Herald on Sunday

Travel has green light — here are the rules

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Many New Zealanders will have a growing sense of anticipati­on about the opportunit­y to leave their isolated place on the planet and wing their way to Australia under the new transtasma­n bubble agreement, due to start tomorrow.

The two-way quarantine-free travel allows airlines and airports to operate “quarantine-free”, also known as “green”, flights between New Zealand and approved safe travel zone destinatio­ns without quarantine on arrival.

Just as we have alert level settings for managing cases within New Zealand, the framework for managing New Zealanders in the event of an Australian outbreak involves three scenarios: continue, pause, suspend — designated by the colours green, orange and red.

The bubble is a “flyer beware” scenario. People need to plan for the possibilit­y of travel disruption­s should there be an outbreak.

To be eligible to travel on a quarantine-free flight, people must not have had a positive Covid-19 test result in the previous 14 days and must not be awaiting the results of a test.

Passengers will be carried on “green zone” flights. There will be no passengers on the flight who have come from anywhere but Australia or New Zealand in the past 14 days. They will also be flown by crew who have not flown on any high-risk routes for a set period of time.

Passengers need to provide comprehens­ive contact informatio­n during their time on the other side of the Ditch, must complete a predepartu­re health declaratio­n and won’t be able to go on the flight if they have cold or flu symptoms.

Masks will be worn on board, and arrivals here will be asked to download and use the NZ Covid Tracer app. Australia has a national-level Bluetooth app, Covid Safe, and every state has its own QR code scanning app. Contact tracing will be essential.

On landing, passengers will be taken through airport green zones — removed from those arriving from other parts of the world, who are still bound for managed isolation or quarantine. Random temperatur­e checks will also be carried out.

All these rules will no doubt be worth it to separated families and friends, reunited from this week.

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