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Reopening of state trade office in Israel proposed

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  • Reopening of state trade office in Israel proposed

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    April 30 2004

    Reopening of state trade office in Israel proposed
    By Harrison Sheppard
    Sacramento Bureau



    As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger visits Israel this weekend, back on the
    home front Assemblyman Keith Richman, R-Granada Hills, is pushing for
    California to reopen its trade office in that country.

    The office was closed, along with 10 in other countries, during last
    year's budget crunch. Richman argued the Israel office cost very
    little compared with the trade it generated.

    "The Israeli trade office has been in place for more than a decade
    now and in fact it has provided a large amount of trade opportunities
    for companies in the state of California and has generated a lot of
    jobs," said Richman.

    Opened in 1993, the office cost about $64,000 a year to maintain on a
    contract basis with a private firm and also got involved with trade
    to other Middle Eastern countries. The state closed its foreign trade
    offices last fall in six Asian countries, Mexico, Europe and South
    Africa.

    California imported more than $1.1 billion of goods from Israel last
    year and exported $320 million in goods, with the bulk of that trade
    coming through the Los Angeles area, according to the Los Angeles
    Economic Development Corp.

    Still, that is a relatively small amount compared with the trade
    California did with the larger Asian nations, noted LAEDC economist
    Jack Kyser.

    "It sounds good to open the office in Israel, but if you're going to
    start opening the offices, wouldn't you want to go to countries where
    we have bigger potential?" Kyser asked. "You'd have to say, OK, the
    largest source of exports out of the L.A. district is Japan. No. 2 is
    China. No. 3 is South Korea. (Israel) is quite a ways down."

    Schwarzenegger is visiting Israel this weekend to attend the
    groundbreaking for a new Simon Wiesenthal Center museum -- a
    commitment he made long before he ran for governor -- and to look for
    new business opportunities for California companies. He is expected
    to meet with leaders in the Israeli government, including Prime
    Minister Ariel Sharon.

    On his way back, he will also stop at the Ramstein Air Base, a U.S.
    military facility in Germany, to visit California troops.

    A Schwarzenegger spokesman said the governor has not taken a position
    on Richman's bill but will be looking to expand trade opportunities
    for California while he is in Israel.

    The administration is also working on a separate bill, SB1665 by Sen.
    Dennis Hollingsworth, R-Temecula, that would encourage the
    establishment of trade and investment offices in other countries. The
    bill does not name the countries, other than Armenia.

    A spokesman for the Israeli government welcomed the effort to bolster
    ties between Israel and California.

    "If we put our two heads together, I think we can achieve great
    things, and this is a step in that direction," spokesman Daniel
    Seaman said, adding that it could "benefit both the people of the
    state of California and the people of the state of Israel." Daily
    News correspondent Erik N. Nelson in Tel Aviv contributed to this
    report.
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