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It's not too soon to start thinking about traveling next year. In 2009, a series of new rules and regulations kick in that could affect your vacation. Ignore them, and you might find yourself delayed or denied access to your destination.
No, really.
Last year, when new travel document requirements went into effect, the government was quickly overwhelmed by passport applications. One of them came from Martin Mitchell, an Air Force major who sent a passport renewal in April but still hadn't received it by mid-July. With less than two weeks to go before a planned trip, he contacted me.
"I read that you have contacts with the State Department," he wrote in an e-mail. "I would appreciate if you could act on my behalf to try and shake loose my application."
Well, I did have a few names, and with their help, Mitchell managed to get his passport renewed in time.
Not everyone was so lucky. Christine Simmons and her husband applied for passports after booking a vacation through Expedia last January.
But by early March, just days before her trip, her husband still didn't have his paperwork—although, for some odd reason, she did.
"Please help!" she wrote in an e-mail. I phoned the State Department, and it was able to find the passport. It arrived a day after they were supposed to leave—"a dollar short and a day late," she says.
Fortunately, Expedia allowed her to change her dates after paying a rebooking fee, so all wasn't lost.
Don't let that happen to you. Here are four new rules you need to know for 2009:
On June 1, the
Susan Tanzman, president or Martin Travel & Tours, a
"If they have a trip after the beginning of the new year, I tell them they need a passport," she says. Why the rush? Tanzman, who is also a lawyer, remembers the last passport crisis, and doesn't want her travelers caught in the middle of a possible sequel. That's sound advice. Applications made at the end of the fourth quarter or the start of the first quarter—in other words, in December, January and February—typically get processed within two weeks, she says. After that, who knows?
The European Parliament this year approved a new "transparency" rule mandating that airfares have to include all taxes, fees and charges added to the basic ticket price and known at the time of publication.
It is expected to take effect either in late 2008 or early 2009, according to the EU. At least theoretically, that should mean no more unpleasant surprises when you buy a ticket for travel within
And any optional price supplements must be communicated in "a clear, transparent and unambiguous way at the start of any booking process" and allow passengers to opt-in for them, according to the EU.
Stanley Gyoshev (http://www.elliott.org/blog/want-an-all-inclusive-airline-ticket-price-then-sign-this-petition-now/), a co-founder of the online travel site Lessno.com, was one of the key proponents of the change. He says there are two reasons why American air carriers may have no choice but to adopt these transparency rules, too. "For one, the federal government could increase consumer protection by using laws relating to unfair advertising—by insisting that airlines only advertise products and pricing which is readily available to the traveler without undue restrictions and red tape," he told me. "The second is that since major international airlines are selling tickets in
The Department of Homeland Security's new Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) will become mandatory on
Last year, in response to increasing consumer frustration over flight delays, the State of
Jeff Miller, a travel industry attorney based in
Considering that 2008 is an election year — which typically means that few significant laws are passed — next year is shaping up to be an eventful one for travelers. If nothing else, new passport, visa and airline ticket rules, plus the prospect of a passenger bill of rights, will make it an interesting one.
Send your questions to chris@elliott.org.