As per our newspaper for your FYI
Changes coming at the U.S.-Canada border
To cross the U.S.-Canadian border, a driver’s license alone won’t cut it anymore.
Starting Jan. 31, you will need to have a passport or similarly secure document, or a combination of two other documents.
If you have one of these, you only have to present one document:
U.S. or Canadian passport.
U.S. passcard (these won't be available until spring).
So-called “trusted traveler card,”' which includes NEXUS, SENTRI or FAST cards (These are typically used only by people who cross the border frequently, often for work).
State or province issued “enhanced” driver's license (states are only beginning to produce these, so they are not available in most places).
U.S. military ID with travel orders.
U.S. merchant mariner document.
Native American Tribal Photo ID card.
Form I-872 American Indian Card.
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada Card.
If you don't have a passport or one of these other IDs, there is a two-document option, the most likely combination being a driver's license and a birth certificate.
You can present a driver's license or ID card, or a U.S. or Canadian ID card, along with one of the following:
Birth certificate.
U.S. Consular report of birth abroad.
U.S. Certificate of Naturalization.
U.S. Certificate of Citizenship.
U.S. Citizen Identification Card.
Canadian citizenship card.
Canadian certificate of citizenship without photo.
18 and under: U.S. and Canadian citizens 18 and younger need a birth certificate issued by a federal, state, provincial, county or municipal authority.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Thursday that the new requirements will initially mean longer lines for those entering the country, including returning Americans.
Critics of the effort need to “grow up,” he said in an Associated Press interview
We travel to Canada every weekend in the summer by boat. I hope this dose not slow things up although we have Passports and NEXUS Cards.
Larry K