Omicron travel panic
AUSTRALIANS are so nervous about Covid-19 this Christmas they are cancelling travel plans, as flight operators call on state premiers to “hold their nerve” and keep borders open amid a new Covid-19 challenge.
As a new survey reveals nearly three-quarters of Australians are wavering on their Christmas travel plans amid a surge of Covid cases and the new Omicron variant, Rex Airlines has already begun recording a spike in cancellations.
Deputy chairman John Sharp told Today: “We are going to continue to operate our flights as per our schedule, that is our intention. (But) it is very much up to state premiers.
“State premiers have proven in the past that they are very keen and willing to close borders and introduce travel restrictions and so I would say that the risk of cancellation is very much up to those governments, premiers, and I would urge those state premiers to hold the line.”
Mr Sharp said Australians had been “persuaded” to get vaccinated to not only protect themselves against getting the virus, but also to travel freely around the country.
“I think it would be a breach of trust between governments and the public if state premiers were now to say, despite the fact that we have got the highest vaccination rates anywhere in the world, we are going to close borders and restrict your ability to travel,” he said.
“Keep your nerve and don’t break that trust.”
A Tourism and Transport Forum survey asked 1500 people about their travel plans over December and January. Seventy-four per cent said Omicron had “negatively impacted” their plans.
More than half of the respondents said they were worried by the lack of consistency in rules and border restrictions between different states and territories.
The survey found only 2 per cent of Australians plan on heading overseas this summer, while 20 per cent will head interstate. More than three-quarters of respondents will travel within their own state.
Chief executive Margy Osmond said the tourism industry, which had lost the last four school holiday periods in a row to travel restrictions and lockdowns, was in a state of concern.
“The tourism sector is now, more than ever, relying on a strong December/January holiday period to drive recovery and this setback will provide more pain just as operators and the aviation industry were preparing for a bumper summer,” she said.
“Of all the states, Queensland is likely to suffer the most from the uncertainty with high-yield travellers from Sydney and Melbourne making up almost 70 per cent of the national market and choosing to holiday within their own state.”
Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, who was earlier this month diagnosed with Covid-19 while in Washington DC, said the threat of border closures was “frustrating”.
“Let’s make sure people get vaccinated and then let's get on with our lives because that's the only alternative, otherwise the economy cannot just keep shutting things down, you will go broke,” he said.