On the spot
A Global Entry slowdown

Don’t thank me; I played no role in this happy outcome. But don’t thank Customs and Border Protection either, at least not until you read to the end of this column.
As I tried to make sense of this spaghetti, I’ve learned a few things about why you may not have received your card. And I’ve also learned that poking a sleeping bear gets you exactly what you think it will.
Where the ho-hum
is my card?
Probably stuck with about 300,000 others that CBP says are pending.
To get a Global Entry card, which confers on you Trusted Traveler status for five years if your application is approved, you fill out a form at
Global Entry has been around about five years, which means it’s time for that first crush of GE card holders to renew.
In ordinary circumstances, the wait time for approval is four to six weeks, CBP told me. I submitted my renewal in early or mid-December and had my card at the beginning of the year. That’s noteworthy because the partial government shutdown began on Dec. 22. It lasted 35 days. Let the backlog begin.
Strike 1.
Apparently, the program is quite popular and has had what CBP called in an email a “historic increase of new applications and renewals.”
Strike 2.
Then, some CBP personnel were reassigned to deal with what CBP called the “ongoing humanitarian and security crisis on our southern border.” For Southern Californians, that meant the LAX Global Entry office at 11099 S. La Cienega Blvd., Suite 155, closed June 23 so personnel could be redeployed.
A scheduling “glitch,” CBP said, meant some applicants or card renewers arrived and found the office locked and dark. The only nearby office is in Long Beach, which is open 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. (LAX hours were 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Mondays-Fridays.)
Because of this, getting an appointment can take a month or two, CBP said.
Strike 3.
But as baseball fans know, when the ball is dropped, you run to first anyway. You’re not completely out, and you won’t know if you don’t try.
What you can do
No easy fixes for this, but here are some things that might work:
And don’t bother
us again!
In response to an inquiry from Porter’s office, CBP replied, “Because applicants can check on the status of their applications at any time and because of the high volume of Trusted Traveler inquiries currently pending with CBP, we kindly request that your office refrain from requesting additional updates from OCA [Office of Congressional Affairs] so that we may focus our time and resources to addressing new and unanswered inquiries.”
Here is Porter’s response to CBP’s response.
“CBP’s suggestion that I refrain from doing that part of my job is deeply problematic, and it will not deter me from cutting through agency red tape on behalf of my constituents.”
Appel isn’t the only one who has struggled with this issue. Joel Lupkin of Calabasas and I have been communicating for several weeks about his struggles to get his renewal, submitted in May, off dead center.
In an email, he shared the letter he just received from CBP saying his application had been “conditionally approved.” But he has to appear for a second interview. “We are booked through March 2020 and currently scheduling appointments for April 2020,” the letter said. By my count, that’s more than six months away.

