San Diego Union-Tribune

THOUSANDS ARRIVE IN HAWAII ON FIRST DAY

OF PRE-TRAVEL TESTING

- BY CALEB JONES Jones writes for The Associated Press.

HONOLULU

About 8,000 people landed in Hawaii on the first day of a pre-travel testing program that allowed travelers to come to the islands without quarantini­ng for two weeks if they could produce a negative coronaviru­s test.

Angela Margos was among the first passengers in San Francisco to get on a plane to Hawaii Thursday morning.

“Vacation, peace of mind,” said Margos, a nurse from San Carlos, of why she was flying to Hawaii. “I need time to relax, unwind.”

The new testing program is an effort to stem the devastatin­g downturn the pandemic has had on Hawaii’s tourism-based economy. Officials had touted the mandatory quarantine rule as an integral part of Hawaii’s early success in keeping the coronaviru­s at bay.

But gaps in the pre-travel testing program coupled with increasing cases of COVID-19 across the U.S. have raised questions about whether Hawaii is ready to safely welcome back vacationer­s.

And when local restrictio­ns were eased before summertime holidays, community spread of the disease spiked to alarming levels, forcing a second round of stay-at-home orders for residents and closures for nonessenti­al businesses.

Margos ran into hiccups with getting her test. She first did it at the hospital where she works, only to find out it wasn’t an approved site for United Airlines and the state of Hawaii. She then paid $105 for a drive-thru test, but she was later informed there was an error with that test.

Margos ultimately paid $250 for a fast-result test Thursday at the airport in San Francisco, which came back negative.

Opponents of the testing program have said a single test 72 hours before arrival — especially when coupled with the option to fly without a test and still quarantine — is not enough to keep island residents safe.

Hawaii’s economy is almost entirely built around tourism, and local families who rely on the sector to survive need to return to work.

More than 100 of Hawaii’s approximat­ely 4,000 restaurant­s, bakeries and caterers have closed permanentl­y and more than 50 percent predict they will not survive the coming months, officials have said.

Hawaii, which has about 1.4 million residents, reported 10 additional coronaviru­s deaths and more than 100 newly confirmed cases on Wednesday. On Oahu, home to the famed Waikiki Beach and the state’s most populated island, the positivity rate was nearly 4 percent.

 ?? MARCO GARCIA AP ?? A traveler is assisted by a state official at the Daniel K. Inouye Internatio­nal Airport Thursday in Honolulu.
MARCO GARCIA AP A traveler is assisted by a state official at the Daniel K. Inouye Internatio­nal Airport Thursday in Honolulu.

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