Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Welcome to Florida, now here’s a face mask

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E —Two state-operated welcome centers opened to the public this week for the first time since March, while the coronaviru­s pandemic keeps two others shut down.

And while the highway centers were once known for offering free orange juice to weary travelers, state workers at the reopened facilities on Interstate 10 near the Alabama border and Interstate 75 near the Georgia border are providing free face masks as part of COVID-19 protocols.

Visit Florida President and CEO Dana Young said more than 400,000 masks have been made available by the state Department of Health and the Division of Emergency Management’s State Emergency Response Team.

“They will be for our staff, and we will be making these available freely to the public throughout the summer if they desire to pick one up while they are visiting our state,” Young said during a Visit Florida Executive Committee conference call Monday.

The welcome-center openings come after the state on June 5 ended a motorist checkpoint on I-10 near the Alabama border set up in late March as part of an effort to require people traveling from Louisiana, then a COVID-19 hotspot, to self-isolate if they entered Florida.

Still not open is a welcome center along Interstate 95 and a Visit Florida kiosk inside the Florida Capitol, which remains closed to walkup visitors.

The I-95 welcome center is just north of a weigh station being used as a COVID-19 checkpoint for motorists from the disease hotspots of New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t.

“We are really looking forward to being able to reopen the I-95 welcome center, and we hope to have more news on that in the coming days,” Young said.

At the checkpoint­s, motorists have been required to complete forms that include contact informatio­n and trip details. The state collected nearly 28,000 traveler forms at the I-10 checkpoint.

More than 35,700 forms had been collected at the I-95 checkpoint as of Monday, according to the state Department of Transporta­tion.

When the respirator­y virus caused the closing of many state agencies, at least 16 of the 20 people who work at the state’s welcome centers were trained to handle phone calls from small business owners for the Department of Economic Opportunit­y.

The opening of the centers comes as Visit Florida, the state’s tourism-marketing agency, is finalizing a “rebounder” marketing campaign that will initially concentrat­e on getting Floridians to become comfortabl­e traveling in the state.

 ?? BILL MANNING/GETTY ?? While Florida’s highway centers were once known for offering free orange juice to weary travelers, state workers at the reopened facilities are providing free face masks as part of COVID-19 protocols.
BILL MANNING/GETTY While Florida’s highway centers were once known for offering free orange juice to weary travelers, state workers at the reopened facilities are providing free face masks as part of COVID-19 protocols.

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