Dayton Daily News

Travelers weigh testing, quarantine or staying put

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Homebound travelers desperate to venture out for the first time since the pandemic are confrontin­g a vacation landscape this summer that may require coronaviru­s tests for the family and even quarantine­s.

States from Maine to Hawaii are trying to strike a balance between containing the new coronaviru­s and encouragin­g out-of-state visitors to spend their cash on hotels, restaurant­s and other businesses.

The measures have gotten a thumbs-down from many in the tourism industry, who fear visitors will choose to wait things out until they can hit the beach without worrying about violating a state-imposed quarantine or searching for a testing site.

During a pandemic, discretion is the better part of valor, said Pauline Frommer, editorial director for Frommers.com and Frommers’ travel guidebooks.

“I think it’s important to look at what our safe options are. You don’t want to die because you went on vacation,” she said.

Some states like Hawaii have settled on quarantine­s. Maine, Alaska and Vermont have some version of a testing alternativ­e.

In “Vacationla­nd,” as Maine dubs itself, Democratic Gov. Janet Mills thought she was doing the tourism industry a favor by providing an alternativ­e to the 14-day quarantine. Visitors can skip the quarantine altogether if they can show they’ve tested negative for the virus within 72 hours before arrival.

Some innkeepers and restaurate­urs complain the measure falls short of what is needed to attract tourists and salvage their summer season.

“We don’t think visitors are going to jump through hoops like that. They’ll just choose another destinatio­n,” said Steve Hewins from Hospitalit­y Maine, the state’s tourism trade group.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige extended the state’s mandatory two-week quarantine for all arriving travelers, even as the state scrambles to produce a screening process that could allow some travelers to return.

In Florida, which has recently seen a spike in cases, visitors from New Jersey, New York and Connecticu­t are required to quarantine. New York, meanwhile, is considerin­g requiring Florida visitors to quarantine.

“There is pent-up demand, people are wanting to come to the state,” so anything to help travelers plan and reduce their burden is a good thing, said Tim Piper, president of the Vermont Inn and Bed and Breakfast Associatio­n.

Safety concerns are real in Maine, the state with the nation’s oldest population, a segment that’s vulnerable to the coronaviru­s.

Maine, which touts its lobster, lighthouse­s and rocky shore as attraction­s, depends heavily on tourism. Its population of 1.3 million swells with 37 million visitors during a typical year.

Visitors can avoid a quarantine by being tested before they arrive, or they can reduce the quarantine’s duration by being tested after arrival. But the state is encouragin­g visitors to test before arrival, and “know before you go.” Vermont residents are exempted.

Jeremiah Hawkins, 72, of New York, said the changes may make him rethink his August visit to the Maine coast. He said it’s not easy to get tests, especially within a 72-hour window before arrival.

 ?? AP ?? Cod Cove Inn owners Ted and Jill Hugger show a draft of a form that inn owners may be required to have out-of-state guests sign.
AP Cod Cove Inn owners Ted and Jill Hugger show a draft of a form that inn owners may be required to have out-of-state guests sign.

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