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entitled 'Border Security: Long-term Strategy Needed to Keep Pace with 
Increasing Demand for Visas' which was released on August 3, 2007. 

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Report to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, House of 
Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

July 2007: 

Border Security: 

Long-term Strategy Needed to Keep Pace with Increasing Demand for 
Visas: 

GAO-07-847: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-847, a report to the Committee on Oversight and 
Government Reform, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Congress and the Department of State 
(State) initiated changes to the visa process to increase security, but 
these changes also increased the amount of time needed to adjudicate a 
visa. Although maintaining security is of paramount importance, State 
has acknowledged that long waits for visas may discourage legitimate 
travel to the United States, potentially costing the country billions 
of dollars in economic benefits over time, and adversely influencing 
foreign citizens’ opinions of our nation. GAO testified in 2006 that a 
number of consular posts had long visa interview wait times. This 
report examines (1) State’s data on visa interview wait times, (2) 
actions State has taken to address wait times, and (3) State’s strategy 
for dealing with projected growth in visa demand. 

What GAO Found: 

According to State, the amount of time that applicants must wait for a 
visa interview has generally decreased over the last year; however, 
some applicants continue to face extensive delays. State’s data showed 
that between September 2005 and February 2006, 97 consular posts 
reported maximum wait times of 30 or more days in at least 1 month, 
whereas 53 posts reported such waits for the same period 1 year later. 
However, despite recent improvements, at times during the past year, a 
number of posts reported long wait times, which could be expected to 
reoccur during future visa demand surges. In 2007, State announced a 
goal of providing applicants an interview within 30 days. Although 
State’s data is sufficiently reliable to indicate that wait times 
continue to be a problem at some posts, GAO identified shortcomings in 
the way the data is developed that could mask the severity of the 
problem. 

State has implemented steps to reduce wait times at several posts 
including using temporary duty employees to fill staffing gaps at some 
posts and repositioning some consular positions to better utilize its 
current workforce. However, these measures are not permanent or 
sustainable solutions and may not adequately address the increasing 
demand for visas worldwide. In addition, State has made improvements to 
several consular facilities and has identified plans for improvements 
at several other posts with high workload. Some posts have utilized 
procedures that enable them to process applications more efficiently. 
However, not all of these procedures are shared among posts in a 
systematic way and, therefore, not all posts are aware of them. 

State has not determined how it will keep pace with growth in visa 
demand over the long-term. State contracted for a study of visa demand, 
in select countries, over a 15-year period beginning in 2005, which 
projected that visa demand will increase dramatically at several posts 
(see fig.) However, at some posts, demand has already surpassed the 
study’s projected future demand levels. State has not developed a 
strategy that considers such factors as available resources and the 
need for maintaining national security in the visa process, along with 
its goal that visas are processed in a reasonable amount of time. Given 
dramatic increases in workload expected at many posts, without such a 
strategy State will be challenged in achieving its current goal for 
wait times. 

Figure: Projected Growth in Visa Demand for Select Countries by 2020: 

[See PDF for Image] 

Source: GAO analysis of State data from the Consular Affairs Futures 
Study. 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

To improve State’s oversight and management of visa-adjudicating 
posts—with the goal of facilitating legitimate travel while maintaining 
a high level of security to protect our borders—GAO is recommending 
that State (1) develop a strategy to address worldwide increases in 
visa demand, (2) improve the reliability and utility of visa waits 
data, and (3) identify and disseminate practices and procedures used by 
posts to manage workload and reduce wait times. State concurred with 
our recommendations. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-847]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at (202) 512-
4128 or fordj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

State's Recent Data Show Wait Time Trends Have Improved, but Some 
Applicants Continue to Face Extensive Delays for Visa Interviews: 

State Has Taken Steps to Improve Processing Capacity at Posts 
Experiencing Long Waits, but Several Are Not Sustainable: 

State Lacks a Strategy to Address Projected Long-term Growth in Visa 
Demand: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State: 

GAO Comments: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Visa Application Process: 

Figure 2: Applications for Nonimmigrant Visas, Fiscal Years 2000-2008: 

Figure 3: Posts Occasionally Experiencing Waits Over 30 Days, September 
2005-February 2007: 

Figure 4: Posts Consistently Experiencing Waits Over 30 Days, September 
2005-February 2007: 

Figure 5: Actual 2006 Visa Adjudications and Projected Growth in 
Applicant Volume for 2020 from State's Consular Futures Study: 

Abbreviations: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 
NIV: nonimmigrant visa: 
SAO: Security Advisory Opinion: 
State: Department of State: 
US-VISIT: U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 13, 2007: 

The Honorable Henry A. Waxman: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Tom Davis: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: 
House of Representatives: 

To increase the security of the visa process following the 9/11 
terrorist attacks, Congress and the Department of State (State) 
initiated multiple changes to visa laws, policies, and procedures; 
however, these changes have also increased the amount of time needed to 
schedule and adjudicate a nonimmigrant visa (NIV).[Footnote 1] 
Concurrently, annual worldwide demand for visas has increased for 3 
years in a row with levels exceeding 8 million visa applications for 
2006.[Footnote 2] The increase in demand has made it difficult for some 
posts to manage workload without causing applicants to wait 
considerable time for an interview.[Footnote 3] In April 2006, we 
testified that visa applicants at some posts, including strategically 
important posts in India and China, were facing extensive waits in 
obtaining a visa interview.[Footnote 4] According to the visa wait 
times reported by State's consular posts, 97 of its posts had reported 
maximum wait times greater than 30 days in at least 1 month between 
September 2005 and February 2006.[Footnote 5] Although maintaining 
security of the visa process is of paramount importance and overall 
issuances of visas are on the rise, State has also acknowledged that 
long wait times may discourage legitimate travel to the United States, 
potentially costing the country billions of dollars in economic 
benefits over time,[Footnote 6] and adversely influencing foreign 
citizens' impressions and opinions of our nation. Several groups, 
including the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board,[Footnote 7] have 
urged the administration to take action on this issue and have detailed 
the negative impact--in terms of revenue losses--that impediments to 
travel and tourism,[Footnote 8] including from visa processing delays, 
have on U.S. businesses and colleges and universities. 

At your request, we reviewed (1) State data on the amount of time visa 
applicants were waiting to obtain a visa interview, (2) actions State 
has taken to address visa wait times, and (3) State's strategy for 
dealing with projected increases in visa demand. To accomplish our 
objectives, we interviewed officials from State's bureaus of Consular 
Affairs, Human Resources, and Overseas Buildings Operations. We also 
interviewed officials from the Department of Commerce's Office of 
Travel and Tourism Industries. In addition, we observed consular 
operations and interviewed U.S. government officials at 11 posts in 
eight countries--Brazil, China, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, 
India, South Korea, and the United Kingdom. We reviewed visa wait times 
data reported by posts since September 2005. We also reviewed consular 
reports and data from a total of 32 posts to identify factors 
contributing to wait times and potential solutions to reduce wait 
times. Our work was conducted in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. Appendix I contains a more detailed 
description of our scope and methodology. 

Results in Brief: 

According to State, the amount of time that visa applicants must wait 
for a visa interview has generally decreased over the last year; 
however, some applicants continue to face extensive delays[Footnote 9] 
for visa interviews. For example, for the period of September 2006 to 
February 2007, 53 of State's 219 visa-issuing posts reported maximum 
wait times of 30 or more days in at least 1 month, which was 44 fewer 
posts than had reported this figure for the same period the previous 
year. State reported that a number of key posts in India, Mexico, and 
Brazil, among others, have reduced wait times. For example, in April 
2007, all posts in India reported they reduced their waits for 
appointments to less than 2 weeks from highs that had exceeded 140 days 
as recently as August 2006. However, despite recent improvements, at 
times during the past year--especially during peak processing periods 
for the summer months--a number of posts reported long wait times. 
According to State officials, longer wait times are expected to reoccur 
seasonally at some posts but can also occur at others unexpectedly 
depending on factors such as the political or economic situation in a 
given country. In addition, we identified a number of shortcomings in 
the way State's wait times data is developed. For example, some posts 
are not reporting weekly, as required, and some posts use different 
methods for determining wait times. These shortcomings could mask the 
severity of the visa wait problem at some posts. Moreover, they limit 
the extent to which State can monitor whether the visa wait problem has 
been addressed. 

Since we last reported on visa delays in April 2006, State has taken a 
number of steps to adjust staffing, facilities, and consular procedures 
to reduce wait times at several overseas consular posts. State has used 
temporary duty employees to fill consular staffing gaps at some posts 
and is repositioning a number of consular positions at posts around the 
world to better utilize its current workforce--especially at posts 
experiencing large growth in workload. For example, because applicants 
in India were experiencing long waits for appointments, State took 
several actions, including sending a number of temporary duty officers 
to posts in India and utilizing nonconsular staff from other offices in 
the mission to assist with visa processing. In addition, the ambassador 
made the reduction of wait times the primary objective of all India 
posts. However, the use of temporary and other mission staff to reduce 
wait times is not a permanent or sustainable solution. Furthermore, 
State acknowledges that the repositioning of consular staff, while 
necessary, may not adequately address the increasing demand for visas 
worldwide. In addition, State has made improvements to several consular 
facilities and has identified plans for future facilities improvements 
at several posts with high workload. Although some improvements have 
been made, facilities at many consular sections face constraints that 
limit the number of visa officers that can be assigned there; moreover, 
it will take many years for State to complete all needed consular 
construction projects. State has also made some procedural changes to 
help posts better manage visa workload, and we found that some posts 
have utilized procedures that enable them to process applications more 
efficiently--such as conducting workflow studies in order to identify 
obstructions to efficient applicant processing. However, we observed 
that not all of these procedures are shared among posts in a systematic 
way and, therefore, not all posts are aware of them. 

Although State has taken some steps to address wait times at a number 
of overseas posts, including developing a plan to improve visa 
operations and establishing a goal to interview all visa applicants 
within 30 days, it has not determined how it will keep pace with 
continued growth in visa demand over the long-term. State contracted 
for a study of projected visa demand, in select countries over a 15- 
year period beginning in 2005, which found that significant growth in 
visa demand is estimated to occur in a number of countries including 
Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia. However, at 
some posts, demand has already surpassed the study's projected future 
demand levels. State has not developed a strategy that balances such 
factors as available resources and the need for national security in 
the visa process against its goal that visas are processed in a 
reasonable amount of time. For example, it has neither estimated the 
resources necessary to meet future demand, nor proposed plans that 
would significantly reduce the workload of available officers or the 
amount of time needed to adjudicate a visa if such resources are not 
available. Given dramatic increases in workload expected at many visa- 
issuing posts, State will be challenged to obtain the staffing and 
facilities necessary to achieve its current goal for wait times. 

To improve the Bureau of Consular Affairs' oversight and management of 
visa-adjudicating posts, we recommend that the Secretary of State: 

* Develop a strategy to address worldwide increases in visa demand that 
balances the security responsibility of protecting the United States 
from potential terrorists and individuals who would harm U.S. interests 
with the need to facilitate legitimate travel to the United States. In 
doing so, State should take into consideration relevant factors, such 
as the flow of visa applicants, the backlog of applicants, the 
availability of consular officers, and the time required to process 
each visa application. State's analysis should be informed by reliable 
data on the factors that influence wait times. State should update any 
plan annually to reflect new information on visa demand. 

* Improve the reliability and utility of visa waits data by defining 
collection standards and ensuring that posts report the data according 
to the standards. 

* Identify practices and procedures used by posts to manage workload 
and reduce wait times and encourage the dissemination and use of 
successful practices. 

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of State and 
Homeland Security (DHS). DHS did not comment on the report's message, 
but provided a technical comment. State concurred with our report's 
recommendations and said that any appropriate strategy to address 
worldwide increases in visa demand must address the need for resources 
to meet national security goals for both travel facilitation and border 
security. Furthermore, State said that any suggestion of trade-offs 
between these two goals would be inappropriate. Clearly we agree that 
in developing a strategy, State must maintain its security 
responsibilities while also facilitating legitimate travel to the 
United States. Our report does not suggest that one of these goals 
should be sacrificed at the expense of the other. State also provided a 
number of technical comments, which we have incorporated throughout the 
report, as appropriate. 

Background: 

Foreign nationals who wish to come to the United States on a temporary 
basis must generally obtain an NIV[Footnote 10] to be admitted. State 
manages the visa process, as well as the consular officer corps and its 
functions, at 219 visa-issuing posts overseas.[Footnote 11] The process 
for determining who will be issued or refused a visa contains several 
steps, including documentation reviews, in-person interviews, 
collection of biometrics[Footnote 12] (fingerprints), and cross- 
referencing an applicant's name against the Consular Lookout and 
Support System--State's name-check database that posts use to access 
critical information for visa adjudication. In some cases, a consular 
officer may determine the need for a Security Advisory Opinion, which 
is a recommendation from Washington on whether to issue a visa to the 
applicant. Depending on a post's applicant pool and the number of visa 
applications that a post receives, each stage of the visa process 
varies in length. For an overview of the visa process see figure 1. 

Figure 1: Visa Application Process: 

[See PDF for image] 

Sources: GAO; Nova Development Corp. (clip art). 

[End of figure] 

Recent Visa Policy Actions Have Increased Time Needed to Adjudicate 
Visas: 

Congress, State, and DHS have initiated new policies and procedures 
since the 9/11 terrorist attacks to strengthen the security of the visa 
process. These changes have added to the complexity of consular 
workload and have increased the amount of time needed to adjudicate a 
visa. Such changes include the following: 

* Beginning in fiscal year 2002, State began a 3-year transition to 
remove visa adjudication functions from consular associates.[Footnote 
13] All NIVs must now be adjudicated by consular officers.[Footnote 14] 

* Personal interviews are required by law for most foreign nationals 
seeking NIVs.[Footnote 15] 

* As of October 2004, consular officers are required to scan visa 
applicants' right and left index fingers through the DHS Automated 
Biometric Identification System before an applicant can receive a 
visa.[Footnote 16] In 2005, the Secretary of Homeland Security 
announced that the U.S. government had adopted a 10-fingerscan standard 
for biometric collection of fingerprints. In February 2006, State 
reported that it would begin pilot testing and procuring 10-print 
equipment to ensure that all visa-issuing posts have collection 
capability by the end of fiscal year 2007.[Footnote 17] 

* According to State, consular officers face increased requirements to 
consult with headquarters and other U.S. agencies prior to visa 
issuance in the form of Security Advisory Opinions. 

* According to State, as a result of the Patriot Act, consular officers 
have access to, and are required to consult, far greater amounts of 
interagency data regarding potential terrorists and individuals who 
would harm U.S. interests. 

Factors Impacting Visa Delays: 

A number of potential factors can contribute to delays for visa 
interview appointments at consular posts. For example, increased 
consular officer workload at posts, which can be caused by factors such 
as increased security screening procedures or increased visa demand, 
can exacerbate delays because there are more work requirements for each 
available officer to complete. Other factors such as staffing gaps and 
ongoing consular facility limitations could also affect waits because 
they may limit the number of applicants that can be seen for an 
interview in a given day. 

Visa Application Trends: 

Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, applications for visas declined 
from a high of over 10.4 million in fiscal year 2001 to a low of 
approximately 7 million in 2003. For fiscal years 2004 through 2006, 
the number of visa applications increased, according to State's data 
(see fig. 2). State anticipates that 8.1 million visas applications 
will be received in fiscal year 2007 and 8.6 million in 2008. 

Figure 2: Applications for Nonimmigrant Visas, Fiscal Years 2000-2008: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: State. 

[End of figure] 

State's visa workload increased by almost 16 percent between 2004 and 
2006. In addition, several countries and posts have seen large growth 
in visa demand, and State has projected these trends to continue well 
into the future.[Footnote 18] Following are examples of these trends: 

* India had an 18 percent increase in visa adjudications between 2002 
and 2006. 

* Posts in China reported that their visa adjudication volume increased 
between 18 and 21 percent last year alone, and growth is expected to 
continue. 

Long Waits for Visa Interviews Have Previously Challenged a Number of 
Overseas Consular Posts: 

We have previously reported on visa delays at overseas posts. In 
particular, we have reported on the following delays in Brazil, China, 
India, and Mexico: 

* In March 1998, we reported that the post in Sao Paolo, Brazil, was 
facing extensive delays due to staffing and facilities 
constraints.[Footnote 19] 

* In February 2004, we reported delays at consular posts in India and 
China. For example, in September 2003, applicants at one post we 
visited in China were facing waits of about 5 to 6 weeks. Also, we 
reported that, in summer 2003, applicants in Chennai, India, faced 
waits as long as 12 weeks.[Footnote 20] 

* In April 2006, we testified that, of nine posts with waits in excess 
of 90 days in February 2006, six were in Mexico, India, and 
Brazil.[Footnote 21] 

State's Recent Data Show Wait Time Trends Have Improved, but Some 
Applicants Continue to Face Extensive Delays for Visa Interviews: 

According to State, wait times for visa interviews have improved at 
many overseas consular posts in the past year. However, despite recent 
improvements--such as those at posts in India, Mexico, and Brazil--a 
number of posts reported long waits at times during the past year. 
Believing the waits at some posts are excessive, in February of this 
year, State announced its goal of providing all applicants an interview 
within 30 days. We identified a number of shortcomings in the way in 
which State's visa waits data is developed, which could mask the 
severity of the delays for visa interviews at some posts and limit the 
extent to which State can monitor whether the visa wait problem has 
been addressed. To better understand and manage post workload, State 
has begun to develop a measure of applicant backlog. 

State Has Reported Improvements in Visa Wait Times: 

In recent months, reported wait times for visa appointments have 
generally improved. For example, in reviewing visa waits data provided 
to us by the Bureau of Consular Affairs for the period of September 
2006 to February 2007, we found that 53 of State's 219 visa-issuing 
posts had reported maximum wait times of 30 or more days in at least 1 
month--44 fewer posts than had reported this figure when we reviewed 
the same period during the previous year (see fig. 3). [Footnote 22] 

Figure 3: Posts Occasionally Experiencing Waits Over 30 Days, September 
2005-February 2007: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of State data. 

[End of figure] 

Furthermore, wait times reported by several consular posts have 
improved during the past year, including for a number of high volume 
posts in India, Brazil, and Mexico that had previously reported 
extensive delays.[Footnote 23] In April 2007, wait times at all posts 
in India were under 2 weeks, down from previous waits that exceeded 140 
days at four key posts, as recently as August 2006, in most cases. For 
example, Mumbai reported a reduction in wait times from a high of 186 
days in September 2006 to 10 days as of April 9, 2007. Reported wait 
times at some key posts in Mexico also significantly declined,[Footnote 
24] as have wait times for several posts in Brazil in the past year. 
Furthermore, an additional number of posts with delays experienced 
large reductions in wait times over a recent 12 month period. 

Some Posts Continue to Face Long Delays: 

Despite recent improvements in wait times at a number of consular 
posts, at times during the past year, especially during peak processing 
periods, a number of visa adjudicating posts have faced challenges in 
reporting wait times of less than 30 days. For example, during typical 
peak demand season, 29 posts reported maximum monthly waits exceeding 
30 days over the entire 6-month period of March through August 2006 
(see fig. 4). 

Figure 4: Posts Consistently Experiencing Waits Over 30 Days, September 
2005-February 2007: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of State date. 

[End of figure] 

We observed that long waits had occurred over the summer months in 
Tegucigalpa, Honduras; San Jose, Costa Rica; and several posts in 
India. Furthermore, some posts we reviewed developed increased wait 
times. For example, in Caracas, the reported visa waits significantly 
increased--from 34 days in February 2006 to 116 days in April 2007. In 
addition, several other posts, including Sao Paolo, Brazil; Monterrey, 
Mexico; Tel Aviv, Israel; and Kingston, Jamaica; have experienced 
increases in wait times since February 2006.[Footnote 25] Moreover, 20 
posts reported experiencing maximum monthly wait times in excess of 90 
days at least once over the past year. 

New Performance Standard for Visa Waits Implemented: 

In February 2007, State's Bureau of Consular Affairs distributed 
guidance setting a global standard that all visa applicants should 
receive an appointment for a visa interview within 30 days.[Footnote 
26] Previously, State had not set a formal performance standard for 
visa waits but had set a requirement that posts report their wait times 
on a weekly basis and make this information publicly available through 
post Web sites. In setting the 30-day standard for visa waits, 
officials acknowledged that wait times are not only a measure of 
customer service but also help posts to better manage their workload 
and visa demand. Furthermore, State identified that such a standard 
allows it to better track post performance, helps with resource 
allocation, and provides transparency in consular operations. Consular 
officials explained to us that posts that consistently have wait times 
for visa interview appointments of 30 days or longer may have a 
resource or management problem. 

In setting its 30-day performance benchmark, State also distributed 
information to posts on how wait times data is to be used by Bureau of 
Consular Affairs management. For example, State indicated it will 
review all posts that have reported waits over 20 days to determine if 
remedial measures are needed. 

Post Reporting of Visa Waits Data Needs Further Improvement: 

State has provided guidance indicating that posts are required to 
report wait times on a weekly basis, even if the times have not changed 
from the previous week. However, we found posts are not reporting waits 
data consistently, which impacts the reliability of State's visa waits 
figures. In September 2005, our analysis of State's data on reported 
wait times revealed significant numbers of posts that did not report 
this information on a weekly basis during the 6-month period we 
reviewed. In reviewing data over the past year, we again found that a 
large number of posts were not consistently reporting waits data on a 
weekly basis, as required by State.[Footnote 27] For example, post 
reporting of wait times from January 2006 to February 2007 showed that, 
while a large number of posts (about 79 percent) had reported waits at 
least monthly, only 21 posts (about 10 percent) reported waits at least 
weekly. Inconsistencies among posts in the reporting of visa waits data 
impacts the reliability of visa waits figures and limits State's 
ability to assess whether the problem has been addressed by posts. 
However, State does not appear to be enforcing its weekly reporting 
requirement. State acknowledges that it has had difficulties in getting 
all 219 consular posts to report this data consistently. 

According to cables provided to us by State, posts are directed to 
provide the "typical" appointment wait time applicable to the majority 
of applicants applying for a given category of visas on a given 
day.[Footnote 28] Several of the posts we visited calculated wait times 
based on the first appointment available to the next applicant in a 
given visa category; however, other posts we reviewed calculated waits 
differently. For example, one post we visited computed wait times by 
taking the average of several available appointment slots.[Footnote 29] 
In addition, several consular officials we spoke with overseas said 
that they are still unclear on the exact method posts are to use to 
calculate wait times, and some managers were unsure if they were 
calculating wait times correctly. Additionally, we observed that some 
posts artificially limit wait times by tightly controlling the 
availability of future appointment slots--such as by not making 
appointments available beyond a certain date, which can make 
appointment scheduling burdensome for the applicant who must 
continually check for new openings. State officials admitted that posts 
should not be controlling the availability of appointment slots to 
artificially limit wait times but, to date, there has not been specific 
guidance distributed to posts on this issue. 

We determined that State's data are sufficiently reliable for providing 
a broad indication of posts that have had problems with wait times over 
a period of time and for general trends in the number of posts that 
have had problems with wait times over the period we reviewed; however, 
the data were not sufficiently reliable to determine the exact 
magnitude of the delays because the exact number of posts with a wait 
of 30 days or more at any given time could not be determined. Until 
State updates and enforces its collection standards for visa waits 
data, precise determinations about the extent to which posts face visa 
delays cannot be made. State officials acknowledge that current wait 
times data is of limited reliability. State officials have also said 
that visa waits data was not originally designed for the purpose of 
performance measurement but to provide applicants with information on 
interview availability. According to State, a current goal of the 
Bureau of Consular Affairs is to refine collection standards for wait 
times information to provide more uniform and transparent information 
to applicants and management; however, the bureau has not yet done so. 

Measure of Applicant Backlog under Development: 

State's reported wait time data generally reflect the wait, at a moment 
in time, for new applicants, and do not reflect the actual wait time 
for an average applicant at a given post. Furthermore, wait times 
generally do not provide a sense of applicant backlog, which is the 
number of people who are waiting to be scheduled for an appointment or 
the number of people who have an appointment but have yet to be 
seen.[Footnote 30] To better understand and manage post workload, State 
officials we spoke with said that they were in the process of 
developing a measure of applicant backlog. Although State has not yet 
developed the measure of backlog, officials we spoke with said that 
they expect to begin testing methods for measuring applicant backlog by 
the end of 2007. 

State Has Taken Steps to Improve Processing Capacity at Posts 
Experiencing Long Waits, but Several Are Not Sustainable: 

State has implemented a number of measures to increase productivity and 
better manage visa workload, as well as measures to address 
shortcomings in staffing and facilities for a number of consular posts 
experiencing visa delays. State has provided temporary duty staff to 
assist in adjudicating visas at several locations with long wait times, 
particularly at posts in India, and recently developed a plan to 
relocate consular positions to locations where large disparities in 
staff and visa demand were apparent. In addition, State has continued 
to upgrade embassies and consulates overseas to aid in processing visa 
applicants. Furthermore, State has implemented some procedures and 
policies to maximize efficiency and better manage visa workload. 
However, despite the measures State has taken to address staffing, 
facilities, and other constraints at some posts, State's current 
efforts are generally temporary, nonsustainable, and are insufficient 
to meet the expected increases in demand at some posts. 

State Has Used Temporary Duty Staff and Repositioned Consular Staff to 
Address Staffing Shortfalls Contributing to Visa Delays: 

State has recently taken action at several posts to address current 
staffing gaps to minimize the impact on visa wait times. State has 
deployed temporary duty staff from other consular posts and from 
headquarters to help process and adjudicate visa applicants.[Footnote 
31] For example, State deployed 166 officials to staff consular 
sections in fiscal year 2006 and through April of fiscal year 2007. In 
addition, at the order of the Ambassador to India, beginning in 2006, 
posts in India utilized consular-commissioned officials from other 
offices in the embassy and consulates to assist the consular section in 
handling its workload, including fingerprinting applicants and 
interviewing some applicants, which helped reduce the wait times at 
posts.[Footnote 32] According to consular officials, the additional 
assistance in India was necessary as posts there did not have enough 
permanent consular staff to handle the demand and reduce wait times. 

In addition, in February 2007, State completed a review of consular 
officer positions that examined the disparity between visa workload and 
the number of consular officers at posts.[Footnote 33] As a result of 
this study, State will transfer consular positions from certain posts 
that are capable of handling the workload without reporting long visa 
waits to posts where there has not been adequate staff to handle the 
visa workload. The majority of the positions are being transferred from 
posts in the European and Eurasian Affairs Bureau to posts in the 
Western Hemisphere, East Asia and Pacific, and South and Central Asian 
bureaus. Of these transferred and newly created consular officer 
positions, the majority will be located in Brazil, China, India, and 
Mexico--posts with a history of long wait times and high demand for 
visas. State acknowledges that the repositioning of consular staff, 
while necessary, may not adequately address the increasing demand for 
visas worldwide. 

Despite the measures State has taken to address the staffing issues at 
some posts, State's current consular staffing efforts are generally 
temporary, nonsustainable, and insufficient to meet the expected 
increases in demand at some posts. First, when-actually-employed staff 
are only allowed to work 1,040 hours per year due to federal 
regulations. Second, posts are typically required to cover the housing 
costs of assigned temporary staff, which is not always feasible if 
posts are facing budget constraints.[Footnote 34] Third, embassy or 
consulate officials that were temporarily assigned to support consular 
operations indicated that their new duties negatively affected their 
ability to perform their regular assignments, as they were spending 
time performing consular duties instead of their typical functions at 
post. Fourth, although temporary staff have helped to improve wait 
times at select posts, current efforts--and some recent temporary 
assignments, such as over the past 7 months in India--have been 
undertaken during a period of lower applicant volume. It is unknown 
whether State will be able to maintain the improved wait times during 
the summer of 2007, as the period between May and August is typically 
when posts have the largest influx of visa applicants and, in turn, 
longer waits. For example, one post in India recently reported wait 
times now exceed 30 days.[Footnote 35] Moreover, the temporary staff 
assisting with visa adjudications during our visit to posts in India 
was expected to leave by the end of May 2007. According to State's 
Assistant Deputy Secretary for Visa Services, surges in temporary duty 
staff, such as the ones State employed for India, can be useful in 
tackling short-term situations but are not a viable long-term solution 
in places with high visa demand. 

Furthermore, consular staffing gaps are a long-standing problem for 
State and have been caused by such factors as State's annual staffing 
process, low hiring levels for entry-level junior officer positions, 
and insufficient numbers of midlevel consular officers.[Footnote 36] We 
have previously reported that factors such as staffing shortages have 
contributed to long wait times for visas at some posts. A number of 
State's visa-adjudicating posts reported shortages in consular staff 
for 2006, and we observed gaps that contributed to visa wait times at 
several posts overseas. Furthermore, we reviewed reports for 32 select 
consular posts abroad to assess visa workload, consular staffing and 
facilities, as well as other issues affecting visa wait times.[Footnote 
37] We found that of the 32 posts, 19 posts (or about 60 percent) 
indicated the need for additional consular staff to address increasing 
workload.[Footnote 38] 

State Has Implemented Consular Facilities Improvements at Many Overseas 
Posts: 

State has improved a number of consular sections at embassies and 
consulates worldwide.[Footnote 39] According to the Bureau of Overseas 
Buildings Operations, since September 2001, State has improved almost 
100 embassies and consulates, improving the consular section facilities 
at a number of these locations. For example, between fiscal years 2003 
and 2005, State obligated $26.9 million to fund consular workspace 
improvement projects at 101 posts. Although these improvement projects 
have been completed, according to the Bureau of Consular Affairs, most 
were designed as temporary solutions that may require additional 
construction in the future. Moreover, although some consular 
improvement projects were recently completed or were under way when we 
visited Mumbai and Chennai, India, these posts did not have adequate 
office, waiting room, security screening, or window space to 
accommodate the volume of visa applicants. State's construction project 
in Chennai to add windows and additional processing areas was expected 
to be completed by May 2007, and State has begun construction on a new 
consulate in Mumbai that will be completed in 2008 and will add more 
space for additional consular staff and 26 more windows for 
interviewing. In addition, State is planning new consulate and embassy 
construction projects for New Delhi and Hyderabad, India,[Footnote 40] 
as well as at a number of other posts. 

We also found that a number of posts we reviewed currently face 
facility constraints, which limit the number of visa interviews that 
can take place in a given day and, in some cases, prevent posts from 
keeping pace with the current or expected future demand for visas. For 
example, 21 of 32 posts reported, in their consular packages, that 
limitations to their facilities affected their ability to increase the 
number of applicants they could interview, which can contribute to 
longer wait times. 

Although State has taken steps to improve consular facilities and has 
plans to rebuild a number of posts, it is unclear whether the 
facilities will be adequate to handle the future demand. Two posts that 
we reviewed are already predicting that future increased demand will 
outstrip visa processing capacities given existing facilities 
constraints. For example, in Seoul, South Korea, post officials report 
that, despite recent improvements to the facility, the post will soon 
have no additional space to accommodate future applicant growth. 
Moreover, there is no current viable option to build a new facility due 
to continuing land negotiations between the U.S. and South Korean 
governments. In addition, a number of State's recent facilities 
projects have not incorporated planned projections of increased 
workload growth and are expected to soon face challenges meeting 
demand. For example, even though a new embassy construction project is 
currently under way in Beijing, China, State officials indicated that 
the number of planned interviewing windows and space in the new 
facility will be insufficient to allow for future increases in visa 
demand[Footnote 41]. In addition, in Shanghai, China, even though the 
consular section was moved to an off-site location to process visa 
applications, the post has indicated that it already has reached visa- 
adjudicating capacity because it cannot add any more interviewing 
windows in the current space, and construction on a new consulate will 
not begin until 2009. According to the Director and Chief Operating 
Officer of the Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations, the bureau 
designs and constructs consular facilities with input from Consular 
Affairs; therefore, Consular Affairs needs to provide more defined 
assessments of future needs at a facility. The director stated that 
proper planning and stronger estimates of future needs will help in 
building facilities that can better address wait times at post over the 
long term. 

Some Visa Processing and Workload Management Practices Established but 
Not Widely Shared Among Posts: 

Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Congress, State, and DHS have 
initiated a series of changes to visa policies and procedures, which 
have added to the complexity of consular officers' workload and, in 
turn, exacerbated State's consular staffing and facilities constraints. 
For example, most visa applicants are required to be interviewed by a 
consular officer at post, and applicants' fingerprints must be scanned. 
Furthermore, additional procedural changes are expected, including the 
expansion of the electronic fingerprinting program to the 10-fingerscan 
standard, which could further increase the workload of officers and the 
amount of time needed to adjudicate an application. For example, 
consular officers in London, which is one of the posts piloting the 10- 
fingerprint scanners, indicated that the 10-fingerscan standard would 
significantly affect other posts' operations given that they had 
experienced about a 13 percent reduction in the number of applicants 
processed in a day. However, as each post faces slightly different 
circumstances, it is unclear whether this reduction would take place at 
all posts. 

To lessen the increase in wait times caused by of some of these 
legislative and policy changes, State has promoted some initiatives to 
aid posts in processing legitimate travelers. For example, State has 
urged all posts to establish business and student facilitation programs 
intended to expedite the interviews of legitimate travelers. State also 
continues to use Consular Management Assistance Teams to conduct 
management reviews of consular sections worldwide, which have provided 
guidance to posts on standard operating procedures, as well as other 
areas where consular services could become more efficient. In addition, 
according to State officials, State has developed a Two-Year Plan, an 
overall visa processing strategy to coordinate changes to the visa 
process that will ensure consular officers focus on tasks that can only 
be accomplished overseas, and is also contemplating other changes to 
reduce the burden placed on applicants and consular officers. These 
changes include the following: 

* the deployment of a worldwide appointment system, 

* use of a domestic office to verify information on visa petitions, 

* a revalidation of fingerprints for applicants who have already 
completed the 10-fingerprint scan, and: 

* the implementation of an entirely paperless visa application 
process[Footnote 42] 

* and remote or off-site interviewing of visa applicants. 

* Furthermore, some posts have taken action to reduce their increased 
workload. For example, the following actions have been taken: 

* The consular sections in South Korea and Brazil have established 
expedited appointment systems for certain applicant groups, including 
students. 

* Consular officers in Manila, Philippines, redesigned the flow of 
applicants through the facility to ease congestion and utilized space 
designated to the immigrant visa unit to add three new visa processing 
stations. 

* Posts in Brazil have waived interviews for applicants who were 
renewing valid U.S. visas that were expiring within 12 months and had 
met additional criteria under the law.[Footnote 43] 

* The embassy in Seoul, South Korea, implemented a ticketing system 
that tracks applicants through the various stages of processing and 
provides notification to consular section management if backups are 
occurring. The system will also automatically assign applicants to the 
first available interviewing window in order to balance the workload of 
applicant interviews between all available interviewing windows. 

* The embassies in El Salvador and South Korea have conducted workflow 
studies in order to identify obstructions to efficient applicant 
processing. 

Although State has recently implemented a number of policy and 
procedural changes to address increased consular workload and is 
considering additional adjustments, more could be done to assist posts 
in their workload management. Moreover, the effective practices and 
procedures implemented by individual posts that help manage workload 
and assist in improving applicant wait times are not consistently 
shared with the other consular posts. While recognizing that not all 
the policies and procedures used by posts to help manage visa workload 
are transferable to other posts, State officials indicated that, 
although there is currently not a forum available for consular officers 
to share such ideas, State is in the process of developing some online 
capabilities for posts to share visa practices and procedures. 

State Lacks a Strategy to Address Projected Long-term Growth in Visa 
Demand: 

With worldwide nonimmigrant visa demand rising closer to pre-9/11 
levels, and current projections showing a dramatic increase in demand 
over time, State will continue to face challenges in managing its visa 
workload and maintaining its goal of keeping interview wait times under 
30 days at all posts. State has not developed a strategy for addressing 
increasing visa demand that balances such factors as available 
resources and the need for national security in the visa process 
against its goal that visas are processed in a reasonable amount of 
time. 

Dramatic Increase in Visa Demand Is Expected and Will Continue to 
Impact Visa Wait Times: 

In 2005, State contracted with an independent consulting firm to 
analyze several factors to help predict future visa demand in 20 select 
countries, which, according to State officials, constituted 
approximately 75 percent of the visa workload at the time.[Footnote 44] 
The consulting firm identified some demographic, economic, political, 
commercial, and other factors that it believed would affect visa demand 
over a 15-year period, beginning in 2005, and estimated a likely rate 
of growth in demand in those select countries. The study predicted the 
growth in demand in these countries would range between 8 percent and 
232 percent, with Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and Saudi 
Arabia all projected to experience significant growth of more than 90 
percent (see fig. 5).[Footnote 45] State officials indicated that they 
used the futures study to assist in determining consular resource 
allocations and in the repositioning of consular staff in State's 
review of consular positions in February 2007. However, State has not 
analyzed the 5-, 10-, or 20-year future staffing and other resource 
needs based on the demand projections found in the study. 

Figure 5: Actual 2006 Visa Adjudications and Projected Growth in 
Applicant Volume for 2020 from State's Consular Futures Study: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of State data from the Consular Affairs Futures 
Study. 

[End of figure] 

Although officials indicated that State continues to use the visa 
demand projections in the Consular Affairs Futures Study to assist in 
making staffing and resource decisions, some of the study's projections 
have already been proven to underestimate growth in demand. In 
addition, State has not taken action to update the study to reflect 
changes in visa workload since 2005. More than half of the countries 
reviewed are already facing surges in visa demand greater than the 
levels predicted in the Consular Affairs Futures Study for fiscal year 
2006 and beyond. For example, Brazil adjudicated more visas in 2006 
than the volume of applications the study projected for Brazil for 
2010. In addition, Mexico adjudicated approximately 126,000 more visas 
in 2006 than the study projected. Also, the Ambassador to India 
recently stated that all posts in India would process over 800,000 
applications in 2007, which exceeds the study's forecasts for India's 
demand in 2016. 

State's Plans Do Not Fully Address Future Visa Demand: 

The Deputy Assistant Secretary for Visa Services testified to Congress 
in March 2007 of the need to consider and implement viable long-term 
solutions for posts with high visa demand and indicated that State 
needed to ensure it aligns consular assets to meet the demand. In 
November 2006, State developed a plan for improving the visa process 
that details several steps it intends to implement, or pilot, by 
2009.[Footnote 46] Although the visa improvement plan can assist State 
in improving the visa process, and State has taken some steps to 
address wait times at a number of overseas posts, State has not 
determined how it will keep pace with continued growth in visa demand 
over the long term. For example, the strategies in the plan do not 
identify the resources State would need to increase staff or construct 
adequate facilities to handle the projected demand increases. Moreover, 
State has not proposed plans to significantly reduce the workload of 
available officers or the amount of time needed to adjudicate a visa if 
such resources are not available. Without a long-term plan to address 
increasing demand, State does not have a tool to make decisions that 
will maximize efficiency, minimize wait times, and strengthen its 
ability to support and sustain its funding needs. 

In order to develop a strategy addressing future visa demand, State may 
want to make use of operations research methods and optimization 
modeling techniques. These approaches can allow State to develop a long-
term plan that takes into account various factors--such as State's 
security standards for visas, its policies and procedures to maximize 
efficiency and minimize waits, and available resources. Researchers 
have developed statistical techniques to analyze and minimize wait 
times in a wide variety of situations, such as when cars queue to cross 
toll bridges or customers call service centers. These techniques 
consider the key variables that influence wait times, such as the 
likely demand, the number of people already waiting, the number of 
staff that can provide the service required, the time it takes to 
process each person, and the cost of each transaction; consider a range 
of scenarios; and provide options to minimize wait times, bearing in 
mind the relevant factors. The analyses can, for instance, provide 
quantitative data on the extent to which wait times could be reduced if 
more staff were assigned or the time for each transaction were 
decreased. 

For example, State could determine the approximate number of additional 
resources it would need in order to meet its stated goal of providing 
an appointment to all applicants within 30 days despite increased visa 
demand. Such a response would either require State to provide 
additional staff through new hires or by using other staffing methods, 
such as utilizing civil servants to adjudicate visas overseas. 
Alternatively, State could require consular officers to process 
applicants more efficiently and quickly. State may require multiple new 
facilities to support an increase in the number of Foreign Service 
officers and allow posts to process more applicants daily. However, if 
State were to determine that a significant increase in resources for 
staffing and facilities is not feasible, then State would have to 
evaluate the efficacy of its 30-day standard for visa appointments or 
consider requesting Congress to allow for changes in the adjudication 
process, such as allowing additional flexibility in the personal 
appearance requirement for visa applicants. It is dependent upon State 
to determine the specific techniques and appropriate variables or 
factors required to optimize its capability to address the demand for 
visas. 

Conclusions: 

Expediting the adjudication of NIV applications is important to U.S. 
national interests because legitimate travelers forced to wait long 
periods of time for a visa interview may be discouraged from visiting 
the country, potentially costing the United States billions of dollars 
in travel and tourism revenues over time. Moreover, State officials 
have previously testified that long waits for visa appointments can 
negatively impact our image as a nation that openly welcomes foreign 
visitors. Given projected increases in visa demand, State should 
develop a strategy that identifies the possible actions that will allow 
it to maintain the security of the visa process and its interest in 
facilitating legitimate travel in a timely manner. The development of 
such a plan will strengthen State's ability to manage visa demand, 
support and sustain its funding needs, encourage dialogue with relevant 
congressional committees on the challenges to addressing waits, and 
promote consensus by decision makers on funding levels and expectations 
for eliminating visa delays. Furthermore, there are several measures 
State could take in the short run to improve the wait times for 
interviews of NIV applicants and the reliability of visa waits 
information for management purposes. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve the Bureau of Consular Affair's oversight and management of 
visa-adjudicating posts, we recommend that the Secretary of State take 
the following actions: 

* Develop a strategy to address worldwide increases in visa demand that 
balances the security responsibility of protecting the United States 
from potential terrorists and individuals who would harm U.S. interests 
with the need to facilitate legitimate travel to the United States. In 
doing so, State should take into consideration relevant factors, such 
as the flow of visa applicants, the backlog of applicants, the 
availability of consular officers, and the time required to process 
each visa application. State's analysis should be informed by reliable 
data on the factors that influence wait times. State should update any 
plan annually to reflect new information on visa demand. 

* Improve the reliability and utility of visa waits data by defining 
collection standards and ensuring that posts report the data according 
to the standards. 

* Identify practices and procedures used by posts to manage workload 
and reduce wait times and encourage the dissemination and use of 
successful practices. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of State and 
Homeland Security. The Department of Homeland Security did not comment 
on the draft but provided a technical comment. State provided written 
comments on the draft that are reprinted with our comments in appendix 
II of this report. 

State concurred with our recommendations to enhance methods of 
disseminating effective management techniques, to improve the 
reliability and utility of visa waits data, and to develop a strategy 
to address increases in visa demand. State noted that any appropriate 
strategy to address worldwide increases in visa demand must address the 
need for resources to meet national security goals for both travel 
facilitation and border security. Furthermore, State said that any 
suggestion of trade-offs between these two goals would be 
inappropriate. Clearly we agree that in developing a strategy, State 
must maintain its security responsibilities while also facilitating 
legitimate travel to the United States. Our report does not suggest 
that one of these goals should be sacrificed at the expense of the 
other. State also provided a number of technical comments, which we 
have incorporated throughout the report, as appropriate. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to interested congressional committees. We will also send copies to the 
Secretary of State and the Secretary of Homeland Security. We also will 
make copies available to others upon request. In addition, the report 
will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
http://www.gao.gov. 

If you or your staff has any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions are 
listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Jess T. Ford: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

We reviewed (1) Department of State (State) data on the amount of time 
visa applicants were waiting to obtain a visa interview, (2) actions 
State has taken to address visa wait times, and (3) State's strategy 
for dealing with projected increases in visa demand. To accomplish our 
objectives, we interviewed officials from State's bureaus of Consular 
Affairs, Human Resources, and Overseas Buildings Operations. We also 
interviewed officials from the Department of Commerce's Office of 
Travel and Tourism Industries. In addition, we observed consular 
operations and interviewed U.S. government officials at 11 posts in 
eight countries--Brazil, China, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, 
India, South Korea, and the United Kingdom. For our site visits, we 
selected posts that had either (1) recently reported wait times of 60 
days or more, (2) had previously experienced long-standing wait time 
problems, (3) were projected to experience a large future volume of 
visa adjudications, or (4) were able to process a large volume of visas 
with little or no wait for applicant interviews. During these visits, 
we observed visa operations; interviewed consular staff and embassy 
management about visa adjudication policies, procedures, and resources; 
and reviewed documents and data. In addition, to obtain a broader view 
of visa workload, consular staffing and facilities, as well as other 
issues affecting visa wait times in consular sections, we selected an 
additional 21 posts for a document review based on the same selection 
criteria we used for selecting our site visits.[Footnote 47] Our 
selection of posts was not intended to provide a generalizable sample 
but allowed us to observe consular operations under a wide range of 
conditions. 

To determine the amount of time visa applicants were waiting to obtain 
a visa interview, we analyzed interview wait times data for applicants 
applying for visas for temporary business or tourism purposes, but not 
for other types of visas, including student visas. Specifically, the 
data provided to us showed the minimum and maximum wait times for visa- 
issuing posts for the period January 2006-February 2007. Data were also 
provided for the same period that indicated the number of posts that 
reported maximum wait times of 30 or more days in at least 1 month and 
the number that reported wait times in excess of 30 days for this 
entire 6-month period.[Footnote 48] In addition, at various points-in- 
time, we received information on the most recently reported wait times 
for visa-issuing posts and the date of last entry. To determine the 
reliability of State's data on wait times for applicant interviews, we 
reviewed the department's procedures for capturing these data, 
interviewed the officials in Washington who monitor and use these data, 
and examined data that was provided to us electronically. In addition, 
we interviewed the corresponding officials from our visits to select 
posts overseas and in Washington, who input and use the visa waits 
data. We found that data was missing throughout the 13-month period 
because posts were not reporting each week. Based on our analysis, we 
determined that the data were not sufficiently reliable to determine 
the exact magnitude of the delays because the exact number of posts 
with a wait of 30 days or more at any given time could not be 
determined. Consular officials who manage consular sections overseas 
acknowledged that many posts are not reporting on a weekly basis. 
However, we determined that the data are sufficiently reliable for 
providing a broad indication of posts that have had problems with wait 
times over a period of time and for general trends in the number of 
posts that have had problems with wait times over the 13 months we 
reviewed. 

To determine the actions State has taken to address visa wait times and 
its strategy for addressing waits, we analyzed consular policies and 
procedures cables and staffing and facilities plans developed by the 
department. In addition, we analyzed consular workload and staffing 
data. We also reviewed the methodology for the Change Navigations Study 
and found it to be one of a number of fairly standard approaches that 
are available for a forecasting exercise of this nature. However, we 
did not attempt to replicate the methodology or test alternative models 
that relied on different techniques, data, or assumptions. 

We conducted our work from August 2006 through May 2007 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

United States Department of State: 
Assistant Secretary for Resource Management and Chief Financial 
Officer: 
Washington, D.C. 20520: 

JUN 2 5 2007 

Ms. Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers: 
Managing Director: 
International Affairs and Trade: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548-0001: 

Dear Ms. Williams-Bridgers: 

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "Border 
Security: Long-term Strategy Needed to Keep Pace with Increasing Demand 
for Visas," GAO Job Code 320441. 

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report. 

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact June 
Kunsman, Managing Director, Bureau of Consular Affairs, at (202) 663- 
1153. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Bradford R. Higgins: 

cc: GAO - Melissa Pickworth: 
CA - Maura Harty: 
State/OIG - Mark Duda: 

Department of State Comments on GAO Draft Report: 

Border Security: Long-Term Strategy Needed to Keep Pace with Increasing 
Demand for Visas (GAO-07-847, GAO Code 320441): 

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the Government 
Accountability Office draft report entitled, "Border Security: Long- 
Term Strategy Needed to Keep Pace with Increasing Demand for Visas." 
The Department offers the following comments: 

p. 3 (Letter to Waxman): "Although maintaining security of the visa 
process is of paramount importance, State has also acknowledged that 
long wait time may discourage legitimate travel to the United States, 
potentially costing the country billions of dollars in economic 
benefits. " 

Comment: Although State recognizes that travel to the United States 
results in billions of dollars of economic activity and State 
acknowledges that long wait times for visas may discourage some travel 
to the United States, it is misleading to say that visa wait times are 
"potentially costing the country billions of dollars in economic 
benefits." There is no meaningful way to correlate visa wait times with 
travel or tourism revenues for the United States, as we do not know how 
many applicants would actually be issued visas and travel to the United 
States. It should be noted that in the same period covered by the 
study, visa issuances have been steadily rising, thus producing steady 
year over year increases in travel and tourism revenues. Moreover, 
other studies have found the greatest drop in travel to the United 
States to be from Visa Waiver countries. 

p.5 "However, despite recent improvements, at times during the past 
year - especially during peak summer-month processing periods - a 
number of posts reported long wait times. " 

Comment: State acknowledges that this is accurate, but believes 
inadequate explanation is offered regarding the cyclical phenomena that 
cause longer wait times during summer months. State also notes that the 
report simplistically equates this transient, recurring phenomenon with 
a more fundamental issue regarding resources needed to meet overall 
visa demand now and in the future. The variations and events described 
below often defy otherwise sound projections of demand. Factors that 
cause this cyclical rise in backlogs include the following: 

* The cost of overseas personnel and the infrastructure to support them 
requires "right-sized" staffing for average annual workload. 

* The timing of the personnel transfer cycle is set in part by external 
factors that cannot be changed, such as the start and end of the school 
year. This produces staffing gaps in the summer months. The perennial 
fact that international travel increases in the summer months 
guarantees that demand will peak as human resources remain static or 
are actually reduced. 

* Long lead times required for construction of facilities and security 
requirements make expansion and larger numbers of admissions to 
facilities a lengthy process. 

* Currency exchange rates, inflation cycles, and general prosperity, 
wages, and credit vary country by country. 

* Political changes impact the perception of current and future 
stability or economic security country by country. 

* Natural disasters, coups, or violence require officers to turn their 
full efforts to assisting American citizens immediately and may have 
significant longer-term impacts upon economic conditions. 

State believes it is misleading to equate this cyclical problem and the 
modalities for addressing it with the underlying question of chronic 
backlogs. By definition, posts that experience purely cyclical 
increases in wait times normally reduce these backlogs within 
established standards during off-peak seasons. 

p. S "State has used temporary duty employees to fill consular staffing 
gaps at some posts, and is repositioning a number of consular positions 
at posts around the world to better maximize its current workforce - 
especially at posts experiencing large growth in workload. . 
Furthermore, State acknowledges that the repositioning of consular 
staff, while necessary, may not adequately address the increasing 
demand for visas worldwide. " 

Comment: CA acknowledges that repositioning alone may not resolve the 
issue and suggests that it should be noted in this report that the best 
way to adequately address the increasing demand for visas worldwide, in 
conjunction with efforts to improve capacity and efficiency of 
facilities and consular procedures, is to permanently increase staffing 
levels at State. 

p.5 ". we found that some posts have utilized procedures that permit 
them to process applications more efficiently - such as conducting 
workflow studies in order to identify obstructions to efficient 
applicant processing. However, we observed that these procedures are 
not shared among posts in any systematic way, and, therefore, not all 
posts are aware of them. " 

Comment: Acknowledging that improvements can be made in information 
sharing tools, which GAO notes in the report, State does not believe 
there is any significant information gap between the Department and the 
field on the basic methods for achieving efficiency in consular 
operations. Workflow analysis, queue management, appointment system and 
demand management, team approaches to processing, and even shift work 
are all widely known techniques. While noting that improvements can be 
made, in State's view, sharing at this level already exists in the form 
of guidance on the Consular Affairs Intranet, cables to the field on 
standard operating procedures including outsourcing and concession 
agreement options, and inclusion of these methods in formal consular 
training courses and in the directed guidance offered by Consular 
Management Assistance Teams. The annual Consular Workload and Support 
Statistics specifically address key workload management and customer 
service concerns and require posts to report and evaluate their use of 
those. Post-specific procedures are less sharable than management 
principles, given the differences in physical configuration, host 
country conditions, and other resource factors among posts. 

p. 6: "For example, it has neither estimated the resources necessary to 
meet future demand, nor proposed plans that would significantly reduce 
the workload of available officers or the amount of time needed to 
adjudicate a visa if such resources are not available. " 

Comment: This comment does not acknowledge steps CA has taken. CA 
planning for workload and resources includes regular projections of 
future workload done post by post as part of the regular reporting in 
the annual "consular package," the future study conducted by 
contractors in 2005, and the CA global repositioning exercise in 2006 
that balanced consular officer staffing and workload among overseas 
posts worldwide. 

p. 6: "Develop a strategy to address worldwide increases in visa demand 
that balances the security responsibility of protecting the United 
States from potential terrorists and individuals who would harm U.S. 
interests with the need to facilitate legitimate travel to the United 
States. " 

Comment: We have to challenge the selection of the word "balances." 
State's border security responsibilities as a matter of public policy 
and law do not lend themselves to a "balancing" process, with 
facilitation of legitimate travel on one side of the scale and security 
on the other. We must do both with equal efficacy and this has been the 
fundamental challenge set by the "Secure Borders, Open Doors" agenda 
and the Rice-Chertoff Joint Vision. State questions the appropriateness 
of any suggestion that meeting increasing visa demand be approached in 
this way. In particular, State questions the assumption that "time 
required to process each visa application" is a significant factor in 
wait times and there is nothing in this report to suggest that it is. 
The duration of a visa interview at high volume posts is only a few 
minutes and 97 percent of visas are processed to completion within two 
days of the visa interview. 

p. 8: "These changes have added to the complexity of consular workload 
and have increased the amount of time needed to adjudicate a visa. Such 
changes include the following... " 

Comment: State recommends the inclusion of two additional very 
significant factors: 

- Consular officers have increased requirements to consult with 
headquarters, both within State and at other USG agencies, prior to 
visa issuance in the form of Security Advisory Opinions. 

- As a result of the Patriot Act, consular officers have access to, and 
are required to consult, far greater amounts of interagency data 
regarding potential terrorists and individuals who would harm U.S. 
interests. 

p. 14: "We observed that long waits had occurred over the summer 
months. " 

Comment: As noted above, the report fails to give adequate context to 
cyclical/seasonal factors that have made delays in peak season a 
persistent phenomenon. 

p. 14: "For example, in Caracas the reported visa waits significantly 
increased -from 34 days in February 2006 to 116 days in April 2007. " 

Comment: State would like to point out once again that changes in the 
political situation in Venezuela fueled this extraordinary demand. The 
type of long-term planning which GAO rightly suggests is needed to 
address the visa demand would not and could not address this type of 
unpredictable political factor. 

p. 16: "Several of the posts we visited calculated wait times based on 
the first appointment available to the next applicant in a given visa 
category; however, other posts we reviewed calculated waits 
differently. " 

Comment: As GAO is aware, variations in appointment systems make 
calculation of wait times based on the next available appointment 
inherently problematic. In fact, GAO pointed out this issue after their 
early analysis of wait time data recorded by posts in India using this 
method. The data were extremely volatile and had limited value. As 
noted in the report, State is working on better measures to capture 
both wait time and demand. As we transition to global on-line 
application, appointment, and payment systems, it will at some point no 
longer be necessary for managers to provide wait time information 
because it will be built into the global systems. 

p. 18: ".State will transfer 32 consular positions from posts that have 
more staff than is needed to posts where there has not been adequate 
staff to handle the visa workload. " 

Comment: State notes that no post or consular section has more staff 
than is needed. The repositioning exercise simply moved staff from 
posts that were understaffed to a lesser degree to posts that were 
understaffed to a greater degree. 

p. 22: ".the bureau designs and constructs consular facilities with 
input from Consular Affairs; therefore, they told us, Consular Affairs 
needs to provide more defined assessments of future needs at a 
facility. The director stated that proper planning and stronger 
estimates of future needs will help in building facilities that can 
better address wait times at post over the long-term. 

Comment: The Bureau of Consular Affairs is not included in the formal 
design approval process, although they do provide input informally to 
the designers at the working level or intervene at higher levels once 
issues come to their attention. Only State's regional bureaus have a 
formal role in design approval. Recent efforts have generated a CA-0130 
Working Group, which has discussed upcoming projects and responded to 
all requests for assessments of future needs. 

p. 22: "Consular officers in London...indicated that the 10- 
fingerprint requirement would significantly affect other posts' 
operations given that it experienced about a 13 percent reduction in 
the number of applicants an officer can interview in a day." 

Comment: The officer time required per case hasn't changed in London, 
where officers do not do the fingerprint enrollment. State acknowledges 
there may be a reduction in total applicants processed as a result of 
the additional time required for 10-print enrollment in a high-volume 
operation, but the constraints would be at the intake/enrollment 
processes, which would not be done by officers in high-volume posts 
such as London. 

p. 23: "State is contemplating additional changes to the visa process, 
including reducing the burden placed on applicants and consular 
officers. " 

Comment: In line with the general principles of good government, State 
is continuously reviewing visa processing procedures to make the most 
effective use of existing resources. The Visa Office's Two Year Plan is 
an overall visa processing strategy to coordinate changes to the visa 
process that will ensure consular officers abroad focus on those tasks 
that can only be accomplished overseas. For example, the plan envisions 
using the Kentucky Consular Center (KCC) to verify information on non- 
immigrant visa (NIV) petitions. Demands in other parts of the consular 
section, such as the increased demand for passports resulting from the 
Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative or a high proportion of 
inadequately prepared Immigrant Visa (IV) applicants, also use up 
resources that could be diverted to NIV processing. Other elements of 
the Two Year Plan, such as using the National Visa Center (NVC) to 
relieve posts of the task of collecting documents from IV applicants, 
will make consular sections overall more efficient and potentially free 
up resources and space. 

p. 27: "In order to develop a strategy addressing future visa demand, 
State may want to make use of operations research methods and 
optimization modeling techniques. " 

Comment: State is aware of and encourages the use of "lean management," 
ISO 9001 certification methodology, queue management techniques, and 
value stream mapping techniques in visa and consular processing that 
employ the methodologies cited in the GAO report. While acknowledging 
the analytic insight these tools can sometimes provide, it would be 
inappropriate to reduce visa processing to an analog of a "call center 
operation," or "cars crossing a bridge," as the report suggests. It 
would be highly inappropriate if consular interviews were considered 
only a variable in "transaction time." Our experience in consulting 
with businesses indicates that private sector, e.g., call center, 
staffing models have limited applicability to State overseas 
operations. The border security function must be supported and not 
diminished by changes in administrative procedures aimed at reducing 
process time. 

p. 28: ". or would require consular officer(s) to process applicants 
more efficiently and quickly. " 

Comment: To reiterate points made above, State finds the emphasis on 
making officers act more quickly to be misplaced and contrary to post- 
9/11 mandates. While State acknowledges that more resources and 
enhanced resource planning will be needed to meet the challenge of 
growing visa demand, State finds the either/or formulation in the 
report that either more resources are needed or officers will need to 
be faster an unacceptable trade-off inconsistent with significant post- 
9/11 concerns and legislative requirements. 

p. 29: Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Comment: State concurs with the need for a long term strategy to 
address worldwide increases in visa demand. At the same time State 
notes that an appropriate strategy must address the needs for resources 
to meet national goals for both travel facilitation and border 
security. An approach that suggests trade-offs or "balancing" of the 
two goals is inappropriate. The Bureau of Consular Affairs can and does 
update annually information on visa demand and information on personnel 
resources, but this cannot be translated into an effective planning 
tool without concerted action by several Bureaus and shared priorities 
on allocation of resources to meet these demands. 

State concurs with the recommendation to improve the reliability and 
utility of visa waits data. Better data will become available as State 
migrates to global appointment systems for visas. State also concurs 
with the recommendation to enhance methods of disseminating effective 
management techniques. 

The following are GAO's comments on the Department of State's letter 
dated June 25, 2007. 

GAO Comments: 

1. State's Deputy Assistant Secretary for Visa Services has 
acknowledged that visa applicants may be deterred from visiting the 
United States by long appointment wait times and that this could have 
negative economic consequences and could adversely affect foreign 
opinions of our country. The Department of Commerce points out that 
foreign visitors bring economic benefits to our country in excess of 
$100 billion each year. We agree that it is difficult to correlate visa 
wait times with specific dollar value losses in travel and tourism 
revenues. However, given that wait times for interviews are very high 
at a number of posts, we believe that the loss in economic benefits to 
our country over time could potentially be significant. 

Our report acknowledges that visa issuances have increased over the 
last several years. 

2. We believe our report, as well as past GAO reports, shows that long 
waits for visa interviews have been a long-standing problem for the 
department. Furthermore, State's data show that there have been long 
waits at some posts during peak and nonpeak periods (see fig. 2) and 
that long waits are not solely cyclical in nature. State acknowledges a 
number of cyclical factors that affect visa demand and resource 
availability, such as staffing gaps and the personnel transfer cycle. 
We believe these and other factors can contribute to chronic as well as 
cyclical backlogs. In addition, we have modified the draft to 
acknowledge the fact that wait times may reoccur cyclically as well as 
unexpectedly. However, the report points toward the need for a strategy 
for addressing such delays, which State has not developed to address 
either cyclical or chronic visa waits. 

3. We agree that increasing consular staff levels may ultimately be 
necessary to address increasing visa demand. This is why we recommended 
that State develop a strategy to address wait times and that, in doing 
so, identify its resource needs. Such actions could promote consensus 
by decision makers on funding levels and expectations for eliminating 
visa delays. 

4. We agree that State has taken a number of actions to share 
information with posts on reducing wait times. However, as noted in the 
report, during our fieldwork, we found that there were instances where 
posts were not aware of certain practices and procedures implemented by 
other posts to help manage workload and assist in improving applicant 
wait times. We understand that all practices may not be transferable to 
all posts, but we believe that all posts would benefit from knowing the 
options that are available for more efficient operations. 

5. Our report discusses State's efforts to estimate visa demand and 
gives ample credit to the 2006 repositioning exercise to shift some 
consular staffing to posts with the greatest need. Furthermore, neither 
the annual consular package exercise nor the Consular Affairs Future 
Study estimated the resources needed to meet long-term future demand. 
Our point is that State has not estimated what resources will be 
required to keep up with the increase in future demand that State 
forecasts. Because these resources could be substantial, we think it is 
incumbent on State to develop a long-term strategy now. 

6. We based our statements on the testimony of State's Deputy Assistant 
Secretary for Visa Services before Congress in March 2007, where he 
stated, "we strive to constantly strike the right balance between 
protecting America's borders and preserving America's welcome to 
international visitors." We acknowledge that in striking this balance 
security is the primary concern. Clearly the time it takes to process 
an application affects how many applications an officer can process in 
a given day. We are not suggesting that State sacrifice security in 
order to avoid visa waits, but rather that State develop a plan for how 
it will cope with rising demand, taking these various circumstances and 
responsibilities into consideration. 

7. We agree that these are important factors and have modified the text 
accordingly. 

8. We understand that there are spikes in visa demand for various 
reasons, some of which are difficult to predict. However, State is 
aware that such spikes in visa demand can occur. We believe that State 
needs a strategy to address growing visa demand that includes 
consideration of how it will meet unanticipated spikes in demand. The 
development of such a plan would allow State to use its visa surge 
teams of temporary duty staff to deal with unanticipated spikes, rather 
than using them to handle the anticipated increasing demand. 

9. We have modified language in the report. State's comment reinforces 
our belief that it is time for State to develop a strategy for 
addressing long-term visa demand. If State determines it needs more 
staff to handle projected demand, then it should detail these needs in 
its strategy. 

10. We based our comment on a cable prepared by the U.S. Embassy in 
London. State acknowledges that the 10-fingerprint requirement could 
reduce the number of applicants processed. Applicants are not 
interviewed until after their fingerprints are taken, so a reduction in 
the number of applicants processed would subsequently result in a 
reduction of applicants interviewed. We have modified language in the 
draft to clarify our point. 

11. We have incorporated information on the Visa Office's Two-Year Plan 
into the report. 

12. State does not have a plan that outlines how it will cope with 
growing visa demand, which is why we recommend that State develop a 
strategy that identifies the actions it will take to address increasing 
demand. We believe that there may be opportunities to achieve 
efficiencies at some posts and that more resources may be needed. The 
short-term, temporary measures that State is currently taking to 
address visa demand are not adequate to handle the projected visa 
demand. We suggest that State take advantage of available analytical 
tools in order to identify options for the development of an overall 
strategy that will address the projected increase in visa demand 
worldwide. A wide range of sophisticated techniques are available to 
help manage customer waiting times in many areas of government 
operations, such as testing drivers at departments of motor vehicles 
and treating patients at public health clinics. Our report does not 
recommend that State reduce the processing time at the expense of 
security. We agree that State must maintain its security 
responsibilities while facilitating legitimate travel to the United 
States. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Jess Ford, (202) 512-4128, fordj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, John Brummet, Assistant 
Director; Joe Brown; Joe Carney; Martin de Alteriis; Jeff Miller; Mary 
Moutsos; and Melissa Pickworth made key contributions to this report. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] The United States also grants visas to people who intend to 
immigrate to the United States. In this report, we use the term "visa" 
to refer to nonimmigrant visas only. 

[2] Applications for visas rose steadily in the 1990s to a peak of 10.4 
million for fiscal year 2001. Following the 2001 economic recession and 
the precipitous decline in travel resulting from the 9/11 terrorist 
attacks, visa demand dropped. 

[3] Wait time is broadly defined as the amount of time that a visa 
applicant must wait to obtain a visa interview. 

[4] See GAO, Border Security: Reassessment of Consular Resource 
Requirements Could Help Address Visa Delays, GAO-06-542T (Washington, 
DC: Apr. 4, 2006). 

[5] At the time we reported this figure in April 2006, State reporting 
having 211 visa-adjudicating consular posts. State currently reports 
that it has 219 such posts. 

[6] In March 2007, the Deputy Secretary of State for Visa Services 
testified that, according to Department of Commerce figures, foreign 
visitors accounted for $107.4 billion in spending and other economic 
activity in the United States in 2006, and that international students 
contribute an additional $13.5 billion each year to institutions they 
attend and the surrounding communities in which they live. 

[7] The U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board consists of 14 industry 
CEOs and was formed to advise the U.S. Secretary of Commerce on 
national tourism strategy. 

[8] As defined by the Department of Commerce, travel and tourism 
includes leisure, business, conventions and meetings, and educational 
and medical travel. 

[9] Believing the waits at some posts are excessive, earlier this year, 
State announced a goal of providing all applicants an interview within 
30 days. 

[10] Persons who may require NIVs include temporary business travelers 
and tourists. 

[11] The 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended, is the 
primary body of law governing immigration and visa operations (see Pub. 
L. No. 82-414, 8 U.S.C., 1101 et seq.) In addition, the Homeland 
Security Act of 2002 generally grants DHS exclusive authority to issue 
regulations on, administer, and enforce the Immigration and Nationality 
Act and all other immigration and nationality laws relating to the 
functions of U.S. consular officers in connection with the granting or 
denial of visas; however, State retains authority in certain 
circumstances (see Pub. L. No. 107-296.) A subsequent September 2003 
Memorandum of Understanding between State and DHS further outlines the 
responsibilities of each agency with respect to visa issuance. 
According to the Memorandum of Understanding, DHS is responsible for 
establishing visa policy, reviewing implementation of the policy, and 
providing additional direction. State is in charge of managing the visa 
process, as well as the consular corps and its functions at 219 visa- 
issuing posts overseas. 

[12] Biometrics includes a wide range of technologies that can be used 
to verify a person's identity by measuring and analyzing that person's 
physiological characteristics. For the purposes of this report, 
"biometric identifiers" refer to fingerprints. See GAO, Technology 
Assessment: Using Biometrics for Border Security, GAO-03-174 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 14 2002). 

[13] Consular Associates are U.S. citizens and relatives of U.S. 
government direct-hire employees overseas who, following a successful 
completion of the required Basic Consular Course, are hired by the 
consular section at post. Up until September 30, 2005, consular 
associates at some posts were allowed to assist consular officers in 
adjudicating visas. 

[14] The Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 
further required that consular officers adjudicate visas. See Pub. L. 
No. 108-458. As defined by State, consular officers are generally 
active Foreign Service officers but may also include commissioned civil 
service employees or retirees of the Foreign Service. 

[15] According to U.S. law (8 U.S.C. § 1202(h), every alien applying 
for an NIV who is between the ages of 14 and 79 must submit to an in- 
person interview with a consular officer unless the interview is waived 
under certain circumstances by either the consular officer or the 
Secretary of State. See Pub. L. No. 108-458. 

[16] The Automated Biometric Identification System is a DHS database 
that includes some 5 million people who may be ineligible to receive a 
visa. For example, the Automated Biometric Identification System data 
includes, among other records, Federal Bureau of Investigation 
information on all known and suspected terrorists, selected wanted 
persons, and previous criminal histories for individuals from high-risk 
countries. See GAO, Border Security: State Department Rollout of 
Biometric Visas on Schedule, but Guidance Is Lagging, GAO-04-1001 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 9, 2004) and GAO, Technology Assessment: Using 
Biometrics for Border Security, GAO-03-174 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 14, 
2002). 

[17] In January 2006, the director of the U.S. Visitor and Immigrant 
Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) program testified that moving to 
a 10-fingerscan standard from a 2-print standard would allow the United 
States to be able to identify visa applicants and visitors with even 
greater accuracy. US-VISIT is a governmentwide program to collect, 
maintain, and share information on foreign nationals and better control 
and monitor the entry, visa status, and exit of visitors. Under the 
program, most foreign visitors are required to submit to fingerprint 
scans of their right and left index fingers and have a digital 
photograph taken upon arrival at U.S. ports of entry. 

[18] See Change Navigators, Inc., State Department/Consular Affairs 
Futures Study (Washington, D.C.: July-September 2005). 

[19] See GAO, State Department: Tourist Visa Processing Backlogs Still 
Persist at U.S. Consulates, GAO/NSIAD-98-69 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 13, 
1998). 

[20] See GAO, Border Security: Improvements Needed to Reduce Time Taken 
to Adjudicate Visas for Science Students and Scholars, GAO-04-371 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 25, 2004). 

[21] GAO-06-542T. 

[22] See GAO-06-542T. We reported that, during the period September 
2005-February 2006, 97 of State's visa-issuing posts (211 at the time) 
had reported maximum waits of 30 or more days in at least 1 month, and 
20 posts had reported waits in excess of 30 days for an entire 6-month 
period. 

[23] In April 2006, we testified that waits over 90 days occurred at 
the following posts in India, Mexico and Brazil: Mumbai, India--154 
days; Chennai, India--168 days; New Delhi, India--91 days; Ciudad 
Juarez, Mexico--92 days; Mexico City, Mexico--34 days; and Rio de 
Janeiro, Brazil--140 days. 

[24] Rio de Janeiro reported its wait times were reduced to 48 days in 
February 2007 from a high of 149 days in October 2006. Mexico City 
reported its wait times were reduced to 19 days from a high of 160 days 
in January 2006. 

[25] Wait times, as of May 16, 2007 are as follows: Sao Paolo-59 days; 
Monterrey-60 days; Tel Aviv-66 days; and Kingston-55 days. 

[26] In addition, State set a performance indicator that student visas 
and U.S.-interest business applicants should receive an appointment for 
a visa within 15 days or less. Furthermore, State clarified that those 
applicants found eligible to receive a visa should expect their visa to 
be issued within 2 or 3 days after their interview. 

[27] Select small posts are allowed to report less frequently but are 
required to do so at least once per month. 

[28] One cable, in particular, directs posts not to compute a 
mathematical average but to ask the question "on what date will the 
majority of visa applicants seeking an appointment be scheduled for an 
interview?" According to State, the number of calendar days between 
that date and the calendar date is the typical wait time. 

[29] A new post appointment system was recently implemented that 
provided applicants the option to choose from available appointments at 
either 3 or 6 weeks into the future. 

[30] Appointment cancellations and other variables, such as increases 
in the number of post staff or visa processing windows, can allow for 
immediate appointment openings. When new appointments become available, 
posts in some cases can reschedule applicants for earlier appointments; 
however, we observed posts can fill the new slots with new applicants. 
Therefore, applicants with prior appointments can continue to face long 
waits although the post may be reporting low wait times due to new 
appointment availability. 

[31] These temporary duty staff include when-actually-employed 
personnel, which is defined as employment where the workweek schedule 
is determined by post management on an as-needed basis. These officials 
are typically retired foreign service officers. 

[32] The ambassador made the reduction of wait times the primary 
objective of all posts in India. 

[33] State officials indicated that the review considered NIV, 
immigrant visa, and American Citizen Services workload and staffing 
levels, and also considered other factors including future demand 
projections. 

[34] According to State officials, the Bureau of Consular Affairs was 
providing posts in India with funding for temporary duty staff in order 
to reduce the wait times at all posts in India. According to officials, 
this was an exemption from State's policy and was only provided for 
posts in India. 

[35] As of May 16, 2007, wait times in Mumbai were reported at 46 days. 

[36] Foreign Service officers are assigned a grade, which ranges from 
FS-06 to FS-01, corresponding from entry-level to midlevel, 
respectively. According to State, officers between grades 6 through 4 
are classified as junior officers, while grades 3 through 1 are 
midlevel officers. 

[37] We selected posts that had either (1) recently reported wait times 
of 60 days or more, (2) had previously experienced longstanding wait 
time problems, (3)were projected to experience a large future volume of 
visa adjudications, or (4) were able to process a large volume of visas 
with little or no wait for applicant interviews. The analysis was not 
intended to be representative of all posts. 

[38] For the purpose of this report, consular staff includes both 
Foreign Service consular officers and locally engaged staff working in 
the consular section. 

[39] In 2003, Congress directed the Bureau of Overseas Buildings 
Operations to improve the overall working environment for consular 
officers through the Consular Workspace Improvement Initiative. 

[40] The new consulate in Hyderabad, India, is expected to be 
operational by fiscal year 2008. 

[41] The new embassy compound in Beijing is scheduled to open in the 
summer of 2008. According to Beijing reports, the new facility will 
meet consular section needs when it first opens, but the post expects 
to quickly outgrow the new space as workload will soon require an 
additional six interview windows. 

[42] State introduced an electronic visa application form and mandated 
its use at consulates worldwide in November 2006. Use of the 
application form reduces data entry errors, eliminates duplicative data 
entries, and increases the number of applicants consular staff can 
interview daily. Building on its recent implementation of this 
application form, State anticipates moving to an entirely paperless, 
electronic visa application process by the end of 2007. 

[43] The personal appearance requirement can generally be waived under 
the following circumstances: (1) if the alien is applying at a post in 
his resident country, the applicant has complied with U.S. immigration 
laws and regulations, the prior visa expired less than 12 months ago, 
and the alien is applying for the same visa classification; (2) if the 
alien is applying for a visa as a foreign government official or an 
official to an international organization; (3) if the alien is applying 
for a NATO visa; (4) if the alien is granted a diplomatic or official 
visa on a diplomatic or official passport; (5) if the alien is applying 
as a foreign government official or member of the immediate family, 
attendant, servant, or personal employee, in transit; or (6) if the 
Secretary of State determines that the waiver is either in U.S. 
national interest or is necessary as a result of unusual or emergent 
circumstances. Regardless of the circumstances mentioned above, there 
are also certain circumstances under which the interview cannot be 
waived. 

[44] The study was conducted by Change Navigators, Inc., between July 
and September 2005. 

[45] The projected growth is: Argentina-96 percent, Brazil-196 percent, 
China-232 percent, India-109 percent, Mexico-99 percent, and Saudi 
Arabia-136 percent. 

[46] The plan calls for State to implement a number of steps, including 
the following: (1) worldwide appointment scheduling system, which would 
make more management information on visa demand available; (2) 
electronic visa applications that can be reviewed prior to the 
interview; (3) remote interviewing of applicants, where applicable, for 
potential cost savings; and (4) visa "surge teams," or temporary duty 
staff, to assist posts that face problems with wait times exceeding 30 
days. 

[47] We reviewed consular reports and data from a total of 32 posts 
including: New Delhi, Calcutta, Chennai, Mumbai, Beijing, Shanghai, 
Shenyang, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Bogotá, Cairo, Seoul, Rio de Janeiro, Sao 
Paolo, Manila, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Islamabad, Monterrey, Mexico City, 
Guadalajara, Ciudad Juarez, London, Santo Domingo, Tegucigalpa, San 
Jose, San Salvador, Riyadh, Quito, Paris, Port au Prince, and 
Johannesburg. 

[48] According to consular officials, in cases where posts report wait 
time data more than once in a given month, State's data are the maximum 
wait time reported that month. 

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