Great news about 21km checkpoint.....it is toast!

jerry

Guest
From The excellent San Carlos forum

Mexico closes customs checkpoint south of Nogales, Sonora



A banner at the Mexican customs checkpoint at Agua Zarca, 21 kilometers south of the U.S.-Mexico border, announces its closure.

The Mexican government has closed its customs checkpoint on Highway 15 south of Nogales, Sonora, eliminating a second layer of inspection at the border that President Enrique Peña Nieto said had become unnecessary and cumbersome.

For southbound commercial and tourist vehicle traffic, the closure of the Agua Zarca checkpoint will likely mean shorter wait times for those headed south to Hermosillo and beyond. Immigration services at the facility, commonly known as Kilometer 21, will be unaffected.

Miguel Pacheco, owner of Nogales-based USA-Mex-Can Transport, said that the change will speed up the truckloads of heavy machinery his company takes into Mexico up to five times daily during peak months. “It’s going to be really good because there will be no more delays at Kilometer 21,” he said.
According to Pacheco, those delays lasted up to two hours, on top of crossing delays near the border, depending on “how many trucks are to be inspected.”

Two other interior Sonoran checkpoints, Cabullona south of Agua Prieta and San Antonio near Imuris, were also closed, as well six others in in the border states of Nuevo Leon, Coahuila, and Tamaulipas, according to an announcement Friday by Peña Nieto.

“Today we arrived at the last stage, the last step toward closing the last checkpoints that have no reason to be and which will make travel much faster, more comfortable and safer for those who previously had to pass through customs checkpoints,” the president said during a speech in Reynosa, Tamaulipas.

The checkpoints are run by the Mexico’s Tax Administration Service (SAT), the federal agency tasked with enforcing the country’s customs laws. Mexican customs revisions at the border itself – including those immediately south of the Dennis DeConcini and Mariposa ports of entry – are not affected by the change and travellers will still have to pass through them.

Also unchanged is the requirement that foreign travelers heading south of Kilometer 21 must obtain a tourist permit from Mexico’s National Migration Institute (INM). Those who don’t pick up a permit at the INM office on the south side on the DeConcini port can still apply at the office at Kilometer 21, according to INM Nogales delegate Carla Veronica Vazquez. “Independently of the fact that there will no longer be a customs inspection, foreigners and nationals of other countries must come to the migration office to get documented,” she said.

Vazquez said that she had received no word that indicated that the president’s announcement will affect her agency’s work south of Nogales.
“As of right now, we have not received any other instruction,” she said. “We will remain at Kilometer 21 issuing permits to foreigners and nationals of the United States or any other country.”

Vazquez said that Banjercito, the agency that issues vehicle import permits for drivers traveling outside of Sonora’s permit-free zone, will also continue its operations at Kilometer 21. A woman who answered the phone Friday at Banjercito’s Agua Zarca office also said operations there remain unchanged.

In a speech in May in Cancun announcing the closure of several customs checkpoints in Southern Mexico, Peña Nieto said the days of drivers being “daily bothered by having to pass through (interior) customs checkpoints” are over. According to a news release posted Friday on the SAT website, 26 of the nation's 40 interior customs checkpoints have now been eliminated since Peña Nieto took office in 2012.

On Friday in Reynosa, Peña Nieto also announced the lifting of a $14,000 cap on monthly U.S. dollar deposits from border-area Mexican businesses, an anti-money laundering measure that had been in place since 2010.


Last edited on Sat Sep 13th, 2014 02:13 pm by bartmanaz
 

Roberto

Guest
If you mean the one at Almejas I think it is to be closed if not already. The twits there turned me back and made me get a car permit to go to Kino years back !!
 

jerry

Guest
Some real jerks work there.My buddy had to go to Rocky Point from Desemboque and had a car with a iffy plate.The guy told him no problem so he went to Penasco and on his return they demanded 1800 pesos or they would take the car.He had his wife and sick baby in the car and had to pay up...
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Never truly had issues with the 21km checkpoint, they usually green lighted me through with the boat. Still have to get that visa, though, and if you're going further south than San Carlos, car permit, TIP permit, etc. I'm assuming all of that will still be in operation.
 
The checkpoint I went through, they are like new timers and a pain in the butt. I screwed up and let my tags expire and didn't know . He turned me around and I went thru carbora and got the green light. Funny thing is I had turkeys and probably 30 bags of clothes for down there and was really pissed off for being stupid. I got down there almost and got pulled over by the federales. He gave me a lot of shit for the expired tags and went thru everything,and then said slow down and have a nice day. Funny thing was as I left 7 days later he pulled me over again and went thru it again. he said to have a nice day and get your registration renewed. He was really a nice guy.Leigh
 
Top