Hartford Courant

COVID-19 test demand for travelers to US ending

Official: Mandate to expire early Sunday after CDC says it’s no longer needed

- By Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is lifting its requiremen­t that internatio­nal air travelers to the U.S. take a COVID-19 test within a day before boarding their flights, easing one of the last remaining government mandates meant to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s.

A senior administra­tion official said Friday that the mandate will expire Sunday at 12:01 a.m. EDT, adding that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention determined it is no longer necessary.

The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to preview the formal announceme­nt, said that the agency would reevaluate the need for the testing requiremen­t every 90 days and that it could be reinstated if a troubling new variant emerges.

The Biden administra­tion put in place the testing requiremen­t last year, as it has moved away from restrictio­ns that banned nonessenti­al travel from several dozen countries — most of Europe along with

China, Brazil, South Africa, India and Iran — and instead focus on classifyin­g individual­s by the risk they pose to others. It was coupled with a requiremen­t that foreign, non-immigrant adults traveling to the United States need to be fully vaccinated, with only limited exceptions.

The initial mandate allowed those who were fully vaccinated to show proof of a negative test within three days of travel, while unvaccinat­ed people had to present a test taken within one day of travel.

In November, as the highly transmissi­ble omicron variant swept the world, the Biden administra­tion toughened the requiremen­t and required all travelers, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, to test within a day of travel to the U.S.

Airline and tourism groups have been pressing the administra­tion for months to eliminate the testing requiremen­t, saying it discourage­s people from booking internatio­nal trips because they could be stranded overseas if they contract the virus on their trip.

Roger Dow, president of the U.S. Travel

Associatio­n, called lifting the testing rule “another huge step forward for the recovery of inbound air travel and the return of internatio­nal travel to the United States.”

While domestic U.S. travel has returned nearly to pre-pandemic levels, internatio­nal travel — which is very lucrative for the airlines — has continued to lag. In May, U.S. internatio­nal air travel remained 24% below 2019 levels, with declines among both U.S. and foreign citizens, according to trade group Airlines for America.

Many other countries have lifted their testing requiremen­ts for fully vaccinated and boosted travelers in a bid to increase tourism.

In February, travel groups argued that the testing requiremen­t was obsolete because of the high number of omicron cases already in every state, higher vaccinatio­ns rates and new treatments for the virus.

Despite ending the testing requiremen­t, the CDC will continue to recommend COVID-19 testing prior to air travel of any kind as a safety precaution, according to the senior administra­tion official.

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