Mexico's stamps in the passport
If Mexico insists on stamping passports, the gringos who live in Mexico and commute to work in the US (like one of my attorney friends) would have about 300 stamps every year in their passports.
Unless they use a very small stamp, it would quickly take lots of passport pages for those commuters.
What if you live in US and cross frequently but only stays less than 7 days each time
[QUOTE=Artisttyp;1763430]I received a stamp in my passport. This was two weeks ago. I live in Tijuana.[/QUOTE]In your case I guess you had to pay for a more than 7 day visa? What if you live in US and cross frequently but only stays less than 7 days each time? Do they stamp your passport book each time you cross? Then the passport will soon run out of stamping spaces.
I believe this will definitely affect the business in Tijuana negatively.
There is no place to turn in the visa
[QUOTE=ScatManDoo;1763840]If I understand their laws correctly, a visiting United States citizen needs a visa to enter Mexico (two kinds, one is free, the longer one costs around $20). And the visa is to be turned in every time when that visitor exits Mexico.
But in the case of the free visa (for 7 days or less) the Mexican government doesn't want to go through the time, expense and bother of reissuing a S / T visa daily for those visitors who stay in Mexico for just a few hours each time, multiple times each week?
Too bad they didn't take that logic to the matter of someone who stays more than a week at a time, but does that multiple times within a 6-month period.[/QUOTE]I did not see any place to return the visa on my way back. Apparently this is still in the initial testing stage. So I guess each time you enter, you will just have to go through the same process of getting a paper permit with the date stamp.
The Tijuana Cops, Passports, & Permits
I've been following all this and plan to cross by foot next weekend and have a Passport Card which I will use to cross with.
It's my understanding that people driving into the country are "exempt" from all of this and that the showing of a Passport / Issuance of a permit is not done.
The Tijuana Cops in the Zone are going to have a field day with this.
I know lots of guys drive across and others walk.
So what happens when someone has driven across, is stopped by the Cops on the street, and does not have a permit and / or a copy of a permit because they drove.
I see lots of extortion in the works and wouldn't be surprised to see a report about something like this very soon.
Is the 180 day Visa Good for multiple Entries?
[QUOTE=Artisttyp;1763698]This remains to be seen. If the passport card works indefinitely then there is your answer. There is speculation that eventually they will tighten the reins once this has been in play for a few months. There are a lot of issues that need to be ironed out. They will change things as the program matures. They can't possibly do everything they want without some serious overhaul.
I will purchase a 180 day visa once a month until they tell me I can't anymore. My time is split between SD and Tijuana. Two weeks in each place. If they want me out eventually then fine I will leave.
Right now day trippers have been told to hold onto the 7 day visa and when it expires get another one. This could change at some point.
On the other hand people passing cars get waived right through.
This will be a mess for a while then it gets more strict or they give up due to caos. We shall see.
Have fun and just go with the flow.[/QUOTE]My buddy crossed the border today and was issued the free 7 day visa. He said they told him that he could pay for the 180 day visa and it would be good for multiple entries during the 180 day period. Can you verify that this is the case?
For the weekend warriors like my self and others why fill out paperwork every weekend when you only have to fill it out once every six months?