Flooded with Visa Requests US Sends Dozens of Temporary Employees to Brazil to Meet Demand

Big line at São Paulo's US Consulate in Brazil The US state has informed that the US Mission to Brazil processed a record number of visa applications – 820,000 – in fiscal year 2011, a 42 percent year-over-year increase. To meet the surging demand for US visas in Brazil, the Department of State is deploying waves of temporary employees to the US Embassy in Brazilian capital Brasília and US Consulates in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Recife.

These employees are helping to process extraordinary numbers of visa applications until permanent staff members arrive. The Department will double consular staffing in Brazil over the course of 2012, adding 50 new officer positions.

With the help of additional personnel, US Mission Brazil has reduced the average wait time for visa interview appointments in Brazil to less than 50 days.

While the Department always puts security first, visitors to the United States make critical contributions to economic growth and job creation.

That is why shortening visa interview wait times is also a priority – to encourage even greater numbers of Brazilians to visit the United States, a premier destination for travelers from around the world.

In a communiqué to the press the Stated Department stated that the United States and Brazil, “the two largest economies and the two largest democracies in the Western Hemisphere, share one of the most important trade and economic relationships in the world.”

According to the American Department of Commerce, more than 1.2 million Brazilians visited the United States in 2010, contributing nearly US$ 6 billion to the U.S. economy. By 2016, the United States could host a record 2.8 million Brazilian visitors.

The United States is also experiencing unprecedented growth in demand for US visas in China, where consular officers processed more than one million applications during fiscal year 2011, a 34 percent increase over 2010.

The average wait for visa interview appointments in China is now less than ten days. The American government is promising that the  US Missions to Brazil and China “will continue to reduce visa interview wait times to the greatest extent possible by adding staff and eliminating inefficiencies wherever possible.”

More information about wait times for visa interviews and processing can be found online at http://travel.state.gov/visa/temp/wait/wait_4638.html  

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian soap opera America from Globo TV

Brazil’s Soap America, a Story About America the Ugly

Since the very beginning, I’ve been a big fan of the Brazilian telenovela, America. ...

Brazilians Hopeful They Will Sell Syria Healthcare Products

Syria’s Healthcare fair, of medical and pharmaceutical products, happened in Damascus last week, and ...

Brazil Seizes US$ 87 Million in Contraband, a 130% Jump

The president of the Brazilian National Council to Combat Piracy and Intellectual Property Violations, ...

Without Food For Her 4 Kids Brazilian Guarani Indian Kills Self

Teresa Murilha, a young Guarani Kaiowá mother of four children, killed herself on October ...

Brazil Ready to Eliminate Tariffs for Poorest Countries

One of the topics on the agenda of the 6th Ministerial Conference of the ...

Lula Tells Peres Why Brazil Talks to Iran and Is Invited to Turn On Middle East Lights

Talking to journalists in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia and standing close to Israeli president Shimon ...

Obama Considering Brazil Invitation for Summit on US Forces in Colombia

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva suggested to his peer American ...

Brazil's depachante de aduana

Meet the Despachante, Your New Brazilian Best Friend

In the previous articles in our series about doing business in Brazil we’ve discussed ...

Brazilian Congress Wants Access to Corruption-Linked Adman’s Account in the US

Senator DelcÀ­dio Amaral, from the Workers Party of Mato Grosso do Sul state, president ...

Brazil’s Lula Says New Deal Inspired His Biodiesel Program

“The 21st century must be Brazil’s century,” affirmed President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, ...