated by the Supreme Court earlier this year. The process follows Court of ‎International Trade orders directing CBP to remove the affected duties and process refunds for ‎eligible importers. For importers of record, or their authorized brokers, the CAPE process is the ‎primary mechanism for seeking refunds for eligible entries.

Additional Phases Will Be Necessary

 

The scale of the refund process is substantial. According to CBP and court filings, approximately ‎‎$166 billion in IEEPA duties were collected across more than 53 million entries filed by more ‎than 330,000 importers. The first phase of the process does not cover every entry, and CBP has ‎indicated that additional phases will be needed as implementation continues.‎

 

Other Trade Authorities Not Affected

 

The decision does not affect duties imposed under other trade authorities, including Section ‎‎232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, automobiles and parts, or Section 301 duties on China, which ‎remain in place. NASF will continue to monitor CBP implementation and share updates where ‎relevant to member companies and their supply chains.‎

 

Tax Policy: House Advances Narrow Tax Bills as Midterm Elections Loom

 

The House in late April advanced a series of bipartisan tax administration measures focused on ‎IRS operations, taxpayer protections and a handful of narrower provisions. The bills are far more ‎limited than last year’s major tax law, but they show that some noncontroversial tax items may ‎still move even as broader tax policy becomes more difficult heading into the midterms.‎

 

The 2025 Law and New Data

 

The latest action comes as both parties define their tax messages for 2026 and beyond. The ‎White House and Republican lawmakers are continuing to highlight the benefits of last year’s ‎One Big Beautiful Bill Act, including measures aimed at supporting capital investment, ‎equipment purchases, domestic R&D and business expansion. At the same time, a recent Atlanta ‎Fed report from April suggests the law has not yet become a major driver of near-term firm ‎planning for most businesses, with only 17 percent of firms reporting they increased planned ‎capital investment for 2026.‎

 

Future Tax Debate

 

If Democrats retake one or both chambers, tax-related activity is expected to focus heavily on ‎oversight of IRS operations and implementation of the 2025 law, with possible broader debate ‎over tax fairness and middle-class tax relief. Additional tax legislation this year remains ‎uncertain.‎

 

NASF will continue to monitor tax policy developments and solicit member input on federal tax ‎and manufacturing policy issues as we move toward the September Washington Forum.‎

 

Environmental Policy: EPA Releases Updated PFAS Destruction and Disposal Guidance

 

EPA published its updated 2026 Interim Guidance in April on the Destruction and Disposal of ‎PFAS and PFAS-Containing Materials. The guidance is non-binding and updates EPA’s 2024 ‎version, including additional research and data reviewed through September 2025.‎

The guidance addresses large-scale approaches for managing PFAS-containing materials, ‎including thermal treatment, landfilling, and underground injection, and identifies continuing ‎data gaps for destruction efficiency, air emissions, landfill leachate, byproducts, and emerging ‎technologies.‎

 

No Requirements for Finishing

 

For the surface finishing industry, the guidance does not create new disposal requirements and ‎should not be read as changing current waste management obligations. Its relevance is limited ‎primarily to situations where facilities are already managing PFAS-containing residuals under ‎state, permit, POTW, or vendor arrangements. NASF will continue to monitor the guidance and ‎related state implementation issues as EPA considers comments and future updates.‎

 

Safety Policy: OSHA Publishes Walking-Working Surfaces Proposal

 

On April 6, OSHA published its proposed update to the walking-working surfaces standard in ‎the Federal Register. As anticipated in last month’s report, the proposal is narrowly focused on ‎fixed ladder requirements and is intended to provide significantly greater compliance flexibility ‎for certain general industry operations. ‎

 

What the Proposal Would Change

 

The proposal would remove the November 18, 2036 deadline by which all existing fixed ladders ‎extending more than 24 feet above a lower level must be equipped with personal fall arrest ‎systems or ladder safety systems. Removing this deadline would allow employers to update ‎existing fixed ladders at the end of their service lives rather than incur retrofit costs to meet a ‎fixed compliance date.‎

 

The requirement to equip new and replacement fixed ladders with personal fall arrest systems ‎or ladder safety systems remains unchanged.‎

 

Comment on Cages and Wells

 

Notably, OSHA is also seeking comment on a broader option: whether to repeal or revise the ‎requirement that employers use personal fall arrest systems or ladder safety systems on fixed ‎ladders over 24 feet and instead allow continued use of ladder cages or wells.‎

 

This would represent a more substantive revisiting of one of the central technical assumptions in ‎the 2016 final rule and would address concerns raised by industry regarding retrofit feasibility, ‎cost and safety benefit in older facilities.‎

 

Outlook

 

Many finishing operations will not be affected by the proposed change, but those with older ‎fixed ladders over 24 feet should evaluate the proposal closely. NASF will continue to monitor ‎the rulemaking in the meantime.‎

 

Environmental Policy: Historic EPA Greenhouse Gas Finding Repeal Takes Effect; Litigation ‎Continues

 

EPA chief Lee Zeldin’s promised repeal of the Obama-era 2009 greenhouse-gas endangerment ‎finding became effective April 20. That finding had served as the legal basis for federal ‎greenhouse-gas standards for new motor vehicles and engines. EPA’s action also repeals those ‎vehicle standards for light-, medium-, and heavy-duty vehicles and engines and may have ‎broader significance for a range of other industries.‎

 

Litigation in the D.C. Circuit

 

In response to the Trump administration’s action, multiple coalitions of environmental, public-‎health, and state plaintiffs have filed challenges in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. ‎The challengers are expected to argue that EPA’s action conflicts with the Clean Air Act, the ‎scientific record, and the Supreme Court’s 2007 decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, which held ‎that greenhouse gases fall within the Clean Air Act’s definition of “air pollutant.” Litigation is ‎expected to take time to resolve, and the ultimate status of the repeal may depend on whether ‎the courts uphold, stay, remand, or vacate the rule.‎

 

Broader Clean Air Act Significance

 

Finishing operations, of course, are not directly regulated under the repealed vehicle ‎greenhouse-gas framework, and the action does not impose new compliance obligations on ‎surface finishing facilities. However, EPA’s repeal of the underlying finding has broader ‎significance for automotive, power, oil and gas, and energy-intensive manufacturing sectors, ‎though the rule itself is technically tied to vehicle GHG standards. NASF will continue to monitor ‎the litigation and related regulatory developments where they may affect customer sectors ‎important to surface finishing.‎

 

For additional information on any of this month’s topics, please contact Christian Richter at ‎crichter@thepolicygroup.com or Jeff Hannapel at jhannapel@thepolicygroup.com. ‎

 

NASF 1000

 

The NASF 1000 program was established to ensure that the surface finishing industry would ‎have resources to effectively address regulatory, legislative and legal actions impacting the ‎industry, NASF members and their workplaces. All funds from the NASF 1000 program are used ‎exclusively to support specific projects and initiatives that fall outside the association’s day-to-‎day public policy activities. The commitment to this program is one of the most vital ‎contributions made in support of surface finishing and directly shapes the future of the ‎industry. ‎

 

The sustained commitment from industry leaders has helped the NASF remain strong and ‎credible in informing regulatory decisions across the nation. Specific projects funded through ‎the NASF 1000 make a measurable difference in how the industry navigates emerging ‎challenges, communicates credibly with policy makers, and advocates for a strong science base ‎for rules or standards that affect surface finishing. ‎

 

Please consider supporting the NASF 1000 program. For more information, contact: Christian Richter (202-257-‎‎0250) or Jeff Hannapel (202 257-3756) with NASF.‎