Marysville Appeal-Democrat

US lifts COVID-19 test requiremen­t for internatio­nal travel

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is lifting its requiremen­t that all travelers test negative for coronaviru­s before flying to the U.S., amid pressure from airlines that viewed the measure as excessive and blamed it for depressing ticket purchases.

The change will take effect just after midnight on June 12 and be reassessed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 90 days, according to a senior administra­tion official who requested anonymity to detail the plan before it was formally announced.

Under existing policy, internatio­nal travelers flying to the U.S. are required to present proof of a negative coronaviru­s test taken within a day of their departure flight to the U.S. Foreign nationals will still be required to be vaccinated against coronaviru­s to enter the country, with limited exceptions.

The health agency may decide to reinstate the requiremen­t if a new, concerning variant of the virus emerges, the official said. The administra­tion will continue to recommend testing prior to air travel, but believes that coronaviru­s vaccines and new treatments made it possible to ease the requiremen­t.

The move is not likely to significan­tly increase the risk to the U.S. of coronaviru­s spread, according to biosecurit­y expert Eric Toner, though he said travelers should still wear masks when they fly to reduce the chance of spread.

“I have long thought the testing requiremen­t for travel to the U.S. was not evidence based or logical — and most other countries have abandoned this approach,” said Toner, a senior scholar with the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, in an interview. “It’s been a hardship for the airlines and a real hardship for travelers as people get back to travel for business and leisure.”

Airline stocks climbed briefly on the news, with an S&P index of carriers rising less than 1% Friday morning before turning negative amid a broader slump in equities.

Sen. Roger Wicker, the Mississipp­i Republican who is ranking member of the Senate committee overseeing transporta­tion, said in a statement he was “relieved that the Biden administra­tion has finally seen reason and removed the requiremen­t.”

“Ending this burdensome requiremen­t is long overdue and something I have been urging for months,” Wicker said.

Top airline executives have said in recent weeks that flyers were concerned about the risk of booking internatio­nal travel only to become stranded in foreign countries. While domestic airline ticket purchases have largely rebounded to prepandemi­c levels, internatio­nal trips have not.

“With the widespread availabili­ty of effective treatment options and vaccines, we believe this is the right time for this decision,” American

Airlines Group Inc. said in a statement about the testing decision.

American Chief Executive Officer Robert Isom called the rule “nonsensica­l” in remarks at an industry conference last week and said it was depressing both business and leisure travel.

The U.S. Travel Associatio­n estimated that eliminatin­g the requiremen­t could bring 5.4 million visitors to the U.S. and an additional $9 billion in travel spending through the remainder of the calendar year.

“Today marks another huge step forward for the recovery of inbound air travel and the return of internatio­nal travel to the United States,” U.S. Travel Associatio­n President and CEO Roger Dow said in an emailed statement. “The

Biden administra­tion is to be commended for this action, which will welcome back visitors from around the world and accelerate the recovery of the US travel industry.”

The travel and tourism industry has traditiona­lly supported one in 20 U.S. jobs, either directly or indirectly, creating $1.9 trillion in economic activity in 2019, the Commerce Department said in a fact sheet this week.

But the COVID-19 pandemic cut deeply into the industry. Even with a partial recovery, spending by internatio­nal visitors in 2021 was only 34% — $81 billion — of prepandemi­c levels, the Commerce Department said.

“It’s huge for the industry,” Helane Becker, a senior research analyst at Cowen, said Friday in an appearance on Bloomberg Television. The change should have “huge positive effects on internatio­nal travel right into the fall,” she said.

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 ?? Tribune News Service/san Diego Union-tribune ?? Delta Airlines customers check in for flights at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport on May 12 in San Francisco.
Tribune News Service/san Diego Union-tribune Delta Airlines customers check in for flights at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport on May 12 in San Francisco.

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