[Brahms-l] Fw: NYTimes.com Article: U.S. Acts to Notify Foreigners of Tougher Ru les for Visits (fwd)

From: flemming videbaek <videbaek@rcf.rhic.bnl.gov>
Date: Tue Sep 14 2004 - 17:03:19 EDT
FYI,

this should be read carefully by our overseas collegues in case you do not
know about this.
regards
    Flemming

----------------------------------------------------------------
Flemming Videbaek
Physics Department
Brookhaven National Laboratory

e-mail: videbaek@bnl.gov
phone: 631-344-4106
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From: "White DePace, Susan M" <swd@bnl.gov>
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Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 4:09 PM
Subject: NYTimes.com Article: U.S. Acts to Notify Foreigners of Tougher Ru
les for Visits (fwd)


> For those of you who may not get the New York Times.
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> U.S. Acts to Notify Foreigners of Tougher Rules for Visits September 11,
> 2004  By RACHEL L. SWARNS
>
> WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 - Only three weeks before sweeping policy shifts
begin
> affecting foreign visitors at American airports, officials say they are
> intensifying their efforts to inform travelers from more than 20
> industrialized nations to prepare for tough new entry requirements.
> By the end of September, tourists from 27 nations, including Britain,
> Germany, Japan and Australia, will for the first time be photographed and
> fingerprinted on arrival. And beginning at the end of October, passengers
> from 22 countries, mostly in Europe, must carry machine-readable passports
> in order to visit without visas.
> Officials at the Department of Homeland Security plan to start advertising
> in newspapers in Britain and Australia later this month, informing
travelers
> from those countries that airport inspectors here will start collecting
> digital fingerprints and photographs from them on Sept. 30. The officials,
> who have highlighted the new requirement in meetings with trade groups and
> journalists in London and Germany in recent months, also plan to attend a
> trade show in Hong Kong in coming weeks.
> On Wednesday, the State Department sent a cable to its consulates and
> embassies in the affected nations, encouraging consular officials to
expand
> their efforts to inform travelers about the need to have machine-readable
> passports by Oct. 26. Consular officials have already been posting
> advisories on their Web sites and meeting with chambers of commerce,
travel
> groups and news organizations, the department says.
> Tourists from Europe and other industrialized countries are not typically
> required to apply for visas to visit the United States, but they will have
> to do so if they do not have machine-readable passports by the Oct. 26
> deadline.
> Officials at the Travel Industry Association of America, which represents
> the nation's largest airlines, hotels, cruise lines and car rental
> companies, say some people in Spain, Italy, France and Switzerland still
> lack such passports.
> Travel industry officials commend Homeland Security for its efforts but
say
> the State Department is doing too little to inform travelers about the
> machine-readable policy.
> Rick Webster, director of government relations for the Travel Industry
> Association, said that without a concerted publicity campaign, some
> travelers might arrive at American airports without either the required
> passport or a visa.
> Starting next week, the industry group says, it will send hundreds of
e-mail
> messages to travel associations, foreign journalists and others to advise
> them of the changes.
> Angela Aggeler, a spokeswoman for the State Department, said officials had
> been using various means, among them getting articles published in
European
> newspapers, to spread word.
> The new policy that requires tourists from 27 industrialized nations to be
> fingerprinted and photographed affects travelers from 22 European
countries
> and Brunei, Singapore, Japan, Australia and New Zealand who can currently
> travel to the United States for up to 90 days without a visa. Because
> students and other visitors from those nations who stay for more than
three
> months are required to carry visas, they have already been subjected to
> these new security measures, which took effect for all visa carriers in
> January regardless of country of origin.
> The policy that requires travelers to carry machine-readable passports
will
> now affect 22 of those 27 nations. The remaining five - Andorra, Belgium,
> Liechtenstein, Luxembourg and San Marino - adopted the American standard
in
> 2003.
>
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/11/politics/11travel.html?ex=1096040610&ei=1&
> en=ce99c498b3507775
> Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
>
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Received on Tue Sep 14 16:59:38 2004

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