Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

U.S. passport delays lead to long lines of would-be travelers

- By Christophe­r Weber and Eugene Garcia

LOS ANGELES — Britt Johnson showed up around midnight to the West Los Angeles Federal Building, hoping to apply for a rushed passport when the office opened at 7 a.m.

Johnson, eager to visit a dying relative in Mexico, was in line with hundreds of would-be travelers midmorning Thursday when a security guard announced that walk-ins for passport applicatio­ns would no longer be taken there.

The disappoint­ment in the crowd has been felt across the U.S. at passport offices, which have been overwhelme­d by people ready to travel again as COVID-19 restrictio­ns gradually have lifted in recent months.

The pent-up demand for passports has swelled wait times to between 12 and 18 weeks, according to the State Department. That’s caused many like Johnson to seek expedited appointmen­ts at understaff­ed passport offices. Those now take up to 12 weeks.

“It’s pretty urgent,” Johnson said of his travel plans. “It’s pretty important to me right now. So I’m gonna do my best to try to get this thing.”

Now, his only options for an in-person appointmen­t are to try to schedule it online or by phone. Marvella Carson, who was hoping to attend a cousin’s wedding in Jamaica, said she’s tried both, with no luck.

“You can’t get through. You can’t get on their website. You can’t get through on the phone,” Carson said while she was waiting outside the federal building in Los Angeles.

She has resigned herself to the fact that she’s probably not going to make the wedding.

After more than a year of pandemic-related lockdowns, people are ready to travel again, but the State Department closed many of its offices last year in an effort to keep employees safe, creating an enormous backlog.

That’s because of ripple effects from the pandemic that caused extreme disruption­s to the process at domestic issuance facilities and overseas embassies and consulates.

The department says that a backlog of 1.5 million to 2 million passport requests means that most applicatio­ns submitted now probably will not be processed until the fall.

Those without immediate travel plans are encouraged to renew their passports by mail.

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