Crunch time: Come Tuesday, all Canada-U.S. air travellers must have passport

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The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
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By Bruce Cheadle

OTTAWA (CP) - Documents, please!

That famous demand - traditionally spat in some clipped foreign accent to signal the dramatic turning point in an espionage thriller - takes on new meaning at a Canadian airport near you, starting Tuesday.

That's the day every Canadian heading to the United States by air must carry a valid passport, or hold one of the special Nexus Air cards reserved for frequent travellers.

The U.S.-mandated policy shift marks the formal end to a happy-go-lucky era of casual cross-border traffic between North America's intertwined trading partners.

It's causing huge headaches as tens of thousands of Canadians stampede to government offices to make sure they're properly documented for U.S. travel.

"We are in a very unique, exceptional situation right now," Francine Charbonneau, a spokeswoman for Passport Canada, said in an interview.

"Our infrastructure is under a great deal of pressure."

Just ask Marie Mason.

The resident of Rocky Mountain House, Alta., drove 3½ hours this week to hand-deliver her passport application to Edmonton, the only passport office in northern Alberta.

After almost five hours standing in a line that snaked about 100 metres through Edmonton's main federal office building, Mason was wondering if she'd have to get a hotel room in the city for the night.

Some in the Edmonton lineup arrived at 5:45 a.m. to wait outside in the cold, dark dawn for the passport office's 8:15 a.m. opening.

"I think this is stupid," Mason said. "I thought we were supposed to have free trade with the U.S. We are supposed to be allies, but I don't think we are."

The American law, called the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, has been in the works for years, and became a fait accompli in November when the final implementation date of Jan. 23 was announced.

The air travel component is the first stage of a two-part implementation that will add a passport requirement for all land and sea travellers to the United States no later than June 2009.

In response, Canadian passport applications in November shot up by almost 90,000 to 355,474, an increase of 33 per cent over November 2005, according to Charbonneau.

December applications were up 31 per cent over the same month in 2005 to 322,085, and January applications are following the same trend.

Despite adding 200 frontline staff in the autumn, Passport Canada - a self-funding, stand-alone agency under the Department of Foreign Affairs - hit the breaking point early this month.
Delays began in earnest on Jan. 8, said Charbonneau. Prior to that, getting a passport usually took about 10 business days if you applied in person and 20 business days if you applied by mail.
"Now you can add five to 20 business days on top of those," she said.
Lineups at Canada's 33 full-service passport offices have grown accordingly, but vary widely by region.
That's in part because passport offices, and more than 90 application "receiving agents" located at select postal outlets and government offices, are not evenly distributed across the country. All the locations are listed by province on the Passport Canada website (www.ppt.gc.ca).
Booming Alberta has just four outlets, including a receiving agent in Fort McMurray's post office. Tiny P.E.I. has three outlets, and Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have five each. Ontario has more than 50 and Quebec has 27.
The wait at the downtown Ottawa passport office was barely an hour this week, and applicants at a downtown Toronto office last week waited about two hours.
"There has to be a more efficient system than this," said Les Lumley, an Edmontonian who took the day off work to wait in line for more than four hours to get a passport for a business trip to North Carolina.
"Why don't they have more passport offices?"
Fabian Lengelle, a Passport Canada spokesman, says Ontario currently accounts for 42 per cent of the total passport applications and Alberta just 10 per cent, which explains some of the disparity.
But the number of applicants in Alberta has skyrocketed in the past three years by more than 100,000 annually, and Passport Canada's infrastructure just hasn't kept up in the province, he said.
"We are definitely studying this issue."
A government employee in Edmonton, who declined to be named, said passport office staff were getting an earful.
"Some people are very irate and are under a lot of stress," said the employee.
"The staff don't make the rules and are doing the best they can."
Passport Canada is encouraging people to mail in their applications and, despite the current backlog, is not telling Canadians to wait to apply.
"I don't think it's wise to go stand in a lineup if you don't need that passport right away," said Charbonneau.
"But those delays might get higher and higher, so if you don't want to risk suddenly having a trip that might constitute an emergency to you, it's wise to have your passport."
Depending on your location, you can have applications checked by a receiving agent if you're unsure of the procedure. The agent then forwards the application to Passport Canada. Charbonneau also says its a good idea to have your passport photo taken by a professional, because the photo rules are strict.
Emergency passports can still be issued in as little as 24 hours, but Charbonneau reminds applicants that a last-minute deal on a Florida vacation package won't make the grade.
"We're talking more about a death in the family, an illness in the family and you need to get somewhere. It's up to the passport officer's discretion to decide what constitutes an emergency."
While the hassle for Canadian travellers is currently top of mind, the law also applies to Americans who leave their country and return by air.
Considering only 28 per cent of U.S. citizens have a passport - compared to about 40 per cent of Canadians - there is widespread fear the law will discourage American tourist travel.
The U.S. State Department said this week that 250,000 new U.S. passports are being issued each week, adding to the 73 million valid ones already out there.
That doesn't alleviate the concerns of Randy Williams, president and CEO of the Tourism Industry Association of Canada.
Williams said tourist operators have been hurt by the new U.S. law already, and will continue to suffer for several years.
"People are confused about it, that's a fact," he said.
"All the research shows that people on both sides of the border don't know what the rules are, or will be."
A report by the Conference Board of Canada suggests the rule change will cost Canada some 14 million U.S. visitors and $3.6 billion in lost tourism revenues between 2005 and 2010.
Confusion among would-be American travellers has already cost Canada's tourist industry $1.6 billion over the past two years, said the report.
Canadian businesses that deal with cross-border traffic have been trying to get the message out.
WestJet, for instance, has a warning pop up on its website as soon as a person searches for flights to the United States. The warning links to information on the passport requirements.
The tourism association unsuccessfully lobbied to have Canada Customs officials hand out information flyers to travellers over the past year - the way yellow warning sheets were delivered to travellers during, and well after, the SARS health crisis in 2003.
"We've known about this passport thing for 2½ years," said Williams.
"It would have been very easy to give out handouts at Customs offices right across the country on both sides of the border, just letting people know."
At this point, it's too late for that.
The U.S. State Department says it doesn't foresee a problem come Tuesday, since 96 per cent of Canadian air travellers to the United States in the first week of January were already carrying passports.
But the rush at Passport Canada offices indicates there are still thousands of would-be Canadian travellers who need proper travel documents.
The new era is upon us.
-
The number of full-service Passport Canada offices and receiving agent outlets, by province, across Canada:
Ontario: 53 (13 full-service offices, 40 receiving agent outlets).
Quebec: 27 (seven offices, 20 outlets).
British Columbia: 9 (four offices, five outlets).
New Brunswick: 5 (one office, four outlets).
Nova Scotia: 5 (one office, four outlets).
Northwest Territories: 5 (five outlets).
Alberta: 4 (three offices, one outlet).
Manitoba: 4 (one office, three outlets).
Saskatchewan: 4 (two offices, two outlets).
Newfoundland and Labrador: 3 (one office, two outlets).
Prince Edward Island: 3 (three outlets).
Nunavut: 3 (three outlets).
Yukon: 1 (outlet).


Copyright © 2007 Canadian Press
 

Curiosity

Senate Member
Jul 30, 2005
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Whine grumble and bonjour y'all !

The public have been told about the need for passports for over two years.... some them said they would never cross the border in any case and had no plans to do so in the future.... and never sought to get their own.

Passports have often been required for many countries across the vast oceans and we get no grumbles there.....

Still....if you wait til the last minute..... that last minute can turn into weeks.

Gee I guess they really meant it. Oh yup - the applications are available on line... forget the addy but it's easily found.
 

I think not

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 12, 2005
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Everywhere I have ever travelled abroad, I have taken my passport with me (ya, that includes Canada). I'm not sure what the big fuss is all aboot. :wave:

Maybe those who complain want a North American Union? :shock:
 

Toro

Senate Member
May 24, 2005
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Everywhere I have ever travelled abroad, I have taken my passport with me (ya, that includes Canada). I'm not sure what the big fuss is all aboot. :wave:

Maybe those who complain want a North American Union? :shock:

Yes.

If you are about to integrate nations, the first thing you do is make it more difficult for people to pass over borders.

:withstupid:
 

Curiosity

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Jul 30, 2005
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Tracy

I guess you didn't read the article - here is but one whine....quoted below from the article...

The people on both sides of the border have known for two years the passport was going to be a necessary when crossing into the other nation....and they waited until the last minute....thus the crowd and long lines.

Whether a passport is easily obtained wasn't my point.... it is going to take some time and waiting in lines.

It's causing huge headaches as tens of thousands of Canadians stampede to government offices to make sure they're properly documented for U.S. travel.
 

#juan

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Aug 30, 2005
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Canada and the U.S. were probably the only two countries in the world where no passport was required to cross the border in either direction. This deadline was announced a long time ago and for some reason people are just discovering that they will need a passport. When I last renewed my passport it took about two weeks to get a new one. I was told that a brand new, first passport would take about a month. This should not have been a problem.
 
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tracy

House Member
Nov 10, 2005
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Tracy

I guess you didn't read the article - here is but one whine....quoted below from the article...

The people on both sides of the border have known for two years the passport was going to be a necessary when crossing into the other nation....and they waited until the last minute....thus the crowd and long lines.

Whether a passport is easily obtained wasn't my point.... it is going to take some time and waiting in lines.

I did read the article and I get that people don't like lines. I just still wouldn't call that so difficult in the grand scheme of things and don't think the people who waited to the last minute should whine about it now when it's sort of their fault. Canadians don't have to go to any government office to get a passport. They can do it all by mail and avoid the lines if they wish.
 
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tracy

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Nov 10, 2005
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Canada and the U.S. were probably the only two countries in the world were no passport was required to cross the border in either direction.

It's the same between the US and Mexico. All my friends usually use is their driver's lisences.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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I did read the article and I get that people don't like lines. I just still wouldn't call that so difficult in the grand scheme of things and don't think the people who waited to the last minute should whine about it now when it's sort of their fault.

It's the classic: Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part.

Unfortunately, thousands of Canadians decided to do nothing, even though anyone who could read or listen to the radio knew that this was coming. They all wait to the last minute, and then get upset that thousands of others wait to the last minute.

The passport office should have express service for people RENEWING passports, so we aren't inconvenienced by people with poor planning skills.
 

L Gilbert

Winterized
Nov 30, 2006
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I have no plans to travel anywhere so I don't have a passport. When I need one I will get one. As far as going across the border goes, I never had one before but if I need one I will get one. I haven't been over there for years and now it's increasingly unlikely I will go there as the relatives and friends in the States that are close enough for me to visit are dwindling in numbers.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
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It will about a year from now that we will need a passport for "ground" travel to the u.s., so, "folks",
those of you who will sit around all of this year, will be "whining" then, and will go into some kind of
frenzy, and complain to everyone.Do something different for a change, and be organized and
prepared, so that you have your passports before time runs out.

So, in advance, I "couldn't care less" how you feel, if you don't plan ahead.
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
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bliss
Whine grumble and bonjour y'all !

The public have been told about the need for passports for over two years.... some them said they would never cross the border in any case and had no plans to do so in the future.... and never sought to get their own.

Passports have often been required for many countries across the vast oceans and we get no grumbles there.....

Still....if you wait til the last minute..... that last minute can turn into weeks.

Gee I guess they really meant it. Oh yup - the applications are available on line... forget the addy but it's easily found.

Yeah... anyone I know who works in the states on occasion, made sure to get their passports roughly two years ago, rather than wait until the last minute. It made travel way easier than using the other documentation anyway, so I don't get what the big problem is. I hadn't stopped to think about the backlog to get my passport though... hubby's going to kuwait some time this year, and I've been pondering going with for the week and a half he'll be there. We'll see, it might not be an option at all if I can't get my paperwork through.
 

L Gilbert

Winterized
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Just wondering if Americans need a passport to enter Canada. (Um, I think what goes around comes around).
I just think it's funny. The US requiring Canadians to have passports and yet they can't keep illegals out of their country anyway. lol
 

#juan

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Aug 30, 2005
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It's the same between the US and Mexico. All my friends usually use is their driver's lisences.

Yeah, and didn't I read somewhere that the Mexicans use the special "midnight" border crossing where they don't need any documentation.:)......kidding..
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
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Just wondering if Americans need a passport to enter Canada. (Um, I think what goes around comes around).
I just think it's funny. The US requiring Canadians to have passports and yet they can't keep illegals out of their country anyway. lol

But, don't the americans need their passports to return to their country?
 

m_levesque

Electoral Member
Dec 18, 2006
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Whine grumble and bonjour y'all !

The public have been told about the need for passports for over two years.... some them said they would never cross the border in any case and had no plans to do so in the future.... and never sought to get their own.

Passports have often been required for many countries across the vast oceans and we get no grumbles there.....

Still....if you wait til the last minute..... that last minute can turn into weeks.

Gee I guess they really meant it. Oh yup - the applications are available on line... forget the addy but it's easily found.


Dosen't bother me. I have been to the USA exactly three times in my life and have no plans at all to go back in the near future. I hate going to the States, the people are rude, arrogant and dangerous. I'm always worried some yahoo is going to start shooting wherever I am at!
 

m_levesque

Electoral Member
Dec 18, 2006
524
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Montreal, Quebec
Just wondering if Americans need a passport to enter Canada. (Um, I think what goes around comes around).
I just think it's funny. The US requiring Canadians to have passports and yet they can't keep illegals out of their country anyway. lol


Canada is not going to require passports, yet. But give the government time! They so like to ape everything Washington does, they'll eventually get around to it unless we get them out of Parliament.

Off topic, A friend of mine who teaches at Laval Univserity thinks we should change our capitol city to Winnipeg because Ottawa is no longer in the centre of the country as it was when it was first was picked by Queen Victoria to be our capitol! Can you imagine Winnipeg as our capitol city?