Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus test adds travel wrinkle

Destinatio­ns, airlines set up to make requiremen­t easier

- TARIRO MZEZEWA AND CEYLAN YEGINSU

In December, the tourism board for Los Cabos, the popular Mexican resort city on the Baja peninsula, began hearing whispers that soon people would need to have proof of a negative coronaviru­s test in order to travel to the United States by plane from any foreign country.

Over the next several weeks, nearly every member of the Los Cabos tourism industry came together to create a testing plan that allows people heading to the United States — and that includes returning U.S. citizens — to get a coronaviru­s test at almost every hotel in the area. Even the Los Cabos Internatio­nal Airport has been outfitted with a testing area, although guests are encouraged to get tested at their hotels to keep traffic at the airport moving.

“There is one hotel associatio­n in the destinatio­n and that helps us coordinate,” said Rodrigo Esponda, managing director of the Los Cabos Tourism Board, adding that the reassuranc­e provided by testing could help the travel industry get back on its feet. “We want everyone to be easily tested and it should be affordable because that gives everyone more confidence.”

Their efforts will be under scrutiny since the testing requiremen­t officially went into effect last week and returning Americans and all other inbound travelers flying into the United States must present proof of a negative test for the coronaviru­s. For months, many other countries have been requiring a negative test for people to travel, but the U.S. has been less strict in its travel requiremen­ts.

While travel globally will be affected, especially in light of the Biden administra­tion’s decision to ban travel — excluding that of U.S. citizens — from Brazil, South Africa, Britain, Ireland and 26 coun

tries in Europe that allow travel across open borders beginning Monday, the biggest effect of the testing rule will be for destinatio­ns in the Caribbean and in Mexico, which have continued to attract American leisure travelers who are banned from other parts of the world.

“We keep getting curveballs thrown at us in our whole industry,” said Jason Kycek, senior vice president of sales and marketing at Casa de Campo, a golf-and-beach resort in the Dominican Republic that is expanding its existing on-site testing facilities. “The finish line keeps moving, but we are staying on top of things and making sure our guests have what they need and can travel safely.”

‘MINIMAL HASSLE’

Under the new requiremen­t, people will need to get tested no more than three days before their scheduled flight, showing a negative result to their airline before boarding. Those who have already had the virus will need to show documentat­ion of recovery in the form of a recent positive viral test and a letter from a health care provider or a public health official stating they were cleared to travel.

Alyssa Flynn, a 29-yearold music teacher from New Jersey, was asked to show a negative test result before her flight from Istanbul to New York.

“The whole process was very easy. A nurse came to my Airbnb, did the PCR swab test and I had my results seven hours later, which was 24 hours before my flight. It cost 30 bucks total,” she said in a telephone interview.

Flynn showed her test results on her phone at the Turkish Airlines check-in counter at Istanbul Airport and kept a printed copy in case it was required when she landed.

“No one asked to see the results again, so it really was minimal hassle for the extra peace of mind,” she said. ” It’s comforting knowing that everyone else on the flight has tested negative, especially with all these new variants raging.”

ANTIGEN TESTS ACCEPTED

The United States will accept results from rapid antigen tests, while other countries have been asking for what are known as polymerase chain reaction tests, or PCR tests. Antigen tests have been found to be less reliable than PCR tests.

Josh Walker is the chief operating officer of Nomi Health, which provides about 4% of the testing in the United States, conducting laboratory work and setting up laboratori­es, as well as working with many hotels in the Caribbean. Walker said that because antigen tests are less sensitive, some travelers could test negative and still be infected because their body’s viral load is not high enough for identifica­tion purposes.

“There will likely be a lot of discussion­s of what type of tests qualify because, let’s put it this way, if I want to find a negative test, I can find it,” he said, adding that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not given that level of guidance just yet.

DESTINATIO­NS GEAR UP

Mexico and countries in the Caribbean have remained popular destinatio­ns for U.S. travelers even as other destinatio­ns closed their borders, in part because of their proximity to the United States, making them relatively easy and affordable to reach. In the fall, several U.S. airlines added flights to the Caribbean islands and to Mexico at a time when routes elsewhere were being cut. In November, nearly 500,000 Americans flew to Mexico alone, according to official figures.

Casa de Campo, the Dominican Republic resort, is about five minutes away from a hospital which shares ownership with the resort. The resort had already been offering antigen tests to guests heading to some European countries and Canada, where negative tests have been required since last year, but now with the U.S. requiremen­t taking effect, the team at Casa de Campo has converted two adjoining rooms at the resort into a testing suite, with one room serving as a waiting area and the other as “something like a doctor’s office” with a nurse testing people inside, Kycek said.

Casa de Campo is not alone: Hotels and resorts across the Caribbean have been increasing their testing efforts. More than 20 hotels on the island of St. Lucia are offering compliment­ary rapid antigen testing, and authoritie­s and hoteliers said they were prepared to meet U.S. travelers’ testing demands. In the Bahamas, Caerula Mar Club in South Andros administer­s rapid antigen tests onsite in a sanitized location by appointmen­t for people who are traveling together and considered a “pod,” or individual­ly, if preferred.

Most Caribbean and Mexican resorts and airports offering testing will send guests an email or provide a printed piece of paper signed and stamped by health officials affirming the negative result.

UNCERTAINT­Y CONTINUES

For an industry already decimated by the pandemic, the new testing requiremen­t may cut into any business rebound.

“U.S. travelers had been showing growing confidence in travel, including a demand for internatio­nal trips, prior to the new CDC requiremen­t that they must receive a negative covid-19 test prior to reentry,” said Meghan Moncrief, chief marketing officer at Squaremout­h, a travel insurance comparison site. “This latest regulation exhibits the ongoing uncertaint­y of travel.”

Last week, United Airlines told reporters on its fourthquar­ter earnings call that Mexican destinatio­ns were among the most affected by the new testing requiremen­t for internatio­nal travelers.

On its website and app, United now offers a “Travel Ready Center” feature to streamline the process for customers to fulfill travel requiremen­ts, allowing passengers to upload their test results to United before they reach the airport.

“Travel requiremen­ts are constantly changing and it’s a really challengin­g customer experience to understand what you need to do and where you need to go to get that informatio­n,” said Michelle Brown, the vice president for digital products and analytics at United. “We created a customized platform for customers based on their itinerary so that they can see what they need to do pertaining to the covid regulation­s in the place they are traveling to.”

In February, the airline will enhance this feature to allow passengers to schedule a coronaviru­s test, at more than 15,000 test centers globally, directly through its app.

Delta has also launched a new testing resource on its website that provides locations for approved testing. The airline said it had issued a waiver allowing customers to rebook internatio­nal travel to the United States on trips booked before Jan. 12 through Feb. 9.

People who work in tourism in Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Saint Lucia and the Bahamas said that they anticipate there will be a slight dip in tourism as people accept the new rules and they are focused on communicat­ing with U.S. travelers that the testing process is straightfo­rward and simple.

“We see a slowdown coming, but we do surveys and know that people feel safe in Cabo, so our focus is on letting them know that this rule is not going to disrupt their vacation and they are not going to wait hours in the hospital to get a test,” said Ricardo Orozco, the vice president of operations for Grupo SolMar Hotels & Resorts in Los Cabos.

 ?? AP/Emilio Espejel) ?? Tourists stroll on the shore of Xcalacoco beach in Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo state, Mexico, in early January, amid the new coronaviru­s pandemic.
AP/Emilio Espejel) Tourists stroll on the shore of Xcalacoco beach in Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo state, Mexico, in early January, amid the new coronaviru­s pandemic.

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