EC Commissioner Questions Validity Of ESTA Fee - Business Travel News

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EC Commissioner Questions Validity Of ESTA Fee

August 12, 2010 - 12:20 PM ET

By Amon Cohen

The European Commission has sharply criticized the United States for announcing last week the introduction of a fee for its Electronic System for Travel Authorization. European commissioner for home affairs Cecilia Malmström said the fee would damage "transatlantic mobility."

She also will investigate whether the application of a $14 charge starting Sept. 8 will render ESTA tantamount to a visa application process for visitors from countries in the U.S. Visa Waiver Program. Twenty-three European Union member states are included in the 36-country program.

Passport holders from VWP countries entering the United States without a visa have been obliged to make an ESTA application since January 2009. The online process usually tells them within seconds whether they have been granted the authorization, which permits the passport holder multiple entries to the United States for two years or until their passport runs out.

In line with the Travel Promotion Act of 2009, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced an interim final rule on Aug. 6 that ESTA applicants must pay a $14 fee, of which $10 will go toward tourism promotion and $4 toward administration of the program.

Malmström said an EC assessment in December 2008 concluded ESTA was not tantamount to a visa application but that she will have to take another look at the situation. "I regret very much the fee established by the interim rule," she said in an official statement. "I have repeatedly raised concerns about the introduction of this fee and I remain convinced that these new requirements, applicable only to travelers under the Visa Waiver Program, are inconsistent with the commitment of the U.S. to facilitate transatlantic mobility and will be an additional onus for European citizens traveling to the U.S."

A spokesperson for CBP said she was unable to comment on the commissioner's remarks. However, she added: "It's a nominal fee. We continue to be a welcoming country for one million people to the United States every day."

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