Documents Required for Travelers Departing From or Arriving in the United States at Air Ports-of-Entry From Within the Western Hemisphere, 68412-68430 [06-9402]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 226 / Friday, November 24, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Avenue, NW., Room 5.4–D,
Washington, DC 20229, telephone
number (202) 344–2847.
Department of State: Consuelo Pachon,
Office of Passport Policy, Planning
and Advisory Services, Bureau of
Consular Affairs, telephone number
(202) 663–2662.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection
8 CFR Parts 212 and 235
[USCBP 2006–0097]
RIN 1651–AA66
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
22 CFR Parts 41 and 53
RIN 1400–AC10
Documents Required for Travelers
Departing From or Arriving in the
United States at Air Ports-of-Entry
From Within the Western Hemisphere
Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection, Department of Homeland
Security; Bureau of Consular Affairs,
Department of State.
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule finalizes the first
phase of a joint Department of
Homeland Security and Department of
State plan, known as the Western
Hemisphere Travel Initiative, to
implement new documentation
requirements for certain United States
citizens and nonimmigrant aliens
entering the United States. As a result
of this final rule, with limited
exceptions discussed below, beginning
January 23, 2007, all United States
citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from
Canada, Bermuda, and Mexico
departing from or entering the United
States from within the Western
Hemisphere at air ports-of-entry will be
required to present a valid passport.
This final rule differs from the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM)
published in the Federal Register on
August 11, 2006, by finalizing new
documentation requirements for only
travelers arriving in the United States by
air. The portion of the NPRM that
proposed changes in documentation
requirements for travelers arriving by
sea will not be finalized under this rule.
Requirements for United States citizens
and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Bermuda, and Mexico departing from or
entering the United States at land and
sea ports-of-entry will be addressed in a
separate, future rulemaking.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
January 23, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Department of Homeland Security:
Robert Rawls, Office of Field
Operations, Bureau of Customs and
Border Protection, 1300 Pennsylvania
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Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Documentation Requirements Prior to
the Effective Date of this Rule
1. U.S. Citizens
2. Nonimmigrant Aliens from Canada
Citizens and the British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda
3. Mexican Citizens
B. Statutory and Regulatory History
II. Summary of Changes from NPRM and
New Document Requirements
III. Discussion of Comments
A. General
B. Timeline
C. Passports
1. General
2. Cost of Passports
3. Obtaining Passports
4. Children
5. DOS Issuance Capacity
D. Alternative Documents
1. General
2. Driver’s License and Birth Certificate
3. Real ID Act Compliant Driver’s Licenses
4. Border Crossing Cards
5. Merchant Mariner Cards
6. NEXUS Air Cards
7. Passport Cards
8. Tribal Documents
E. Implementation and Effect on Specific
Populations
1. General
2. Outer Continental Shelf
3. Emergencies
F. Outside the Scope of this Rulemaking
G. Public Relations
H. Regulatory Analyses
1. General
2. Executive Order 12866
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
IV. Conclusion
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
D. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice
Reform
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Assessment
F. Paperwork Reduction Act
G. Privacy Statement
List of Subjects
Amendments to the Regulations
Abbreviations and Terms Used in This
Document
ANPRM—Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
APIS—Advance Passenger Information
System
BCC—Form DSP–150, B–1/B–2 Visa and
Border Crossing Card
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CBP—Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection
DHS—Department of Homeland
Security
DMV—Department of Motor Vehicles
DOS—Department of State
FAST—Free and Secure Trade
IBWC—International Boundary and
Water Commission
ICAO—International Civil Aviation
Organization
INA—Immigration and Nationality Act
INS—Immigration and Naturalization
Service
IRTPA—Intelligence Reform and
Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004
LPR—Lawful Permanent Resident
MMD—Merchant Mariner Document
MODU—Mobile Offshore Drilling Unit
NATO—North Atlantic Treaty
Organization
NPRM—Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
OCS—Outer Continental Shelf
OTTI—Office of Travel & Tourism
Industries
SENTRI—Secure Electronic Network for
Travelers Rapid Inspection
TSA—Transportation Security
Administration
TWIC—Transportation Worker
Identification Card
US–VISIT—United States Visitor and
Immigrant Status Indicator
Technology Program
WHTI—Western Hemisphere Travel
Initiative
I. Background
For a detailed discussion of the
current documentation requirements for
travelers entering the United States from
within the Western Hemisphere, the
statutory and regulatory histories, and
the applicability of the rule related to
specific groups, please see the NPRM
published on August 11, 2006, at 71 FR
46155.
A. Documentation Requirements Prior
to the Effective Date of This Rule
The documentation requirements for
travelers entering the United States by
air generally depend on the nationality
of the traveler and whether or not the
traveler is entering the United States
from a country within the Western
Hemisphere. The following is an
overview of the documentation
requirements for citizens of the United
States, Canada, British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda, and Mexico who
enter the United States at air ports-ofentry prior to the effective date of this
rule.
1. U.S. Citizens
U.S. citizens must possess a valid U.S.
passport to depart from or enter the
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United States.1 However, this passport
requirement has not applied to U.S.
citizens who depart from or enter the
United States from within the Western
Hemisphere other than from Cuba.2
United States citizens have been
required to satisfy the inspecting
officers of their identities and
citizenship. Accordingly, U.S. citizens
have not been required to present a
valid passport when entering the United
States by air from within the Western
Hemisphere other than Cuba.3
2. Nonimmigrant Aliens From Canada
and the British Overseas Territory of
Bermuda
Each nonimmigrant alien arriving in
the United States must present a valid
unexpired passport issued by his or her
country of citizenship and, if required,
a valid unexpired visa issued by a
United States embassy or consulate
abroad.4 Nonimmigrant aliens entering
the United States must also satisfy any
other applicable entry requirements
(e.g., United States Visitor and
Immigrant Status Indicator Technology
Program (US–VISIT)). In most cases,
Canadian citizens and citizens of the
British Overseas Territory of Bermuda
(Bermuda) have not been required to
present a valid passport and visa when
entering the United States as
nonimmigrant visitors from countries in
the Western Hemisphere.5 These
travelers have been required to satisfy
the inspecting CBP officer of their
identities and citizenship at the time of
their application for admission.6
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3. Mexican Citizens
Mexican citizens are generally
required to present a valid unexpired
passport and visa when entering the
1 Section 215(b) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. 1185(b).
2 See 22 CFR 53.2(b), which waived the passport
requirement pursuant to section 215(b) of the INA,
8 U.S.C. 1185(b).
3 In lieu of a passport, U.S. citizens have been
permitted to present a variety of documents to
establish their identity and citizenship and right to
enter the United States. A driver’s license issued by
a state motor vehicle administration or other
competent state government authority is a common
form of identity document. Citizenship documents
generally include birth certificates issued by a
United States jurisdiction, Consular Reports of Birth
Abroad, Certificates of Naturalization, and
Certificates of Citizenship.
4 Section 212(a)(7)(B)(i) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(7)(B)(i).
5 8 CFR 212.1(a)(1) (Canadian citizens) and 8 CFR
212.1(a)(2) (Citizens of Bermuda). See also 22 CFR
41.2.
6 Entering aliens may present any evidence of
identity and citizenship in their possession.
Individuals who initially fail to satisfy the
examining CBP officer may then be required to
provide further identification and evidence of
citizenship such as a birth certificate, passport, or
citizenship card.
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United States. However, Mexican
citizens arriving in the United States at
ports-of-entry who possess a Form DSP–
150, B–1/B–2 Visa and Border Crossing
Card (BCC) 7 currently may be admitted
without presenting a valid passport if
they are coming from contiguous
territory.8 While the use of a BCC
without a passport is atypical in the air
environment, it has been permitted.
B. Statutory and Regulatory History
On December 17, 2004, the President
signed into law the Intelligence Reform
and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004
(IRTPA).9 Section 7209 of IRTPA, as
amended by the Department of
Homeland Security Appropriations Act
of 2007, provides that the Secretary of
Homeland Security, in consultation
with the Secretary of State, develop and
implement a plan to require travelers
entering the United States to present a
passport, other document, or
combination of documents, that are
‘‘deemed by the Secretary of Homeland
Security to be sufficient to denote
identity and citizenship.’’ As a result,
United States citizens and
nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Mexico, and Bermuda will be required
to comply with the new documentation
requirements.
On September 1, 2005, the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) and the Department of State
(DOS) published in the Federal Register
at 70 FR 52037, an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that
announced that DHS and DOS were
planning to amend their respective
regulations to implement section 7209
of IRTPA. For further information,
please see the ANPRM document that
was published in the Federal Register
on September 1, 2005, at 70 FR 52037.
On August 11, 2006, DHS and DOS
published in the Federal Register at 71
FR 46155, an NPRM that announced
that DHS and DOS were planning to
amend their respective regulations to
implement section 7209 of IRTPA. The
NPRM proposed that, with some
exceptions, United States citizens and
nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Bermuda, and Mexico traveling into the
United States by air and sea from
7 A BCC is a machine-readable, biometric card,
issued by the Department of State, Bureau of
Consular Affairs.
8 8 CFR 212.1(c)(1)(i). See also 22 CFR 41.2(g). If
they are only traveling within a certain geographic
area along the United States’ border with Mexico:
usually up to 25 miles from the border but within
75 miles under the exception for Tucson, Arizona,
they do not need to obtain a form I–94. If they travel
outside of that geographic area, they must obtain an
I–94 from CBP at the port-of-entry. 8 CFR
235.1(f)(1).
9 Pub. L. 108–458, 118 Stat. 3638 (Dec. 17, 2004).
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Western Hemisphere countries, be
required to show a passport. The NPRM
did not propose changes to the
documentation requirements at land
border ports-of-entry.
The NPRM proposed that the passport
requirement would apply to all air and
most sea travel, including commercial
air travel and commercial sea travel.
According to the NPRM, there were two
categories of travel and one category of
traveler that would not be subject to the
passport requirement proposed for air
and sea travel, but would be addressed
in the second phase rulemaking for land
border travel. First, the NPRM provided
that the passport requirement would not
apply to pleasure vessels used
exclusively for pleasure and which are
not for the transportation of persons or
property for compensation or hire.
Second, the NPRM stated that the
passport requirement would not apply
to travel by ferry. Finally, the NPRM
provided that the passport requirement
would not apply to United States citizen
members of the Armed Forces on active
duty.
The NPRM also proposed to designate
two documents, in addition to the
passport, as sufficient to denote identity
and citizenship under section 7209, and
acceptable for air and sea travel. The
first document was the Merchant
Mariner Document (MMD) or ‘‘z-card’’
issued by the United States Coast Guard
(Coast Guard) to Merchant Mariners.
The second document was the NEXUS
Air card when used with a NEXUS Air
kiosk.10
On October 4, 2006, the President
signed into law the Department of
Homeland Security Appropriations Act
of 2007 (DHS Appropriations Act of
2007).11 Section 546 of the DHS
Appropriations Act of 2007 amended
section 7209 of IRTPA by stressing the
need for DHS and DOS to expeditiously
implement the requirements by the
earlier of two dates, June 1, 2009, or
three months after the Secretaries of
Homeland Security and State certify
that certain criteria have been met. The
section requires ‘‘expeditious[ ]’’ action
and states that requirements must be
satisfied by the ‘‘earlier’’ of dates
identified. By using this language, the
drafters expressed an intention for rapid
action.12 Congress also expressed an
interest in having the requirements for
land and sea implemented at the same
10 Air Nexus is an airport border clearance pilot
project.
11 Pub. L. 109–295, 120 Stat. 1355 (Oct. 4, 2006).
12 Id. at § 546. See Congressional Record, 109th
cong. 2nd sess., September 29, 2006 at H7964.
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time as part of the DHS Appropriations
Act of 2007.13
On October 17, 2006, to meet the
documentary requirements of the
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative
and to facilitate the frequent travel of
persons living in border communities,
the Department of State, in consultation
with the Department of Homeland
Security, proposed to develop a cardformat passport, called the Passport
Card, for international travel by United
States citizens through land and sea
ports of entry between the United
States, Canada, Mexico, or the
Caribbean and Bermuda.14
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II. Summary of Changes From NPRM
and New Document Requirements
Under this final rule, beginning
January 23, 2007, United States citizens
and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Bermuda, and Mexico entering the
United States at air ports-of-entry will
generally be required to present a valid
passport. Accordingly, all aviation
passengers and crew, including
commercial flights and general aviation
flights (i.e., private planes), who arrive
at air ports-of-entry in the United States
from countries within the Western
Hemisphere will be required to possess
a valid passport beginning January 23,
2007. The only exceptions to this
requirement would be for United States
citizens who are members of the United
States Armed Forces traveling on active
duty; travelers who present a Merchant
Mariner Document traveling in
conjunction with maritime business;
and travelers who present a NEXUS Air
card used at a NEXUS Air kiosk.
This final rule does not change the
documentation requirements for United
States citizens and nonimmigrant aliens
from Canada, Bermuda, and Mexico
who arrive at sea ports-of-entry. Based
on DOS’ recent proposal to allow the
use of the Passport Card in the sea
environment, Congress’ intent with
respect to the land and sea
environments, and the public
comments, DHS and DOS have decided
to defer decisions on the proposed
changes to documentation requirements
for arrivals by sea. Arrivals by sea and
land will be addressed in a separate,
future rulemaking.
III. Discussion of Comments
In both the ANPRM and NPRM, DHS
and DOS sought public comment to
assist the Secretary of Homeland
Security to make a final determination
concerning which document, or
combination of documents, other than
13 Id.
14 71
FR 60928.
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valid passports, would be accepted at
ports-of-entry.
DHS and DOS received 2,062 written
comments in response to the ANPRM
and 104 written comments in response
to the NPRM. The majority of the
comments (1,910 from the ANPRM)
addressed only potential changes to the
documentation requirements at land
border ports-of-entry. One hundred and
fifty-two comments from the ANPRM
addressed changes to the documentation
requirements for persons arriving at air
or sea ports-of-entry. Comments in
response to both the ANPRM and NPRM
were received from a wide range of
sources including: private citizens;
businesses and associations; local, state,
federal, and tribal governments;
members of the United States Congress;
and foreign government officials.
Since this final rule addresses solely
the changes to the documentation
requirements for travelers arriving at air
ports-of-entry, the comments received in
response to the ANPRM and NPRM
regarding arrivals by land and sea will
not be addressed in this rulemaking. A
summary of the comments from both the
ANPRM and the NPRM primarily
regarding air travel follows with
complete responses to the comments.
A. General
Forty-nine commenters agreed with a
passport requirement.
In contrast, eleven commenters
expressed general disagreement with a
passport requirement for travel within
the Western Hemisphere where such
documentation was previously not
required.
B. Timeline
Comment
We received many comments
regarding the implementation timeline
for new documentation requirements.
Nine commenters stated that the
requirements for all air, sea, and landborder crossings should be implemented
without delay. Two commenters agreed
with the timelines for a phased-in
approach. One commenter stated that
the January 1, 2007, timeline announced
in the ANPRM should be maintained.
Forty-five commenters asked for a
single implementation date for land, air,
and sea. Fifty-seven commenters
requested that the implementation date
be delayed to December 31, 2007, or
later. Several commenters asserted that
the implementation date for cruise
passengers not occur earlier than the
statutory deadline. Among the reasons
to support a single and delayed
implementation date, commenters
asserted that one timeline would be
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more fair, provide adequate time for
travelers to comply with the new
regulations, and allow time to
communicate the requirements to the
public. One commenter reasoned that
one timeline would ensure that
infrastructure and technology is in place
to support the initiative. Another
commenter requested that changes to
the requirements for commercial
fishermen transiting between Alaska
and Washington be delayed and
addressed with persons arriving by
pleasure boats and ferries, not with
commercial vessels as proposed. One
commenter requested that general
aviation have the same implementation
date as pleasure boats and land-border
crossings.
Response
DHS and DOS agree with the
commenters that the implementation
date for new documentation
requirements for travelers arriving by
sea should be delayed. In the NPRM,
DHS and DOS proposed to implement
new documentation requirements for
travelers arriving at air ports-of-entry
and most sea ports-of-entry. However,
based on DOS’ recent Passport Card
proposal which would allow the
Passport Card for sea travel, the
Departments have decided to delay new
requirements for arrivals by sea until the
Passport Card is available for use in the
sea environment. Delaying the
implementation date for the sea
environment will allow the Departments
to develop the Passport Card and
enhance the infrastructure and
technology to support the Passport Card
for arrivals by sea. This is also
consistent with Congress’ intent to
implement the land and sea
environments at the same time as
expressed in section 546 of the DHS
Appropriations Act of 2007.
Additionally, this delay will address the
concerns for commercial fishermen
transiting between Alaska and the
United States by not implementing new
requirements until the Passport Card is
operational. It will also be less
confusing to the public to implement
sea and land requirements, both of
which would accept the Passport Card,
at the same time. Therefore, the
documentation requirements for
travelers arriving by sea, whether aboard
commercial vessels, pleasure vessels, or
ferries, will not change under this final
rule.
DHS and DOS have determined that
the proposed implementation date of
January 23, 2007, is appropriate for air
travel because of operational
considerations and available resources.
This phased approach is essential
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because a staggered implementation in
advance of the statutory deadline will
enhance security requirements using
existing infrastructure while allowing
the Departments time to acquire and
develop resources to meet the increased
demand for sea and land-border entries.
C. Passports
1. General
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Comment
One commenter raised concerns about
the security of U.S. and foreign
passports, stating that passports may be
easily falsified or altered. Another
commenter stated that terrorists could
misuse passports. One commenter
stated that Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID), as related to
electronic passports, poses a safety
concern because it can be read from a
distance.
Response
Passports are acceptable at the border
as a matter of law.
The primary purpose of the passport
has always been to establish citizenship
and identity. It has been used to
facilitate travel to foreign countries by
displaying any appropriate visas or
entry/exit stamps. Passports are globally
interoperable, consistent with
worldwide standards, and usable
regardless of the international
destination of the traveler.
U.S. passports incorporate a host of
security features. These security features
include, but are not limited to, rigorous
adjudication standards and document
security features. The adjudication
standards establish the individual’s
citizenship and identity and ensure that
the individual meets the qualifications
for a U.S. passport. The document
security features include digitized
photographs, embossed seals,
watermarks, ultraviolet and fluorescent
light verification features, security
laminations, micro-printing, and
holograms to authenticate passports. A
U.S. passport is a document that is
adjudicated by trained DOS experts and
issued to persons who have documented
their United States identity and
citizenship by birth, naturalization or
derivation. Applications are subject to
additional Federal government checks
to ensure the applicants are eligible to
receive a U.S. passport under applicable
standards (for example, those subject to
outstanding federal warrants for arrest
are not eligible for a U.S. passport).
Foreign passports accepted for
admission to the United States must
meet the standards set out in
International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) 9303. Passports
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issued by Canada, Mexico, and Bermuda
meet these international standards and
are, therefore, acceptable. Finally, the
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
Officer verifies and authenticates the
passport presented for entry.
Privacy and security concerns related
to RFID technology were addressed in
extensive detail in the final rule for
electronic passports published by DOS
on October 25, 2005, at 70 FR 61553.
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Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated
that the cost for a Canadian passport is
high and that the process for obtaining
a passport should be made easier.
Two commenters asked if non-U.S.
citizens would be allowed to depart the
United States without a passport,
regardless of their intent to return to the
United States.
Response
While the U.S. Government is
working closely with passport agencies
throughout the Western Hemisphere on
WHTI and other travel document
security matters, each nation’s
government ultimately controls the
process and cost for obtaining a
passport. The application process for
and cost of a Canadian Government
issued document is outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
Response
3. Obtaining Passports
Currently, if an individual is not
required to present a passport upon
entry to the United States, that
individual does not need to present a
passport upon exit. Under this final
rule, however, if an individual must
present a passport upon entry, then that
individual will also need to bear one
upon exit. In the event that non-U.S.
citizens’ passports are lost or stolen,
those individuals would need to contact
their nearest consular office to have the
documents replaced prior to departing
the United States.
Comment
One commenter stated that the
process for obtaining a passport should
be made easier. One commenter stated
that the passport application process is
very burdensome for travelers in remote
areas.
Comment
2. Cost of Passports
Comment
Nineteen commenters stated that the
cost for a U.S. passport is high and that
the process for obtaining a passport
should be made easier. One commenter
stated that while the passport cost is
‘‘high’’ it should not outweigh safety
and security. Twenty-one commenters
stated that the cost for a U.S. passport
is high. Several commenters requested
that DOS offer discounted or free
passports to certain groups such as
students, senior citizens, families with
children, welfare recipients, group
purchases, and early purchasers. Two
commenters stated that the cost of a
passport should be significantly
lessened for citizens below the poverty
level. Six commenters stated that the
passport cost should be greatly reduced.
Response
At this time, DOS does not intend to
offer discounts or no-fee passports for
any of the specific groups mentioned.
The passport fee reflects the actual costs
of adjudicating a passport application
and producing a passport. Because the
requirements for adjudication and
production remain the same for all
applicants, DOS does not intend to offer
discounts.
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Response
While some applicants may find the
current process burdensome, the
application process is standard across
the U.S. and is intended to establish
nationality, identity, and entitlement to
the issuance of a U.S. passport. Due to
statutory requirements and established
regulations, a complete end-to-end
electronic submission for the DS–11
form (Application for a U.S. Passport) is
currently not possible. However, in an
effort to provide customers with an
electronic alternative to the paper-based
form, the DS–11 form is posted on the
DOS Web site, where it can be filled out
online and printed for submission.
There are over 7,500 acceptance
facilities nationwide including many
Federal, state and probate courts, post
offices, some public libraries and a
number of county and municipal
offices. Additionally, there are 14
regional passport agencies and 1
Gateway City Agency that serve
customers who are traveling within 2
weeks or who need foreign visas for
travel. Complete information on how to
obtain, replace, or change a passport can
be found at the DOS Web site: https://
travel.state.gov/passport/
passport_1738.html.
4. Children
Comment
Thirty-nine commenters asked to
allow travelers under the age of 16 to be
exempt from a passport requirement and
able to use a birth certificate as
sufficient proof of identity and
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citizenship. One commenter suggested
simplifying passport procedures for
children under 16.
One commenter stated that children
under 16 should not be exempt from a
passport requirement in the Western
Hemisphere.
Response
The United States Government
currently requires all U.S. citizens,
including children, arriving from
countries outside the Western
Hemisphere to provide a passport when
entering the United States. IRTPA, as
amended, does not contain a general
exemption from providing a passport or
other document designated by DHS for
children under the age of 16 when
entering the United States from Western
Hemisphere countries. Consequently,
children under the age of 16 arriving
from Western Hemisphere countries
will be required to present a passport
when entering the United States by air.
Requiring passports for children
departing from or entering the United
States will also assist the U.S.
Government, as well as foreign
governments within the Western
Hemisphere, to prevent child
abductions. Of the nearly 600
international parental child abductions
brought to the attention of the State
Department each year, outgoing parental
abductions of American children from
the U.S. to Canada and Mexico
represent about one-quarter.
5. DOS Issuance Capacity
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Comment
Seven commenters expressed concern
that DOS may not be able to issue
several million new passports in the
timeframe required and without
significant delay.
Two commenters to the NPRM
expressed concern about whether DHS
and DOS would be able to successfully
implement the new passport
requirements by January 8, 2007.
Response
DOS appreciates the commenters’
concerns and is already expanding
passport production capacity to meet
the additional demand for passports.
DOS will be able to meet a significant
increase in demand from the more than
10 million passports produced in fiscal
year 2005. DOS estimates a 25 percent
increase in passport applications so far
in fiscal year 2006. DOS has increased
passport production capacity with an
aim towards processing 16 million
passports in fiscal year 2007 and 19
million passports in fiscal year 2008.
The Departments have taken the
appropriate measures to ensure the
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1. General
Comment
Twenty-four commenters asked for a
clear definition of other secure
documents that will be accepted in
addition to a passport. Eight
commenters asked that NEXUS,
SENTRI, and FAST cards be accepted in
lieu of a passport. Three commenters
stated that other travel documents
should be used in lieu of a passport
where practicable.
One commenter asked that WHTI
should be linked to the evolution of the
Registered Traveler program.
addition, the TWIC could not be read by
current CBP technology installed in air
ports-of-entry. While there will be
information embedded in the chip on
the TWIC, only the name of the
individual and a photo ID are apparent
to a CBP officer upon presentation. CBP
could not validate this document at
primary inspection for the reasons
outlined in the next section addressing
the use of birth certificates.
Comment
One commenter asked that an
International Boundary Water
Commission (IBWC) identification be
acceptable for land, air, and sea travel.
implementation of the new
requirements by the implementation
date.
D. Alternative Documents
Response
Other acceptable documents are
designated in this rule by the Secretary
of DHS to sufficiently establish identity
and citizenship at airports. The
documents designated in this rule are
sufficiently secure to impede
counterfeiting and alterations for
fraudulent purposes. Along with the
passport, the Secretary of Homeland
Security is designating the MMD and
the NEXUS Air card when used at a
NEXUS Air kiosk as sufficient to denote
identity and citizenship under section
7209 and acceptable for air travel.
Currently, the rest of the NEXUS
program cards, as well as SENTRI and
FAST cards, are accepted only at
designated lanes at land-border ports-ofentry and not in the air environment.
Currently, the Transportation Security
Administration’s (TSA) Registered
Traveler program is for domestic travel
only.
Comment
One commenter asked that a
Transportation Worker Identification
Card (TWIC) be designated as an
acceptable document to denote
citizenship and identity.
Response
A TWIC card will not be suitable as
an alternative document because it does
not denote citizenship and is not
intended as a travel document.
Although a TWIC card would positively
identify the bearer of the card,
citizenship would have to be
established through a paper-based
document because a TWIC card does not
provide citizenship information.
Because, as proposed, TWIC cards may
be issued to non-U.S. citizens and they
do not denote citizenship, they could
not be used in place of passports. In
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Response
In the NPRM, DHS and DOS clarified
that documentation requirements for
direct and indirect employees of the
IBWC (Article 20 of the 1944 Treaty
Between the United States and Mexico
regarding division of boundary water
and the functions of (IBWC), TS 922,
Bevan 1166, 59 Stat. 1219; 8 CFR
212.1(c)(5)) crossing the United StatesMexico border while on official
business would not change under this
final rule.
2. Driver’s License and Birth Certificate
Comment
We received many comments stating
that driver’s licenses and birth
certificates should be acceptable to
denote an individual’s citizenship and
identity. Many commenters stated that
these documents are affordable and
easily obtainable and their acceptance
would not dissuade travel. Several
commenters stated that because a
driver’s license and birth certificate are
most commonly used to obtain a
passport, these documents should also
be sufficient to establish citizenship and
identity at ports-of-entry.
Response
DHS and DOS disagree with the
commenters. Because birth certificates
and driver’s licenses are issued by
numerous government entities, there is
no standard format for either document,
and, at present, it is not possible to
authenticate either document quickly or
reliably. Some states only issue
photocopies as replacements of birth
certificates, some states issue
replacement birth certificates by mail or
through the Internet, and some states
will not issue photo identification to
minors. Both documents lack security
features and are susceptible to
counterfeiting or alteration. Neither the
birth certificate nor the state-issued
identification is designed to be a travel
document. Birth certificates can easily
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deteriorate when used frequently as
travel documents because they are
normally made from paper with a raised
seal, and they cannot be laminated or
otherwise protected from repeated use.
The U.S. birth certificate can be used
as evidence of birth in the United States;
however, it does not provide definitive
proof of citizenship (e.g., children born
in the U.S. to foreign diplomats do not
acquire U.S. citizenship at birth). Highly
trained passport specialists and
consular officers abroad adjudicate
passport applications, utilizing identity
and citizenship documents (U.S. birth
certificates, naturalization certificates,
consular reports of birth abroad, etc.).
These specialists have resources
available, including fraud and
document experts, to assist when
reviewing documents and are not faced
with the same time constraints as CBP
officers at ports-of-entry. These factors
explain why a birth certificate and
driver’s license may be sufficient
documentary evidence of citizenship
and identity for an application for a
passport, but are not sufficient under
WHTI for entry to the United States. In
addition, there is no current way to
validate that the person presenting the
birth certificate for inspection is, in fact,
the same person to whom it was issued.
The lack of security features and the
plethora of birth certificate issuers in
the United States (more than 8,000
entities) currently make it difficult to
reliably verify or authenticate a birth
certificate. A state-issued photo
identification provides positive
identification with name, address, and
photograph. However, a state-issued
photo identification does not provide
proof of citizenship.
3. Real ID Act Compliant Driver’s
Licenses
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Comment
In response to the ANPRM, twenty
commenters asked DHS and DOS to
work with state governments on
possible use of driver’s licenses to verify
U.S. citizenship. In response to the
NPRM, eleven commenters asked DHS
and DOS to accept driver’s licenses that
are in compliance with the REAL ID Act
of 2005.15
Response
As previously stated, driver’s licenses
currently do not denote citizenship. The
REAL ID specifications are still under
consideration, therefore the Secretary of
Homeland Security cannot designate
these documents for travel in the
Western Hemisphere. Once documents
15 Pub. L. 109–13, codified at 49 U.S.C. 30301
note.
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14:02 Nov 22, 2006
Jkt 211001
are available that comply with the
requirements of the REAL ID Act, the
Secretary may consider these
documents for WHTI purposes. DHS
will be issuing a proposed rule
implementing REAL ID driver’s license
standards. At that time, DHS would
encourage States interested in
developing driver’s licenses that will
meet both the REAL ID and WHIT
requirements to work closely with us to
that end.
4. Border Crossing Cards
Comment
In response to the ANPRM, two
commenters recommended that Border
Crossing Cards (BCCs) be acceptable
documentation for citizens of Mexico
entering the United States through
airports. One commenter to the NPRM
stated that the proposed rule would
eliminate the BCC as an acceptable
entry document.
Response
At this time, DHS and DOS do not
support allowing the BCC without any
additional documents in the air
environment. The BCC is not
compatible with CBP’s Advance
Passenger Information System (APIS),
which collects data from travelers prior
to their arrival in and departure from
the United States, and thus the BCC
does not meet the security objectives of
WHTI. Accordingly, DHS has not
designated the BCC as a document
sufficient to denote identity and
citizenship for the purposes of air travel
into the United States when used by
itself. However, this final rule does not
change the status of the BCC as a valid
entry document at sea and land-border
ports-of-entry.
5. Merchant Mariner Cards
Comment
We received two comments to the
NPRM that endorse the proposal that a
Merchant Mariners’ Document (MMD)
be accepted as proof of citizenship and
identity. These commenters also
asserted that the MMD should also be
accepted for legal aliens because a U.S.
Coast Guard-issued MMD will provide
the required proof of citizenship and
identity for these individuals.
Response
The U.S. Coast Guard primarily issues
MMDs to U.S. citizen Merchant
Mariners.16 The Secretary of Homeland
16 In very limited circumstances, foreign nationals
who are enrolled as students at the U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy may obtain an MMD. However,
the number of international students who may
attend the Academy at any one time is 30 (46 CFR
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68417
Security has determined that an MMD,
when used in conjunction with
maritime business, would be sufficient
to denote identity and citizenship when
presented upon arrival at an air port-ofentry. Accordingly, under this rule,
United States citizens who possess an
MMD would continue to be exempt
from the requirement to present a
passport when arriving in the United
States at air ports-of-entry. However, the
Coast Guard has proposed to phase-out
the MMD over the next five years and
streamline all existing Merchant
Mariner credentials. DHS will accept
the MMD as long as it is an unexpired
document. We also note that United
States citizen Merchant Mariners
serving on U.S. flag vessels are eligible
for no-fee U.S. passports upon
presentation of a letter from the
employer and an MMD, in addition to
the standard evidence of citizenship and
identity.
6. NEXUS Air Cards
Comment
Eleven commenters recommended
that the NEXUS Air program be
accelerated and expanded. One
commenter also added that the U.S.
government should attempt to reduce
the costs of programs such as NEXUS
Air.
Response
NEXUS Air is an airport border
clearance pilot project implemented at
one airport in Vancouver, Canada, by
CBP and the Canada Border Services
Agency pursuant to the Shared Border
Accord and Smart Border Declaration
between the United States and Canada.
The NEXUS Air alternative inspection
program allows pre-screened, low-risk
travelers to be processed more
efficiently by United States and
Canadian border officials. CBP is
planning to expand the program beyond
the Vancouver international airport to
other Canadian airports, but does not
intend to lower the costs of the program
at this time. Travelers interested in
joining the NEXUS Air or any other
CBP-sponsored trusted traveler program
should consult the CBP Web site
(https://www.cbp.gov) for future
expansion plans, current availability,
acceptance, and instructions on how to
enroll in the program.
310.66); therefore, the number of MMDs issued to
foreign nationals at any one time is limited to 30.
These MMDs denote citizenship on their face and
are valid only while a cadet in the U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy (46 CFR 12.25–25). These foreign
nationals will not be permitted to use the MMD for
entry purposes.
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7. Passport Cards
8. Tribal Documents
Comment
Comment
We received many comments asking
DHS and DOS to develop low-cost
alternative travel documents. Eight
commenters stated that an alternative,
secure travel document must be costeffective and available in a timely
fashion for the average traveler. Fifteen
commenters asked that a low-cost travel
card be developed. One commenter
asked that a card replace the traditional
passport book, stating that paper
documentation is outdated. One
commenter stated that the document
should fit in a wallet and be more
durable than the traditional passport
book.
Two commenters stated that any
technology contained in a secure travel
document should be determined before
an implementation date is finalized.
Nine commenters stated that the
Passport Card’s scope should be
expanded to all modes of travel between
the U.S., Mexico, and Canada. One
commenter stressed that the U.S. should
work with Canada to develop a similar
low-cost travel document in Canada.
One commenter asked that a Passport
Card be available for infrequent, as well
as frequent, travelers.
Three commenters to the NPRM
stated that Native Americans should be
able to use their Tribal documents in the
air environment because treaty rights
assure cross-border travel between the
U.S. and Canada.
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Response
DOS, in consultation with DHS, has
begun developing an alternative format
passport: a card-format, limited-use
Passport Card. Like a traditional
passport book, the Passport Card will be
a secure travel document that
establishes the identity and citizenship
of the bearer. The Passport Card is being
designed to benefit those citizens in
border communities who regularly cross
the northern and southern borders every
day where such travel is an integral part
of their daily lives. As currently
envisioned, it will be the size of a credit
card and will be less expensive than a
traditional passport book. The
application process for the Passport
Card will be the same as that for the
passport book in that each applicant
will have to establish United States
citizenship, personal identity, and
entitlement to obtain the document.
DOS intends to make the Passport Card
available by summer 2007. For more
information see 71 FR 60928 (October
17, 2006). The Secretaries of DHS and
DOS have worked closely with the
Canadian and Mexican governments on
numerous fronts, including the Security
and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) of
North America, the Smart Border
Declaration, and the Shared Border
Accord.
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14:02 Nov 22, 2006
Jkt 211001
would be implemented and how it
would affect specific populations.
Response
Section 289 of the INA 17 provides
that Native Americans born in Canada
may ‘‘pass the borders of the United
States,’’ provided they possess at least
50 percentum of Native American
blood. Historically, the courts have
addressed the right of Native Americans
born in Canada to ‘‘pass the borders of
the United States’’ in the context of land
border crossings.18 Case law has not
expressly addressed the extension of the
right to ‘‘pass the borders of the United
States’’ by air.19 Moreover, any right or
privilege to ‘‘pass the border’’ does not
necessarily encompass a right to ‘‘pass
the border’’ without sufficient proof of
identity and citizenship. Under the final
rule, Native Americans born in Canada
will be required to present a valid
passport when departing from or
entering the United States by air.
Regarding Native Americans born in
the United States, Federal statutes apply
absent some clear indication that
Congress did not intend for them to
apply.20 IRTPA expressly applies to
United States citizens and as a matter of
law Native Americans born in the
United States are United States
citizens.21 Moreover, Congress did not
indicate any intention to exclude Native
Americans born in the United States
from the requirements of IRTPA. Under
this final rule, therefore, Native
Americans born in the United States
will be required to present a valid
passport when entering the United
States by air.
E. Implementation and Effect on
Specific Populations
Numerous commenters raised
questions about how the new rule
17 8
U.S.C. 1359.
Akins v. Saxbe, 380 F. Supp. 1210, 1221
(D. Maine 1974) (‘‘[I]t is reasonable to assume that
Congress’’ purpose in using the Jay Treaty language
in the 1928 Act was to recognize and secure the
right of free passage as it had been guaranteed by
that Treaty.’’) See also United States ex rel. Diabo
v. McCandless, 18 F.2d 282 (E.D. Pa. 1927), aff’d,
25 F.2d 71 (3rd Cir. 1928).
19 See Matter of Yellowquill, 16 I. & N. Dec. 576
(BIA 1978).
20 See Federal Power Commission v. Tuscarora
Indian Nation, 362 U.S. 99, 120 (1960); Taylor v.
Ala. Intertribal Council Title IV J.T.P.A., 261 F.3d
1032, 1034–1035 (11th Cir. 2001).
21 8 U.S.C. 1401(b).
18 See
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1. General
Comment
Two commenters to the NPRM noted
that a U.S. citizen cannot be denied
entry to the United States. One
commenter stated that the NPRM did
not address U.S. citizens that arrive at
ports-of-entry without a valid travel
document.
Response
Section 215(b) of the INA requires
U.S. citizens to bear passports unless
excepted by the President. By section
7209, Congress has limited this
exception authority to those individuals
bearing other documents acceptable to
the Secretary of Homeland Security.
Comment
Three commenters asked if they
would need passports if the effective
date of the rule falls between their
departure and return dates. One
commenter asked that CBP refrain from
penalizing air carriers that transport
travelers who, under the new passport
requirements, are improperly
documented.
Response
Persons returning to the United States
after the effective date of
implementation should plan to depart
from the United States with documents
sufficient to meet requirements that will
be in place when they return. Current
regulations do not contain penalty
provisions for carriers that transport
U.S. citizens to the United States
without proper documentation.
However, under the current law (8
U.S.C. 1323) carriers that transport nonU.S. citizens into the United States who
are not properly documented are subject
to penalties.
Comment
One commenter stated that the NPRM
is contrary to U.S. obligations under
international human rights law, free
trade agreements, and U.S. statutes,
including the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, the Charter of
the Organization of American States, the
North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), and the NAFTA
Implementation Act, because the rules
restrict free movement of people in the
Western Hemisphere.
Response
By requiring a valid passport as an
entry document, DHS and DOS are not
denying U.S. or non-U.S. citizens the
ability to travel to and from the United
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States. Requiring sufficient proof of
identity and citizenship through
presentation of a passport or other
acceptable document upon entry to the
United States is fully within DHS and
DOS’s authority pursuant to 8 U.S.C.
1182(d)(4)(B) and 1185(b).
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated
that this rule violates the Convention on
International Civil Aviation (ICAO),
claiming that, under Annex 9, a
contracting State shall allow airline
crew possessing a crewmember
certificate to enter the country without
a passport or visa.
Response
The commenter cited provision 3.74
in Annex 9 of the Convention on ICAO.
However, on March 25, 2004, provision
3.74 was amended and replaced with a
new provision 3.76 (Amendment 19).
Under the new provision, contracting
states shall waive the visa requirement
for arriving crewmembers presenting
crewmember certificates, when arriving
in a duty status on an international
flight and seeking temporary entry for
the period allowed by the receiving state
before joining their next assigned flight
in a duty status. Therefore, the
exception cited by the commenter only
applies to visas and not to passports.
Therefore, requiring a valid passport
does not violate the Convention on
ICAO.
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Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated
that because the passport is machine
readable, it would speed up the
immigration process. Another
commenter stated that such timesavings
are not benefits because the cost has
been ‘‘shifted’’ to citizens.
Response
As stated in the NPRM, by requiring
the vast majority of air passengers to
possess a passport, CBP officers would
reduce the time and effort used to
manually enter passenger information
into the computer system on arrival
because the officer can quickly scan the
machine-readable zone of the passport
to process the information using
standard passport readers used for all
machine readable passports worldwide.
It is difficult to precisely determine the
improved efficiencies resulting from
limiting the acceptable documents in
the air environment. Based on
information from CBP field operations,
CBP estimates that presenting secure
and machine-readable documentation
may typically save CBP officers from 5
to 30 seconds per air passenger
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68419
processed. This could result in an
annual cost savings of $1.7 million to
$10.4 million.
be addressed in a future rulemaking for
sea and land-border ports-of-entry.
2. Outer Continental Shelf
Comment
Comment
Three commenters expressed concern
about the passport requirement and
emergencies (medical, natural disasters)
that might require air transport across a
border.
One commenter to the NPRM stated
that the proposed regulations do not
clearly address the offshore community,
creating ambiguity for CBP officers to
either not require a passport or to
require them based on the CBP officer’s
knowledge of offshore operations. This
commenter also suggested that the
regulations be amended to include a
definition of a Mobile Offshore Drilling
Units (MODU). Six commenters
suggested that the regulations expressly
provide that U.S. citizens should be
exempt from bearing a valid passport
when entering or departing the United
States when traveling as an employee of
an offshore drilling company directly
between the United States and a MODU
operating, attached, or transiting
between well sites on the United States
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS).
Response
DHS and DOS do not intend to create
an exemption in the regulations
specifically for employees on the United
States OCS. When these employees have
not departed the United States or have
already been cleared by CBP upon entry
from a foreign port or place, they will
not be required to present a passport
upon re-entry. As described in the
NPRM, offshore workers who work
aboard a MODU attached to the United
States OCS and travel to and from such
a MODU would not need to possess a
passport to re-enter the United States if
they depart the United States and do not
enter a foreign port or place. DHS and
DOS note that offshore employees on
MODUs underway, which are not
considered attached, would not need to
present a passport for re-entry to the
United States mainland if they do not
enter a foreign port or place during
transit. However, an individual who
travels to a MODU from outside the
United States OCS and, therefore, has
not been previously inspected and
admitted to the United States, would be
required to possess a passport and visa
when arriving at the United States portof-entry by air. Likewise, an individual
who travels by air to a foreign flagged
MODU, who has not been previously
inspected or admitted to the United
States by CBP, must present a passport
or alternative document and, if required,
a visa because they have traveled to a
foreign port or place.
As stated previously, arrivals by sea
will not be finalized in this rule but will
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3. Emergencies
Response
IRTPA provides for situations in
which documentation requirements may
be waived on a case-by-case basis for
unforeseen emergencies or
‘‘humanitarian or national interest
reasons.’’ See section 7209(c)(2) of
IRTPA.
F. Outside the Scope of This
Rulemaking
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM made
numerous comments on the technical
specifications for DOS’s Passport Card.
Response
Comments regarding the technical
specifications for the DOS-issued
Passport Card are beyond the scope of
this rule; however, please see the
recently published NPRM at 71 FR
60928 (Oct. 17, 2006).
Comment
One commenter stated that the NPRM
correctly acknowledges that the Lawful
Permanent Resident (LPR) card is a
sufficiently secure document issued by
the U.S. government.
Response
DHS and DOS are allowing the
Permanent Resident Card to be
presented upon entry to the U.S. not
because the Secretary has made a
determination that this is an acceptable
alternative document, but because LPRs
are not covered by section 7209 of
IRTPA. Section 211(b) of the INA
specifically establishes that an LPR can
present a valid, unexpired Form I–551
(Permanent Resident Card) alone when
applying for readmission to the U.S.
after being absent from the U.S. for less
than one year. Form I–551 is a secure,
fully adjudicated document that can be
verified and authenticated by CBP at
ports-of-entry. DHS published a notice
of proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register on July 27, 2006, that proposes
to collect and verify the identity of LPRs
arriving at air and sea ports-of-entry, or
requiring secondary inspection at land
ports of entry, through US–VISIT. 22
22 See
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G. Public Relations
Comment
We received seven comments
recommending that the U.S.
Government work multilaterally with
Canada and Mexico to address WHTI
issues.
Response
The Secretaries of DHS and DOS have
worked closely with the Canadian and
Mexican governments on numerous
fronts, including the Security and
Prosperity Partnership (SPP) of North
America, the Smart Border Declaration,
and the Shared Border Accord. The
objectives of the initiatives are to
establish a common approach to
security to protect North America from
external threats, prevent and respond to
threats within North America, and
further streamline the secure and
efficient movement of legitimate traffic
across our shared borders. The
Secretaries are committed to working
with our international partners to
establish a common security strategy.
Comment
We received fifty-seven comments to
the ANPRM on public outreach and the
importance of educating the traveling
public about the passport requirements
for the Western Hemisphere. Several
commenters asked that DHS and DOS
work with the private sector on an
aggressive outreach campaign.
Response
DHS and DOS are committed to an
effective and intensive communications
strategy during the implementation of
WHTI. To that end, the Departments
will continue to issue detailed press
releases, address the public’s frequently
asked questions, supply travel
information on their Web sites, and hold
public meetings in affected
communities.
H. Regulatory Analyses
1. General
Comment
We received ten comments expressing
concern that this rule will adversely
affect spontaneous travel to destinations
in the Western Hemisphere.
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Response
This rule may have an impact on
unplanned travel within the Western
Hemisphere. We found that most air
travelers make their plans in advance of
their travel date and can obtain or
already possess a passport (see the
Regulatory Assessment that
accompanies this rule which is available
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Jkt 211001
on the public docket). Additionally,
travelers in need of a passport quickly
may request expedited processing at an
additional cost. We believe that the
majority of travelers will be able to
obtain a passport in time to make their
scheduled trips. Travelers are strongly
encouraged to obtain the necessary
documentation in advance of all
international travel.
Comment
We received thirty-eight comments
expressing concern that the rule would
negatively affect tourism by impeding
travel within the Western Hemisphere.
Several commenters stated they would
no longer take trips to Canada, Mexico,
and the Caribbean if these rules go into
effect.
Response
This rule could have an impact on
tourism. These impacts were explored
in detail in the Regulatory Assessment
for this rule, which was made available
upon publication of the NPRM. 23 An
updated Regulatory Assessment is
published with this final rule and is
available on the docket.
2. Executive Order 12866
Comment
Nine commenters to the NPRM argued
that the economic analysis does not
sufficiently address negative impacts to
the economy.
Response
While these commenters were
dissatisfied with the economic analysis,
none of them submitted specific
information that would enhance the
current analysis, nor did they submit
alternative analyses that more robustly
consider the impacts on the U.S. and
foreign economies. The direct costs to
the traveling public, which were the
focus of the Regulatory Assessment,
were extensively explored, researched,
and analyzed.
According to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
Circular A–4, an economic analysis
should ‘‘look beyond the direct benefits
and direct costs and consider any
important ancillary benefits and
countervailing risks’’ (page 26). This
Circular notes, however, ‘‘some
important benefits and costs * * * may
be inherently too difficult to quantify or
monetize given current data and
methods’’ (pages 26–27). Given the data
available for this analysis and the
limitations of using this data to assess
indirect costs of the rule, CBP’s
Regulatory Assessment concentrated on
23 See
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the direct impacts to U.S. citizens who
will need to obtain a passport in order
to continue traveling by air in the
Western Hemisphere, including the
costs to the traveler of opting to forgo
travel. In that assessment, CBP
anticipated that the vast majority (96
percent) of U.S. travelers to Western
Hemisphere destinations already have
or will obtain a passport and will
continue traveling in the Western
Hemisphere. As stated in the
assessment, we cannot look at the
number of travelers who choose to forgo
travel as a result of the rule and
determine what the welfare losses to
travelers or gains and losses to different
players in different economies will be—
we simply cannot determine adequately
what each individual traveler (or even
bloc of travelers) will do to express his
preferences for goods and services given
a change in price in one portion of his
travel cost. Thus, again per Circular
A–4, we presented the relevant
quantitative information available, its
strengths and weaknesses, and a
description of the non-quantified
effects. Furthermore, CBP conducted a
formal probabilistic modeling in the
form of a Monte Carlo analysis to
measure the uncertainty and variance of
the estimates presented. We discussed
the industries we expect to be affected
by this rule and noted that any impacts
will be spread over wide swaths of the
domestic and foreign economies.
It is extremely difficult to estimate the
indirect costs with any certainty. The
analysis made many assumptions
regarding direct costs that may carry
errors or over- or underestimate indirect
costs. Travelers are faced with complex
decisions and myriad substitutes for
particular trips that could still maximize
their utility. There is evidence in the
travel literature cited throughout the
analysis that price may not be a very big
determinant of destination selection.
CBP chose to estimate direct costs using
demand elasticities to avoid
misrepresenting direct costs (we would
not want to assume that travelers’
decisions will be completely unaffected
by the passport requirement), knowing
that we may then be overstating the
simplicity of the traveler’s decisionmaking process. In doing this, we have
likely overstated indirect costs.
Because such a small percentage of
the covered traveling population is
likely to forgo travel (even with our
application of the binary choice for the
traveler), the macro-economic impacts
of the proposed rule are likely small as
well. Unfortunately, given the dearth of
specific data, we have only rough
estimates of how many people travel,
where they come from, and where they
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go. We know even less about how they
will alter their behavior if they do, in
fact, forgo obtaining a passport.
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated
that the economic analysis cannot be
considered reliable because it examines
a program that is not yet in place.
Response
Per Executive Order 12866, an
economic analysis is required for all
major rulemakings prior to final
implementation. This analysis must
contain an identification of the
regulatory ‘‘baseline’’ as well as the
anticipated costs and benefits of the rule
on relevant stakeholders. The analysis
prepared for the NPRM was reviewed by
OMB in accordance with Executive
Order 12866 and OMB Circular A–4.
Comment
One commenter stated that the only
alternative to the proposed rule
considered was the current practice of
accepting existing documents (driver’s
licenses and birth certificates).
Response
Executive Order 12866 and OMB
Circular A–4 require the full analysis of
regulatory alternatives as part of the
rulemaking development process. As
presented in the Regulatory Assessment
published with the NPRM and finalized
with this final rule, there were five
alternatives to the proposed rule
considered and analyzed. The first was
the ‘‘No Action’’ alternative. The second
was to require United States travelers to
present a state-issued photo ID and
proof of citizenship. The third was to
designate TWIC as an acceptable
document for United States citizens.
The fourth was to designate the Border
Crossing Card (BCC) as an acceptable
document for Mexican citizens. The
fifth was to develop and designate a
low-cost Passport Card as an acceptable
document for United States citizens.
OMB reviewed the analysis prepared for
the NPRM in accordance with Executive
Order 12866.
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with RULES3
Comment
travelers to Mexico, the Caribbean,
Central America, and South America
will also be affected by this rule. As
estimated, almost twice as many U.S.
citizens will be covered by this rule as
non-U.S. citizens (14.2 million versus
7.7 million, of which 4.4 million are
Canadian). Thus, foreign businesses in
these regions are most likely to
experience adverse impacts as a result
of this rule because there are more U.S.
travelers covered by the rule than nonU.S. travelers, and U.S. citizens and a
very small percentage of these travelers
(an estimated 4 percent) may choose to
forgo travel by air to these regions given
the passport requirement.
Comment
One commenter argued that the cost
to obtain a passport is significantly
underestimated because the time
estimated to obtain a passport is too
low.
Response
We appreciate this comment and the
detail that accompanied the estimate
provided in the comment. However, the
commenter presented an estimate that
was overly pessimistic and represented
an absolute ‘‘worst-case’’ scenario that
would rarely, if ever, be realized. The
time estimate presented in the
Regulatory Assessment is from DOS’s
Supporting Statement for the Paperwork
Reduction Act Submission for DS–11—
Application for a U.S. Passport (OMB
Control #1405–0004). The estimated
number of minutes required per
response is based on a recent sampling
of the time required to search existing
data sources, gather the necessary
information, provide the information
required, review the final collection,
and submit the collection to Passport
Services for processing. The sampling
was completed through consultation
with a small group of actual
respondents. Passport Services found
that the overall average for the estimated
time required for this information
collection was 1 hour and 25 minutes
per response. This Collection of
Information was reviewed and approved
by OMB in September 2005.
Response
Comment
One commenter argued that many
passports are never used, but are
needed: people obtain them in order to
be able to travel whenever it may be
necessary. These costs were not
included in the analysis.
This commenter appears to have
incorrectly focused exclusively on travel
between the U.S. and Canada. It is
important to remember that U.S.
Response
The commenter is correct that we did
not include these costs in the Regulatory
Assessment. The purpose of an
One commenter stated that the
Regulatory Assessment’s assertion that
primarily foreign businesses will be
affected by the rule is false because
Canadians spend more money in the
U.S. than Americans spend in Canada.
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68421
economic analysis is to estimate the
costs and benefits of a rulemaking based
on an identified baseline and the
anticipated change from that baseline
that is directly attributable to the
regulation under consideration.
Individuals that choose to obtain a
passport ‘‘just to have one’’ should not
be considered in this regulatory analysis
because they are not obtaining a
passport specifically for air travel in the
Western Hemisphere, but worldwide as
circumstances arise.
Comment
One commenter argued that the
assumption that gains in domestic travel
would be offset by losses from reduced
travelers from Canada, Mexico, and
Bermuda trivialized the impact of
Canadian visitors who spent $10 billion
in the United States in 2005.
Response
It is important to note that this
analysis does not assert that domestic
gains will equal losses from reduced
foreign travelers; it simply states that
while the U.S. economy may gain
slightly if a small percentage of U.S.
citizens travel domestically rather than
in the rest of the Western Hemisphere,
the U.S. economy will also likely lose
slightly if a small percentage of non-U.S.
citizens forgo travel to the United States.
The net impacts are not known.
Furthermore, it is important to note that
the majority of the $10 billion spent by
Canadians in this country in 2005 is
through cross-border trade and tourism
conducted via land-border ports-ofentry. Economic impacts for land-border
entries will be addressed in a future
rulemaking for land and sea entries.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Comment
Six commenters asserted the rule
would have a disproportionate effect on
small entities and argued that DHS and
DOS should conduct a small business
analysis for any proposed rule.
Response
When considering the impacts on
small entities for the purpose of
complying with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), we consulted the
Small Business Administration’s
guidance document for conducting
regulatory flexibility analysis. Per this
guidance, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is required when an agency
determines that the rule will have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities that
are subject to the requirements of the
rule. This guidance document also
includes a good discussion describing
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how direct and indirect costs of a
regulation are considered differently for
the purposes of the RFA. With the
possible exception of certain ‘‘sole
proprietors,’’ we do not believe that
small entities are subject to the
requirements of the proposed rule;
individuals are subject to the
requirements, and individuals are not
considered small entities. As stated in
the Small Business Administration’s
guidance document, ‘‘[t]he courts have
held that the RFA requires an agency to
perform a regulatory flexibility analysis
of small entity impacts only when a rule
directly regulates them.’’ Consequently,
CBP prepared an extensive analysis of
the direct economic impacts of this rule
and believes that it adequately
considered the economic impacts of this
rule on small businesses for the
purposes of the RFA. Additionally, our
analysis did not reveal any
‘‘disproportionate effect’’ of the rule on
small entities.
Comment
One commenter noted several
examples of individuals who would be
considered small businesses, including
a freelance graphic artist, a selfemployed provider of business training
services, and a sole proprietor soliciting
bids for fabrication or assembly of a new
product, that would be directly
impacted by the proposed rule.
Response
We agree that certain ‘‘sole
proprietors’’ would be considered small
businesses and could be directly
affected by the rule if their occupation
requires travel within the Western
Hemisphere where a passport was not
previously required. The number of
such sole proprietors is not available
from the Small Business Administration
or other available business databases.
However, as estimated in the Regulatory
Assessment available in the public
docket, the cost to such businesses
would be only $149 for a first-time
passport applicant, or $209 if expedited
service were requested, and would only
be incurred if the individual needed a
passport. We believe such an expense
would not rise to the level of being a
‘‘significant economic impact.’’
IV. Conclusion
Based on the analysis of comments,
the recently issued DOS NPRM
proposing to create a Passport Card, and
section 7209 of IRTPA, DHS and DOS
have determined that beginning January
23, 2007, United States citizens and
nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Bermuda, and Mexico entering the
United States at air ports-of-entry from
the Western Hemisphere will be
required to present a valid passport, a
NEXUS Air Card, or a Merchant Mariner
Document.
An MMD is a document sufficient to
denote identity and citizenship for
United States citizens. Accordingly,
United States citizens who present an
MMD in conjunction with maritime
business would continue to be exempt
from the requirement to present a
passport when arriving in the United
States at air ports-of-entry. In addition,
a NEXUS Air membership card is a
document sufficient to denote identity
and citizenship for United States
citizens, Canadian citizens, and
permanent residents of Canada when
arriving in the United States as a
NEXUS Air program participant and
when using a NEXUS Air kiosk at
designated airports. Accordingly,
United States and Canadian citizens
who present an NEXUS Air card when
using a NEXUS Air kiosk, would
continue to be exempt from the
requirement to present a passport when
arriving in the United States at air portsof-entry.
In addition, all active duty members
of the United States Armed Forces
regardless of citizenship will be exempt
from the requirement to present a valid
passport when entering the United
States. Therefore, travel document
requirements for United States citizens
who are members of the United States
Armed Forces will not change from the
current requirements.
The new passport requirement does
not apply to travelers arriving at land or
sea ports-of-entry. Additionally, U.S.
citizens and nationals who travel
directly between parts of the United
States,24 which includes Guam, Puerto
Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American
Samoa, Swains Island, and the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, without touching at a foreign
port or place, are not required to present
a valid passport.
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
This rule is considered to be an
economically significant regulatory
action under Executive Order 12866
because it may result in the expenditure
of over $100 million in any one year.
Accordingly, the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) has reviewed this
rule. The following summary presents
the costs and benefits of the rule plus a
range of alternatives considered. The
complete and detailed ‘‘Regulatory
Assessment’’ can be found in the docket
for this rulemaking: https://
www.regulations.gov; see also https://
www.cbp.gov.
This rule will affect certain travelers
to the Western Hemisphere countries for
whom there are no current requirements
to present a United States passport for
entry. While United States citizens may
not need a passport to enter these
countries, they would need to carry a
passport to leave the United States and
for inspection upon re-entry to the
United States. This analysis considers
air travelers on commercial flights and
travelers using general aviation.
Based on data from the Department of
Commerce, approximately 14 million
travelers will be covered by the rule.
Based on additional available data
sources, DHS and DOS assume that a
large portion of these travelers already
hold passports and thus will not be
affected (i.e., they will not need to
obtain a passport as a result of this rule).
DHS and DOS estimate that
approximately 4 million passports will
be required in the first year the rule is
in effect, at a direct cost to traveling
individuals of $649 million. These
estimates are presented in Table 1.
TABLE 1.—FIRST YEAR DIRECT COSTS TO TRAVELERS OF THE RULE
Passports demanded ...................................................................................................................
Total cost of passports demanded ..............................................................................................
Expedited service fees (20% of passports):
Number of passports ............................................................................................................
24 As defined in section 215(c) of the INA (8
U.S.C. 1185(c)), the term ‘‘United States’’ includes
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........................
........................
1st quartile
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Travelers to WHTI countries, first year .......................................................................................
14,299,093
Median
3rd quartile
3,942,859
$579,379,344
4,084,204
$600,142,162
4,364,197
$641,283,623
788,572
816,841
872,839
all territory and waters, continental or insular,
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
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68423
TABLE 1.—FIRST YEAR DIRECT COSTS TO TRAVELERS OF THE RULE—Continued
Cost of expedited service .....................................................................................................
$47,314,302
$49,010,449
$52,370,370
Grand total cost .............................................................................................................
$626,693,646
$649,152,611
$693,653,992
Following the first year, the costs will
diminish as most United States travelers
in the air environment would then hold
passports. Because the number of
travelers to the affected Western
Hemisphere countries has been growing
and turnover in the traveling population
is not 100 percent on an annual basis,
a small number of ‘‘new’’ travelers who
did not previously hold passports will
now have to obtain them in order to
travel. The estimated costs for new
passport acquisition in the second year
the rule is in effect are presented in
Table 2.
TABLE 2.—SECOND YEAR DIRECT COSTS TO TRAVELERS OF THE RULE
‘‘New’’ travelers to WHTI countries, second year .......................................................................
1,994,380
........................
........................
Median
3rd quartile
1st quartile
566,350
$83,213,742
584,364
$85,866,599
625,893
$91,966,740
113,270
$6,796,196
116,873
$7,012,365
125,179
$7,510,711
Grand total cost .............................................................................................................
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Passports demanded ...................................................................................................................
Total cost of passports demanded ..............................................................................................
Expedited service fees (20% of passports):
Number of passports ............................................................................................................
Cost of expedited service .....................................................................................................
$90,009,938
$92,878,964
$99,477,450
This rule could also impose indirect
costs to those industries that support the
traveling public. If some travelers do not
obtain passports because of the cost or
inconvenience and forgo travel to
Western Hemisphere destinations,
certain industries would incur the
indirect consequences of the forgone
foreign travel. These industries include
(but are not limited to):
• Air carriers;
• Airports and their support services;
• Traveler accommodations; travel
agents; dining services; retail shopping;
• Tour operators;
• Scenic and sightseeing
transportation;
• Hired transportation (rental cars,
taxis, buses);
• Arts, entertainment, and recreation.
DHS and DOS expect that foreign
businesses whose services are
consumed largely outside of the United
States (with the exception of United
States air carriers, travel agents, and
airport services) will primarily be
impacted. If domestic travel is
substituted for international travel,
domestic industries in these areas
would gain. DHS and DOS expect,
however, that United States travel and
tourism could also be indirectly affected
by the rule if fewer Canadian, Mexican
BCC holders, and Bermudan travelers
visit the United States (these travelers
do not currently need a passport for
entry to the United States but will
require one under the rule). In this case,
United States businesses in these sectors
would be affected. Thus, gains in
domestic consumption may be offset by
losses in services provided to the
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citizens and residents of the Western
Hemisphere countries affected. In both
cases, we expect the gains and losses to
be marginal as the vast majority of
travelers (based on our Regulatory
Assessment available in the public
docket, an estimated 96 percent of
United States air travelers and 99
percent of Canadian, Mexican, and
Bermudan air travelers) are expected to
obtain passports and continue traveling
internationally.
The benefits of the rule are virtually
impossible to quantify in monetary
terms. The benefits of the rule are
significant and real in terms of
increased security in the air
environment provided by more secure
documents and facilitation of
inspections provided by the limited
types of documents that would be
accepted. In fact, this rule addresses a
vulnerability of the United States to
entry by terrorists or other persons by
false documents or fraud under the
current documentary exemptions for
travel within the Western Hemisphere,
which has been noted extensively by
Congress and others:
• During the debate on IRTPA,
several members of Congress, including
the Chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee commented on the need for
more secure documents for travelers.25
25 ‘‘As the 9/11 staff report on terrorist travel
declared, ‘The challenge for national security in an
age of terrorism is to prevent the people who may
pose overwhelming risk from entering the United
States undetected.’ The Judiciary sections of title III
require Americans returning from most parts of the
Western Hemisphere to possess passports; require
Canadians seeking entry into the United States to
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• The 9/11 Commission
recommendations, which provide much
of the foundation for IRTPA, specifically
include a recommendation to address
travel documents in the Western
Hemisphere.26
• Finally, in May 2003, a
subcommittee of the House Judiciary
Committee held a hearing focused on a
fraudulent U.S. document ring in the
Caribbean, the exploitation of which
allowed the notorious Washington D.C.
‘‘sniper,’’ John Allen Muhammad to
support himself while living in Antigua.
A Government Accountability Office
(GAO) investigator at that hearing
testified as to the ease of entering the
United States with fraudulent birth
certificates and drivers’ licenses.
A uniform document requirement
would assist CBP officers in verifying
the identity and citizenship of travelers
who enter the United States, and
present a passport or other secure identification;
authorize additional immigration agents and
investigators; reduce the risk of identity and
document fraud; provide for the expedited removal
of illegal aliens; limit asylum abuse by terrorists;
and streamline the removal of terrorists and other
criminal aliens. These provisions reflect both
commission recommendations and legislation that
was pending in the House.’’ Congressional Record,
October 7, 2004, H8685.
26 ‘‘Americans should not be exempt from
carrying biometric passports or otherwise enabling
their identities to be securely verified when they
enter the United States; nor should Canadians or
Mexicans. Currently U.S. persons are exempt from
carrying passports when returning from Canada,
Mexico, and the Caribbean. The current system
enables non-U.S. citizens to gain entry by showing
minimal identification. The 9/11 experience shows
that terrorists study and exploit America’s
vulnerabilities.’’ The 9/11 Commission Report, p.
388.
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improving their ability to detect
fraudulent documents or false claims to
citizenship and deny entry to such
persons. Further, such standardized
documents would enable more rapid
processing of travelers who enter the
United States because an individual’s
identity would be easier to confirm and
he or she could be processed through
CBP more efficiently.
Alternatives to the Rule
CBP considered the following five
alternatives to the rule:
1. The No Action alternative (status
quo);
2. Require United States travelers to
present a state-issued photo ID and
proof of citizenship (such as birth
certificates) upon return to the United
States from countries in the Western
Hemisphere;
3. Allow United States citizens who
possess a Transportation Worker
Identification Card (TWIC) to use the
card as a travel document in the air
environment;
4. Allow Mexican citizens to present
their Border Crossing Cards (BCCs) in
the air in lieu of a passport; and
5. Develop and designate a low-cost
Passport Card as an acceptable
document for United States citizens.
Calculations of costs (if any) for the
alternatives can be found in the
Regulatory Assessment.
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Alternative 1: The No Action
Alternative
The No Action alternative would have
zero costs (or benefits) associated with
it. This alternative was rejected because
section 7209 of IRTPA specifically
provides for the expeditious
implementation of the requirement that
United States citizens and
nonimmigrant aliens must have
passports or such alternative documents
as the Secretary of Homeland Security
may designate as satisfactorily
establishing identity and citizenship to
depart from or enter the United States.
Current documentation requirements
leave major gaps in security at U.S.
airports and do not satisfy the
requirements under the IRTPA that
travel documents for entry into the
United States must denote identity and
citizenship.
Alternative 2: Require United States
Travelers to Present a State-Issued Photo
ID and Proof of Citizenship
The second alternative would require
United States citizens to present stateissued photo identification in
combination with a birth certificate to
establish citizenship and identity. This
alternative is similar to the status quo.
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The U.S. birth certificate can be used as
evidence of birth in the United States;
however, it does not provide definitive
proof of citizenship (e.g., children born
in the U.S. to foreign diplomats do not
acquire U.S. citizenship at birth). Highly
trained passport specialists and
consular officers abroad adjudicate
passport applications, utilizing identity
and citizenship documents (like U.S.
birth certificates, naturalization
certificates, consular reports of birth
abroad, etc.). These specialists have
resources available, including fraud and
document experts, to assist when
reviewing documents and are not faced
with the same time constraints as
officers at ports-of-entry. These factors
are critical in determining that a birth
certificate and driver’s license may be
presented as documentary evidence of
citizenship and identity for an
application for a passport but are not
sufficient under WHTI for entry to the
United States. In addition, there is no
current way to validate that the person
presenting the birth certificate for
inspection is, in fact, the same person to
whom it was issued. The lack of
security features and the plethora of
birth certificates issued in the United
States (issued by more than 8,000
entities) currently make it difficult to
reliably verify or authenticate a birth
certificate. A state-issued photo
identification provides positive
identification with name, address, and
photograph. However, a state-issued
photo identification does not provide
proof of citizenship.
Alternative 2 was rejected for several
reasons. Section 7209 requires that U.S.
citizens have a passport, other
documents or combination of
documents deemed sufficient by the
Secretary of DHS to denote citizenship
and identity when departing or entering
the United States. Because birth
certificates and driver’s licenses are
issued by numerous government
entities, there is no standard format for
either document, and, at present, it is
not possible to authenticate quickly and
reliably either document. Some states
only issue photocopies as replacements
of birth certificates, some states issue
replacement birth certificates by mail or
through the Internet, and some states
will not issue photo identification to
minors. Both documents lack security
features and are susceptible to
counterfeiting or alteration. While most
states require that driver’s licenses
contain correct address information, it is
not uncommon for the address
information to be outdated. Neither the
birth certificate nor the state-issued
identification was designed to be a
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travel document. Birth certificates can
easily deteriorate when used frequently
as travel documents because they are
normally made from some sort of paper
with a raised seal, so they cannot be
laminated or otherwise protected when
under repeated use.
Because these documents are not
standardized, CBP officers require
additional time to locate the necessary
information on the documents. This
may result in cumulative delays at
airports of entry.
Because neither document has a
machine-readable zone, CBP will not be
able to front-load information on the
traveler to expedite the initial
inspection processing, including checks
necessary to protect the national
security of the United States. Birth
certificates are issued by thousands of
authorities, and are currently impossible
to validate or vet sufficiently. Both
documents are readily available for
purchase to assume a false identity.
Because the birth certificate and stateissued photo ID have limited or nonexistent security features, they are more
susceptible to alteration. Therefore, the
actual, rather than claimed, identity and
citizenship of the traveler using these
documents cannot always be
determined. DHS and DOS believe that
the risk of counterfeiting and fraud
associated with these documents makes
them unacceptable documents for travel
under IRTPA. For all of these reasons,
these documents are not sufficient to
reliably establish citizenship and
identity.
The costs of this alternative include
those for minors to obtain photo
identification for travel. Currently, all
adult travelers in the air environment
must present photo identification
(usually a driver’s license) along with
proof of citizenship (usually a birth
certificate) when they check in for their
flights (per the requirements of the air
carriers). Additionally, all countries in
the Western Hemisphere require a
passport or other proof of citizenship
(i.e., birth certificate) and photo
identification for entry into their
countries via air. The exception,
however, is for minor travelers.
Currently, parents may orally vouch for
their children upon exit and entry into
the United States to and from the
Western Hemisphere, and some Western
Hemisphere countries allow children to
present school identification as
sufficient proof of identity. To comply
with a requirement that would allow a
photo ID in combination with a birth
certificate for travel in the Western
Hemisphere, minors would most likely
need to obtain state-issued photo
identification. There could also be
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additional costs in the form of lost
efficiency upon entry to United States
ports-of-entry. If CBP officers need to
spend more time examining a variety of
documents to determine what they are
and if they are fraudulent, and if CBP
officers need to enter data by hand
rather than routinely utilize machinereadable technology to obtain
information on arriving passengers, this
would result in delays at airports. CBP
is unable to quantify this loss of
efficiency and presents only the cost to
minors to obtain a photo ID.
Based on data from the Department of
Commerce’s Office of Travel & Tourism
Industries (OTTI), eleven states
(California, New York, New Jersey,
Florida, Texas, Illinois, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, Washington,
Massachusetts, and Ohio) account for
almost three-quarters of international air
travelers.27 Most requirements for
obtaining a photo identification are
similar across these states: Completion
of a department of motor vehicles
(DMV) form, submission of a form or
declaration attesting that the applicant
is the parent or legal guardian of the
minor receiving the identification, and
presentation of a birth certificate and
social security card. If the applicant is
a minor, he or she must appear in
person with a parent or guardian. Fees
for these states range from $3 (Florida)
to $21 (California), and identifications
are valid for an average of five years.28
As stated previously, some states will
not issue photo ID to minors under a
certain age.29 For the purposes of this
analysis only, we assume all minors
would be able to obtain state-issued
photo identification.
CBP estimates that there are 496,597
minors that will be covered by this rule,
416,858 of whom do not currently hold
a passport. CBP has used the average of
the photo identification fees from the 11
states above ($15) and added the cost of
the time it takes to complete the forms
and submit them to the DMV ($41, the
same time cost CBP estimated to obtain
the passport) for a total of
approximately $55 per minor. Thus,
assuming that a birth certificate is
readily available, the cost of this
alternative ID for minors would be $27.4
million.
Alternative 3: Designate TWIC as an
Acceptable Document for United States
Citizens
The third alternative would allow
U.S. transportation workers to use their
TWICs in lieu of a passport. Section 102
of the Maritime Transportation Security
Act of 2002 requires the Secretary of
Homeland Security to issue a biometric
transportation security card to
individuals with unescorted access to
secure areas of vessels and facilities.30
In addition, these individuals must
undergo a security threat assessment to
determine that they do not pose a
security threat prior to receiving the
biometric card and access to secure
areas. The security threat assessment
must include a review of criminal,
immigration, and pertinent intelligence
records in determining whether the
individual poses a threat, and
individuals must have the opportunity
to appeal an adverse determination or
apply for a waiver of the standards. The
regulations to implement the TWIC in
the maritime environment have been
proposed and were subject to public
comment.31 For the sake of comparison,
CBP assumes that TWICs are available
to all transportation workers covered by
the rule. Additionally, analysis of this
alternative assumes that CBP would
accept the TWIC for any travel.
The Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) and Coast Guard
estimate that the initial population of
cards holders will be approximately
750,000.32 This population includes
such individuals as United States MMD
holders, port truck drivers, contractors,
longshoremen, and some rail workers.
Again, for the purposes of this economic
analysis only, we estimate the cost
savings to these individuals of using
TWICs in the air environment for nonwork-related travel. (These TWIC
holders would not likely leave the
country via air for the purposes of workrelated activities.)
CBP does not know how TWIC
holders overlap with the United States
population traveling to the affected
WHTI countries. As calculated
previously, CBP estimates there are
approximately 14 million unique
travelers covered by the rule, and
approximately 4 million (29 percent) of
them will require passports since they
27 Table 22, U.S. Travelers to Overseas Countries
2004, State of Residence of Travelers, OTTI, 2005.
28 See the nationwide DMV guide at https://
www.dmv.org.
29 Of the 11 states examined in the analysis of this
alternative, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania have a minimum age requirement for
obtaining a photo ID. The minimum age to obtain
a photo ID in Florida is 12, in Massachusetts is 16,
in New Jersey is 17, and in Pennsylvania is 16.
30 Pub. L. 107–295, 116 Stat. 2064 (Nov. 25,
2002).
31 71 FR 29396 and 29462 (May 22, 2006).
32 Department of Homeland Security,
Transportation Security Administration, and U.S.
Coast Guard, Regulatory Evaluation for the Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking Transportation Worker
Identification Credential (TWIC) Implementation in
the Maritime Sector, 49 (2006). Dockets TSA–2006–
24191 or USCG–2006–24196.
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do not already have them. For the
purposes of this analysis of alternatives,
CBP assumes that the population
requiring passports fully encompasses
TWIC holders. This is an extreme bestcase assumption, as most of the TWIC
holders will not be traveling
internationally in the air environment as
part of their work. Thus in the best-case,
29 percent of the 750,000 TWIC holders
(approximately 227,000 individuals)
would not need passports. At a cost of
$149 per passport ($97 application fee
for an adult, $11 for photos and $41 for
the time costs of completing the
necessary paperwork), this would result
in a savings of, at best, $21.9 million.
This is approximately 3 percent of the
total rule cost. The savings are likely to
be lower because the TWIC-holders are
unlikely to be entirely included in the
United States air-traveling population
covered by the rule.
The TWIC cannot be read by current
CBP technology installed in air ports-ofentry. While there is information
embedded in the chip on the TWIC,
only the name of the individual and a
photo ID are apparent to a CBP officer
upon presentation. DHS would have to
install chip readers in airports to access
other information and verify the validity
of the document. TSA estimates that
this cost could be $7,200 per card
reader. Additionally, CBP believes that
it would cost $500,000 to develop
databases, cross-reference information
and coordinate with TSA and Coast
Guard, and test equipment installed in
airports.
For this analysis CBP assumes that a
card reader would need to be installed
in each CBP booth in airports. CBP
estimates that there are 2,000 air ‘‘lanes’’
nationwide that would need a TWIC
reader. The cost for readers is thus $14.4
million and with the additional cost for
reprogramming and adapting existing
systems, the total cost is $14.9 million
in the first year. Following the first year,
CBP would expect to pay approximately
25 percent of the initial cost for
operations and maintenance. The net
first-year savings would be, again, at
best $15.3 million. This is a 2 percent
difference from the costs of the chosen
alternative ($649 million).
This alternative was rejected because
the TWIC does not denote citizenship
and it was not designed as a travel
document but rather, to positively
identify the holder and hold the results
of a security threat assessment, and as
a tool for use in access control systems.
Because the TWIC does not provide
citizenship information, the holder
would need to present at least one other
document that proves citizenship. CBP
would need to take additional time at
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primary inspection to establish
citizenship, or the traveler would have
to be referred to secondary inspections
for further processing. The overall result
could be increased delays at ports of
entry.
Alternative 4: Designate the BCC as an
Acceptable Document for Mexican
Citizens
Alternative 4 would allow Mexican
citizens to present their BCCs upon
entry to this country, without also
presenting a passport. This alternative
would have no impact on the cost of the
rule to United States citizens. The BCC
is a credit card-size document with
many security features and 10-year
validity. Also called a ‘‘laser visa,’’ the
card is both a BCC and a B1/B2 visitor’s
visa. This alternative could be less
expensive for a percentage of Mexican
citizens. Mexican citizens must have a
passport to apply for and obtain a BCC.
However, there are some Mexican
citizens that hold a BCC without a valid
passport because the passport has
expired prior to the expiration of the
BCC.
This alternative was rejected because
the BCC cannot be used with CBP’s
Advance Passenger Information System
(APIS), which collects data from
travelers prior to their arrival in and
departure from the United States.33 The
passport requirement for Mexican
citizens who hold BCC in the air
environment is consistent with the
requirement for passports for most
United States citizens and foreign
nationals.
Alternative 5: Develop and Designate a
Low Cost Passport Card as an
Acceptable Document for United States
Citizens
DOS, in consultation with DHS, has
begun developing an alternative travel
document, a card-format passport. Like
a traditional passport book, the Passport
Card will be a secure travel document
that establishes the identity and
citizenship of the bearer. The Passport
Card is being designed to primarily
benefit those citizens in border
communities who regularly cross the
northern and southern borders every
day where such travel is an integral part
of their daily lives. As currently
envisioned, it will be the size of a credit
card and will have a fee structure that
is lower than for a traditional passport
book. The application process for the
Passport Card will be identical to that
for the passport book in that each
applicant will have to establish United
States citizenship, personal identity,
and entitlement to obtain the document.
The cost of the Passport Card has yet
to be finalized. However, in the NPRM
published October 17, 2006, DOS
proposed the application fees for the
Passport Card. For the purposes of this
analysis of alternatives, using the fees
proposed in the NPRM, the fee for a
first-time adult Passport Card would be
$45 and for a minor would be $35. The
cost for photos is $11. Because the
application process would be
comparable to that for a traditional
passport, the personal time cost would
continue to be $41, as estimated
previously for the primary analysis of
the cost of the rule. Using the same
methodology as used for the primary
analysis (most likely scenario) but
assuming that all travelers who do not
currently hold a passport obtain a
Passport Card rather than the traditional
passport book, we estimate that the firstyear cost would be $463 million. At this
lower cost, approximately 4.3 million
Passport Cards would be demanded,
approximately 230,000 more than under
this rule, an increase of 5 percent.
Use of this alternative Passport Card
was rejected for the air environment for
a number of reasons. DHS and DOS
believe that accepting the Passport Card
in the air environment for air travel
within the Western Hemisphere could
potentially lead to confusion for air
travelers who may attempt to use the
Passport Card, rather than a traditional
passport book, to fly outside of the
Western Hemisphere. As developed by
the Department of State, the Passport
Card is intended to be a limited-use
passport designed to address the needs
of border communities, but not the
operational needs of inspection at
airports. See 71 FR 60928, 60930 (Oct.
17, 2006). Because the Passport Card is
not designed to be a globally
interoperable document as defined by
the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO), it does not meet
all the international standards for
passports and other official travel
documents (for example, the size of the
Passport Card does not comport with
ICAO 9303 travel document standards).
The DOS Passport Card NPRM
explained that ‘‘[d]esigning a card
format passport for wide use, including
by air travelers, would inadvertently
undercut the broad based international
effort to strengthen civil aviation
security and travel document
specifications to address the post 9/11
threat environment.’’ Id. at 60928.
Therefore, excluding the Passport Card
for air travel within the Western
Hemisphere would reduce the
possibility that travelers would attempt
to fly outside of the Western
Hemisphere to countries where the
Passport Card may not be accepted.
Finally, as stated in the Regulatory
Assessment, many air travelers already
possess a passport book for ease of use,
because air carriers require it, or
because the countries they are visiting
require it.
The following table presents a
comparison of the costs of this rule and
the alternatives considered.
COMPARISON OF REGULATORY ALTERNATIVES IN FIRST YEAR
[Costs in millions]
First-year cost
Final rule (passports, Air Nexus) ......
Status quo ........................................
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Alternative
Cost compared to
status quo
$649 .....................
0 ...........................
33 Information for aircraft to be submitted
includes: Full name, date of birth, gender,
citizenship, country of residence, status on board
the aircraft, travel document type, passport
information if passport is required (number,
country of issuance, expiration date), alien
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+$649
n/a
Cost compared to
final rule
n/a ........................
¥$649 ..................
registration number where applicable, address
while in the United States (unless a U.S. citizen,
lawful permanent resident, or person in transit to
a location outside the United States), Passenger
Name Record locator if available, foreign code of
foreign port/place where transportation to the
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Reason rejected
Status quo does not meet requirements of
IRTPA.
United States began, code of port/place of first
arrival, code of final foreign port/place of
destination for in-transit passengers, airline carrier
code, flight number, and date of aircraft arrival.
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68427
COMPARISON OF REGULATORY ALTERNATIVES IN FIRST YEAR—Continued
[Costs in millions]
Alternative
First-year cost
State-issued photo ID + birth certificate in lieu of U.S. passport.
27 .........................
TWICs in lieu of U.S. passport .........
642 .......................
BCCs in lieu of Mexican passport ....
No direct costs for
U.S. citizens.
Passport card in lieu of traditional
passport book.
Cost compared to
status quo
463 .......................
Accounting Statement
Cost compared to
final rule
Reason rejected
+$27
¥622 ....................
+642
¥7 ........................
0
May be slightly
less expensive
for BCC holders.
¥186 ....................
Identity and citizenship of the traveler cannot always be reasonably assumed or ascertained
using these documents; minors may not be
able to obtain IDs in all states; delays in
processing entries because neither document
is standardized.
TWIC is not designed as a travel document;
citizenship not included; CBP would have to
install card readers and modify their own systems to accept TWICs.
Cannot be used in conjunction with APIS in the
air environment.
+463
classification of the expenditures
associated with this rule. The table
provides an estimate of the dollar
amount of these costs and benefits,
expressed in 2005 dollars, at three
percent and seven percent discount
rates. DHS and DOS estimate that the
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/
index.html), CBP has prepared an
accounting statement showing the
Passport cards cannot be used because they
do not yet exist.
cost of this rule will be approximately
$206 million annualized (7 percent
discount rate) and approximately $204
million annualized (3 percent discount
rate). Non-quantified benefits are
enhanced security and efficiency.
ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF EXPENDITURES, 2006 THROUGH 2016
[2005 Dollars]
3% discount rate
7% discount rate
Costs:
Annualized monetized costs ......................
Annualized quantified, but un-monetized
costs.
Qualitative (un-quantified) costs .................
$204 million ......................................................
None .................................................................
$206 million.
None.
Indirect costs to the travel and tourism industry.
Indirect costs to the travel and tourism industry.
Benefits:
Annualized monetized benefits ..................
Annualized quantified, but un-monetized
costs.
Qualitative (un-quantified) costs .................
None quantified ................................................
None quantified ................................................
None quantified.
None quantified.
Enhanced security and efficiency ....................
Enhanced security and efficiency.
complying with the RFA, we consulted
the Small Business Administration’s
guidance document for conducting
regulatory flexibility analysis.35 Per this
guidance, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is required when an agency
determines that the rule will have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities that
are subject to the requirements of the
rule.36 This guidance document also
includes a good discussion describing
how direct and indirect costs of a
regulation are considered differently for
the purposes of the RFA. With the
exception of certain sole proprietors, we
do not believe that small entities are
subject to the requirements of the rule;
individuals are subject to the
requirements, and individuals are not
considered small entities. As stated in
the Small Business Administration’s
guidance document, ‘‘The courts have
held that the RFA requires an agency to
perform a regulatory flexibility analysis
of small entity impacts only when a rule
directly regulates them.’’ 37
As described in the Regulatory
Assessment for this rule, we could not
quantify the indirect impacts of the rule
with any degree of certainty; we instead
focused our analysis on the direct costs
to individuals recognizing that some
small entities will face indirect impacts.
In accordance with the provisions of
EO 12866, this regulation was reviewed
by OMB.
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B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
We have prepared this section to
examine the impacts of the rule on
small entities as required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA).34 A
small entity may be a small business
(defined as any independently owned
and operated business not dominant in
its field that qualifies as a small
business per the Small Business Act); a
small not-for-profit organization; or a
small governmental jurisdiction
(locality with fewer than 50,000 people).
When considering the impacts on
small entities for the purpose of
34 5
U.S.C. 601–612.
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35 Small Business Administration, Office of
Advocacy, A Guide for Government Agencies: How
to Comply with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, May
2003.
36 Id. at 69.
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37 Id.
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Many of the small entities indirectly
affected will be foreign owned and will
be located outside the United States.
Additionally, reductions in
international travel that result from the
rule could lead to gains for the domestic
travel and tourism industry. Most air
travelers—an estimated 96 percent of
United States travelers and 99 percent of
Canadian, Mexican, and Bermudan
travelers (based on the Regulatory
Assessment summarized above)—are
expected to obtain passports and
continue traveling. Consequently,
indirect effects are expected to be
spread over wide swaths of domestic
and foreign economies.
Small businesses may be indirectly
affected by the rule if international
travelers forgo travel to affected Western
Hemisphere countries. Industries likely
affected include (but may not be limited
to):
• Air carriers;
• Airports and their support services;
• Traveler accommodations;
• Travel agents;
• Dining services;
• Retail shopping;
• Tour operators;
• Scenic and sightseeing
transportation;
• Hired transportation (rental cars,
taxis, buses);
• Arts, entertainment, and recreation.
In the NPRM, we asked specifically
for comments on direct impacts to small
entities. No comments were received
that addressed direct impacts to small
entities with the exception of certain
‘‘sole proprietors.’’ Notwithstanding this
exception for certain ‘‘sole proprietors,’’
this rule does not directly regulate small
entities. Based on our extensive analysis
of the direct economic effects of this
rule (which is available in the public
docket) and the consideration of
comments to the proposed rule, we
certify that this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The complete analysis of impacts to
small entities for this rule is available
on the CBP Web site at: https://
www.regulations.gov; see also https://
www.cbp.gov.
C. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 requires DHS
and DOS to develop a process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications.’’ Policies that have
federalism implications are defined in
the Executive Order to include rules
that have ‘‘substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States,
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14:02 Nov 22, 2006
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or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ DHS and DOS
have analyzed the rule in accordance
with the principles and criteria in the
Executive Order and have determined
that it does not have federalism
implications or a substantial direct
effect on the States. The rule requires
United States citizens and
nonimmigrant aliens from Canada,
Bermuda and Mexico departing from or
entering the United States by air from
Western Hemisphere countries to bear a
valid passport or other document
designated by the Secretary of
Homeland Security. States are not
subject to this rule. For these reasons,
this rule would not have sufficient
federalism implications warranting the
preparation of a federalism summary
impact statement.
D. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice
Reform
This rule meets the applicable
standards set forth in sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988.
Executive Order 12988 requires agencies
to conduct reviews on civil justice and
litigation impact issues before proposing
legislation or issuing proposed
regulations. The order requires agencies
to exert reasonable efforts to ensure that
the regulation identifies clearly
preemptive effects, identifies effects on
existing federal laws or regulations,
identifies any retroactive effects of the
regulation, and identifies other matters.
DHS and DOS have determined that this
regulation meets the requirements of
Executive Order 12988 because it does
not involve retroactive effects,
preemptive effects, or the other matters
addressed in the Executive Order.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Assessment
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), enacted as
Pub. L. 104–4 on March 22, 1995,
requires each Federal agency, to the
extent permitted by law, to prepare a
written assessment of the effects of any
Federal mandate in a proposed or final
agency rule that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. Section 204(a) of the UMRA,
2 U.S.C. 1534(a), requires the Federal
agency to develop an effective process
to permit timely input by elected
officers (or their designees) of State,
local, and tribal governments on a
proposed ‘‘significant intergovernmental
mandate.’’ A ‘‘significant
intergovernmental mandate’’ under the
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UMRA is any provision in a Federal
agency regulation that will impose an
enforceable duty upon State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, of
$100 million (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year. Section 203
of the UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1533, which
supplements section 204(a), provides
that before establishing any regulatory
requirements that might significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, the
agency shall have developed a plan that,
among other things, provides for notice
to potentially affected small
governments, if any, and for a
meaningful and timely opportunity to
provide input in the development of
regulatory proposals.
This rule would not impose a
significant cost or uniquely affect small
governments. The rule does have an
effect on the private sector of $100
million or more. This impact is
discussed under the Executive Order
12866 discussion.
F. Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information
requirement for passports is contained
in 22 CFR 51.20 and 51.21. The required
information is necessary for DOS
Passport Services to issue a United
States passport in the exercise of
authorities granted to the Secretary of
State in 22 U.S.C. section 211a et seq.
and Executive Order 11295 (August 5,
1966) for the issuance of passports to
United States citizens and non-citizen
nationals. The issuance of U.S.
passports requires the determination of
identity and nationality with reference
to the provisions of Title III of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1401–1504), the 14th
Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States, and other applicable
treaties and laws. The primary purpose
for soliciting the information is to
establish nationality, identity, and
entitlement to the issuance of a United
States passport or related service and to
properly administer and enforce the
laws pertaining to issuance thereof.
There are currently two OMBapproved application forms for
passports, the DS–11 Application for a
U.S. Passport (OMB Approval No. 1405–
0004) and the DS–82 Application for a
U.S. Passport by Mail. First time
applicants must use the DS–11. The rule
would not create any new collection of
information requiring OMB approval
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507). It would result in
an increase in the number of persons
filing the DS–11, and a corresponding
increase in the annual reporting and/or
record-keeping burden. In conjunction
with publication of the final rule, DOS
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List of Subjects
G. Privacy Statement
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will amend the OMB form 83I
(Paperwork Reduction Act Submission)
relating to the DS–11 to reflect these
increases.
The collection of information
encompassed within this rule has been
submitted to the OMB for review in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507).
An agency may not conduct, and a
person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless the
collection of information displays a
valid control number assigned by OMB.
The estimated average burden per
respondent is 1 hour and 25 minutes.
The estimated frequency of responses is
once every 10 years (adult passport
application) and once every 5 years
(minor passport application).
Comments concerning the accuracy of
this burden estimate and suggestions for
reducing this burden, should be
directed to the Office of Management
and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer of
the Department of State, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503.
8 CFR PART 212—DOCUMENTARY
REQUIREMENTS: NONIMMIGRANTS;
WAIVERS; ADMISSION OF CERTAIN
INADMISSIBLE ALIENS; PAROLE
A Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) is
being posted to the DHS Web site (at
https://www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/
interapp/editorial/editorial_0511.xml)
in conjunction with the publication of
this rule in the Federal Register. The
changes made by this rule involve the
removal of an exception for United
States citizens from having to present a
passport in connection with Western
Hemisphere air travel, such that those
individuals must now present a
passport when traveling by air from
points of origin both within and without
of the Western Hemisphere. The rule
expands the number of individuals
submitting passport information for
travel within the Western Hemisphere,
but does not involve the collection of
any new data elements. Presently, CBP
collects and stores passport information
from all travelers, required to provide
such information pursuant to the
Aviation and Transportation Security
Act of 2001 (ATSA) and the Enhanced
Border Security and Visa Reform Act of
2002 (EBSA), in the Treasury
Enforcement Communications System
(TECS) (a System of Records Notice for
which is published at 66 FR 53029). By
removing the exception for submitting
passport information from United States
citizens traveling by air within the
Western Hemisphere, DOS and CBP are
requiring these individuals to comply
with the general requirement to submit
passport information when traveling to
and from the United States.
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Jkt 211001
8 CFR Part 212
Administrative practice and
procedure, Aliens, Immigration,
Passports and visas, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
8 CFR Part 235
Administrative practice and
procedure, Aliens, Immigration,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
22 CFR Part 41
Aliens, Nonimmigrants, Passports and
visas.
22 CFR Part 53
Passport requirement and exceptions;
parameters for U.S. citizen travel and
definitions.
Amendment of the Regulations
For the reasons stated in the preamble,
DHS and DOS amend 8 CFR parts 212
and 235 and 22 CFR parts 41 and 53 as
set forth below.
I
1. The authority citation for part 212
is revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 and note, 1102,
1103, 1182 and note, 1184, 1187, 1223, 1225,
1226, 1227; 8 U.S.C. 1185 note (section 7209
of Pub. L. 108–458).
2. Section 212.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) and
(a)(2); and
I b. Revising paragraph (c)(1)(i), as
follows:
I
I
§ 212.1 Documentary requirements for
nonimmigrants.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Citizens of Canada or Bermuda,
Bahamian nationals or British subjects
resident in certain islands—(1)
Canadian citizens. A visa is not
required. A passport is not required for
Canadian citizens entering the United
States from within the Western
Hemisphere by land or sea, or as
participants in the NEXUS Air program
at a NEXUS Air kiosk pursuant to 8 CFR
235.1(e). A passport is otherwise
required for Canadian citizens arriving
in the United States by aircraft.
(2) Citizens of the British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda. A visa is not
required. A passport is not required for
Citizens of the British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda entering the
United States from within the Western
Hemisphere by land or sea. A passport
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
68429
is required for Citizens of the British
Overseas Territory of Bermuda arriving
in the United States by aircraft.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Mexican nationals. (1) A visa and
a passport are not required of a Mexican
national who:
(i) Is in possession of a Form DSP–
150, B–1/B–2 Visa and Border Crossing
Card, containing a machine-readable
biometric identifier, issued by the DOS
and is applying for admission as a
temporary visitor for business or
pleasure from a contiguous territory by
land or sea.
*
*
*
*
*
8 CFR PART 235—INSPECTION OF
PERSONS APPLYING FOR ADMISSION
3. The authority citation for part 235
is revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 and note, 1103,
1183, 1185 (pursuant to E.O. 13323,
published January 2, 2004), 1201, 1224, 1225,
1226, 1228, 1365a note, 1379, 1731–32; 8
U.S.C. 1185 note (section 7209 of Pub. L.
108–458).
4. Section 235.1 is amended by:
a. Redesignating current paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) as paragraphs (f), (g), and
(h); and
I b. Adding a new paragraphs (d) and
(e).
The additions read as follows:
I
I
§ 235.1
Scope of examination.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) U.S. Merchant Mariners. United
States citizens who are holders of a
Merchant Mariner Document (MMD or
Z-card) issued by the U.S. Coast Guard
may present, in lieu of a passport, an
unexpired MMD used in conjunction
with maritime business when entering
the United States.
(e) NEXUS Air Program Participants.
United States citizens, Canadian
citizens, and permanent residents of
Canada who are traveling as participants
in the NEXUS Air program, may
present, in lieu of a passport, a valid
NEXUS Air membership card when
using a NEXUS Air kiosk prior to
entering the United States.
*
*
*
*
*
22 CFR PART 41—VISAS:
DOCUMENTATION OF
NONIMMIGRANTS UNDER THE
IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY
ACT, AS AMENDED
5. The authority citation for part 41 is
revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1104; Pub. L. 105–277,
112 Stat. 2681–795 through 2681–801; 8
U.S.C. 1185 note (section 7209 of Pub. L.
108–458).
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68430
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 226 / Friday, November 24, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
I
6. Section 41.1 is amended by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
22 CFR PART 53—PASSPORT
REQUIREMENT AND EXCEPTIONS
§ 41.1 Exemption by law or treaty from
passport and visa requirements.
Sec.
53.1
53.2
53.3
*
*
*
*
*
(b) American Indians born in Canada.
An American Indian born in Canada,
having at least 50 per centum of blood
of the American Indian race, entering
from contiguous territory by land or sea
(sec. 289, 66 Stat. 234; 8 U.S.C. 1359).
*
*
*
*
*
7. Section 41.2 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (a) and (b);
I b. Revising paragraph (g)(1);
I c. Removing paragraphs (g)(2) and
(g)(4); and
I d. Redesignating paragraphs (g)(3) as
(g)(2), (g)(5) as (g)(3), and (g)(6) as (g)(4).
I
I
§ 41.2 Waiver by Secretary of State and
Secretary of Homeland Security of passport
and/or visa requirements for certain
categories of nonimmigrants.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Canadian nationals. A visa is not
required. A passport is not required for
Canadian citizens entering the United
States from within the Western
Hemisphere by land or sea, or by air as
participants in the NEXUS Air program
pursuant to 8 CFR 235.1(e). A passport
is otherwise required for Canadian
citizens arriving in the United States by
aircraft.
(b) Citizens of the British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda. A visa is not
required. A passport is not required for
Citizens of the British Overseas
Territory of Bermuda entering the
United States from within the Western
Hemisphere by land or sea. A passport
is required for Citizens of the British
Overseas Territory of Bermuda arriving
in the United States by aircraft.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Mexican nationals. (1) A visa and
a passport are not required of a Mexican
national in possession of a Form DSP–
150, B–1/B–2 Visa and Border Crossing
Card, containing a machine-readable
biometric identifier, applying for
admission as a temporary visitor for
business or pleasure from a contiguous
territory by land or sea.
*
*
*
*
*
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with RULES3
I
8. Part 53 is revised to read as follows:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
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Passport requirement; definitions.
Exceptions.
Attempt of a citizen to enter without
a valid passport.
53.4 Optional use of a valid passport.
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1185; 8 U.S.C. 1185
note (section 7209 of Pub. L. 108–458); E.O.
13323, 69 FR 241 (Dec. 30, 2003).
§ 53.1
Passport requirement; definitions.
(a) It is unlawful for a citizen of the
United States, unless excepted under 22
CFR 53.2, to enter or depart, or attempt
to enter or depart, the United States,
without a valid U.S. passport.
(b) For purposes of this part ‘‘United
States’’ means ‘‘United States’’ as
defined in section 215(c) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act of
1952, as amended (8 U.S.C. 1185(c)).
§ 53.2
Exceptions.
A U.S. citizen is not required to bear
a valid U.S. passport to enter or depart
the United States:
(a) When traveling directly between
parts of the United States as defined in
§ 50.1 of this chapter; or
(b) When entering from or departing
to a foreign port or place within the
Western Hemisphere, excluding Cuba,
by land or by sea; or
(c) When traveling as a member of the
Armed Forces of the United States on
active duty; or
(d) When traveling as a U.S. citizen
seaman, carrying a Merchant Marine
Document (MMD or Z-card) in
conjunction with maritime business.
The MMD is not sufficient to establish
citizenship for purposes of issuance of
a United States passport under 22 CFR
part 51; or
(e) When traveling as a participant in
the NEXUS Air program with a valid
NEXUS Air membership card. United
States citizens who are traveling as
participants in the NEXUS Air program,
may present, in lieu of a passport, a
valid NEXUS Air membership card
when using a NEXUS Air kiosk prior to
entering the United States. The NEXUS
Air card is not sufficient to establish
citizenship for purposes of issuance of
a U.S. passport under 22 CFR part 51;
or
(f) When the U.S. citizen bears
another document, or combination of
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
documents, that the Secretary of
Homeland Security has determined
under Section 7209(b) of Pub. L. 108–
458 (8 U.S.C. 1185 note) to be sufficient
to denote identity and citizenship; or
(g) When the U.S. citizen is employed
directly or indirectly on the
construction, operation, or maintenance
of works undertaken in accordance with
the treaty concluded on February 3,
1944, between the United States and
Mexico regarding the functions of the
International Boundary and Water
Commission (IBWC), TS 994, 9 Bevans
1166, 59 Stat. 1219, or other related
agreements provided that the U.S.
citizen bears an official identification
card issued by the IBWC; or
(h) When the Department of State
waives, pursuant to EO 13323 of
December 30, 2003, Sec 2, the
requirement with respect to the U.S.
citizen because there is an unforeseen
emergency; or
(i) When the Department of State
waives, pursuant to EO 13323 of
December 30, 2003, Sec 2, the
requirement with respect to the U.S.
citizen for humanitarian or national
interest reasons.
§ 53.3 Attempt of a citizen to enter without
a valid passport.
The appropriate officer at the port of
entry shall report to the Department of
State any citizen of the United States
who attempts to enter the United States
contrary to the provisions of this part,
so that the Department of State may
apply the waiver provisions of § 53.2(h)
and § 53.2(i) to such citizen, if
appropriate.
§ 53.4
Optional use of a valid passport.
Nothing in this part shall be
construed to prevent a citizen from
using a valid U.S. passport in a case in
which that passport is not required by
this part 53, provided such travel is not
otherwise prohibited.
Dated: November 17, 2006.
Michael Chertoff,
Secretary of Homeland Security, Department
of Homeland Security.
Dated: November 17, 2006.
Henrietta H. Fore,
Under Secretary for Management,
Department of State.
[FR Doc. 06–9402 Filed 11–22–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 226 (Friday, November 24, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 68412-68430]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-9402]
[[Page 68411]]
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Part V
Department of Homeland Security
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Bureau of Customs and Border Protection
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Department of State
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8 CFR Parts 212 and 235
22 CFR Parts 41 and 53
Documents Required for Travelers Departing From or Arriving in the
United States at Air Ports-of-Entry From Within the Western Hemisphere;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 226 / Friday, November 24, 2006 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 68412]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Bureau of Customs and Border Protection
8 CFR Parts 212 and 235
[USCBP 2006-0097]
RIN 1651-AA66
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
22 CFR Parts 41 and 53
RIN 1400-AC10
Documents Required for Travelers Departing From or Arriving in
the United States at Air Ports-of-Entry From Within the Western
Hemisphere
AGENCY: Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland
Security; Bureau of Consular Affairs, Department of State.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule finalizes the first phase of a joint Department of
Homeland Security and Department of State plan, known as the Western
Hemisphere Travel Initiative, to implement new documentation
requirements for certain United States citizens and nonimmigrant aliens
entering the United States. As a result of this final rule, with
limited exceptions discussed below, beginning January 23, 2007, all
United States citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Bermuda,
and Mexico departing from or entering the United States from within the
Western Hemisphere at air ports-of-entry will be required to present a
valid passport. This final rule differs from the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) published in the Federal Register on August 11, 2006,
by finalizing new documentation requirements for only travelers
arriving in the United States by air. The portion of the NPRM that
proposed changes in documentation requirements for travelers arriving
by sea will not be finalized under this rule. Requirements for United
States citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Bermuda, and
Mexico departing from or entering the United States at land and sea
ports-of-entry will be addressed in a separate, future rulemaking.
DATES: This final rule is effective on January 23, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Department of Homeland Security: Robert Rawls, Office of Field
Operations, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, 1300 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Room 5.4-D, Washington, DC 20229, telephone number (202)
344-2847.
Department of State: Consuelo Pachon, Office of Passport Policy,
Planning and Advisory Services, Bureau of Consular Affairs, telephone
number (202) 663-2662.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Documentation Requirements Prior to the Effective Date of
this Rule
1. U.S. Citizens
2. Nonimmigrant Aliens from Canada Citizens and the British
Overseas Territory of Bermuda
3. Mexican Citizens
B. Statutory and Regulatory History
II. Summary of Changes from NPRM and New Document Requirements
III. Discussion of Comments
A. General
B. Timeline
C. Passports
1. General
2. Cost of Passports
3. Obtaining Passports
4. Children
5. DOS Issuance Capacity
D. Alternative Documents
1. General
2. Driver's License and Birth Certificate
3. Real ID Act Compliant Driver's Licenses
4. Border Crossing Cards
5. Merchant Mariner Cards
6. NEXUS Air Cards
7. Passport Cards
8. Tribal Documents
E. Implementation and Effect on Specific Populations
1. General
2. Outer Continental Shelf
3. Emergencies
F. Outside the Scope of this Rulemaking
G. Public Relations
H. Regulatory Analyses
1. General
2. Executive Order 12866
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
IV. Conclusion
V. Regulatory Analyses
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
D. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice Reform
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Assessment
F. Paperwork Reduction Act
G. Privacy Statement
List of Subjects
Amendments to the Regulations
Abbreviations and Terms Used in This Document
ANPRM--Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
APIS--Advance Passenger Information System
BCC--Form DSP-150, B-1/B-2 Visa and Border Crossing Card
CBP--Bureau of Customs and Border Protection
DHS--Department of Homeland Security
DMV--Department of Motor Vehicles
DOS--Department of State
FAST--Free and Secure Trade
IBWC--International Boundary and Water Commission
ICAO--International Civil Aviation Organization
INA--Immigration and Nationality Act
INS--Immigration and Naturalization Service
IRTPA--Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004
LPR--Lawful Permanent Resident
MMD--Merchant Mariner Document
MODU--Mobile Offshore Drilling Unit
NATO--North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NPRM--Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
OCS--Outer Continental Shelf
OTTI--Office of Travel & Tourism Industries
SENTRI--Secure Electronic Network for Travelers Rapid Inspection
TSA--Transportation Security Administration
TWIC--Transportation Worker Identification Card
US-VISIT--United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator
Technology Program
WHTI--Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative
I. Background
For a detailed discussion of the current documentation requirements
for travelers entering the United States from within the Western
Hemisphere, the statutory and regulatory histories, and the
applicability of the rule related to specific groups, please see the
NPRM published on August 11, 2006, at 71 FR 46155.
A. Documentation Requirements Prior to the Effective Date of This Rule
The documentation requirements for travelers entering the United
States by air generally depend on the nationality of the traveler and
whether or not the traveler is entering the United States from a
country within the Western Hemisphere. The following is an overview of
the documentation requirements for citizens of the United States,
Canada, British Overseas Territory of Bermuda, and Mexico who enter the
United States at air ports-of-entry prior to the effective date of this
rule.
1. U.S. Citizens
U.S. citizens must possess a valid U.S. passport to depart from or
enter the
[[Page 68413]]
United States.\1\ However, this passport requirement has not applied to
U.S. citizens who depart from or enter the United States from within
the Western Hemisphere other than from Cuba.\2\ United States citizens
have been required to satisfy the inspecting officers of their
identities and citizenship. Accordingly, U.S. citizens have not been
required to present a valid passport when entering the United States by
air from within the Western Hemisphere other than Cuba.\3\
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\1\ Section 215(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA),
8 U.S.C. 1185(b).
\2\ See 22 CFR 53.2(b), which waived the passport requirement
pursuant to section 215(b) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1185(b).
\3\ In lieu of a passport, U.S. citizens have been permitted to
present a variety of documents to establish their identity and
citizenship and right to enter the United States. A driver's license
issued by a state motor vehicle administration or other competent
state government authority is a common form of identity document.
Citizenship documents generally include birth certificates issued by
a United States jurisdiction, Consular Reports of Birth Abroad,
Certificates of Naturalization, and Certificates of Citizenship.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Nonimmigrant Aliens From Canada and the British Overseas Territory
of Bermuda
Each nonimmigrant alien arriving in the United States must present
a valid unexpired passport issued by his or her country of citizenship
and, if required, a valid unexpired visa issued by a United States
embassy or consulate abroad.\4\ Nonimmigrant aliens entering the United
States must also satisfy any other applicable entry requirements (e.g.,
United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology Program
(US-VISIT)). In most cases, Canadian citizens and citizens of the
British Overseas Territory of Bermuda (Bermuda) have not been required
to present a valid passport and visa when entering the United States as
nonimmigrant visitors from countries in the Western Hemisphere.\5\
These travelers have been required to satisfy the inspecting CBP
officer of their identities and citizenship at the time of their
application for admission.\6\
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\4\ Section 212(a)(7)(B)(i) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(7)(B)(i).
\5\ 8 CFR 212.1(a)(1) (Canadian citizens) and 8 CFR 212.1(a)(2)
(Citizens of Bermuda). See also 22 CFR 41.2.
\6\ Entering aliens may present any evidence of identity and
citizenship in their possession. Individuals who initially fail to
satisfy the examining CBP officer may then be required to provide
further identification and evidence of citizenship such as a birth
certificate, passport, or citizenship card.
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3. Mexican Citizens
Mexican citizens are generally required to present a valid
unexpired passport and visa when entering the United States. However,
Mexican citizens arriving in the United States at ports-of-entry who
possess a Form DSP-150, B-1/B-2 Visa and Border Crossing Card (BCC) \7\
currently may be admitted without presenting a valid passport if they
are coming from contiguous territory.\8\ While the use of a BCC without
a passport is atypical in the air environment, it has been permitted.
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\7\ A BCC is a machine-readable, biometric card, issued by the
Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs.
\8\ 8 CFR 212.1(c)(1)(i). See also 22 CFR 41.2(g). If they are
only traveling within a certain geographic area along the United
States' border with Mexico: usually up to 25 miles from the border
but within 75 miles under the exception for Tucson, Arizona, they do
not need to obtain a form I-94. If they travel outside of that
geographic area, they must obtain an I-94 from CBP at the port-of-
entry. 8 CFR 235.1(f)(1).
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B. Statutory and Regulatory History
On December 17, 2004, the President signed into law the
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA).\9\
Section 7209 of IRTPA, as amended by the Department of Homeland
Security Appropriations Act of 2007, provides that the Secretary of
Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of State, develop
and implement a plan to require travelers entering the United States to
present a passport, other document, or combination of documents, that
are ``deemed by the Secretary of Homeland Security to be sufficient to
denote identity and citizenship.'' As a result, United States citizens
and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Mexico, and Bermuda will be
required to comply with the new documentation requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Pub. L. 108-458, 118 Stat. 3638 (Dec. 17, 2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On September 1, 2005, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and
the Department of State (DOS) published in the Federal Register at 70
FR 52037, an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that
announced that DHS and DOS were planning to amend their respective
regulations to implement section 7209 of IRTPA. For further
information, please see the ANPRM document that was published in the
Federal Register on September 1, 2005, at 70 FR 52037.
On August 11, 2006, DHS and DOS published in the Federal Register
at 71 FR 46155, an NPRM that announced that DHS and DOS were planning
to amend their respective regulations to implement section 7209 of
IRTPA. The NPRM proposed that, with some exceptions, United States
citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Bermuda, and Mexico
traveling into the United States by air and sea from Western Hemisphere
countries, be required to show a passport. The NPRM did not propose
changes to the documentation requirements at land border ports-of-
entry.
The NPRM proposed that the passport requirement would apply to all
air and most sea travel, including commercial air travel and commercial
sea travel. According to the NPRM, there were two categories of travel
and one category of traveler that would not be subject to the passport
requirement proposed for air and sea travel, but would be addressed in
the second phase rulemaking for land border travel. First, the NPRM
provided that the passport requirement would not apply to pleasure
vessels used exclusively for pleasure and which are not for the
transportation of persons or property for compensation or hire. Second,
the NPRM stated that the passport requirement would not apply to travel
by ferry. Finally, the NPRM provided that the passport requirement
would not apply to United States citizen members of the Armed Forces on
active duty.
The NPRM also proposed to designate two documents, in addition to
the passport, as sufficient to denote identity and citizenship under
section 7209, and acceptable for air and sea travel. The first document
was the Merchant Mariner Document (MMD) or ``z-card'' issued by the
United States Coast Guard (Coast Guard) to Merchant Mariners. The
second document was the NEXUS Air card when used with a NEXUS Air
kiosk.\10\
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\10\ Air Nexus is an airport border clearance pilot project.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 4, 2006, the President signed into law the Department of
Homeland Security Appropriations Act of 2007 (DHS Appropriations Act of
2007).\11\ Section 546 of the DHS Appropriations Act of 2007 amended
section 7209 of IRTPA by stressing the need for DHS and DOS to
expeditiously implement the requirements by the earlier of two dates,
June 1, 2009, or three months after the Secretaries of Homeland
Security and State certify that certain criteria have been met. The
section requires ``expeditious[ ]'' action and states that requirements
must be satisfied by the ``earlier'' of dates identified. By using this
language, the drafters expressed an intention for rapid action.\12\
Congress also expressed an interest in having the requirements for land
and sea implemented at the same
[[Page 68414]]
time as part of the DHS Appropriations Act of 2007.\13\
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\11\ Pub. L. 109-295, 120 Stat. 1355 (Oct. 4, 2006).
\12\ Id. at Sec. 546. See Congressional Record, 109th cong. 2nd
sess., September 29, 2006 at H7964.
\13\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 17, 2006, to meet the documentary requirements of the
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative and to facilitate the frequent
travel of persons living in border communities, the Department of
State, in consultation with the Department of Homeland Security,
proposed to develop a card-format passport, called the Passport Card,
for international travel by United States citizens through land and sea
ports of entry between the United States, Canada, Mexico, or the
Caribbean and Bermuda.\14\
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\14\ 71 FR 60928.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Summary of Changes From NPRM and New Document Requirements
Under this final rule, beginning January 23, 2007, United States
citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Bermuda, and Mexico
entering the United States at air ports-of-entry will generally be
required to present a valid passport. Accordingly, all aviation
passengers and crew, including commercial flights and general aviation
flights (i.e., private planes), who arrive at air ports-of-entry in the
United States from countries within the Western Hemisphere will be
required to possess a valid passport beginning January 23, 2007. The
only exceptions to this requirement would be for United States citizens
who are members of the United States Armed Forces traveling on active
duty; travelers who present a Merchant Mariner Document traveling in
conjunction with maritime business; and travelers who present a NEXUS
Air card used at a NEXUS Air kiosk.
This final rule does not change the documentation requirements for
United States citizens and nonimmigrant aliens from Canada, Bermuda,
and Mexico who arrive at sea ports-of-entry. Based on DOS' recent
proposal to allow the use of the Passport Card in the sea environment,
Congress' intent with respect to the land and sea environments, and the
public comments, DHS and DOS have decided to defer decisions on the
proposed changes to documentation requirements for arrivals by sea.
Arrivals by sea and land will be addressed in a separate, future
rulemaking.
III. Discussion of Comments
In both the ANPRM and NPRM, DHS and DOS sought public comment to
assist the Secretary of Homeland Security to make a final determination
concerning which document, or combination of documents, other than
valid passports, would be accepted at ports-of-entry.
DHS and DOS received 2,062 written comments in response to the
ANPRM and 104 written comments in response to the NPRM. The majority of
the comments (1,910 from the ANPRM) addressed only potential changes to
the documentation requirements at land border ports-of-entry. One
hundred and fifty-two comments from the ANPRM addressed changes to the
documentation requirements for persons arriving at air or sea ports-of-
entry. Comments in response to both the ANPRM and NPRM were received
from a wide range of sources including: private citizens; businesses
and associations; local, state, federal, and tribal governments;
members of the United States Congress; and foreign government
officials.
Since this final rule addresses solely the changes to the
documentation requirements for travelers arriving at air ports-of-
entry, the comments received in response to the ANPRM and NPRM
regarding arrivals by land and sea will not be addressed in this
rulemaking. A summary of the comments from both the ANPRM and the NPRM
primarily regarding air travel follows with complete responses to the
comments.
A. General
Forty-nine commenters agreed with a passport requirement.
In contrast, eleven commenters expressed general disagreement with
a passport requirement for travel within the Western Hemisphere where
such documentation was previously not required.
B. Timeline
Comment
We received many comments regarding the implementation timeline for
new documentation requirements. Nine commenters stated that the
requirements for all air, sea, and land-border crossings should be
implemented without delay. Two commenters agreed with the timelines for
a phased-in approach. One commenter stated that the January 1, 2007,
timeline announced in the ANPRM should be maintained.
Forty-five commenters asked for a single implementation date for
land, air, and sea. Fifty-seven commenters requested that the
implementation date be delayed to December 31, 2007, or later. Several
commenters asserted that the implementation date for cruise passengers
not occur earlier than the statutory deadline. Among the reasons to
support a single and delayed implementation date, commenters asserted
that one timeline would be more fair, provide adequate time for
travelers to comply with the new regulations, and allow time to
communicate the requirements to the public. One commenter reasoned that
one timeline would ensure that infrastructure and technology is in
place to support the initiative. Another commenter requested that
changes to the requirements for commercial fishermen transiting between
Alaska and Washington be delayed and addressed with persons arriving by
pleasure boats and ferries, not with commercial vessels as proposed.
One commenter requested that general aviation have the same
implementation date as pleasure boats and land-border crossings.
Response
DHS and DOS agree with the commenters that the implementation date
for new documentation requirements for travelers arriving by sea should
be delayed. In the NPRM, DHS and DOS proposed to implement new
documentation requirements for travelers arriving at air ports-of-entry
and most sea ports-of-entry. However, based on DOS' recent Passport
Card proposal which would allow the Passport Card for sea travel, the
Departments have decided to delay new requirements for arrivals by sea
until the Passport Card is available for use in the sea environment.
Delaying the implementation date for the sea environment will allow the
Departments to develop the Passport Card and enhance the infrastructure
and technology to support the Passport Card for arrivals by sea. This
is also consistent with Congress' intent to implement the land and sea
environments at the same time as expressed in section 546 of the DHS
Appropriations Act of 2007. Additionally, this delay will address the
concerns for commercial fishermen transiting between Alaska and the
United States by not implementing new requirements until the Passport
Card is operational. It will also be less confusing to the public to
implement sea and land requirements, both of which would accept the
Passport Card, at the same time. Therefore, the documentation
requirements for travelers arriving by sea, whether aboard commercial
vessels, pleasure vessels, or ferries, will not change under this final
rule.
DHS and DOS have determined that the proposed implementation date
of January 23, 2007, is appropriate for air travel because of
operational considerations and available resources. This phased
approach is essential
[[Page 68415]]
because a staggered implementation in advance of the statutory deadline
will enhance security requirements using existing infrastructure while
allowing the Departments time to acquire and develop resources to meet
the increased demand for sea and land-border entries.
C. Passports
1. General
Comment
One commenter raised concerns about the security of U.S. and
foreign passports, stating that passports may be easily falsified or
altered. Another commenter stated that terrorists could misuse
passports. One commenter stated that Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID), as related to electronic passports, poses a safety concern
because it can be read from a distance.
Response
Passports are acceptable at the border as a matter of law.
The primary purpose of the passport has always been to establish
citizenship and identity. It has been used to facilitate travel to
foreign countries by displaying any appropriate visas or entry/exit
stamps. Passports are globally interoperable, consistent with worldwide
standards, and usable regardless of the international destination of
the traveler.
U.S. passports incorporate a host of security features. These
security features include, but are not limited to, rigorous
adjudication standards and document security features. The adjudication
standards establish the individual's citizenship and identity and
ensure that the individual meets the qualifications for a U.S.
passport. The document security features include digitized photographs,
embossed seals, watermarks, ultraviolet and fluorescent light
verification features, security laminations, micro-printing, and
holograms to authenticate passports. A U.S. passport is a document that
is adjudicated by trained DOS experts and issued to persons who have
documented their United States identity and citizenship by birth,
naturalization or derivation. Applications are subject to additional
Federal government checks to ensure the applicants are eligible to
receive a U.S. passport under applicable standards (for example, those
subject to outstanding federal warrants for arrest are not eligible for
a U.S. passport).
Foreign passports accepted for admission to the United States must
meet the standards set out in International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) 9303. Passports issued by Canada, Mexico, and Bermuda meet these
international standards and are, therefore, acceptable. Finally, the
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Officer verifies and authenticates
the passport presented for entry.
Privacy and security concerns related to RFID technology were
addressed in extensive detail in the final rule for electronic
passports published by DOS on October 25, 2005, at 70 FR 61553.
Comment
Two commenters asked if non-U.S. citizens would be allowed to
depart the United States without a passport, regardless of their intent
to return to the United States.
Response
Currently, if an individual is not required to present a passport
upon entry to the United States, that individual does not need to
present a passport upon exit. Under this final rule, however, if an
individual must present a passport upon entry, then that individual
will also need to bear one upon exit. In the event that non-U.S.
citizens' passports are lost or stolen, those individuals would need to
contact their nearest consular office to have the documents replaced
prior to departing the United States.
2. Cost of Passports
Comment
Nineteen commenters stated that the cost for a U.S. passport is
high and that the process for obtaining a passport should be made
easier. One commenter stated that while the passport cost is ``high''
it should not outweigh safety and security. Twenty-one commenters
stated that the cost for a U.S. passport is high. Several commenters
requested that DOS offer discounted or free passports to certain groups
such as students, senior citizens, families with children, welfare
recipients, group purchases, and early purchasers. Two commenters
stated that the cost of a passport should be significantly lessened for
citizens below the poverty level. Six commenters stated that the
passport cost should be greatly reduced.
Response
At this time, DOS does not intend to offer discounts or no-fee
passports for any of the specific groups mentioned. The passport fee
reflects the actual costs of adjudicating a passport application and
producing a passport. Because the requirements for adjudication and
production remain the same for all applicants, DOS does not intend to
offer discounts.
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated that the cost for a Canadian
passport is high and that the process for obtaining a passport should
be made easier.
Response
While the U.S. Government is working closely with passport agencies
throughout the Western Hemisphere on WHTI and other travel document
security matters, each nation's government ultimately controls the
process and cost for obtaining a passport. The application process for
and cost of a Canadian Government issued document is outside the scope
of this rulemaking.
3. Obtaining Passports
Comment
One commenter stated that the process for obtaining a passport
should be made easier. One commenter stated that the passport
application process is very burdensome for travelers in remote areas.
Response
While some applicants may find the current process burdensome, the
application process is standard across the U.S. and is intended to
establish nationality, identity, and entitlement to the issuance of a
U.S. passport. Due to statutory requirements and established
regulations, a complete end-to-end electronic submission for the DS-11
form (Application for a U.S. Passport) is currently not possible.
However, in an effort to provide customers with an electronic
alternative to the paper-based form, the DS-11 form is posted on the
DOS Web site, where it can be filled out online and printed for
submission. There are over 7,500 acceptance facilities nationwide
including many Federal, state and probate courts, post offices, some
public libraries and a number of county and municipal offices.
Additionally, there are 14 regional passport agencies and 1 Gateway
City Agency that serve customers who are traveling within 2 weeks or
who need foreign visas for travel. Complete information on how to
obtain, replace, or change a passport can be found at the DOS Web site:
https://travel.state.gov/passport/passport_1738.html.
4. Children
Comment
Thirty-nine commenters asked to allow travelers under the age of 16
to be exempt from a passport requirement and able to use a birth
certificate as sufficient proof of identity and
[[Page 68416]]
citizenship. One commenter suggested simplifying passport procedures
for children under 16.
One commenter stated that children under 16 should not be exempt
from a passport requirement in the Western Hemisphere.
Response
The United States Government currently requires all U.S. citizens,
including children, arriving from countries outside the Western
Hemisphere to provide a passport when entering the United States.
IRTPA, as amended, does not contain a general exemption from providing
a passport or other document designated by DHS for children under the
age of 16 when entering the United States from Western Hemisphere
countries. Consequently, children under the age of 16 arriving from
Western Hemisphere countries will be required to present a passport
when entering the United States by air. Requiring passports for
children departing from or entering the United States will also assist
the U.S. Government, as well as foreign governments within the Western
Hemisphere, to prevent child abductions. Of the nearly 600
international parental child abductions brought to the attention of the
State Department each year, outgoing parental abductions of American
children from the U.S. to Canada and Mexico represent about one-
quarter.
5. DOS Issuance Capacity
Comment
Seven commenters expressed concern that DOS may not be able to
issue several million new passports in the timeframe required and
without significant delay.
Two commenters to the NPRM expressed concern about whether DHS and
DOS would be able to successfully implement the new passport
requirements by January 8, 2007.
Response
DOS appreciates the commenters' concerns and is already expanding
passport production capacity to meet the additional demand for
passports. DOS will be able to meet a significant increase in demand
from the more than 10 million passports produced in fiscal year 2005.
DOS estimates a 25 percent increase in passport applications so far in
fiscal year 2006. DOS has increased passport production capacity with
an aim towards processing 16 million passports in fiscal year 2007 and
19 million passports in fiscal year 2008. The Departments have taken
the appropriate measures to ensure the implementation of the new
requirements by the implementation date.
D. Alternative Documents
1. General
Comment
Twenty-four commenters asked for a clear definition of other secure
documents that will be accepted in addition to a passport. Eight
commenters asked that NEXUS, SENTRI, and FAST cards be accepted in lieu
of a passport. Three commenters stated that other travel documents
should be used in lieu of a passport where practicable.
One commenter asked that WHTI should be linked to the evolution of
the Registered Traveler program.
Response
Other acceptable documents are designated in this rule by the
Secretary of DHS to sufficiently establish identity and citizenship at
airports. The documents designated in this rule are sufficiently secure
to impede counterfeiting and alterations for fraudulent purposes. Along
with the passport, the Secretary of Homeland Security is designating
the MMD and the NEXUS Air card when used at a NEXUS Air kiosk as
sufficient to denote identity and citizenship under section 7209 and
acceptable for air travel. Currently, the rest of the NEXUS program
cards, as well as SENTRI and FAST cards, are accepted only at
designated lanes at land-border ports-of-entry and not in the air
environment. Currently, the Transportation Security Administration's
(TSA) Registered Traveler program is for domestic travel only.
Comment
One commenter asked that a Transportation Worker Identification
Card (TWIC) be designated as an acceptable document to denote
citizenship and identity.
Response
A TWIC card will not be suitable as an alternative document because
it does not denote citizenship and is not intended as a travel
document. Although a TWIC card would positively identify the bearer of
the card, citizenship would have to be established through a paper-
based document because a TWIC card does not provide citizenship
information. Because, as proposed, TWIC cards may be issued to non-U.S.
citizens and they do not denote citizenship, they could not be used in
place of passports. In addition, the TWIC could not be read by current
CBP technology installed in air ports-of-entry. While there will be
information embedded in the chip on the TWIC, only the name of the
individual and a photo ID are apparent to a CBP officer upon
presentation. CBP could not validate this document at primary
inspection for the reasons outlined in the next section addressing the
use of birth certificates.
Comment
One commenter asked that an International Boundary Water Commission
(IBWC) identification be acceptable for land, air, and sea travel.
Response
In the NPRM, DHS and DOS clarified that documentation requirements
for direct and indirect employees of the IBWC (Article 20 of the 1944
Treaty Between the United States and Mexico regarding division of
boundary water and the functions of (IBWC), TS 922, Bevan 1166, 59
Stat. 1219; 8 CFR 212.1(c)(5)) crossing the United States-Mexico border
while on official business would not change under this final rule.
2. Driver's License and Birth Certificate
Comment
We received many comments stating that driver's licenses and birth
certificates should be acceptable to denote an individual's citizenship
and identity. Many commenters stated that these documents are
affordable and easily obtainable and their acceptance would not
dissuade travel. Several commenters stated that because a driver's
license and birth certificate are most commonly used to obtain a
passport, these documents should also be sufficient to establish
citizenship and identity at ports-of-entry.
Response
DHS and DOS disagree with the commenters. Because birth
certificates and driver's licenses are issued by numerous government
entities, there is no standard format for either document, and, at
present, it is not possible to authenticate either document quickly or
reliably. Some states only issue photocopies as replacements of birth
certificates, some states issue replacement birth certificates by mail
or through the Internet, and some states will not issue photo
identification to minors. Both documents lack security features and are
susceptible to counterfeiting or alteration. Neither the birth
certificate nor the state-issued identification is designed to be a
travel document. Birth certificates can easily
[[Page 68417]]
deteriorate when used frequently as travel documents because they are
normally made from paper with a raised seal, and they cannot be
laminated or otherwise protected from repeated use.
The U.S. birth certificate can be used as evidence of birth in the
United States; however, it does not provide definitive proof of
citizenship (e.g., children born in the U.S. to foreign diplomats do
not acquire U.S. citizenship at birth). Highly trained passport
specialists and consular officers abroad adjudicate passport
applications, utilizing identity and citizenship documents (U.S. birth
certificates, naturalization certificates, consular reports of birth
abroad, etc.). These specialists have resources available, including
fraud and document experts, to assist when reviewing documents and are
not faced with the same time constraints as CBP officers at ports-of-
entry. These factors explain why a birth certificate and driver's
license may be sufficient documentary evidence of citizenship and
identity for an application for a passport, but are not sufficient
under WHTI for entry to the United States. In addition, there is no
current way to validate that the person presenting the birth
certificate for inspection is, in fact, the same person to whom it was
issued. The lack of security features and the plethora of birth
certificate issuers in the United States (more than 8,000 entities)
currently make it difficult to reliably verify or authenticate a birth
certificate. A state-issued photo identification provides positive
identification with name, address, and photograph. However, a state-
issued photo identification does not provide proof of citizenship.
3. Real ID Act Compliant Driver's Licenses
Comment
In response to the ANPRM, twenty commenters asked DHS and DOS to
work with state governments on possible use of driver's licenses to
verify U.S. citizenship. In response to the NPRM, eleven commenters
asked DHS and DOS to accept driver's licenses that are in compliance
with the REAL ID Act of 2005.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Pub. L. 109-13, codified at 49 U.S.C. 30301 note.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response
As previously stated, driver's licenses currently do not denote
citizenship. The REAL ID specifications are still under consideration,
therefore the Secretary of Homeland Security cannot designate these
documents for travel in the Western Hemisphere. Once documents are
available that comply with the requirements of the REAL ID Act, the
Secretary may consider these documents for WHTI purposes. DHS will be
issuing a proposed rule implementing REAL ID driver's license
standards. At that time, DHS would encourage States interested in
developing driver's licenses that will meet both the REAL ID and WHIT
requirements to work closely with us to that end.
4. Border Crossing Cards
Comment
In response to the ANPRM, two commenters recommended that Border
Crossing Cards (BCCs) be acceptable documentation for citizens of
Mexico entering the United States through airports. One commenter to
the NPRM stated that the proposed rule would eliminate the BCC as an
acceptable entry document.
Response
At this time, DHS and DOS do not support allowing the BCC without
any additional documents in the air environment. The BCC is not
compatible with CBP's Advance Passenger Information System (APIS),
which collects data from travelers prior to their arrival in and
departure from the United States, and thus the BCC does not meet the
security objectives of WHTI. Accordingly, DHS has not designated the
BCC as a document sufficient to denote identity and citizenship for the
purposes of air travel into the United States when used by itself.
However, this final rule does not change the status of the BCC as a
valid entry document at sea and land-border ports-of-entry.
5. Merchant Mariner Cards
Comment
We received two comments to the NPRM that endorse the proposal that
a Merchant Mariners' Document (MMD) be accepted as proof of citizenship
and identity. These commenters also asserted that the MMD should also
be accepted for legal aliens because a U.S. Coast Guard-issued MMD will
provide the required proof of citizenship and identity for these
individuals.
Response
The U.S. Coast Guard primarily issues MMDs to U.S. citizen Merchant
Mariners.\16\ The Secretary of Homeland Security has determined that an
MMD, when used in conjunction with maritime business, would be
sufficient to denote identity and citizenship when presented upon
arrival at an air port-of-entry. Accordingly, under this rule, United
States citizens who possess an MMD would continue to be exempt from the
requirement to present a passport when arriving in the United States at
air ports-of-entry. However, the Coast Guard has proposed to phase-out
the MMD over the next five years and streamline all existing Merchant
Mariner credentials. DHS will accept the MMD as long as it is an
unexpired document. We also note that United States citizen Merchant
Mariners serving on U.S. flag vessels are eligible for no-fee U.S.
passports upon presentation of a letter from the employer and an MMD,
in addition to the standard evidence of citizenship and identity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ In very limited circumstances, foreign nationals who are
enrolled as students at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy may obtain
an MMD. However, the number of international students who may attend
the Academy at any one time is 30 (46 CFR 310.66); therefore, the
number of MMDs issued to foreign nationals at any one time is
limited to 30. These MMDs denote citizenship on their face and are
valid only while a cadet in the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (46 CFR
12.25-25). These foreign nationals will not be permitted to use the
MMD for entry purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. NEXUS Air Cards
Comment
Eleven commenters recommended that the NEXUS Air program be
accelerated and expanded. One commenter also added that the U.S.
government should attempt to reduce the costs of programs such as NEXUS
Air.
Response
NEXUS Air is an airport border clearance pilot project implemented
at one airport in Vancouver, Canada, by CBP and the Canada Border
Services Agency pursuant to the Shared Border Accord and Smart Border
Declaration between the United States and Canada. The NEXUS Air
alternative inspection program allows pre-screened, low-risk travelers
to be processed more efficiently by United States and Canadian border
officials. CBP is planning to expand the program beyond the Vancouver
international airport to other Canadian airports, but does not intend
to lower the costs of the program at this time. Travelers interested in
joining the NEXUS Air or any other CBP-sponsored trusted traveler
program should consult the CBP Web site (https://www.cbp.gov) for future
expansion plans, current availability, acceptance, and instructions on
how to enroll in the program.
[[Page 68418]]
7. Passport Cards
Comment
We received many comments asking DHS and DOS to develop low-cost
alternative travel documents. Eight commenters stated that an
alternative, secure travel document must be cost-effective and
available in a timely fashion for the average traveler. Fifteen
commenters asked that a low-cost travel card be developed. One
commenter asked that a card replace the traditional passport book,
stating that paper documentation is outdated. One commenter stated that
the document should fit in a wallet and be more durable than the
traditional passport book.
Two commenters stated that any technology contained in a secure
travel document should be determined before an implementation date is
finalized. Nine commenters stated that the Passport Card's scope should
be expanded to all modes of travel between the U.S., Mexico, and
Canada. One commenter stressed that the U.S. should work with Canada to
develop a similar low-cost travel document in Canada. One commenter
asked that a Passport Card be available for infrequent, as well as
frequent, travelers.
Response
DOS, in consultation with DHS, has begun developing an alternative
format passport: a card-format, limited-use Passport Card. Like a
traditional passport book, the Passport Card will be a secure travel
document that establishes the identity and citizenship of the bearer.
The Passport Card is being designed to benefit those citizens in border
communities who regularly cross the northern and southern borders every
day where such travel is an integral part of their daily lives. As
currently envisioned, it will be the size of a credit card and will be
less expensive than a traditional passport book. The application
process for the Passport Card will be the same as that for the passport
book in that each applicant will have to establish United States
citizenship, personal identity, and entitlement to obtain the document.
DOS intends to make the Passport Card available by summer 2007. For
more information see 71 FR 60928 (October 17, 2006). The Secretaries of
DHS and DOS have worked closely with the Canadian and Mexican
governments on numerous fronts, including the Security and Prosperity
Partnership (SPP) of North America, the Smart Border Declaration, and
the Shared Border Accord.
8. Tribal Documents
Comment
Three commenters to the NPRM stated that Native Americans should be
able to use their Tribal documents in the air environment because
treaty rights assure cross-border travel between the U.S. and Canada.
Response
Section 289 of the INA \17\ provides that Native Americans born in
Canada may ``pass the borders of the United States,'' provided they
possess at least 50 percentum of Native American blood. Historically,
the courts have addressed the right of Native Americans born in Canada
to ``pass the borders of the United States'' in the context of land
border crossings.\18\ Case law has not expressly addressed the
extension of the right to ``pass the borders of the United States'' by
air.\19\ Moreover, any right or privilege to ``pass the border'' does
not necessarily encompass a right to ``pass the border'' without
sufficient proof of identity and citizenship. Under the final rule,
Native Americans born in Canada will be required to present a valid
passport when departing from or entering the United States by air.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ 8 U.S.C. 1359.
\18\ See Akins v. Saxbe, 380 F. Supp. 1210, 1221 (D. Maine 1974)
(``[I]t is reasonable to assume that Congress'' purpose in using the
Jay Treaty language in the 1928 Act was to recognize and secure the
right of free passage as it had been guaranteed by that Treaty.'')
See also United States ex rel. Diabo v. McCandless, 18 F.2d 282
(E.D. Pa. 1927), aff'd, 25 F.2d 71 (3rd Cir. 1928).
\19\ See Matter of Yellowquill, 16 I. & N. Dec. 576 (BIA 1978).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding Native Americans born in the United States, Federal
statutes apply absent some clear indication that Congress did not
intend for them to apply.\20\ IRTPA expressly applies to United States
citizens and as a matter of law Native Americans born in the United
States are United States citizens.\21\ Moreover, Congress did not
indicate any intention to exclude Native Americans born in the United
States from the requirements of IRTPA. Under this final rule,
therefore, Native Americans born in the United States will be required
to present a valid passport when entering the United States by air.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See Federal Power Commission v. Tuscarora Indian Nation,
362 U.S. 99, 120 (1960); Taylor v. Ala. Intertribal Council Title IV
J.T.P.A., 261 F.3d 1032, 1034-1035 (11th Cir. 2001).
\21\ 8 U.S.C. 1401(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Implementation and Effect on Specific Populations
Numerous commenters raised questions about how the new rule would
be implemented and how it would affect specific populations.
1. General
Comment
Two commenters to the NPRM noted that a U.S. citizen cannot be
denied entry to the United States. One commenter stated that the NPRM
did not address U.S. citizens that arrive at ports-of-entry without a
valid travel document.
Response
Section 215(b) of the INA requires U.S. citizens to bear passports
unless excepted by the President. By section 7209, Congress has limited
this exception authority to those individuals bearing other documents
acceptable to the Secretary of Homeland Security.
Comment
Three commenters asked if they would need passports if the
effective date of the rule falls between their departure and return
dates. One commenter asked that CBP refrain from penalizing air
carriers that transport travelers who, under the new passport
requirements, are improperly documented.
Response
Persons returning to the United States after the effective date of
implementation should plan to depart from the United States with
documents sufficient to meet requirements that will be in place when
they return. Current regulations do not contain penalty provisions for
carriers that transport U.S. citizens to the United States without
proper documentation. However, under the current law (8 U.S.C. 1323)
carriers that transport non-U.S. citizens into the United States who
are not properly documented are subject to penalties.
Comment
One commenter stated that the NPRM is contrary to U.S. obligations
under international human rights law, free trade agreements, and U.S.
statutes, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, the Charter of the Organization of American States, the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and the NAFTA Implementation
Act, because the rules restrict free movement of people in the Western
Hemisphere.
Response
By requiring a valid passport as an entry document, DHS and DOS are
not denying U.S. or non-U.S. citizens the ability to travel to and from
the United
[[Page 68419]]
States. Requiring sufficient proof of identity and citizenship through
presentation of a passport or other acceptable document upon entry to
the United States is fully within DHS and DOS's authority pursuant to 8
U.S.C. 1182(d)(4)(B) and 1185(b).
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated that this rule violates the
Convention on International Civil Aviation (ICAO), claiming that, under
Annex 9, a contracting State shall allow airline crew possessing a
crewmember certificate to enter the country without a passport or visa.
Response
The commenter cited provision 3.74 in Annex 9 of the Convention on
ICAO. However, on March 25, 2004, provision 3.74 was amended and
replaced with a new provision 3.76 (Amendment 19). Under the new
provision, contracting states shall waive the visa requirement for
arriving crewmembers presenting crewmember certificates, when arriving
in a duty status on an international flight and seeking temporary entry
for the period allowed by the receiving state before joining their next
assigned flight in a duty status. Therefore, the exception cited by the
commenter only applies to visas and not to passports. Therefore,
requiring a valid passport does not violate the Convention on ICAO.
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated that because the passport is
machine readable, it would speed up the immigration process. Another
commenter stated that such timesavings are not benefits because the
cost has been ``shifted'' to citizens.
Response
As stated in the NPRM, by requiring the vast majority of air
passengers to possess a passport, CBP officers would reduce the time
and effort used to manually enter passenger information into the
computer system on arrival because the officer can quickly scan the
machine-readable zone of the passport to process the information using
standard passport readers used for all machine readable passports
worldwide. It is difficult to precisely determine the improved
efficiencies resulting from limiting the acceptable documents in the
air environment. Based on information from CBP field operations, CBP
estimates that presenting secure and machine-readable documentation may
typically save CBP officers from 5 to 30 seconds per air passenger
processed. This could result in an annual cost savings of $1.7 million
to $10.4 million.
2. Outer Continental Shelf
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated that the proposed regulations do
not clearly address the offshore community, creating ambiguity for CBP
officers to either not require a passport or to require them based on
the CBP officer's knowledge of offshore operations. This commenter also
suggested that the regulations be amended to include a definition of a
Mobile Offshore Drilling Units (MODU). Six commenters suggested that
the regulations expressly provide that U.S. citizens should be exempt
from bearing a valid passport when entering or departing the United
States when traveling as an employee of an offshore drilling company
directly between the United States and a MODU operating, attached, or
transiting between well sites on the United States Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS).
Response
DHS and DOS do not intend to create an exemption in the regulations
specifically for employees on the United States OCS. When these
employees have not departed the United States or have already been
cleared by CBP upon entry from a foreign port or place, they will not
be required to present a passport upon re-entry. As described in the
NPRM, offshore workers who work aboard a MODU attached to the United
States OCS and travel to and from such a MODU would not need to possess
a passport to re-enter the United States if they depart the United
States and do not enter a foreign port or place. DHS and DOS note that
offshore employees on MODUs underway, which are not considered
attached, would not need to present a passport for re-entry to the
United States mainland if they do not enter a foreign port or place
during transit. However, an individual who travels to a MODU from
outside the United States OCS and, therefore, has not been previously
inspected and admitted to the United States, would be required to
possess a passport and visa when arriving at the United States port-of-
entry by air. Likewise, an individual who travels by air to a foreign
flagged MODU, who has not been previously inspected or admitted to the
United States by CBP, must present a passport or alternative document
and, if required, a visa because they have traveled to a foreign port
or place.
As stated previously, arrivals by sea will not be finalized in this
rule but will be addressed in a future rulemaking for sea and land-
border ports-of-entry.
3. Emergencies
Comment
Three commenters expressed concern about the passport requirement
and emergencies (medical, natural disasters) that might require air
transport across a border.
Response
IRTPA provides for situations in which documentation requirements
may be waived on a case-by-case basis for unforeseen emergencies or
``humanitarian or national interest reasons.'' See section 7209(c)(2)
of IRTPA.
F. Outside the Scope of This Rulemaking
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM made numerous comments on the technical
specifications for DOS's Passport Card.
Response
Comments regarding the technical specifications for the DOS-issued
Passport Card are beyond the scope of this rule; however, please see
the recently published NPRM at 71 FR 60928 (Oct. 17, 2006).
Comment
One commenter stated that the NPRM correctly acknowledges that the
Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) card is a sufficiently secure document
issued by the U.S. government.
Response
DHS and DOS are allowing the Permanent Resident Card to be
presented upon entry to the U.S. not because the Secretary has made a
determination that this is an acceptable alternative document, but
because LPRs are not covered by section 7209 of IRTPA. Section 211(b)
of the INA specifically establishes that an LPR can present a valid,
unexpired Form I-551 (Permanent Resident Card) alone when applying for
readmission to the U.S. after being absent from the U.S. for less than
one year. Form I-551 is a secure, fully adjudicated document that can
be verified and authenticated by CBP at ports-of-entry. DHS published a
notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register on July 27, 2006,
that proposes to collect and verify the identity of LPRs arriving at
air and sea ports-of-entry, or requiring secondary inspection at land
ports of entry, through US-VISIT. \22\
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\22\ See 71 FR 42605.
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[[Page 68420]]
G. Public Relations
Comment
We received seven comments recommending that the U.S. Government
work multilaterally with Canada and Mexico to address WHTI issues.
Response
The Secretaries of DHS and DOS have worked closely with the
Canadian and Mexican governments on numerous fronts, including the
Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) of North America, the Smart
Border Declaration, and the Shared Border Accord. The objectives of the
initiatives are to establish a common approach to security to protect
North America from external threats, prevent and respond to threats
within North America, and further streamline the secure and efficient
movement of legitimate traffic across our shared borders. The
Secretaries are committed to working with our international partners to
establish a common security strategy.
Comment
We received fifty-seven comments to the ANPRM on public outreach
and the importance of educating the traveling public about the passport
requirements for the Western Hemisphere. Several commenters asked that
DHS and DOS work with the private sector on an aggressive outreach
campaign.
Response
DHS and DOS are committed to an effective and intensive
communications strategy during the implementation of WHTI. To that end,
the Departments will continue to issue detailed press releases, address
the public's frequently asked questions, supply travel information on
their Web sites, and hold public meetings in affected communities.
H. Regulatory Analyses
1. General
Comment
We received ten comments expressing concern that this rule will
adversely affect spontaneous travel to destinations in the Western
Hemisphere.
Response
This rule may have an impact on unplanned travel within the Western
Hemisphere. We found that most air travelers make their plans in
advance of their travel date and can obtain or already possess a
passport (see the Regulatory Assessment that accompanies this rule
which is available on the public docket). Additionally, travelers in
need of a passport quickly may request expedited processing at an
additional cost. We believe that the majority of travelers will be able
to obtain a passport in time to make their scheduled trips. Travelers
are strongly encouraged to obtain the necessary documentation in
advance of all international travel.
Comment
We received thirty-eight comments expressing concern that the rule
would negatively affect tourism by impeding travel within the Western
Hemisphere. Several commenters stated they would no longer take trips
to Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean if these rules go into effect.
Response
This rule could have an impact on tourism. These impacts were
explored in detail in the Regulatory Assessment for this rule, which
was made available upon publication of the NPRM. \23\ An updated
Regulatory Assessment is published with this final rule and is
available on the docket.
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\23\ See NPRM at 71 FR 46155.
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2. Executive Order 12866
Comment
Nine commenters to the NPRM argued that the economic analysis does
not sufficiently address negative impacts to the economy.
Response
While these commenters were dissatisfied with the economic
analysis, none of them submitted specific information that would
enhance the current analysis, nor did they submit alternative analyses
that more robustly consider the impacts on the U.S. and foreign
economies. The direct costs to the traveling public, which were the
focus of the Regulatory Assessment, were extensively explored,
researched, and analyzed.
According to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-
4, an economic analysis should ``look beyond the direct benefits and
direct costs and consider any important ancillary benefits and
countervailing risks'' (page 26). This Circular notes, however, ``some
important benefits and costs * * * may be inherently too difficult to
quantify or monetize given current data and methods'' (pages 26-27).
Given the data available for this analysis and the limitations of using
this data to assess indirect costs of the rule, CBP's Regulatory
Assessment concentrated on the direct impacts to U.S. citizens who will
need to obtain a passport in order to continue traveling by air in the
Western Hemisphere, including the costs to the traveler of opting to
forgo travel. In that assessment, CBP anticipated that the vast
majority (96 percent) of U.S. travelers to Western Hemisphere
destinations already have or will obtain a passport and will continue
traveling in the Western Hemisphere. As stated in the assessment, we
cannot look at the number of travelers who choose to forgo travel as a
result of the rule and determine what the welfare losses to travelers
or gains and losses to different players in different economies will
be--we simply cannot determine adequately what each individual traveler
(or even bloc of travelers) will do to express his preferences for
goods and services given a change in price in one portion of his travel
cost. Thus, again per Circular A-4, we presented the relevant
quantitative information available, its strengths and weaknesses, and a
description of the non-quantified effects. Furthermore, CBP conducted a
formal probabilistic modeling in the form of a Monte Carlo analysis to
measure the uncertainty and variance of the estimates presented. We
discussed the industries we expect to be affected by this rule and
noted that any impacts will be spread over wide swaths of the domestic
and foreign economies.
It is extremely difficult to estimate the indirect costs with any
certainty. The analysis made many assumptions regarding direct costs
that may carry errors or over- or underestimate indirect costs.
Travelers are faced with complex decisions and myriad substitutes for
particular trips that could still maximize their utility. There is
evidence in the travel literature cited throughout the analysis that
price may not be a very big determinant of destination selection. CBP
chose to estimate direct costs using demand elasticities to avoid
misrepresenting direct costs (we would not want to assume that
travelers' decisions will be completely unaffected by the passport
requirement), knowing that we may then be overstating the simplicity of
the traveler's decision-making process. In doing this, we have likely
overstated indirect costs.
Because such a small percentage of the covered traveling population
is likely to forgo travel (even with our application of the binary
choice for the traveler), the macro-economic impacts of the proposed
rule are likely small as well. Unfortunately, given the dearth of
specific data, we have only rough estimates of how many people travel,
where they come from, and where they
[[Page 68421]]
go. We know even less about how they will alter their behavior if they
do, in fact, forgo obtaining a passport.
Comment
One commenter to the NPRM stated that the economic analysis cannot
be considered reliable because it examines a program that is not yet in
place.
Response
Per Executive Order 12866, an economic analysis is required for all
major rulemakings prior to final implementation. This analysis must
contain an identification of the regulatory ``baseline'' as well as the
anticipated costs and benefits of the rule on relevant stakeholders.
The analysis prepared for the NPRM was reviewed by OMB in a