
CONSULATE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
WESTERN HEMISPHERE TRAVEL
INITIATIVE
• The Western Hemisphere
Travel Initiative will require all travelers, including
U.S. citizens, to and from the Americas, the Caribbean,
and Bermuda to have a passport or other accepted document
that establishes the bearer’s identity and nationality
to enter or re-enter the United States. This is a change
from prior travel requirements. (See related
article)
• The goal of this program is to strengthen
border security and facilitate entry into the United States
for U.S. citizens and legitimate foreign visitors.
• The Intelligence Reform
and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA) mandated that
the U.S. Secretaries of Homeland Security and State develop
and implement a plan to require U.S. citizens and foreign
nationals to present a passport or other appropriate secure
identity and citizenship documentation when entering the
United States.
• For many years U.S. citizens,
citizens of Canada, the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda,
and some Mexican citizens have not been required to present
a passport or other specific form of secure travel identification
to enter the U.S.
In light of the new security efforts, the
United States is requiring travelers to have a passport
or other accepted document for entry into the United States.
• In the proposed implementation plan, which
is subject to a period of initial public comment, the Initiative
will be rolled out in phases, providing as much advance
notice as possible to the affected public to enable them
to meet the terms of the new guidelines. The proposed timeline
will be as follows:
• • January 23, 2007 –
Requirement applied to all air and sea travel to or from
Canada, Mexico, Central and South America, the Caribbean,
and Bermuda.
• • January 1, 2008 –
Requirement extended to land border crossings as well as
air and sea travel.
In April 2005, the Departments of State
(DOS) and Homeland Security (DHS) announced a proposed plan
to be implemented in three phases beginning on December
31, 2005 for the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. After
further review and considering the delay in publishing the
public notice in the Federal Register, DOS and DHS recognized
that implementing the December 31, 2005, phase would be
problematic for travelers during the upcoming winter tourism
season. This change will simplify the implementation and
provide a longer lead-time for travelers to come into compliance
with the requirements.
• United States citizens can
visit the State Department’s travel website www.travel.state.gov,
or call the U.S. National Passport Information Center: 1-877-4USA-PPT;
TDD/TTY: 1-888-874-7793.
You should allow yourself a sufficient amount
of time to apply and receive your passport in advance of
travel. Please allow 6 weeks for processing of your passport
application if you apply from within the U.S. If you need
to travel urgently and require a passport sooner, please
visit http://www.travel.state.gov
for additional information. If you plan to apply for a passport
outside the U.S., you should check with the closest U.S.
Embassy or Consulate for anticipated processing time.
Peak domestic passport processing is between
January and July. For faster service, we recommend applying
between August and December.
Foreign nationals should contact their respective
governments to obtain passports.
• • The passport is the document
of choice because of security features. Individuals traveling
within the Western Hemisphere are encouraged to obtain a
passport.
For land border crossings, other documentation
that we anticipate will be acceptable under the Travel Initiative
are SENTRI, NEXUS and FAST program cards. These are current
international frequent traveler programs (see www.cbp.gov
for further information).
We anticipate that the Border Crossing Card,
(BCC – also known as “laser visa”) will
also be acceptable as a substitute for a passport and a
visa for citizens of Mexico traveling to the United States
from contiguous territory.
No currently existing documents other than
the BCC, SENTRI, NEXUS or FAST cards are under active consideration
as substitutes for the passport. The Departments of Homeland
Security and State are working to determine acceptable alternative
documents other than a passport as soon as possible. We
are using new technologies to create other acceptable travel
documents. We will make public additional travel document
options as they become available.
• The Departments of Homeland Security (DHS)
and State (DOS) are issuing an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM) in the Federal Register to provide vital
information on the plan to the public and request input
and/or comment on the suggested documents and possible alternative
documents that can meet the statutory requirements. DHS
and DOS expect to issue a more formal rule later this year
following review of those comments to implement the first
phase of the Initiative. This rule will take into account
comments received from the ANPRM as well as soliciting further
comments on the rule itself.
• The government expects that acceptable documents
must establish the citizenship and identity of the bearer
through electronic data verification and will include significant
security features. Ultimately, all documents used for travel
to the United States are expected to include biometrics
that can be used to authenticate the document and verify
identity.
• • DHS and the State Department
understand that the greatest potential change will occur
at the land borders. The new statute specifically mandates
that the agencies implementing this program consider the
concerns of border communities. We recognize the implications
this might have for industry, business and the general public,
as well as our neighboring countries, and they are important
partners in this initiative. The advanced notice of proposed
rule making will allow these affected publics to voice concern
and provide ideas for alternate documents.
• • The Western Hemisphere
Travel Initiative will not affect travel between the United
States and its territories. U.S. citizens traveling between
the United States, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa will
continue to be able to use established forms of identification
to board flights and for entry.
If traveling outside the United States or
a U.S. territory, a passport or other secure document will
be required. For example, a person may travel to and from
the United States to the U.S. Virgin islands without a passport
or other secure document, but under proposed regulations,
a passport or other secure document would be required to
re-enter the U.S. Virgin Islands from the British Virgin
Islands or another country as of December 31, 2006.
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