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10 August 2004
U.S. Delays Biometric Passport Deadline until 2005
Bush signs law to delay 2004 implementation
Washington -- President Bush signed a bill August 9 delaying the
deadline for implementation of new high-technology passports for 27
countries.
The new law calls for adoption of biometric passport
identification standards by October 26, 2005 rather than by October
26, 2004, which was the deadline originally adopted when the U.S.
Congress ordered more secure passport standards as part of the
Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002.
The delay would allow immigration officials in affected nations
-- those that participate in the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) -- one
more year to properly develop, test and incorporate what are called
biometric standards in travel documents.
"This extension was necessary to avoid potential disruption of
international travel and provide the international community
adequate time to develop viable programs for producing a more
secure, biometrically enabled passport," said State Department
Deputy Spokesman Adam Ereli.
Biometrics indicators are features that can be definitively
linked to a given individual, such as fingerprints. The
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) has recommended
that facial recognition technology become the preferred technology
for passports. Facial recognition technology takes use of the
standard photo identification card to a new level of sophistication.
In current practice, a border official compares the face of a
traveler before him with a photo in the passport. With the newly
developing facial recognition technology, a camera at the port of
entry will capture the traveler's image, then a computer will
compare and validate the facial characteristics of the individual
presenting the passport and the passport itself. The method is
supposed to help better detect forged documents and improve
security. The problem is that the method is still in the testing
stages. Officials from the Departments of Homeland Security and
State went to Congress and sought the delay because the United
States and other nations are encountering serious challenges in
designing and testing the new technology.
Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Maura Harty
outlined the problems at a congressional hearing June 15. "We
face complex technological and operational issues," said Harty,
explaining the difficulties involved in ensuring the system's
readability and security. "Working through these hard issues takes
time." The 2002 law called on the 27 nations participating in the
Visa Waiver Program to adopt a more secure design, but international
agreement on what standard to use came only in May 2003.
"Thus, VWP countries had 17 months from that decision date to
bring a biometric passport from design to production—a process that
normally takes years," Harty said. In her testimony, Harty said it
appeared that "few, if any" of the affected nations would be ready
with a new passport design by October 2004.
Facial recognition passport technology works using a computer
chip. So not only are nations producing new passports, they are also
designing, developing and producing reading machines that will scan
the passports at every port of entry. Nations are also working to
ensure that their passports and reading machines are compatible with
those produced by all other nations involved in the VWP so travelers
can move smoothly across international borders.
Requirements that all nations issue machine-readable passports to
travelers will take effect in the next few months and are not
subject to the deadline extension signed by President Bush. Nations
sharing travel reciprocity under the VWP are required to issue
machine-readable passports to their travelers by October 26. That
deadline was supposed to have taken effect last year but was
extended by the secretary of state when nations appealed for a
postponement.
Because of security concerns surrounding these transitions in
passport systems and border controls, the Department of Homeland
Security will also begin asking VWP travelers for digital
fingerprints and photographs as they enter the United States. The
agency calls it a fast and easy process that enhances border
security and facilitates the movement and safety of legitimate
travelers. The new requirement will begin September 30.
The United States began a concerted effort to review and revise
its entry policies for international visitors when investigations
revealed that some September 11 hijackers had exploited lapses in
the system to gain entry to the country and make their attacks.
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