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Poll Question: 90 or 30 Day Stamp (Visa) on your Passport ?
I have always received a 90 day stamp on my passport. 74%  74%  [ 35 ]
I have received less than a 90 Day Stamp on my passport. 26%  26%  [ 12 ]
Total votes : 47
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 2:00 pm 
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Came back three weeks ago, 90 days on the stamp as always. I do know of several guys that got stamps for less days with no explanationand they did not relize it until later.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 2:57 pm 
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90 days in April with many CR stamps on Pasport

Coming in sept for 30 days and will tell imigration that before the stamp to avoid proplems if I stay a few extra days

I do have one stamp for 30 days the other 12 are for 90


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PostPosted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 3:47 pm 
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DiegoC wrote:
The way the question was written an entire segment of the monger population is omitted, the permanent residents and citizens.


Am I confused here or does this question not make sense ?

permanent residents do not get '90 or 30 day visa' Stamps. They would only get an enter or exit stamp.

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 5:58 pm 
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Not to get between these 2 heavyweights but what seems to have happened is 2 folks talking skewed and thus past each other. They are both correct but they're not talking on the same issue. The underlying issue is all about those here on visas but the question was phrased so that Brother DiegoC's point about omissions is valid. It just wasn't relevant IN CONTEXT (sorry, Brother but it's true).

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PostPosted: Sat Aug 13, 2011 7:26 pm 
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My remarks were relevant as to the validity and to some extent the reliability, of the original questions because the original questions omitted the segment of the population who are permanent residents or citizens and CRT members. In other words, if a questionnaire is to be valid it should measure what it purports to measure and the questions as written did not do that. Therefore it was an invalid survey.

Let me explain. The choices were:

1. I have always received a 90 day stamp on my passport.
2. I have received less than a 90 Day Stamp on my passport.

For the question to have been valid it would have to include a third choice:

3. I am a permanent resident or a citizen.

My first explanation was posted on Sunday, October 3, 2010, and was written in response to the comment made on Friday, October 1, 2010, by Icantstayaway: “Why would 48 people view this and only 8 vote :?: ” I was simply trying to answer that question.

It was based on the fact that if one is a permanent resident, one does not receive a time limit stamp on their passport. A visa as defined is “An endorsement on a passport indicating that the holder is allowed to enter, leave, or stay for a specified period of time in a country” (Merriam-Webster). The stamp on the passport is a temporary visa. Because it is temporary it has time limits. Permanent visas do not have time limits.

The original questions addressed the duration of the “day stamp” or length of time the visa was or is valid. My point was that a permanent resident is not required to have a time limit stamped on their visa because a permanent resident has a permanent visa. Therefore a resident or a citizen cannot declaratively state that he/she “received a 90 day stamp on [his/her] passport” or “less than a 90 Day Stamp on [his/her] passport,” and consequently cannot participate in the survey.

That was the rationale to address Icantstayaway’s question which was why did why were there 48 viewers but only eight people voted. The original question did not provide a possible response for permanent residents (and citizens) because the original question failed to address the issue by failing to address all the possibilities.

I understand that some didn’t understand me. I base that on the comments “Am I confused here or does this question not make sense ?” and “huh ? :shock: ”.

Yes, I understand what you were trying to get at. I was just being technical or perhaps more correctly a “plick” because the question was not properly worded and therefore not technically valid. So I was poking fun at you while you were poking fun at me. Sorry if I offended you. Nonetheless, the concept that you wanted to measure was actually a good concept.


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 11:29 am 
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Pretty sure Costa Rican citizens and permanent residents don't even have to show a passport when they return. The cedula is swiped, not the passport. It shows valid, they are allowed in. Ever notice how the resident/citizen line runs so much faster than normal immigration lines at the airport? When entering the U.S., they rarely stamp a passport but since the U.S. doesn't have a universal (country-wide) ID card/cedula then the passport is the only valid (Federal) identification document you can provide to show you are a citizen.

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PostPosted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 2:09 pm 
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Puravidatransport wrote:
Pretty sure Costa Rican citizens and permanent residents don't even have to show a passport when they return. The cedula is swiped, not the passport. It shows valid, they are allowed in. Ever notice how the resident/citizen line runs so much faster than normal immigration lines at the airport? When entering the U.S., they rarely stamp a passport but since the U.S. doesn't have a universal (country-wide) ID card/cedula then the passport is the only valid (Federal) identification document you can provide to show you are a citizen.


Legal residents from another country MUST present a valid passport. Not sure about whether it is a requirement for CR citizens but have never observed one just presenting a cedula.

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 16, 2011 12:23 am 
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About seven or eight years ago my spouse’s U.S. Passport was going to expire. It has about one month before it expired but the airline would still not let her on the plane. However, they allowed her to get on the plane with her CR cedula and she was able to enter CR based only on her CR cedula.

I am asked to show my passport and my cedula when I arrive or depart from Costa Rica. When departing they ask for my cedula at the guard stand where you present your passport and departure tax receipt.


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 16, 2011 11:19 am 
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Srilm wrote:
Did a check of my last 3 passports:
90 days: 103
illegible: 5
blank:2
SR


The results of this poll so far are 29 (90 day stamp) and 10 (less than 90 days)

I find this amazing since I have about 70+ stamps- All 90 days and Srilm has similar results.

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 16, 2011 12:50 pm 
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20 trips... 20- 90 day visas (even for the lay-overs to South America).


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 16, 2011 1:22 pm 
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BlueDevil wrote:
20 trips... 20- 90 day visas (even for the lay-overs to South America).


I looked through Dennis's, from the Freebird, passport and he has over 20 90day stamps and I look through two other friends . We cant find ONE for less than 90.

So , I'm quite curious how or why someone would get one for less. I have had them ask me, "How long is my visit" two or three times out of 60+ trips but , I always answer two months and they gave me the 90 stamp.

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:17 pm 
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About half the time, they ask me how long I'm staying. But in about 40 trips (maybe 38-39), I have ALWAYS gotten the 90 day stamp, even if I say 4 days or 1 week. Why do they even ask? MUY TICO!!!


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2011 9:11 am 
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Orange wrote:
About half the time, they ask me how long I'm staying. But in about 40 trips (maybe 38-39), I have ALWAYS gotten the 90 day stamp, even if I say 4 days or 1 week. Why do they even ask? MUY TICO!!!

Until yesterday. I got a 9 day stamp. Yes, 9, as in nueve. :lol: :lol: :lol: She asked how long I'm staying. I said 6 days, so she was nice enough to give me 3 extra. :roll:

First time for everything.


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