Boston Herald

THE CARIBBEAN, EDGE,

Pack a mask with your swimsuit – the Caribbean’s reopening

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After more than two months of watching their tourism-dependent economies get decimated by the coronaviru­s amid airport, beach and hotel closures, Caribbean nations are starting to reopen their borders to tourists again.

But the experience won’t look anything like the one visitors may have had six months ago. Traveling during the global COVID-19 pandemic will now mean health and safety protocols for hoteliers and tour operators and uncertaint­y for airlines as island government­s demand face masks, temperatur­e checks and COVID-19 testing for passengers — some even before boarding.

“There is an expectatio­n that if you are staying in the territory and you feel you have some of the known symptoms for the coronaviru­s, you report immediatel­y to the government powers that be and then begin self-quarantine,” said Joseph Boschulte, commission­er of tourism for the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Last week, the U.S. territory, which never officially closed its airports, relaunched its tourism brand by inviting travelers to once more come visit. As the pandemic hit in March, USVI Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. closed the islands of St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John to all visitors and banned hotels, guesthouse­s and bed-and-breakfasts from accepting new guests.

Now the islands are trying to lure them back and hoping temperatur­e screenings at the airport and mandatory face masks and social distancing, along with the health and safety protocols for businesses, will be enough.

“Eventually, you have to make some steps to try and stimulate your economy. What you do to prepare is key and we are putting the necessary mitigation in place,” Boschulte said. “The governor has said it very clearly, ‘If we see a sharp spike, we’ll shut back down.’ “

While the virus has mostly been contained in the English-speaking Caribbean, reopening airports and cruise ports remain a thorny matter as countries try to figure out how to balance lives with livelihood­s. The region is the world’s most dependent on tourism, and, after months of closed airports, a number of

carriers have announced the resumption of some service for the summer pending the lifting of restrictio­ns on border closures.

The director of the Pan American Health Organizati­on, Dr. Carissa Etienne, cautioned nations that opening up too quickly risks “a resurgence of COVID-19 that could erase the advantage gained over the past few months.”

To mitigate against a surge, a number of Caribbean countries are turning to testing.

Already a requiremen­t for travelers to Haiti and the Bahamas, which will begin allowing boaters and private-plane charters Monday and internatio­nal commercial flights on July 1, a negative COVID-19 real-time reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction test is also being required in St. Lucia.

The eastern Caribbean island reopened its airport last week, restrictin­g visitors to those from the United States for now, and requiring “a certified” negative COVID-19 test taken within 48 hours of boarding.

Antigua and Barbuda, which also reopened, had hoped to have the airlines administer a rapid test to passengers before boarding, but now says its health officials will do so upon arrival, although everyone will need to fill out a health form.

Whether the new protocols will be enough to lure tourists back remains to be seen, as industry officials concede that safety will be a top priority for consumers and the region should expect to see a different kind of visitor.

“The ability for Caribbean countries to remain closed indefinite­ly is not realistic,” said Anton Edmunds, St. Lucia’s ambassador to the United States. “It’s beyond tourists. It’s everything else that comes with travel. It’s everybody who comes in and out of a country; I am dealing with nationals, folks in the diaspora who want to go home for funerals.”

Laura Masvidal, a spokeswoma­n with American Airlines, said St. Lucia’s negative COVID-19 test requiremen­t is the reason why the airlines have delayed returning to the island until July 7. The airlines, she said, “aren’t responsibl­e for the enforcemen­t.”

American Airlines, however, will require all of its passengers to wear face coverings while onboard and, in the case of Antigua travelers, it will hand out health forms at the boarding gate. Antigua’s Port Health will collect the forms after customers deplane.

“In Antigua, passengers can bring their own COVID-19 certificat­e, take a rapid test upon arrival or they can also arrive without a test as long as they remain exclusivel­y in their hotel during their stay,” Masvidal said.

Antigua Prime Minister Gaston Brown said the bottom line is that countries will have to learn to live with COVID-19. Visiting the eastern Caribbean island will not only mean staying at a hotel but being subjected to a rapid COVID test.

Visitors who test positive will be isolated and treated at an infectious disease control center the twin-island nation has fully equipped with ventilator­s and other medical equipment to treat patients who get critically ill from COVID-19.

“We believe that with the continued vigilance and personal responsibi­lity of our people, that we will continue to be successful in containing the disease,” Brown said.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? OUT OF THE SUN: A wooden gazebo provides some shade at Lindbergh Bay on St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
GETTY IMAGES OUT OF THE SUN: A wooden gazebo provides some shade at Lindbergh Bay on St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? DIVE IN: A snorkeler looks at fish in a coral reef sea pool.
GETTY IMAGES DIVE IN: A snorkeler looks at fish in a coral reef sea pool.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ABOVE, TNS RIGHT ?? CALMING VIEW: Lush hills surround Castries, above, the capital and cruise port of St Lucia. Catamarans in a row at Carlisle Bay in Antigua, right, await beach-goers
GETTY IMAGES ABOVE, TNS RIGHT CALMING VIEW: Lush hills surround Castries, above, the capital and cruise port of St Lucia. Catamarans in a row at Carlisle Bay in Antigua, right, await beach-goers
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