Are you prepared to travel in 2016? If your passport book is full or you owe back taxes, you may be grounded. Welcome to the new United States of America: land of the impeded, home of the…well, you decide.
Source: Changing Travel Laws That Could Affect Your Plans in 2016
This is a summary of the above article. If you are a frequent air traveler, I suggest you read it in its entirety.
As part of a bill for federal highway funding, as of January 1, 2016, any U.S. citizen who owes at least $50,000 in unpaid taxes can be prevented from applying for or renewing their passport. This regulation can also allow the IRS to rescind travel privileges of tax delinquent travelers. The traveler has to be the subject of a tax lien, but their passport privileges can be restored by either contesting the taxes owed in court, or by actively working with the IRS to pay the debt.
Also as of January 1, 2016, frequent U.S. travelers abroad are no longer able to order an additional 24-page insert for visa stamps for their existing passport books. Now, you either have to apply for a second passport book when the pages are filled, or opt for a 52-page passport book at renewal time. A regular passport book has 20 pages for visa stamps.

Come 2018, the scene in “The Hunt for Red October” where Sean Connery’s character tells Sam Neill’s he can travel in the U.S. between states without certain “papers” will become quaint.
Another law that was supposed to take effect this past January 1 but has been postponed to take effect January 22, 2018 requires all U.S. air travelers — for domestic and foreign travel — to carry identification that is REAL-ID compliant. REAL-ID legislation was passed in 2005 and is described as “an effort to combine driver’s licenses and state ID cards into a national identification system as a way to support national security.” Two of the key features of REAL-ID: certain personal information and features will be encrypted into each card, and states will share this information with other states. In the double-speak of the Department of Homeland Security, you’re not required to carry a REAL-ID, but if you want to board a commercial airline, you will have to, come 2018. If you live in one of the four states (or in the American Territory of Samoa) that are not REAL-ID compliant, you can purchase a passport card for $55, but only if you are current with your taxes.
DHS also claims REAL-ID will not create a national database of personal information on U.S. citizens, but as Jennifer McFadyen points out, “the implications of a national-database-that-is-not-a-national-database are staggering.”
Au revoir! (But only if you’re current with your taxes)
Image of Passort by CanStockPhoto. Image of “The Hunt for Red October” from quora.com, CCBY 2.0.