Los Angeles Times

How to get through faster

- John Loggins Rancho Palos Verdes Have a travel dilemma or question? Write to travel@latimes.com. We regret we cannot answer every inquiry.

Question: I am returning from Mexico through Tijuana by car, and there is a choice of “signed” lanes, including “Público General” and “Ready Lane.” We have passports with us, but which lane is for us?

Answer: Loggins emailed his question to me as he was stuck in the traffic at the border.

For him, the answer is “Público General.”

If Loggins had a U.S. passport card, not the traditiona­l passport book or one of several other acceptable documents, the Ready Lane, which offers the promise of shorter waits, would be the answer.

But let’s back up for a minute to see how we got to this point.

What is the Ready Lane?

Returning from Mexico by car has never been a cakewalk in terms of traffic, especially on weekends or holidays.

Enter Ready Lane, which U.S. Customs and Border Protection said began as a pilot project a little more than eight years ago. The goal: Speed up the process for people who have specific kinds of Radio Frequency Identifica­tion-, or RFID-, enabled documents.

What documents are those?

Besides the aforementi­oned passport card, those documents include the new permanent resident green card; the new border crossing card; an enhanced driver’s license, which California does not issue but which Washington and several other Canada-proximate states do; and a Trusted Traveler card.

One such Trusted Traveler card is SENTRI, or Secure Electronic Network for Travelers Rapid Inspection. The SENTRI lane can be used by people who often go back and forth across the border and have SENTRI documentat­ion.

The Trusted Traveler card you are more likely to have is a Global Entry card. That’s the program that allows you to speed through customs upon return to the U.S. by air and also gives you TSA PreCheck, which includes expedited lanes for airport security. It costs $100 for five years and may be the best time- and money-saving bargain around.

Why won’t a passport book work at the U.S. border?

The book and the card use different RFID technologi­es, the State Department said. The book is designed for borders all over the world, or, as the State Department calls it, to be “globally interopera­ble.”

The card, State said, “was designed for limited use for compliance with the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative,” or WHTI. What is the WHTI? The Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative was part of the post-9/11 effort to make borders more secure.

The first wave went into effect in 2007 and mostly dealt with air travel; Part 2 went into effect in 2009 and meant that those traveling by car needed a “WHTI-complaint travel document such as a valid passport, U.S. passport card” and more, Customs said in its FAQ.

And, it added, “Verbal claims of citizenshi­p and identify alone are no longer sufficient to establish identify and citizenshi­p for entry into the United States.” If my passport doesn’t get me into the fast lanes, should I have a passport and something else? Maybe. If you’re driving back and forth across the border, consider a second form of ID. If not, your passport is sufficient, if slower. Do the lanes really save time? Customs says they are about 16% faster than the general public lanes. (That’s nationwide, not just at Tijuana.)

San Diego-Tijuana “is the busiest land border crossing in the Western Hemisphere, with approximat­ely 120,000 passenger vehicles, 63,000 pedestrian­s and 6,000 trucks crossing back and forth every single day,” the San Diego Union-Tribune said.

The May opinion piece noted that traffic congestion and delays cost the San Diego County and Baja California economies billions of dollars. Maybe I should let my passport lapse? I wouldn’t. Having a card that gets you across the border faster is nice, but it’s a little bit like the secondary insurance a credit card affords on a rental car: Secondary insurance can’t do everything the passport book (like your auto insurance policy) can.

If you’re going to renew your passport, do it now.

Check your passport to see whether it’s close to expiring. There was such a rush for passports in the months after WHTI that passport production could not keep up.

As passports obtained during those tumultuous times near expiration, there could be another big push for renewal.

December is one of the better months to renew, although maybe not from a financial standpoint. Applicatio­ns drop; speed increases.

It’s a good gift to give yourself.

 ?? GUILLERMO ARIAS AFP/Getty Images ?? VEHICLES on the Tijuana side of the border wait — and wait — to eventually cross in to the United States.
GUILLERMO ARIAS AFP/Getty Images VEHICLES on the Tijuana side of the border wait — and wait — to eventually cross in to the United States.

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