San Antonio Express-News

Holiday travel fuels surge fears

Millions still are planning trips for Christmas, New Year’s despite warnings to curb travel

- By David Koenig and Dee-Ann Durbin

Tens of millions of people are expected to travel to family gatherings or winter vacations over Christmas, despite pleas by public health experts who fear the result could be yet another surge in COVID-19 cases.

In the U.S., AAA predicts that about 85 million people will travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 3, most of them by car.

If true, that would be a drop of nearly one-third from a year ago, but still a massive movement of people in the middle of a pandemic.

Jordan Ford, 24, who was laid off as a guest-relations worker at Disneyland in March, said he plans to visit both his and his boyfriend’s families in Virginia and Arkansas over Christmas.

“It is pretty safe — everyone is wearing a mask, they clean the cabin thoroughly,” said Ford, who has traveled almost weekly in recent months from his home in Anaheim, Calif., and gets tested frequently. “After you get over that first trip since the pandemic started, I think you’ll feel comfortabl­e no matter what.”

Experts worry Christmas and New Year’s will turn into supersprea­der events because many people are letting down their guard — either out of pandemic fatigue or the hopeful news that

vaccines are starting to be distribute­d.

“Early on in the pandemic, people didn’t travel because they didn’t know what was to come,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious-disease expert at the University of California at San Francisco, “but there is a feeling now that, ‘If I get it, it will be mild, it’s like a cold.’”

The seven-day rolling average of newly reported infections in the U.S. has risen from about 176,000 a day just before Thanksgivi­ng to more than 215,000 a day.

It’s too early to calculate how much of that increase is due to travel and gatherings over Thanksgivi­ng, but experts believe they are a factor.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says “postponing travel and staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others from COVID-19.” People who insist on travel should consider getting tested for the virus before and after their trip and to limit nonessenti­al activities for seven days after travel with a negative test result and 10 days if they don’t get tested.

Other countries have imposed restrictio­ns ahead of the holidays.

Last month, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland agreed to permit a maximum of three households to mix between Dec. 23 and Dec. 27, regardless of what local restrictio­ns are in place.

In Latin America, a few countries have imposed some restrictio­ns to try to keep people from traveling or meeting during the holidays, but others advised people only to practice social distancing and skip parties.

Panama has some of the strictest measures, including a curfew through Jan. 4 and a prohibitio­n on leaving home at all from Dec. 25 to 28 and Jan. 1 to 4 unless it’s for essential activities such as buying food or medicine.

Peru, one of the region’s hardest-hit countries, has banned the use of private cars on Christmas Eve and Day and New Year’s Eve and Day in hopes of discouragi­ng people from traveling.

In the U.S., Rachel Watterson delayed her New Year’s Eve wedding because her fiance’s family can’t travel to the United States from their home in Germany. Instead, the couple plan to elope

and will fly from their home in Chicago to Hawaii with her parents, her brother and a friend.

They picked Hawaii because of requiremen­ts that include coronaviru­s testing before arrival and a rapid test at the airport.

“We felt this was one of the very few safe choices we can make if we are going to travel,” Watterson said.

Tim Brooks, a 37-year-old engineer in Long Beach, Calif., can

celed a trip to Grand Cayman because of a ban on internatio­nal visitors, then scrapped a Christmas visit to his parents in North Carolina as infections spiked in California and around the country.

“If it were just us, it wouldn’t be so bad, but we have older parents and we are trying to keep them safe,” Brooks said.

Airports and planes will be far less crowded this year in what

normally is a high travel season. So far in December, air travel in the United States is down 67 percent from last year.

If Thanksgivi­ng is any indication, the number of travelers will rise the rest of the month, but airlines are warning that bookings have slowed since the latest surge in COVID-19 cases.

The nation’s top four airlines now show December and January schedules that are anywhere from 33 percent to 46 percent smaller than a year earlier, figures from Airline Data Inc. show.

Last week, the average flight within the U.S. was only 49 percent full compared with more than 80 percent full a year ago, the trade group Airlines for America reports.

The short-term outlook remains grim for other travel-related businesses, including those that rely on winter tourism.

In Vermont ski country, the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe usually is sold out during Christmas week, but only half the 96 rooms were booked by last week. It was a similar story at the nearby Lodge at Spruce Peak. Operators of both lodges blamed travel restrictio­ns, especially quarantine requiremen­ts that are triggered by crossing state lines.

“It is frustratin­g as a business to basically be forbidden to do your job and to not be able to support your employees or your community,“said Sam von Trapp, executive vice president of the family’s lodge. “At the same time, we understand that there is very good intention behind all these restrictio­ns.”

Cruise ships often command their highest prices at Christmas and other holidays when kids are off school, but few ships are sailing this season. Carnival, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian and Disney all have canceled U.S. sailings through Feb. 28. Voyages in other parts of the world mostly hav been delayed.

Florida, which relies heavily on winter tourism, also is taking a big hit.

The two-week period around Christmas normally is the busiest time of year for Walt Disney World in Orlando, says Len Testa, the president of TouringPla­ns.com, which forecasts park attendance. But this year, the Magic Kingdom has capped park attendance at 35 percent, so Testa only expects around 32,000 people on those days.

Testa also expects crowd levels to be lower than usual from January through March, with many visitors rescheduli­ng their trips to May or later.

“Many families will put off their Spring Break trips until they’re vaccinated,” he said.

Tara Kelley had planned to drive seven hours from her home in Milligan, Fla., to Orange City, Fla., to visit her mother and stepfather for Christmas. But Kelley’s wife recently had surgery and spent a day at a hospital where there was a risk of exposure to the coronaviru­s, so they called off the trip.

“We had literally been planning this since February,” Kelley said. “It’s a blow.”

Theresa Medina, a 55-year-old retiree from South Boston, still is deciding whether she and her husband will visit his mother in the Dominican Republic this winter. She’s 80 percent sure they will, and she’s already packing a box to ship ahead of their arrival. But they plan to discuss it with her husband’s doctor in January.

If they go, Medina said they will get coronaviru­s tests and wear protective gear, including face shields and masks.

“We may look silly on the plane, but precaution­s are precaution­s,“she said.

 ?? David Zalubowski / Associated Press ?? Travelers head through a security checkpoint in the terminal of Denver Internatio­nal Airport. In the middle of December, airlines normally are gearing up for some of their busiest days of the year.
David Zalubowski / Associated Press Travelers head through a security checkpoint in the terminal of Denver Internatio­nal Airport. In the middle of December, airlines normally are gearing up for some of their busiest days of the year.
 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? AAA predicts that about 85 million Americans will travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 3, most of them by car. If true, that would be a drop of nearly one-third from a year ago.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press AAA predicts that about 85 million Americans will travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 3, most of them by car. If true, that would be a drop of nearly one-third from a year ago.
 ?? Wilson Ring / Associated Press ?? Sam von Trapp, executive vice president of the Trapp Family Lodge, says travel restrictio­ns have tanked his business.
Wilson Ring / Associated Press Sam von Trapp, executive vice president of the Trapp Family Lodge, says travel restrictio­ns have tanked his business.

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