The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Backlog to get or renew passports eases at last

For first time since March 2020, processing times at pre-pandemic norms.

- Derek M. Norman

Among the many aspects of travel that the pandemic disrupted, one issue was more bureaucrat­ic — but no less frustratin­g — for some Americans: an enormous backlog of U.S. passport applicatio­ns.

As recently as last summer, the estimated wait time to get a passport was as long as 10 to 13 weeks — nearly twice as long as the pre-pandemic benchmark. Even expedited service took seven to nine weeks.

Now, for the first time since March 2020, processing times have returned to pre-pandemic norms, according to an update on the State Department website, with six to eight weeks for routine service and two to three weeks for expedited service.

Through August, many Americans expressed fury and frustratio­n that passport applicatio­n wait times were disrupting their summer plans.

Many across the United States were writing federal lawmakers for help, while others wrote directly to Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Some officials described the situation as a “crisis” and an “unacceptab­le failure.”

The State Department, which issues and renews passports for U.S. citizens, has faced a number of challenges since the start of the pandemic. Staffing shortages caused extensive delays in the applicatio­n process, including a scarcity of in-person appointmen­ts, while a surge of Americans hoping to travel led to a record number of applicatio­ns and renewal requests.

David Alwadish, the founder of itseasy.com, a passport and visa expediting service, called the backlog of passport applicatio­ns a “perfect storm.”

“Prior to the summer, it was awful,” he said. “They have corrected it, but that was the worst I have ever seen it.”

Between October 2022 and September 2023, the State Department issued more than 24 million passports — the highest number it has ever issued during a fiscal year, according to the agency.

To address the backlog and bring down applicatio­n processing times, the State Department has increased staffing by 12% since December 2022, with hundreds of more people still in the process of being hired, according to a spokespers­on. And between January and October 2023, the department authorized more than 30,000 hours of overtime each month.

The department also brought on volunteers from across the agency to form surge teams, which included new hires and retirees, to work on adjudicati­ng passports, according to a department spokespers­on.

Dr. Barry G. Simonson, a 65-year-old orthopedic surgeon from Long Island, New York, planned a vacation to Mexico with his wife in January.

But in late October, with the trip approachin­g, Simonson looked at the passports. “Oh, my God, they’re expiring,” he recalled thinking.

Aware of the backlog of passport renewals bogging down the system, Simonson was worried.

“I was very concerned that we were not going to get the passports renewed in time,” he said.

He immediatel­y sought out itseasy.com, which warned that the process had been taking months, he said. But their passports arrived in about two to three weeks, Simonson said, and by early January, they were on a beach in Mexico.

Need a passport or a renewal?

If you plan on traveling internatio­nally, a good idea would be to apply for a passport as soon as possible, or if you already have one, check your expiration date and apply for a renewal if needed. Remember, some countries require that your passport be valid for six months beyond the dates of your travels.

Mailing your applicatio­n? Keep in mind that the estimated time frame for processing begins once your applicatio­n is received at a passport agency or processing center. It could take an additional two weeks for your applicatio­n to arrive at the passport office and then two more weeks for your passport to be mailed back to you.

A few tips that Alwadish of itseasy.com noted: You should type the informatio­n into your applicatio­n rather than hand write it, double check all of your informatio­n and your payment, and make sure your passport photo is of good quality.

While the government’s applicatio­n processing might be improving, Alwadish said, little mistakes and human error could still throw a wrench in your travel plans.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? From October 2022 to September 2023, the State Department issued more than 24 million passports, the most in a fiscal year.
DREAMSTIME/TNS From October 2022 to September 2023, the State Department issued more than 24 million passports, the most in a fiscal year.

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