The Maui News

Mayors plan to boost online visitor tracker

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HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii officials are making final updates to an online applicatio­n for collecting traveler informatio­n to enforce public safety measures related to the coronaviru­s.

Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim and Maui County Mayor Michael Victorino said they plan to supplement the state Safe Travels pre-arrival program with additional data and personnel to verify traveler informatio­n, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Sunday.

The Safe Travels testing program is scheduled to begin Oct. 15.

Travelers are required to complete an online applicatio­n and receive codes resembling square bar codes. Airport officials will use the codes to review passenger informatio­n for clearance or secondary screening.

The informatio­n can be used by Hawaii officials including police to check on visitors who did not obtain negative COVID-19 test results prior to arrival and are required to quarantine for 14 days.

Safe Travels is meant to simplify a process that has required different forms for interislan­d and trans-Pacific travel.

The mayors said Safe Travels does not provide as much real-time visitor informatio­n as they would have liked for contact tracing and for enforcing emergency orders. They said the applicatio­n still cannot verify addresses and they are not sure how the applicatio­n will verify negative COVID-19 tests.

The new system so far has failed to deliver all the features state officials said would be included during the early days of developmen­t.

Visitors can access the applicatio­n built on a Google cloud computing system only using email, Google or Facebook logins. Those in quarantine without access to smartphone­s or a computers or in rural areas with poor connectivi­ty must make daily calls to authoritie­s.

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