BajaNews - 1-3-2007 at 01:20 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20070102/ap_tr_ge/travel_b...
Jan 2, 2007
WASHINGTON - Planning a last-minute beach getaway in January or February?
If you were hoping to fly to the Caribbean or Mexico, you'd better have your passport.
New rules will require all air travelers to the U.S. to have a passport by Jan. 23, including U.S. residents and citizens returning home by air from
Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean.
It normally takes six to eight weeks to obtain a passport, or about two weeks if you're willing to pay for expedited service.
But if you don't have time for that or simply can't be bothered, here are some alternatives.
You could take a cruise that visits Mexican or Caribbean ports, since land and sea travelers won't need a passport for those destinations until 2008
at the earliest. You could stay within the 50 states, and pick a beach in Florida, like Bahia Honda State Park in the lower Florida Keys, or in
Hawaii, like Kahala Beach in Oahu. You could head for Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands, which are both U.S. territories.
Or drive or take a bus tour across the border to Mexico. From San Diego, head for Tijuana or Rosarito in the Baja; from Tucson, Ariz., drive to Puerto
Penasco, also known as Rocky Point; and just across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas, is an interesting shopping and cultural destination,
Matamoros.
If you do want to obtain or renew a passport, you can get information online from the U.S. State Department at http://travel.state.gov/passport/passport_1738.html or from the Travel Industry Association's http://www.GetAPassportNow.com.
To obtain a passport for the first time, you must go in person to one of 9,000 passport-acceptance facilities located around the country with two
photographs of yourself, proof of U.S. citizenship and a photo identification, such as a driver's license. The facilities include some post offices
and other government agencies. To find a location near you, type in your zip code at http://iafdb.travel.state.gov/.
Passport fees are $97 for adults, $82 for children under 16. Processing time varies but typically takes six to eight weeks. For an extra $60, plus
overnight delivery fees, you can expedite the service and get the passport within two weeks.
Although only about 27 percent of Americans currently hold a passport, the number of passports issued has steadily risen over the past five years. In
the 2002 fiscal year, only 7 million passports were issued; in the 2006 fiscal year, 12.1 million passports were issued, according to statistics on
the U.S. State Department Web site. In 1996, only 5.5 million passports were issued.
The National Passport Information Center can be reached at 877-487-2778.
Capt. George - 1-3-2007 at 06:45 PM
I understand crossing the border with these new regulations includes a "short arm inspection". Sorry girls, you're out on this one.
holy crap, who turned out the lights, ware da fug am I now????