Passengers and crew of private aircraft departing Bermuda are expected to soon
have the rare benefit of United States Customs pre-clearance at Bermuda's L.F.
Wade International Airport, according to a Letter of Intention signed jointly
in Washington, D.C. by Premier of Bermuda Ewart F. Brown and US Secretary of Homeland
Security Michael Chertoff.
The international pact is viewed as mutually beneficial by enhancing the attractiveness
of Bermuda’s tourism and financial services industries while also mitigating
the potential threat to US homeland security as passengers and crew will be
thoroughly vetted before arriving on American soil.
Premier Brown, who is also Bermuda’s Minister of Tourism and Transport,
said: “Given the steady increase in private jet landings in Bermuda, this
is a timely development.”
The Letter of Intention was signed at the Department of Homeland Security Monday,
part of a Bilateral Visit to Washington led by US Chief of Mission in Bermuda
Gregory Slayton. Slayton is widely credited for strengthening the 400-year relationship
between the two countries.
Slayton said: “This agreement is yet another example of international
cooperation at its best. Our success in forging this partnership reflects on
the close relationship that exists between the United States, the United Kingdom
and Bermuda which grows ever stronger.”
In Bermuda passengers and crew of commercial flights already receive US Customs
pre-clearance at L.F. Wade International Airport in accordance with an agreement
signed in January 1974. To extend the same conveniences to non-commercial flyers
will require an amendment to the 1974 agreement.
The newly signed Letter of Intention is the result of months of talks between
Hamilton, Washington and London. A final agreement will be reached once logistical
and legal hurdles are cleared between Bermuda and the United States, with the
oversight of the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO).
Deputy Governor Mark Capes represents the FCO in Bermuda. He said: “The
well-established and efficient pre-clearance operation for commercial flights
is highly valued by travelers from Bermuda to the USA. This shared intent to
build on that success, by expanding pre-clearance to include private aircraft,
is a good indicator of the strength and maturity of the relationship between
Bermuda, the United States and the United Kingdom.”
Bermuda’s insurance and reinsurance industry boasts USD325bn in assets
and wrote 29% of the world’s gross insurance premiums in 2005, the largest
premium-writing capacity of any country outside of the United States. Bermuda-based
companies provide more insurance cover for Americans than any other country
in the world outside of the United States. As a result private air travel between
the United States and Bermuda is frequent, about 3,000 non-commercial flights
fly into L.F. Wade International each year.
Meantime, Bermuda’s tourist industry increasingly attracts affluent travelers,
fuelled in part by the development of new hotel properties and the upgrade of
old properties. It’s believed the added convenience of Customs pre-clearance
will give affluent travelers who fly non-commercially a new reason to choose
Bermuda for leisure travel.
Minister of Tourism and Transport Premier Brown said: “We call our improving
tourism product the Platinum Period to bring attention to an exquisite high-end
visitor experience."
He added: “In the past few years we have rolled out exciting transportation
options like private limousine services and luxurious fast ferries and we have
passed legislation to stimulate new excitement in our hotel offerings. Hotel
owners are busy upgrading their properties and building new ones to meet the
Platinum Period standard."
Brown concluded: “These new developments in the area of private aviation
augment our Platinum Period strategy.”