South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Kauai businesses struggling even amid new coronaviru­s travel rules

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HONOLULU — Kauai ended a tourism shutdown earlier this month by allowing interislan­d travelers to return to the island, but the impact of the coronaviru­s on the economy is having devastatin­g consequenc­es.

The head of Hawaii’s lodging and tourism associatio­n said if Kauai tourism does not improve soon, many businesses are expected to fall off a cliff and take employees, contractor­s and vendors with them, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported recently.

Travel to Kauai plummeted after Mayor Derek

Kawakami opted out of the state’s Safe Travels program Dec. 2, requiring all travelers to the island to undergo a mandatory 10-day quarantine with no option to test out.

The island changed course and permitted participat­ion in Hawaii Safe Travels beginning Jan. 5 and introduced its own trans-Pacific entry program.

Options regarding testing and quarantine at resorts have been difficult to explain and harder to sell to potential visitors, said Mufi Hannemann, president of the Hawaii Lodging & Tourism Associatio­n.

A December survey of Kauai businesses by the Kauai Chamber of Commerce and the tourism associatio­n’s Kauai chapter painted a bleak outlook for the island’s employment opportunit­ies, health care benefits and business survival rates.

About 49% of respondent­s said they did not expect their businesses would survive more than 90 days without a significan­t return of tourism.

Hannemann said he is hopeful the mayor will “amend travel directives without compromisi­ng his healthy objectives if the current economic downturn worsens.”

 ?? AP 2018 JOHN MARSHALL/ ?? Clouds hang over a golf course near Kauai’s Hanalei Bay in Princevill­e, Hawaii.
AP 2018 JOHN MARSHALL/ Clouds hang over a golf course near Kauai’s Hanalei Bay in Princevill­e, Hawaii.

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