Boston Herald

End tourist visa backlog to boost the economy

- By Marcia Hale Marcia Hale is the former chair and president of the infrastruc­ture advocacy group Building America’s Future/Tribune News Service

There’s a good chance that Main Street in your hometown looks different from how it did three years ago. Perhaps your favorite restaurant has closed, or your barber never reopened after lockdowns. For communitie­s whose economic success is tied to tourism and travel, the contrast is much grimmer. When the pandemic abruptly cut off the flow of travelers to the U.S., travel-dependent businesses such as hotels, tour services, museums and amusement parks — and the hundreds of thousands of jobs they support — were rendered inoperable.

With most COVID-19-related

restrictio­ns now lifted, one could expect these industries to get back on their feet and for tourism’s economic engine to fully restart.

But a procedural hurdle is holding up that recovery — one caused not by the pandemic but by bureaucrat­ic red tape. Foreign travelers from key markets seeking to visit the U.S. are facing unimaginab­ly long wait times for visas. The U.S. Travel Associatio­n has called this backlog a “de facto border closure,” with prospectiv­e visitors from top inbound markets waiting an average of more than 400 days before getting a visa interview.

It’s not a shock that tourists looking to visit the U.S. may be reluctant to book tickets for their families if their visa applicatio­n status will be up in the air for the next one to three years, or that they would instead turn to other, more accessible destinatio­ns. A Morning Consult survey found that majorities or pluralitie­s of Brazilian, Indian and Mexican adults — countries whose travelers make up a substantia­l portion of U.S. visitors but face visa wait times that can exceed a year — find visa hurdles more common for the U.S. than for other destinatio­ns.

Those deterred visits mean that the businesses and communitie­s seeking to ease the pandemic’s damage to their finances by once again opening their doors to tourists are left hanging. In 2019, visa travelers spent an estimated $120 billion in the United States and accounted for more than 40% of internatio­nal visitors. But if we don’t address the visa backlog now, we instead stand to lose out on nearly 7 million travelers and $12 billion in spending this year alone.

With travel demand at record highs, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, policymake­rs should look at how American businesses can take advantage of that opportunit­y instead of allowing bureaucrac­y to hold back our potential. Leaders are sounding the alarm — last week, mayors representi­ng Americans from Chicago and Miami to Dallas and Seattle sent a letter calling on Secretary of State Antony Blinken to make this a top priority for the department.

Thankfully, this isn’t the first time we’ve faced such challenges, and previous solutions provide Congress and the Biden administra­tion with a map forward. In a 2012 executive order, President Barack Obama called for provisions that would spur tourism by ensuring that 80% of nonimmigra­nt visa applicants are interviewe­d within three weeks, and increase the State Department’s capacity to process visitors from high-volume countries by expanding hiring and more efficientl­y allocating staff, among other measures.

President Joe Biden and his team should look at how to build upon Obama’s executive order to replicate its success. Likewise, Congress — and in particular, members from touristhea­vy districts — should be ready to exercise their oversight role to ensure the administra­tion is taking any and all steps to streamline the visa process and revive tourism’s benefits for American jobs and communitie­s.

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