Condé Nast Traveler: "New Yorkers Can Enroll in Global Entry Again"

Officials at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) lifted the ban on New York state residents applying for membership in trusted traveler programs including Global Entry after barring applications from state residents for nearly six months. DHS lifted the ban after stating in a federal court filing that its reasoning for the policy was based on false statements. In February, DHS had suspended New Yorkers from the trusted traveler programs after the New York State “Green Light” law was passed that allowed undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain driver’s licenses. DHS officials claimed after the law was passed that if they could not freely access the state’s DMV database, they would not be able to verify an individual’s eligibility for Global Entry, but other states with similar policies were not excluded. Officials also amended the “Green Light” law to allow federal agencies access to the DMV records for applicants to the trusted traveler programs.

New Yorkers’ applications for Global Entry and other trusted traveler memberships including NEXUS, SENTRI, and FAST will now be processed. When the ban was enacted, approximately 175,000 New Yorkers were reportedly removed from the programs and approximately 80,000 conditionally approved or pending applications were rejected. Although New York State residents can now submit applications and renewals to Global Entry, Customs and Border Protection (CBP), which runs the trusted traveler programs, has shut down all enrollment centers until at least August 10. “The Trump Administration backing down and restoring Global Entry and other Trusted Traveler Programs to New Yorkers is a victory for travelers, workers, commerce, and our state’s economy,” Letitia James, NYS Attorney General, who sued the Trump administration over the ban, said in a statement. “We will continue to defend New York’s right to pass its own laws and will fight to protect our state’s residents anytime they are bullied by the president because safety and fairness are not mutually exclusive under the law.”

New York Times: “Trump Administration Freezes Global Entry Enrollment in New York Over Immigration Law”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced last week that New York residents can no longer apply for or re-enroll in Trusted Traveler programs including Global Entry, NEXUS, SENTRI, and FAST, because of the recently passed “Green Light Law” that allows undocumented immigrants in New York State to obtain driver’s licenses. Chad Wolf, the acting secretary of homeland security, said in a letter to the New York State government that DHS was taking this action since the “Green Light Law” prevents Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs & Border Protection (CBP) from gaining access to the state’s DMV databases without a court order.  “Although DHS. would prefer to continue our longstanding cooperative relationship with New York on a variety of these critical homeland security initiatives,” Wolf wrote in the letter, “this act and the corresponding lack of security cooperation from the New York DMV requires DHS to take immediate action to ensure DHS’s efforts to protect the homeland are not compromised.”

In response, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced on February 7 New York State's intent to sue the federal government regarding this DHS decision. "Time and time again President Trump and his Washington enablers have gone out of their way to hurt New York and other blue states whenever they can as punishment for refusing to fall in line with their dangerous and divisive agenda," Governor Cuomo said. "The Department of Homeland Security's decision to ban New Yorkers from the Trusted Traveler Program is yet another example of this administration's disrespect of the rule of law, hyper-partisan politics and use of extortion. There is no rational basis for this politically motivated ban, and we are taking legal action to stop the federal government from inconveniencing New Yorkers to score political points.”

Trusted Traveler Programs

Taking my shoes off at airport security is one of my biggest pet peeves (apart from waiting in long lines). While it’s certainly understandable that in a post-9/11 world, security must be tight, for frequent travelers waiting in long security lines and dealing with restrictions on carry-on items are some of the least pleasant aspects of flying (and that’s including airline food). And the restrictions keep coming. Most recently, the Trump administration barred passengers on foreign airlines headed to the US from ten airports in eight majority-Muslim countries from carrying “personal electronic devices (PEDs) larger than a cell phone or smart phone,” and US officials have even discussed expanding the ban to include flights to the US from Europe. Who knows what might come next.

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