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Need a passport? Three steps to gaining your ticket to world travel.


It's that time of the year again--time to pack up the kids, send the dog to the kennel, and get out the summer gear. Everyone loves to take a vacation, but if you're traveling overseas, don't forget to bring one crucial document: your passport passport

Document issued by a national government identifying a traveler as a citizen with a right to protection while abroad and a right to return to the country of citizenship. It is normally a small booklet containing a description and photograph of the bearer.
. Don't have one? No problem. "Getting a passport is not a difficult process, it's just a time-consuming process," says Charlotte Haymore, president of Travel Professionals of Color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 (www.travelprosofcolor.com).

1. You can apply for a passport at your local post office municipal office, some courthouses, and some libraries. If you're applying for a passport for fine first time, you must do so in person. You must also apply in person if your last passport was damaged or stolen or if your previous passport has expired and was issued more than 15 years ago, when you were under the age of 16, or under your old name and you don't have a legal document formally changing your name. Otherwise, you can apply for passport renewal by mail.

2. To prove U.S. citizenship, bring a previous, undamaged passport, a certified See certification.  birth certificate (a copy won't do), a naturalization naturalization, official act by which a person is made a national of a country other than his or her native one. In some countries naturalized persons do not necessarily become citizens but may merely acquire a new nationality.  certificate, certificate of citizenship era consular con·sul  
n. Abbr. Con. or Cons.
1. An official appointed by a government to reside in a foreign country and represent his or her government's commercial interests and assist its citizens there. See Usage Note at council.
 report of birth abroad. Born in the U.S. and don't have a birth certificate or previous passport? Then you'll need a letter of no record issued by your state of birth that says there is no birth certificate ors file for you. In addition, bring as many early public records of your life as possible, such as baptismal bap·tism  
n.
1. A religious sacrament marked by the symbolic use of water and resulting in admission of the recipient into the community of Christians.

2.
 certificates, hospital birth certificates, census records, or early school records.

3. Now you need to prove that you are who you say you are. A previous, undamaged passport, naturalization certificate, certificate of citizenship, current driver's license Noun 1. driver's license - a license authorizing the bearer to drive a motor vehicle
driver's licence, driving licence, driving license

license, permit, licence - a legal document giving official permission to do something

, government ID, or military ID will do the trick. Otherwise you can bring a combination of documents, such as your Social Security card, bank card, or library card, along with a U.S. citizen who has known you for at least two years and will vouch for vouch for
verb 1. guarantee, back, certify, answer for, swear to, stick up for (informal) stand witness, give assurance of, asseverate, go bail for

verb 2.
 your identity. Don't forget to bring two identical passport photos that are 2x2 inches in size and were taken within the last six months.

The fee is $85 for individuals 16 and over and $70 for those under 16. Your passport will arrive in about six weeks. For an additional fee of $60, plus the cost of overnight delivery, you can get your passport in two weeks. Because of the steps involved, consider getting your passport even if you're not planning an immediate trip. "If you're even thinking of international travel, I would say just go get it and be prepared," Haymore says. For more information, visit travel.state.gov/passport.

DID YOU KNOW?

If you're getting a passport for a minor under the age of 14, you'll need proof of the minor's citizenship and proof of your relationship to the minor, such as a birth certificate, adoption decree decree, in law, decision of a suit in a court of equity. It is the counterpart in equity of the judgment in a court of law, although in those jurisdictions where law and equity have merged, judgment is sometimes used to include both. , or court order establishing custody. All minors must apply in person. If both parents are not able to appear, the absent parent must send a notarized statement of consent authorizing issuance of the passport or the parent or guardian who appears must have proof that he or she is the sole guardian. Such proof could be a birth certificate that lists only one parent, a court order granting sole custody, or a death certificate of the other parent.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:CONSUMER LIFE
Author:Holmes, Tamara E.
Publication:Black Enterprise
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2005
Words:567
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