Connecticut Post (Sunday)

‘They just cut off the flow of business’

Passport photo store owner hit hard by State Department pilot program

- By Paul Schott By Paul Schott

GREENWICH — During the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, Indra Nooyi spent much of her time at her home in Greenwich, thinking and writing about the journey from her hometown of Chennai, India, to the Yale School of Management and eventually to the top of one of the world’s largest and mostrecogn­izable companies.

This week, Nooyi published the result of that work-from-home project, “My Life in Full: Work, Family and Our Future.” The memoir chronicles how an intelligen­t and indefatiga­ble immigrant woman of color ascended into the white male-dominated upper echelons of corporate America to become the CEO and chairman of PepsiCo, a Fortune 500 company based in Purchase, N.Y.

In the new book, Nooyi also analyzes the stark gender inequities that women profession­als still face, the challenges of juggling rigorous executive roles with the needs of her family and how companies and government­s can better support working parents and their children.

In an interview with Hearst Connecticu­t Media this week, Nooyi discussed why she wrote the book,

STAMFORD — Scores of people line up each day outside the Connecticu­t Passport Agency’s office at 850 Canal St., in the city’s South End. But since the beginning of September, only a handful of them have gotten their pictures taken at the Passport Pro shop next door.

Passport Pro owner Kurt Olson blames the plunge in foot traffic at his store on a phototakin­g pilot program that resumed Sept. 1 at the passport center, after the COVID-19 pandemic had forced its suspension in March 2020 several weeks into its rollout.

If the situation does not change soon, Olson fears that Passport Pro could go out of business by the end of this year. Compoundin­g Olson’s distress is his frustratio­n about a dearth of communicat­ion from the Connecticu­t Passport Agency’s parent organizati­on, the U.S. State Department, and bewilderme­nt about why the passport center is adding photograph­y to its workload amid a massive nationwide backlog in applicatio­ns.

“They just cut off the flow of business to me by taking the photos themselves,” Olson said. “It’s like a tap being turned off.”

In response to an inquiry from Hearst Connecticu­t Media, the State Department declined to directly answer questions about Olson. But it confirmed through a spokespers­on that it is running a Secure Live Photo pilot across the U.S., at 26 passport facilities with public counters — including the Stamford site, which is the only passport agency in Connecticu­t.

Photos are not contracted or conducted by third-party vendors, according to the spokespers­on.

“During the pilot, we only take photos for customers who appear at our agencies with no photos or unacceptab­le photos,” the spokespers­on said in an email. “The photo pilot is designed to mitigate fraud, improve applicants’ customer service experience and modernize our operations. We will continue to run Secure Live Photo as a pilot program as we gather and analyze data to determine the program’s impact and identify next steps.”

Fighting to stay in business

Having operated Passport Pro for the past 10 years, including eight years at his current location, Wilton resident Olson, 62, has navigated an arduous past 18 months.

Passport Pro was “essentiall­y closed” between March 2020 and March 2021 because of the pandemic, he said. After resuming with “extremely limited business,” some of the most trying situations she faced at PepsiCo, the obstacles that women encounter in advancing in corporate America and why she believes in Connecticu­t.

Q: What motivated you to write “My Life in Full”?

Nooyi: We have two problems: On the one hand is the office worker who has one set of challenges, and then our frontline workers have a different set of challenges.

And that prompted me to say, “Wait a minute, I should write some policy papers on this topic.” But then a bunch of publishers came to see me and said, “Policy papers informed by your life are more readable than policy it fully reopened in June.

The business has survived with the help of two loans from the Small Business Administra­tion that Olson said total in the “six-figure range.” In addition, he has received unemployme­nt benefits.

Foot traffic at Passport Pro this past summer was averaging about 50 percent of pre-pandemic levels, a decline that Olson largely attributed to the Connecticu­t Passport Agency reopening with an appointmen­tonly policy for applicants. But he believed he could survive because he expected turnout to soon improve.

“I’ve survived through hard work,” said Olson, who has a bachelor of fine arts in photograph­y from California College of the Arts. “I love this business. I’m very good at it, and I’m very proud of it.” papers by themselves.” So what you’re holding is this book, which is informed by my life, but leads to the moon shot.

We started in November 2019. I worked with a writer who helped me put the story in a shape and pattern. And I would dictate all the stories, and then she would create a bone and skeleton for the book and then map out the chapters. And then I’d sit down and finish them up and edit them, and she would then pick up and edit them. So it was a partnershi­p.

Q: You write in the book that when you were

Olson said that demand dissipated when the pilot returned next door on Sept. 1. With the Passport Agency again taking photos — for free — for those with rejected pictures or without a headshot, those applicants no longer needed to go to Passport Pro, which charges $16.95 for a photo.

Before the launch of the pilot in February 2020, about 90 percent of Olson’s customers had been applicants who visited him after the Passport Agency rejected the photos they brought. In total, he was seeing a daily average of about 40 to 50 customers in his approximat­ely 100square-foot shop. He said he can take and process a photo in a minute.

The State Department spokespers­on said Secure Live Photo “has not increased wait times for customers in Connecticu­t, and the number of applicants served is approximat­ely five to seven per day.”

Wen Kai, a teacher from Manhattan, is one of those who got his picture taken inside the Passport Agency. He said officials there rejected the photo he brought because the background was too light.

He needed the passport so he could fly to London to meet his son, who is a student at the University of Cambridge.

“I thought they might tell me to go to the guy next door,” he told Hearst, while waiting outside the passport center on Sept. 24 to pick up his passport. “I imagine he (Olson) is pretty miffed because he’s set up shop here.”

A lack of communicat­ion from the State Department has further incensed Olson. He said he ran into an employee of the Passport

Agency at the end of August who responded to his questionin­g by telling him that the pilot would soon restart. But Olson said no State Department official has ever reached out to him about the photo-taking next door.

“They act like I don’t exist,” Olson said. “It’s insulting.”

The State Department spokespers­on said “programs such as Secure Live Photo are centrally managed by Passport Services in Washington, D.C., and local management is not obligated to contact photo vendors regarding changes to our operations.”

Surge in applicatio­ns

The State Department has resumed the pilot as its passport agencies contend with a massive workload amid a resurgence in Americans’ travel abroad. By early summer, the department was grappling with a reported backlog of nearly 2 million passport applicatio­ns. Processing times are running 16 to 18 weeks for routine applicatio­ns and 10 to 12 weeks for expedited requests, according to some passport centers’ websites.

“Why are you taking on additional services when you can’t even do your core service, which is passport issuance to all the applicants who need one?” Olson said.

Passport agencies accept two types of appointmen­ts. The first group comprises those who need a passport to travel within 72 hours for a “qualifying life-ordeath emergency.” Those with non-emergency “urgent travel requests” must make an appointmen­t within three business days of their internatio­nal trip.

Even with those conditions, the Connecticu­t Passport Agency still faces a glut of applicatio­ns. On a number of occasions during the past week, scores of people have waited on lines snaking down the block to submit documentat­ion and pick up their passports.

A large number of the applicants who come to Stamford are New York City residents. Out-ofstate applicants interviewe­d by Hearst said they went to Stamford because it was the nearest location where they could make an appointmen­t in time for their trips.

Holly Shallow, of Brooklyn, N.Y., had been trying since June to get a passport to visit family in Jamaica. Shallow’s first appointmen­t at the Passport Agency on Sept. 23 fell through because the center temporaril­y closed that day, a developmen­t Shallow did not learn about until arriving in Stamford that morning. That setback forced Shallow to postpone flying to Jamaica by one day and return to Stamford on Sept. 24.

“My flight was for this morning, at 8 a.m. Yesterday, because they closed, I had to go through the madness of trying to figure out how to change my flight,” Shallow, a technician for a security-and-constructi­on company,

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Passport Pro owner Kurt Olson in his store at 850 Canal St. in Stamford, next to the Connecticu­t Passport Agency on Wednesday.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Passport Pro owner Kurt Olson in his store at 850 Canal St. in Stamford, next to the Connecticu­t Passport Agency on Wednesday.
 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Former PepsiCo CEO and Chairman Indra Nooyi, right, speaks with then-state Sen. Alex Kasser during a Community Conversati­on event at the Greenwich Library in 2019.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Former PepsiCo CEO and Chairman Indra Nooyi, right, speaks with then-state Sen. Alex Kasser during a Community Conversati­on event at the Greenwich Library in 2019.

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