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INSIDE
Border
ID rules look to be relaxed
By
Meg Olson
The final
version of the new homeland security spending bill, due to
be voted on before Congress ends its regular session this week,
includes a reprieve for travelers crossing U.S. land borders
without a passport.
Conferees from the House of Representatives and the Senate worked
to reconcile widely different approaches to the Western Hemisphere
Travel Initiative (WHTI). The Senate version of the appropriations
bill included amendments by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont)
and Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) that would delay the requirement for
a passport at land borders and require further delays if certain
measures aren’t implemented to streamline and simplify
the transition. The House version of the bill did not. The final
version of the bill agreed to by conferees retains the Leahy-Stevens
language, but Leahy press secretary David Carl warned that “there’s
a serious effort to remove it,” by house Republicans.
If
approved by Congress and signed by the President the new language
would initially delay the passport requirement at land and
sea borders until June 2009. The requirement is scheduled to
be in place at air and seaports in January 2007 and a year
later at all other ports of entry. Air travelers will still
need a passport after January 2007, with or without the new
legislation.
Implementation
of the passport requirement and the new PASS card system, which
would create a new secure travel document as an alternative
to a traditional passport, would also be delayed until seven
conditions are met: standardized technology; collaboration
with Canada and Mexico; a card useable for all land and sea
travel in North America, the Caribbean and Bermuda; justification
of a fee for the new card; procedures for groups of children
traveling without their parents, such as the Point Roberts
school bus; infrastructure and training at all ports to streamline
processing of the new travel documents; a unified implementation
date for all land and sea borders.
Both Senator
Maria Cantwell and Representative Rick Larsen want to see the
language stay in the final bill.
“As
co-chair of Washington state’s 2010 Olympics
Task Force, my goal is to ensure a safe and secure border
that facilitates the free flow of travel and commerce,” Larsen
said, adding that if WHTI was implemented without the
amendments it could “create a logistical nightmare
for Washington state and slow the economic benefits we hope
to gain from the 2010 Olympics.”
Larsen also
said that, “while
it would be ideal to extend the WHTI implementation deadline
until after the 2010 Olympics, this language still provides
us a greater opportunity to go right where the administration
has gone wrong. An extension to implementing the new document
requirements under the WHTI is a step in the right direction.
This extension will give Congress more time to address
border security concerns while also considering Washington
state commerce and travel between the U.S. and Canada during
the 2010 Olympic Games.”
Another
bill that Congress will be considering in its last week in
session is the Secure Fence Act of 2006, directing the department
of homeland security to “achieve operational control
over U.S. borders.” Measures include a physical barrier
along the southern border and a study to determine
the feasibility of a “state of the art infrastructure
security system” on
the northern border.
Larsen and
Cantwell both said they would work to see the language in the
bill changed.
“Building a 700 mile fence is not the answer
to securing our borders,” Larsen said. “This legislation
only detracts resources and attention away from the real needs
of our borders. Strong border security starts with well-trained
professional border personnel and modern assets.
It is time for Congress to provide real solutions to problems
that have already been identified along our northern border.
If we are serious about increasing the security along our border,
we should focus federal resources into technologies such as
ground based sensors, unmanned aerial vehicles and cameras
to combat law breakers on our borders.”
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