The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How internatio­nal travel will change

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The Biden administra­tion is rolling out new internatio­nal travel policies affecting Americans and noncitizen­s alike who want to fly into the U.S. The goal is to restore more normal air travel after 18 months of disruption caused by COVID-19. The across-the-board rules, which will take effect in November, will replace a hodgepodge of confusing restrictio­ns. Some details of the plan announced Monday are being worked out, but here are some questions and answers about what to expect: Q: What is the new policy in a nutshell?

A: All adult foreign nationals traveling to the U.S. will be required to be fully vaccinated before boarding their flight. This is in addition to the current requiremen­t that travelers show proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of departure to the U.S.

Once the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t is in place, the White House will ease all the country-specific restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel that have prevented noncitizen­s who have been in the United Kingdom, European Union, China, India, Iran, Republic of Ireland, Brazil or South Africa in the previous 14 days from entering the U.S.

Q: How does this affect Americans?

A: Fully vaccinated Americans will only need to show proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of departure to the U.S.

Q: What about unvaccinat­ed Americans?

A: U.S. citizens and permanent residents who are not fully vaccinated will still be able to fly to the U.S., but they will see tougher testing and contact tracing protocols. They will need to be tested within 24 hours of boarding a flight to the U.S., as well as undergo testing upon return to the country. It remains to be seen, though, how the federal government will enforce the testing requiremen­t upon return.

Q: How does this affect children?

A: The new U.S. policy only requires adult foreign nationals to be fully vaccinated in order to enter the country. The White House did not immediatel­y say whether unvaccinat­ed children will face different testing protocols when flying into the country.

Q: Which vaccines are acceptable?

A: The CDC says the U.S. will accept full vaccinatio­n of travelers with any COVID-19 vaccine approved for emergency use by the World Health Organizati­on, including those from Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson used in the U.S. Other vaccines are also approved by the WHO and used widely around the world, including from Astrazenec­a and China’s Sinovac, with varying degrees of effectiven­ess against COVID19 and its more transmissi­ble delta variant. The WHO is reviewing Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine but hasn’t approved it.

Q: How will this affect airfares?

A: Adit Damodaran, economist for the travel-research firm Hopper, predicted that growing demand is likely to cause higher airfares on flights from Europe, although the rush to book flights could be slowed by the delta variant and high COVID-19 rates in the U.S. If fares rise, it would mark a turnaround in prices since the start of the pandemic.

Q: Will airlines collect data on passengers?

A: The CDC will require airlines to collect informatio­n about passengers and provide it to the health agency if it needs to conduct contact tracing. The airlines had resisted a similar change last year, when it was proposed by the CDC and eventually blocked by the Trump administra­tion.

Q: What about travel over land borders?

A: The administra­tion’s restrictio­ns on crossing land borders from Mexico and Canada into the U.S. are to remain unchanged for now. That means that in some cases, fully vaccinated people from the two American neighbors will soon be able fly to the U.S., but may not be able to make the same journey by car.

Q: How will this affect the travel industry?

A: Analysts and industry officials think it will help. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said lifting the current restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travelers will contribute to a durable recovery for the U.S. economy. Before Monday, the U.S. was on pace to lose $175 billion in export income from internatio­nal visitors this year, according to the U.S. Travel Associatio­n.

Q: How have the current restrictio­ns affected internatio­nal travel?

A: They have made it easier for Americans to visit Europe than the other way around. U.S. internatio­nal travel in August was down 54% compared with two years ago, and arrivals by non-u.s. citizens were off 74%, according to Airlines for America.

Q: How will the changes affect business travel?

A: There is pent-up demand among business travelers from Europe. Foreign executives who have been vaccinated will no longer have to prove that their travel to the United States serves the U.S. “national interest” — a time-consuming process.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Travelers line up at a security checkpoint at Denver Internatio­nal Airport. New policies announced by the Biden administra­tion will affect people entering the U.S. more than those departing.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Travelers line up at a security checkpoint at Denver Internatio­nal Airport. New policies announced by the Biden administra­tion will affect people entering the U.S. more than those departing.

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