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BRITS face a bureaucratic mountain as they struggle to register new births or get passports — all because of Covid-19 delays. Official agencies face a massive pile of cases to get through
after nearly five months in lockdown. Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said: “The side effects of the lockdown are astonishing and dangerous. “Lockdown for the economy and public
services has been a total unmitigated disaster. “We’re now in a race to get everything up and running before everything crashes completely and unemployment soars. We have got to persuade the
public that we have to get back to work, that if they take reasonable precautions the vast majority should be OK.” The delays risk paralysing the UK as the justice system plays catch up
with thousands of missed cases. More than 150,000 babies are thought not to have legal status because parents can’t register births. Grieving families are struggling to obtain probate to
wind up their dead relatives’ estates. Holiday makers looking to go abroad also face a delay in getting new passports. Visiting relatives and processing mortgage applications for new house
deals have also been halted because of the long passport processing times. The passport office’s premium fast-track service and face-to-face interviews required for first passports have
been suspended because of the pandemic. The average time taken to process applications remains double pre-Covid times, even though the Government attempted to re-energise foreign holidays
two weeks ago by lifting the ban on non-essential travel. People in England can travel to 70 destinations without quarantining for 14 days in the new "air bridges" scheme. Passport
Waiting Time, a website using crowd-sourced data, shows wait-time is averaging 45 days for a first adult passport, 33 days for a first child's passport, 28 days for a child's
renewal and 23 days for an adult’s renewal. Katy Bishop, from Sandown on the Isle of Wight, is due to fly to Gran Canaria on August 13 with her husband Clive, 45, and their children, Aydin,
12, and Teddy, 4. However, she has been waiting more than 100 days after applying to renew her passport and get one for Teddy. COVID CHAOS Paul Hanley has been waiting 143 days for his
child's passport, while Matthew Hall, a transport clerk based in Dudley, has been waiting 142 days for a first adult passport he applied for on February 28 ahead of a trip to Majorca
with his partner and eight-month-old baby in August. Mr Hall told the Telegraph: "It’s beyond frustrating and they could at least keep people in the know. "I'm set to lose
over £3,000, and I’m a key worker who could seriously do with a holiday." One 30-year-old, who wanted to remain anonymous, was forced to cancel a trip to see relatives in Lithuania
after delays of more than eight weeks and "limited feedback." It took three weeks to confirm a counter-signature, by which point they had run out of time. Dan Gibbons, an interior
designer from Birmingham, received only one of his twin 11-year-old's passports - despite sending them both off for renewal on June 23. He is due to fly to Malaga with his family - and
his wife has had to drive to Liverpool to collect the passport after they finally managed to speak to staff to tell them of the urgency. Mr Gibbons said: "We were being met with a
chaotic and disjointed system that doesn't allow for direct calls. "Staff kept promising to escalate the application, but each day we called we were informed that the escalation
wasn't executed the day before." READ MORE ON THE SUN The passport office admitted it is "taking longer than usual" due to lockdown and has urged people not to apply
unless they are travelling before September or need one for compassionate reasons. It said it is continuing to increase capacity with a phased return of more staff, including using other
buildings so it can maintain social distancing, and was "working hard" to resume all services.