This is being reported on the news wires tonight.
Looks like you will be affected if you need a new passport after October 26th, until the new biometric passports can be issued. People with current passports are okay providing those passports have a barcode.
If your passport is due to expire after October 26th and you are planning to renew it, then it may be worth doing it earlier to save having to queue for a visa.
BRITONS WILL NEED VISAS FOR US VISITS
By Mark Sage, PA News, in New York
Britons travelling to the United States, even for short visits, will soon need
a visa, it emerged today.
Currently, Britons can enter America for up to three months without a visa,
under the "visa waiver programme".
But the rules are being tightened from October 26, by which time citizens of
visa waiver countries must have new "biometric" passports, which contain
digital photographs or fingerprints.
American officials have been told by their counterparts in London that Britain
will not be able to start issuing the biometric passports before the October
deadline.
James Williams, director of a visitor registration programme, launched by the
US Department of Homeland Security on Monday, said most of the 27 visa waiver
countries "cannot comply" by the deadline.
He said Britain had already informed US officials that it would not be issuing
the new passports by October.
The visa ruling will only affect Britons who are issued new, but
non-biometric, passports after October 26.
Anyone who is issued a non-biometric passport after that date will have to go
through the time-consuming process of obtaining a visitor's visa from the US
Embassy in London.
People with valid passports issued before October 26 will not need a visa, as
long as the passport has a bar code.
It is understood British officials are lobbying Washington hard to extend the
deadline or make arrangements to prevent disruption to British travellers.
It is also likely to cause concern among the global travel industry and
tourism bodies in America.
Some 15.1 million tourists entered the United States under the visa waiver
programme last year, accounting for two thirds of spending by foreign visitors.
Among the Britons likely to be caught up in the new regime are those heading
for winter sunshine breaks in Florida, and those heading to ski resorts for the
early season.
In addition to the difficulties the new regime may create, a marked increase
in the number of people queuing for visas at the American Embassy in Grosvenor
Square could create a security nightmare for police.
A British Embassy spokesman said: "We are in close contact with the
Department of Homeland Security on the issue of biometrics, and have been from
the start, and we continue to work to find a solution."
On Monday, stringent new security regulations were introduced at American air
and sea ports.
People entering on a visa now must be fingerprinted and have their photographs
taken.
Those on the visa waiver scheme are not currently affected, but those on work
visas are.
The US's 115 international airports and 14 major seaports are covered by the
programme.
The system allows officials to instantly check an immigrant or visitor's
criminal background.
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said the US aimed to be "open to
visitors but closed to terrorists".
Looks like you will be affected if you need a new passport after October 26th, until the new biometric passports can be issued. People with current passports are okay providing those passports have a barcode.
If your passport is due to expire after October 26th and you are planning to renew it, then it may be worth doing it earlier to save having to queue for a visa.
BRITONS WILL NEED VISAS FOR US VISITS
By Mark Sage, PA News, in New York
Britons travelling to the United States, even for short visits, will soon need
a visa, it emerged today.
Currently, Britons can enter America for up to three months without a visa,
under the "visa waiver programme".
But the rules are being tightened from October 26, by which time citizens of
visa waiver countries must have new "biometric" passports, which contain
digital photographs or fingerprints.
American officials have been told by their counterparts in London that Britain
will not be able to start issuing the biometric passports before the October
deadline.
James Williams, director of a visitor registration programme, launched by the
US Department of Homeland Security on Monday, said most of the 27 visa waiver
countries "cannot comply" by the deadline.
He said Britain had already informed US officials that it would not be issuing
the new passports by October.
The visa ruling will only affect Britons who are issued new, but
non-biometric, passports after October 26.
Anyone who is issued a non-biometric passport after that date will have to go
through the time-consuming process of obtaining a visitor's visa from the US
Embassy in London.
People with valid passports issued before October 26 will not need a visa, as
long as the passport has a bar code.
It is understood British officials are lobbying Washington hard to extend the
deadline or make arrangements to prevent disruption to British travellers.
It is also likely to cause concern among the global travel industry and
tourism bodies in America.
Some 15.1 million tourists entered the United States under the visa waiver
programme last year, accounting for two thirds of spending by foreign visitors.
Among the Britons likely to be caught up in the new regime are those heading
for winter sunshine breaks in Florida, and those heading to ski resorts for the
early season.
In addition to the difficulties the new regime may create, a marked increase
in the number of people queuing for visas at the American Embassy in Grosvenor
Square could create a security nightmare for police.
A British Embassy spokesman said: "We are in close contact with the
Department of Homeland Security on the issue of biometrics, and have been from
the start, and we continue to work to find a solution."
On Monday, stringent new security regulations were introduced at American air
and sea ports.
People entering on a visa now must be fingerprinted and have their photographs
taken.
Those on the visa waiver scheme are not currently affected, but those on work
visas are.
The US's 115 international airports and 14 major seaports are covered by the
programme.
The system allows officials to instantly check an immigrant or visitor's
criminal background.
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said the US aimed to be "open to
visitors but closed to terrorists".