Sunday, 17 June 2007 23:25
U.S. State Department Temporarily Relaxed Rules for Traveling to Certain Places Outside the U.S.
The U.S. State Department last week temporarily relaxed
rules for travelers to Mexico, Canada and the Caribbean. Under new
Homeland Security Measures travelers between the US and those countries and
regions could get out of the country- but not back in without a valid US
Passport. The result, massive back ups for the passport system with many
travelers questioning their travel plans. Last week it was announced that those
rules would be relaxed and the US government said travelers who have a receipt
showing they have applied for a passport and a government-issued ID would be
allowed back in the United States.
On Friday, the U.S. House of Representatives
also sided overwhelmingly with the public. By a 379-45 vote, it approved a
17-month delay for rules requiring passports for U.S. residents traveling by
land and sea to Mexico, Canada, Bermuda and the Caribbean. The Bush administration opposes
delaying the rules, but the big House vote suggests its opposition can be
overcome. The change in January was aimed at improving U.S. security,
but also triggered a surge of passport applications that doubled processing
times to at least 12 weeks. An estimated 500,000 passports already have taken
longer than usual, and some even arrived too late for travelers to leave home. Government documents indicate about
6 million U.S. residents will need passports to travel by sea or air to Mexico,
Canada and the Caribbean in the next five years, and the number of Americans
needing passports for land crossings into Canada and Mexico could reach 27
million. That's in addition to regular demand for passports. The State
Department reported processing 12.1 million passports last year. This year it expects
to process 18 million. Traveladvisor.com, a Web site with 10 million reviews
and opinions posted by 6 million users, recently polled its American members
and found that, despite a weak dollar, 46 percent planned to travel abroad this
summer.