IGLESIA EPISCOPAL DOMINICANA

EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

 The Airport Shuffle

.
Tour Diocesano Our History
Decade of Growth
Our Churches
Our Schools
Our Seminary
Buen Pastor
Buen Samaritano
Jesus Peregrino
Clinic Esperanza
Camp Transfiguracion
Diocesan Staff
Mission Teams
Development Group
Mission Opportunities
Our Missionaries
Helping Hands
Links
Photo Tour

 

Mission Teams

Team Tips

Work Teams

Medical Teams

Bible School Teams

 Mission Discovery

 

 

Click on Picture to Enlarge

 

 

 

Coordinador Of Mission Teams

Ellen Snow

Diocesan Office

(809) 686-7493

Cel: (809) 323-9379

E-Mail

bobsnow_2000@yahoo.com

 

 

The most confusing part of your trip will probably be your arrival at airport.  If you don't speak Spanish, it can be even more intimidating.  Though many airport employees don’t speak English, airline customer service representatives do.  Some customs officials also speak  English.  

You will need a passport or a certified copy of your birth certificate to enter the country.  A photocopy of a birth certificate will not be accepted.  Children who are 15 years of age or under and who are not accompanied by both parents will need a notarized letter signed by both parents indicating that they have given permission for the youth to leave the USA.  The letter must also stipulate who will be responsible for the young person.

Before getting into the line where your passport or birth certificate will be checked by customs, you will need to buy a tourist visa for $10 US.   The airlines normally give you a customs form in-flight.  This form contains the information you will need when you purchase your tourist visa.  The form will ask for the street address of your destination in the DR.  Teams often move from place to place, and the diocese is your host.  So if you don’t know the address of the place where you are staying, you can use the address of the Diocesan Office which if #114 Calle Santiago, Santo Domingo. 

After completing your tourist visa form, get into the immigration line.  The customs agent will check your passport (birth certificate) and stamp it along with your visa.  Before entering the baggage area, a customs agent will take a copy of your visa, and you will retain the other part.  Your tourist visa is your ticket out of the country.  Keep it in with your passport.  If you lose it, you’ll be spending additional time and money in the airport on the day of your departure.

As you the luggage claim area, your baggage claim tickets will be checked.  Have them ready.  Your next stop will be the customs examination area where you may have to open one or more of your bags.

We suggest that your group exit the baggage claim area as a group.   Smokers, especially, want to get outside as soon as possible, and that is understandable.  However, if you exit as a group, the amount of time in this customs area will be reduced, because normally fewer bags are checked. 

If you are flying into Santo Domingo, Bob or Ellen Snow will be greet you in the reception area.  Look for the Episcopal Church symbol or a sign saying “The Episcopal Church Welcomes You.”  If you are landing at one of the DR's other airports, a representative of the church will meet you.  If you don’t see an Episcopal sign, don’t panic.  Traffic in the DR is very congested, and your hosts may have been delayed. The diocese has provided telephone numbers to your group leader.  Please call us.

TRAVEL TIP:  You can save time in pulling luggage off the carousel, with unique or colorful baggage tags.  Some teams make numbered baggage tags.  They then list the contents or owners of each numbered bag.  Teams often bring several bags with just supplies.  By numbering bags, they can tell immediately what is missing.

TIP:   If you encounter problems in customs, send a representative into the reception area to get your diocesan host.  We’re here to help you, as well as greet you. 

Departure

Your team should arrive at the airport at least 2 ½ hours in advance of your scheduled departure.  Baggage restrictions in the DR are just as stringent as in the United States.  Once your bags are checked at the ticket counter, you will go through an airport security system, similar to the United States.  To enter this area, you will have to show your airline ticket.   After exiting security, you will get into a customs line where you will need your tourist visa.  The customs agent will check your visa, stamp and sign it, and you are now ready to go to the boarding area.  Depending on your airline, you may need to pay an exit tax at the boarding gate prior to entering the airplane.  Some airlines include that in the ticket price.  The exit tax is $20 US. 

"You Are My Witnesses"

St. Luke 28: 48

Telephone #: (809) 686-7493; (809) 688-6016  FAX: (809) 686-6364

E-Mail: iglepidom@verizon.net.do