I went to the German consulate this morning and applied for a German passport. The process took less than ten minutes. While the German government website had told me to bring "original and one photocopy" of my birth certificate, marriage certificate, naturalization certificate, and American passport, the clerk made photocopies on their machine instead of using the photocopies I'd brought with me. They did use my photocopy of the application form, and I suspect that they wanted color copies. (As of a few days ago, our printer/copier is only good for black and white, having forgotten how to use the cyan ink.)

The clerk asked me whether I wanted to pick up my passport or have it mailed. I opted to pick it up rather than pay a fee to have it mailed, both to save a bit of money and so I don't have to worry about the passport being lost in the mail. (The round-trip subway fare is $4.80, versus I think $22 for having the passport mailed.) The clerk said that my passport should be ready in about six weeks. They will let me know when I can come pick it up, and I won't need an appointment, just show up any morning between 9 a.m. and noon.

It's a biometric passport, for which they scanned my index fingers. Interestingly, "Please bear in mind that due to privacy protection, the German Mission can only save the fingerprints for a brief period of time and will then delete them." I like the GDPR. My best guess about the fingerprint information is that it will be stored in some form built into the passport.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Jan. 13th, 2020 06:54 pm)
My new passport arrived in the mail today, so I can once again make travel plans more definite than "I would like to go to Canada sometime this spring." I have signed on the appropriate line, and put the new passport number and expiration date into Evernote.

A US passport comes with a "where are my documents?" leaflet, explaining that the State Department may send your passport book and passport card (if you applied for both) and previous passport (if any) back separately. I knew this, so was pleased to get the passport book first.
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