Headlines that Global Entry “reopens” bury the operational truth Travel Weekly and enrollment trackers have been screaming for months: interview slots at major hubs remain scarce, cancellations get snatched in minutes, and a 17-day suspension does not create new officers or new rooms. CNN documented the shutdown-driven suspensions and airport delays; the restoration announcement is compatible with a backlog that still stretches many months for conditionally approved applicants who never stopped paying fees.
Announcements outrun enrollment center capacity
Travel Weekly reported the March 11, 2026 reopening after industry pressure. Reopen is not the same as catch up. Third-party trackers in 2026 describe average waits of many months and zero-slot scenarios at popular centers, driven by record application volume and interview bottlenecks. When DHS paused Global Entry, it did not pause demand; it paused throughput. The buried detail is that headline restoration does not add a single new appointment; it only stops refusing new ones.
CNN’s reporting on Secretary Noem threatening PreCheck again if staffing worsens signals that enrollment centers and lanes remain hostages to politics. Travelers reading “restored” may book international trips assuming an interview will materialize; the calendar often says otherwise. That mismatch is the story the headline omits.
What This Actually Means
Treat reopening as necessary but insufficient. Until CBP publishes credible interview capacity metrics and stabilizes scheduling against shutdowns, “back” is a status flag, not a service level. The reader planning summer travel should assume backlog, not bounce-back.
Sources
Travel Weekly · CNN · CNN