Miami Herald

Lines at the airport, crowds at Wynwood Walls: Tourists surge in

Despite the pandemic, the Miami area is seeing pandemic records of passengers at Miami Internatio­nal Airport and visitors to Wynwood and South Beach.

- BY ROBWILE rwile@miamiheral­d.com

Even as daily COVID-19 case counts remain near all-time highs, the Miami area is seeing a surge in holiday travelers looking to break out of their quarantine confines and take advantage of the region’s friendly winter climes.

At Miami Internatio­nal Airport, passenger volumes averaged nearly 68,000 Dec. 24-27, including a pandemic high of more than 84,000 Sunday.

“We have been trending in the 70s and we are starting to see passenger counts in the 80s,“said MIA spokesman Jack Varela.

Occupancy on Miami Beach also touched a pandemic high the week ending Dec. 19, the most recent date for which data is available.

“This holiday season, we have seen our hotels and restaurant­s perform successful­ly, particular­ly when compared to past years,” Marco Selva, area vice president for sbe, which oversees properties including the SLS South Beach and the Delano South Beach, said in a statement.

And Goldman Properties CEO and Principal Jessica Goldman Srebnick said Wynwood Walls, which she curates, has seen about 30,000 visitors since reopening Dec. 18. Sur

rounding businesses have seen as much as a fivefold increase in revenues compared with when it remained closed, she added.

“That says a lot about the market, and visitors’ comfort level in starting slowly to return to some semblance of normalcy with all of the critically important safety precaution­s we have in place,” she said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continues to advise against undertakin­g any travel.

“The safest way to celebrate winter holidays is at home with the people who live with you,” it says on a web page specifical­ly devoted to holiday travel. “Travel and gatherings with family and friends who do not live with you can increase your chances of getting or spreading COVID-19 or the flu.”

Florida has been seeing between 8,000 and 10,000 new cases a day for most of December. On Tuesday, the state health department confirmed 12,075 additional cases of COVID-19, bringing the state’s known total of cases to 1,292,252.

Rolando Aedo, chief operating officer of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau, said it is possible to strike a balance between traveling and safety — and that MiamiDade has more stringent safety measures in place than much of the rest of the state.

“We have masking, we have curfews,” Aedo said. “We are asking visitors to come, but to do so in the utmost responsibl­e way.”

Miami-Dade has the highest number of COVID cases in the state, with 293,188 confirmed cases as of Tuesday, when it reported 2,825 additional cases and nine new deaths, according to Florida’s Department of Health.

Aedo said that between Dec. 22 and Dec. 28, Miami-Dade had booked a pandemic high 180,000 so-called room nights, or the number of rooms available times nights booked.

While that is still down more than one-third from the same period last year, Aedo said he expects a continued upward trend. New Year’s Eve will likely prove another peak, he said, and the Jan. 2 Orange Bowl and Jan. 11 College Football National Championsh­ip game, to be played at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, will keep momentum strong into January.

But January is likely to see a new surge in cases given the surge in travel we are seeing today, according to Dr. David De La Zerda, a critical care physician at Jackson Health System.

“I think it’s a terrible idea,” De La Zerda said of the decision to undertake travel now. He added that the current case surge is the result of individual­s having traveled during Thanksgivi­ng.

“If people go out now, by mid-January it’s going to be even worse,” he said. “I don’t think people fully understand that.”

He recommende­d Florida “go back to square one” to control the pandemic spike, including closing indoor dining and an earlier curfew.

For now, restaurate­urs like Eduardo “Lalo” Durazo, managing partner at Jaguar Hospitalit­y, which owns Bakan Mexican restaurant in Wynwood, are making do under the circumstan­ces. He said he has hired a “COVID officer” whose sole job is to enforce safety protocols. Unfortunat­ely, Durazo said, the job continues to be necessary.

“We do run into problems where a customer wants to be seated and enjoy our establishm­ent, but does not want to follow the guidelines,” he said. “That’s where we get push back.”

Durazo said he has seen a noticeable uptick in tourist traffic this month; until then, it had mostly been locals. South Florida resident Mazen Halabi, 39, visited Wynwood Walls and the Urban Graffiti Art Museum Monday. He said he had made a reservatio­n ahead of time so that his visit allowed him and his party to be the only ones there for almost a full hour. But he said he found the streets “full of people not wearing masks and drunk.”

“We were expecting everyone to be social distancing and respectful, but tourists were in their own world so we took back roads to get to our destinatio­n,” he said.

Miami Police Assistant Chief Manny Morales said in a statement Tuesday that police would be vigilant in high-traffic areas:

“The Miami Police will have a robust presence in areas in the city that have traditiona­lly seen large crowds during the (New Year’s Eve) celebratio­n, to include Wynwood, Downtown, and Brickell. The officers will be ready to keep partygoers, both locals and tourists, safe by ensuring that Miami-Dade County COVID restrictio­ns are adhered to by patrons as well as businesses, to include the 1 a.m. curfew.

“Mask wearing is still mandatory while in public and our officers will have disposable masks at hand to issue out to those that are in violation.”

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? South Florida resident Katalina Rodriguez, with her dog, waits to check her bags at Miami Internatio­nal AirportMon­day.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com South Florida resident Katalina Rodriguez, with her dog, waits to check her bags at Miami Internatio­nal AirportMon­day.

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