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Louisville City Wire

Friday, November 22, 2024

Rep. Morgan McGarvey Leads Colleagues to Take Next Steps to Open Louisville’s First Passport Agency

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Congressman Morgan McGarvey | Rep Morgan McGarvey official US House headshot

Congressman Morgan McGarvey | Rep Morgan McGarvey official US House headshot

WASHINGTON, D.C. – On July 27, Congressman Morgan McGarvey (KY-03), Congresswoman Erin Houchin (IN-09), Congressman Thomas Massie (KY-04) and Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02) sent a letter to the Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs, Rona Bitter, calling for the Bureau of Consular Affairs to consider opening a passport agency in Louisville Kentucky.

“We write to you today to urge you to consider opening a passport agency in Louisville, Kentucky – a major hub of national and international travel and a significant regional powerhouse without ready access to a nearby passport processing location,” they wrote. “Indeed, those in the area must travel roughly 5 hours to Chicago or Detroit, 7 hours to Atlanta, or 9 hours to Hot Springs, Arkansas, to get to their closest passport agency. This distance places an undue economic, time, and social burden on those in the area, exacerbating frustration and overall constituent dissatisfaction with the system. Moreover, the lack of a passport agency in this heavily populated area of the country hikes wait times in other passport agencies in a spillover effect that increases backlogs across the board and strains workloads for our public servants.”

“Louisville needs a passport agency,”  said Rep. McGarvey. “This would make people’s lives easier so they don’t have to travel all the way to Atlanta or Chicago just to get their renewed passports. This year, my office has received nearly 400 passport requests, and we’re expecting even more. Creating a passport agency in my district would not only help my constituents, but everyone in Kentucky, and people in surrounding states, to process their applications in a timely manner.”

The full text of the letter is below: 

The American people’s ability to travel is integral to intercultural exchange, economic development, and the reunification of travelers with family and friends who live abroad.  Unfortunately, passport application backlogs, geographic barriers, and costs keep too many Americans from sharing equitably in this vision of a mobile and internationally involved populace. 

We write to you today to urge you to consider opening a passport agency in Louisville, Kentucky – a major hub of national and international travel and a significant regional powerhouse without ready access to a nearby passport processing location. Indeed, those in the area must travel roughly 5 hours to Chicago or Detroit, 7 hours to Atlanta, or 9 hours to Hot Springs, Arkansas, to get to their closest passport agency. This distance places an undue economic, time, and social burden on those in the area, exacerbating frustration and overall constituent dissatisfaction with the system. Moreover, the lack of a passport agency in this heavily populated area of the country hikes wait times in other passport agencies in a spillover effect that increases backlogs across the board and strains workloads for our public servants. 

A new passport agency in Louisville, Kentucky, would help reduce these aches by servicing population centers in Nashville, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, St. Louis, and other population hubs, not to mention the wide swaths of rural areas within the Ohio River Basin. As an accessible location, Louisville sits at the crossroads of several major interstates, and its airport serves as a major regional hub. 

Thus, we write to ask:

  1. Are there any current initiatives to explore the opening of a passport agency in Louisville, Kentucky?
  2. If not, what steps can be taken to explore the idea?
We appreciate all that you and the Bureau of Consular Affairs undertake to bolster the international travel and exchange of Americans abroad. We respectfully request that the Bureau consider the construction of a passport agency in Louisville, Kentucky, to ensure that all Americans can share in the vision of international cooperation and travel without undue hassle, distance, or delay.

Original source can be found here.

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