Miami Herald (Sunday)

Don’t let this little known U.S. passport rule — a travel buzz-killer — ground you

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com

There I was, booking spring birthday travel, high as a college freshman after scoring some really good stuff: Reasonable airfare from Miami to Morocco.

Check!

I cheered as I booked my flight to Casablanca. Hello, camel ride into the Saharan sunset.

Now, the only thing left to decide was whether I’d venture on my own to a country in Africa I’ve dreamed about visiting for years, as I did with my trip to Norway last summer, or book a tour for greater ease and safety.

I was studying train schedules between cities when I found out that a discounted National Geographic tour was within my reach, had near-perfect dates and just about everything I wanted to experience.

I ended my laborious DIY pursuit and proceeded to close the deal.

Then, poof, my plans evaporated — no thanks to a little-known passport rule.

The second paragraph of the booking document asked me to certify that I had a valid U.S. passport. Sure I did. Then, came the warning: Morocco requires a U.S. passport that is valid for at least six months. And they don’t play or bargain with their immigratio­n rules. That is, if you get that far. Airlines know the requiremen­t and turn passengers away at the airport counter.

No mercy.

And so, when I checked my passport, I discovered that Morocco had managed to succeed where my guilt-tripping Cuban parents had failed: I was grounded.

My passport was only good until the end of

June.

PASSPORT RENEWAL

Then began the second part of my odyssey: passport renewal.

There’s no way to get a passport right away unless it’s a grave emergency. No more lining up at a federal building in downtown Miami, as I once did, and getting a new passport in no time at all. And the closest federal office with an appointmen­t: New Orleans.

With travel booming in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic, not a thing is business as usual for those of us with unabated wanderlust, especially for foreign travel and adventure.

“If things go well, we might be at the threshold of a new age of travel,” the global management firm McKinsey & Company predicted in 2021.

“Is the industry ready?” the consultant­s asked.

Not at all — especially since government is also a major part of the puzzle.

Getting through immigratio­n last summer at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport was an hourlong ordeal. Not enough staff. Confusing lines.

Now, the State Department Passport service is slammed, too.

“As more and more Americans travel internatio­nally again, we are experienci­ng record passport demand for this time of year, often receiving more than 500,000 new passport applicatio­ns each week,” the State Department said on Twitter.

Yep, we all just want to get the heck outta here.

HIDEOUS PHOTOGRAPH

I couldn’t have moved faster on my end to apply for a new passport.

I bolted to the corner CVS to get a photo taken looking as ragged as if I had just woken up.

For some ridiculous reason, the only thing I did was change into a black shirt with a high neck. But Nora Ephron fans will understand. It’s why the late journalist and filmmaker wrote the book “I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts About Being a Woman.”

“Don’t smile,” the young CVS employee prompted. “Take off your glasses. Those are the rules.”

Again, rules. This time, I followed them to a T — and in an hour I had downloaded and filled out the renewal applicatio­n form, written a check for $209.53 that included a $60 fee to expedite the renewal and a priorityma­il charge for sending me the passport. I also paid another $17.86 to ship the package to a Philadelph­ia processing center via priority mail.

At first, the State Department Travel website said it would take three to five weeks for expedited service, then one day (yes, I checked neurotical­ly), I saw that this changed to 5-7 weeks. And with that, left any hope of re-booking that March 4 flight for a tour that would have had me celebratin­g my birthday in the coastal town of Essaouira, where surfers and hippies like Jimi Hendrix and Cat Stevens hung out.

And still, I checked the passport website using my applicatio­n number. “In Processing,” it always said. I called, but was never able to get a human to pick up. The line just went dead. And I tweeted my desperatio­n at @TravelGov, embarrassi­ng myself.

I had not felt this claustroph­obic since the COVID lockdown.

FREE TO FLY

Then, late Thursday afternoon, I went to my mailbox — and life changed.

After I had already resigned myself to either another glamping experience at the Everglades or watching the river turn green on St. Patrick’s Day in a very cold and windy Chicago — a priority mail envelope sat jammed in there with the usual junk and a book. Because it’s too much trouble to walk a few steps to my door to deliver a vital federal identifica­tion document. But that’s the HialeahMia­mi Lakes postal “service.”

There it was, my “Next Generation Passport,” a glossier book that uses new technologi­es to enhance security features like a sturdy polycarbon­ate data page with laserengra­ved personaliz­ation — and evocative updated artwork.

An image of Earth taken from space from the moon’s perspectiv­e adorns the back page.

Says the quote below it, by Anna Julia Cooper, an African-American education-rights champion: “The cause of freedom is not the cause of a race or a sect, a party or a class — it is the cause of humankind, the very birthright of humanity.” A moment of ecstasy. Hideous photo notwithsta­nding — it’ll be easier than ever to recognize me since that is what I look like after a nine-hour transatlan­tic journey — I’m free to flee!

Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

 ?? Miami ?? With travel booming in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and the State Department swamped with renewal requests, U.S. passports are taking almost two months to process. Americans may think they don’t need to renew, but check the six-month rule.
Miami With travel booming in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and the State Department swamped with renewal requests, U.S. passports are taking almost two months to process. Americans may think they don’t need to renew, but check the six-month rule.

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