Royal Oak Tribune

Despite reopening, the U.S. is still closed to many in world

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status,” said Nancy Kass, deputy director of public health in the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University. “It is that it’s systemical­ly making it impossible for people, generally from poor countries, whose government­s have been unable to secure anything near the supply they need, to be able to come and see their loved ones.”

Even if you’ve gotten the jab, that might not be good enough. Non-immigrant adults need to have received vaccines authorized by the Food and Drug Administra­tion or which received an emergency use listing from the World Health Organizati­on, otherwise they, too, are prohibited from entering the U.S. That sidelines anyone who’s received Russia’s Sputnik V or the Chinaprodu­ced CanSino jab.

Then there are the months-long delays in some places to get a visa. The U.S. Travel Associatio­n

says that, on average, there’s a six-month visitor visa appointmen­t backlog as many U.S. consulates and embassies have yet to resume normal operations. Meanwhile, other countries have their own strict rules, which complicate­s foreign travel.

Experts do expect a wave of travelers at U.S. airports, which will go a long way to boost the overall industry. The 28 European countries that up until Monday were barred under the U.S. policy made up 37% of overseas visitors in 2019, the U.S. Travel Associatio­n says.

Travelport, which analyzes airline bookings data, says that by region, the greatest number of internatio­nal travelers to the U.S. since mid-2020 has come from Latin America, but new travelers booking flights since late September, when the Biden administra­tion said it would end the travel bans, are mainly European.

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