WASHINGTON -- Rep. Barney Frank
(D-Mass.) and his new husband don't know if their wedding rings contain a
conflict mineral regulated by the landmark financial reform law that bears
Frank's name, according to a spokesman for Frank.
The rings are made of black
diamonds set in tungsten, which is a precious metal commonly mined in the
war-ravaged Democratic Republic of the Congo. Congolese warlords have channeled
profits from metals like tungsten, often used in consumer electronics, to fuel
a bloody conflict that has raged in the country for more than a decade.
The Dodd–Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act contained a provision that requires
companies to disclose the use of several conflict minerals -- includingtungsten -- in their products if they come from the DRC and surrounding
countries. Like many of the regulations promulgated by Dodd-Frank, which was
signed into law two years ago this Saturday, the final details of the conflict
minerals regulation are still being hammered out by federal bureaucracies and
industry lobbyists.
"Congressman Frank and
his husband do not know the source of the tungsten in their rings -- the
provision of the law that would make it easier to find out the source of the
metal isn't in effect yet," wrote Harry Gural, Frank's communications
director, in an email to The Huffington Post.
A previous report from the Washington
Examiner, which originally aired the allegations about Frank and his husband's
rings, said that "some tungsten is illegal to use" as a result of
Dodd-Frank.
The relevant provision
"does not outlaw tungsten, but it requires public companies that are
listed on U.S.
stock exchanges to disclose the source of the metal," Gural said.
"This provision is not in effect yet, but the SEC will release the
language of its final rule on the issue at the end of August."
Earlier this month, Frank signed a letter with 58 other members of
Congress that urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to finally implement
the rule, which has been delayed for over a year. A report from the Government Accountability Office, released on Monday, cited
"intense stakeholder interest and input" as a primary reason for the
delay. The SEC had over 140 meetings with affected industries and human rights
groups, which have engaged in a vigorous lobbying tug-a-war over the provision.
没有评论:
发表评论