The Denver Post

The wait time for new and renewed passports is growing

Pandemic-related disruption­s are resulting in wait times of 2 months or more for new, renewed documents

- By Debra Kamin

As Americans finally start taking their longawaite­d vacations, a surprising number of them are realizing that before they can go abroad, they must first take a different kind of trip: to a U.S. Passport Acceptance Agency.

During the most extensive travel shutdown in modern history, hundreds of thousands of Americans let their passports expire. Others are only now seeing that their documents are set to expire soon. But despite the State Department making headway on a massive backlog of passport applicatio­ns that piled up in the early months of the pandemic, appointmen­ts at passport agencies across the country remain elusive, and processing time for renewals by mail is lagging by 10 weeks or more. The crunch is forcing many Americans who need travel documents urgently to travel significan­t distances — sometimes even across the country — for an in-person appointmen­t that will get their documents processed on time.

Ben Williams, an office manager at an Atlanta law firm, is one of them. In April, as Williams was looking forward to a trip to the Dominican Republic with his girlfriend in early June, he realized that his passport was about to expire. He mailed it in for renewal and paid for expedited processing, which before the pandemic would have taken up to three weeks. After five weeks, with his passport still processing and his trip departure looming, he began hunting online for an appointmen­t at one of the State Department’s 26 official passport centers and passport agencies, where he could renew in person and get the document in one day. It was much harder than he imagined.

“I was told they released new appointmen­ts at midnight, so every night at 11:55 p.m., I would be on standby, refreshing my browser,” Williams said. He also called the office of his congressma­n, Rep. Buddy Carter, R-GA., every day on his lunch break, asking if the official could help. He was told there were 50 passport inquiries ahead of his.

As a last resort, Williams joined a Facebook group for Americans struggling with visa and passport issues, where a group member offered him an appointmen­t in Chicago that she no longer needed. On June 4, three days before his scheduled trip, he took a day off from work, spent $400 on airfare from Atlanta and another $120 on Uber rides. He made it to the Chicago passport agency on time, and got his passport that same day.

“I tried to stay evenkeeled about it because the COVID-19 crisis has really given me an opportunit­y to realize there are a lot of people worse off than me,” Williams said. “But I did have moments of frustratio­n. I felt like I was going through the motions correctly, and contacting the appropriat­e people. And I was like: ‘How are other people getting appointmen­ts?’ ”

State Department officials would not offer specifics on the number of Americans struggling to get passports renewed or new documents processed, but they said in a statement that after significan­tly reducing passport operations in March 2020 to protect its staff from contractin­g COVID-19, appointmen­ts at their limited number of passport agencies — the only option for last-minute documents — are generally restricted to life-or-death emergencie­s. Americans seeking passports for nonessenti­al travel are being offered “very limited appointmen­ts,” and are required to show documents indicating their travel is within 72 hours.

Routine passport service by mail, according to the State Department, can now take up to 18 weeks, compared to six to eight weeks before the pandemic, while expedited service, which costs an additional $60 and took anywhere from a few days to three weeks before COVID-19, can now take up to 12 weeks.

“What is going on now is something like I’ve never seen in my life,” said David Alwadish, the founder of Itseasy Passport & Visa, an expediting service. Alwadish said that while an estimated 100,000 Americans abroad were facing passport problems earlier this year because of consular closures across the globe, the number of Americans at home who are unable to travel because they can’t get documents is likely much higher.

(The State Department in May shifted its policy on Americans abroad, allowing them to return to the United States on expired documents because of that backlog.)

“It’s heartbreak­ing in cases when somebody is dying or very ill,” Alwadish said.

Many have found a way to work around the 72hour restrictio­n, said Rick Grobart, who runs a management consultant firm in Chicago. He flew from Chicago to Seattle in April to get his own passport renewed, securing an appointmen­t

at midnight for 9:30 the next morning. He got a seat on the first morning flight out of O’hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago, making it to the appointmen­t thanks to the two-hour time difference in Seattle.

Grobart landed the appointmen­t three days before a scheduled departure to Mexico, which he admits was extremely lucky. Other travelers, he said, are willing to rack up additional costs if their timing isn’t as fortuitous. “Having to show proof of travel within three days is insane, because what’s the odds of it lining up?” He said. “You end up buying dummy tickets to the cheapest place out of the country that you can find, tacking it onto the cost of doing business.”

Like Williams in Atlanta, thousands of Americans trying to secure passports are reaching out to their congressio­nal representa­tives for assistance, with mixed success.

Brittanie Dillard, 36, a car saleswoman in Pensacola, Fla., was delighted in April when her boyfriend surprised her with tickets to Costa Rica, but she faced a significan­t problem: She didn’t have a passport, something she had never told her boyfriend. As a constituen­t of Rep. Matt Gaetz and Sen. Marco Rubio, she contacted both offices of the Republican lawmakers for help. A caseworker from Rubio’s office was able to get her an appointmen­t — but it was in Miami, a 9 1/2-hour drive away.

She drove all night to get there, and slept in an Airbnb for a few hours before receiving her documents and heading back on the road. She estimates that the trip cost her $500, as well as a vacation day from work.

“I believe it’s my right, as a taxpaying citizen, to be able to get my passport and be able to come and go freely out of the country,” Dillard said. “Not only is the rest of the country open already, but the senators have other things to do aside from trying to help us get our passports.”

Rep. Mark Desaulnier, D-calif., said requests to his office for assistance with passport issues have doubled.

“It’s a perfect storm,” he said. “As people come out of COVID, they are anxious to travel and then the agencies are understaff­ed.”

Rep. Frederica S. Wilson, D-fla., is also seeing a spike. “My office is experienci­ng a significan­t increase in the number of passport requests from residents, within and outside of the district that I represent,” she said in an email. “Constituen­ts have complained that it has been nearly impossible to reach anyone by phone or to make an appointmen­t.”

In a bid to ease the crush, the State Department has announced a limited number of passport acceptance fairs across the country, but they are mostly for children and first-time passport applicants and do not offer rush service.

Until the State Department can meet demand, however, Americans in need of a passport in less than four weeks have limited options, and can also expect to pay extra. A same-day expedited passport costs $170, with an additional $35 for first-time applicants. That’s not taking into account any airfare, car rentals or hotel reservatio­ns required for those who travel for their appointmen­ts.

“I’m lucky that the $500 I spent was not a number that would cripple me,” said Grobart, the consultant who flew from Chicago to Seattle. “But I know that the same $500 might have meant a ton more to somebody else.”

 ?? Eileen Putman, The Associated Press ?? Americans hoping to travel abroad this summer or fall should check the expiration date of their passport. State Department officials said this week it could take 12-18 weeks to process new passports and renewals.
Eileen Putman, The Associated Press Americans hoping to travel abroad this summer or fall should check the expiration date of their passport. State Department officials said this week it could take 12-18 weeks to process new passports and renewals.
 ?? Anyaberkut, istockphot­o ?? A traveler watches airplanes take off and land while waiting for their flight.
Anyaberkut, istockphot­o A traveler watches airplanes take off and land while waiting for their flight.

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