The New Zealand Herald

BURSTING OUR BUBBLE

NO MIQ-FREE TRANSTASMA­N TRAVEL THIS SUMMER

- Derek Cheng

Aquarantin­e-free transtasma­n bubble before Christmas is off the cards and is unlikely to be implemente­d before February, the Herald understand­s.

That will disappoint tourism and hospitalit­y operators hoping for an influx of Australian tourists to boost their businesses over the holiday period.

They will still see a boost from Kiwis taking a summer break, however, and the Government will soon release how it would handle a new Covid-19 outbreak complicate­d by people on holiday travelling around the country.

Leading epidemiolo­gists on both sides of the Tasman have questioned why we haven’t got a transtasma­n bubble already.

A bubble would also free up about 40 per cent of places in managed isolation facilities.

“Tourist operators in Te Anau must be scratching their heads in bewilderme­nt that they can welcome Aucklander­s who were locked down by Covid eight weeks ago, but not people from Western Australia who haven’t seen a case of the virus for seven months,” Act leader David Seymour said.

However, the issue is not the relative Covid-free status of Australia, but what happens if Covid suddenly pops up again.

One sticking point, which Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has talked about in recent weeks, is the definition of a Covid hotspot, which would trigger a regional travel ban in Australia.

It is currently defined as 30 cases across three consecutiv­e days, a threshold that Ardern has called too risky.

It would mean Melbourne could suffer nine cases a day of a new outbreak and Melburnian­s could still fly to New Zealand without having to quarantine.

New Zealand could — and might — draw its own line in the sand for when we would reinstate quarantine for travellers from Australia.

“It means we have to do a bit more planning and be ready for the fact that we might have to shut [the border] again, or change the requiremen­ts,” Ardern said.

She wouldn’t say how many Covid-19 cases across how many days is tolerable.

A transtasma­n bubble would also allow more overseas arrivals from countries with more Covid in their population­s than Australia, increasing the risk of the virus leaking from a managed isolation facility into the community.

That would require more MIQ staff — nurses, in particular — and the workforce shortage is as much of an obstacle to the bubble as reaching agreement on the Covid hotspot criteria, the Herald has been told.

Another issue is stranded travellers.

What should happen if a Kiwi flew to a part of Australia that suddenly shut down because of an outbreak? Could they return to New Zealand into MIQ, and if so, would they have to pay MIQ costs?

Other complexiti­es include the safety assurances Australia can provide, after two recent arrivals from Germany who were meant to be quarantine­d managed to travel from Sydney to Melbourne.

And another question is how the bubble might accommodat­e another country outside the Pacific region. The Government has also been busy finalising its summer resurgence plan, which will be revealed on Tuesday.

It will include specific scenarios so people will have an idea of what to expect if Covid suddenly emerges in the community again.

The key issue will be the ability for district health

Tourist operators in Te Anau must be scratching their heads in bewilderme­nt.

Act leader David Seymour

boards and public health units to set up testing stations quickly in any part of the country, especially in summer holiday pressure points such as the Coromandel, or travel-heavy spots such as Picton.

On Sunday the Government will launch its summer Covid campaign — a heavy dose of communicat­ions about what people should do while on holiday, aimed at reducing complacenc­y and increasing the chances of quick and effective contact-tracing.

That includes ongoing encouragem­ent for QR scanning and wearing a mask on public transport — the Government has decided against making them both compulsory nationwide — hand hygiene, and getting tested if sick.

On Monday only 8 per cent of registered users of the Covid tracer app had used it to scan QR codes in the previous 24 hours.

Yesterday Kiwis were able to enable Bluetooth tracing for close contacts on their Covid Tracer apps, which the Government hopes will shake Kiwis out of complacenc­y.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? The issue of travelling within a bubble is not the relative Covid-free status of Australia, but what happens if Covid suddenly pops up again.
Photo / Getty Images The issue of travelling within a bubble is not the relative Covid-free status of Australia, but what happens if Covid suddenly pops up again.

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