The Capital

Americans on edge over omicron

Gathering for holidays fueling unease for some

- By Giulia Heyward

Across the nation, COVID-19 cases are surging and the omicron variant is spreading, throwing the scheduling of schools, concerts and sports leagues into question. Just days away from a holiday weekend, Americans are also grappling with whether to change their traveling or gathering plans.

Millions are forging ahead, but, for many, a sense of unease has crept in.

“My entire family is pretty uncertain about what to do there, what the rules should be,” said Max Farmer, 24, who lives in San Francisco. “With omicron, there’s just a lot of uncertaint­y.”

Farmer has plans to go to Minnesota this month and see his family for the first time in three years. But he said he was worried about the possibilit­y of getting them sick, particular­ly a sister who was pregnant.

“It’s definitely something that goes through your head while you’re traveling,” he said.

More than 109 million Americans are expected to travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 2, a 34% increase from last year, according to AAA. The number of airline passengers is projected to rise 184% from last year.

On Sunday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said that it was OK for Americans to travel and gather, but he strongly emphasized that people take precaution­s.

“If you’re vaccinated and you’re boosted, and you take care when you go into congregate settings like airports to make sure you continuall­y wear your mask, you should be OK,” Fauci said on “Meet the Press” on NBC. He urged air travelers to remain masked during flights.

Caiden Nason, a political campaigner in San Francisco, said he would be flying to see family in rural Southern California. “I’m a little nervous,” he said. But he added: “I just got tested today. My parents will all get tested, too. I will double mask on the airplane.”

Sally Avery, a native of Columbus, Ohio, who now lives in France, was in Cleveland to visit her daughter. She said the uncertaint­y over the COVID-19 surge caused her to leave early and miss the holidays with her daughter. If France went into lockdown, she said at Hopkins Internatio­nal Airport in Cleveland, “I could be here for a long time, and I can’t do that.”

Monica Neal of Smyrna, Georgia, took a trip to South Africa on Thanksgivi­ng, but she said she ended up getting stuck there for days because of the omicron variant. She canceled a trip to Europe this month.

“I have traveled internatio­nally twice this year, and I’ve fortunatel­y been very safe and very healthy,” she said. “I didn’t want to push that luck.”

Many others said they had no plans to adjust. Blake Howe, a software engineer in Roswell, Georgia, said he was going on a cruise in January for his 30th birthday. He planned the trip months ago and received his shots and the booster.

Howe said he knew that cruise liners had been breeding grounds for COVID-19 in the past, but he’s not concerned this time. “They’re requiring full vaccinatio­n, as well as the booster,” he said, adding that “they’re at reduced capacity on the ship.”

Some who were interviewe­d weren’t planning to travel anywhere — and were happy to stay put.

“I wouldn’t want to go anywhere right now,” said Monica Rokes, a 69-yearold retired bank teller in Camden, Maine, who was shopping in the town of Rockland. She said she had started taking more precaution­s in recent days — washing her hands more often, using hand sanitizer, avoiding crowds, and wearing her mask.

For those planning to attend large gatherings, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is still recommendi­ng that everyone get vaccinated before getting together with multiple generation­s of the same family. For indoor gatherings, the CDC is asking people to consider taking an at-home rapid test beforehand.

Eugene DeMarco, 35, who has a bakery stand at the West Side Market in Cleveland, said that his family typically had a big holiday get-together and this year would be no different.

“About 60 or so of our family will be getting together,” said DeMarco, who is unvaccinat­ed and was not wearing a mask. “The COVID-19 infections are the reality, and you have to get used to it. Can’t be driven by fear.”

J’Rycee Johnson, a 20-year-old in Baltimore who works for a T-shirt company, said that he didn’t have extensive plans but that nothing was changing for him.

“I don’t take vaccines at all,” he said, citing his spiritual belief that God heals.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER/AP ?? A family and their pets walk Monday through Miami Internatio­nal Airport. AAA expects to see a huge spike in holiday travel this year.
MARTA LAVANDIER/AP A family and their pets walk Monday through Miami Internatio­nal Airport. AAA expects to see a huge spike in holiday travel this year.

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