Times Standard (Eureka)

Winter travel spike raises more fears of viral spread

- By David Koenig and Dee-Ann Durbin

Tens of millions of people are expected to travel to family gatherings or winter vacations over Christmas, despite pleas by public health experts who fear the result could be another surge in COVID-19 cases.

In the U. S., AAA predicts that about 85 million people will travel between Dec. 23 and Jan. 3, most of them by car. If true, that would be a drop of nearly one-third from a year ago, but still a massive movement of people in the middle of a pandemic.

Jordan Ford, 24, who was laid off as a guest-relations worker at Disneyland in March, said he plans to visit both his and his boyfriend’s families in Virginia and Arkansas over Christmas.

“It is pretty safe — everyone is wearing a mask, they clean the cabin thoroughly,” said Ford, who has traveled almost weekly in recent months from his home in Anaheim, California, and gets tested frequently. “After you get over that first trip since the pandemic started, I think you’ll feel comfortabl­e no matter what.”

Experts worry that Christmas and New Year’s will turn into supersprea­der events because many people are letting down their guard — either out of pandemic fatigue or the hopeful news that vaccines are starting to be distribute­d.

“Early on in the pandemic, people didn’t travel because they didn’t know what was to come,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious- disease expert at the University of California, San Francisco, “but there is a feeling now that, ‘If I get it, it will be mild, it’s like a cold.’”

The seven- day rolling average of newly reported infections in the U. S. has

risen from about 176,000 a day just before Thanksgivi­ng to more than 215,000 a day. It’s too early to calculate how much of that increase is due to travel and gatherings over Thanksgivi­ng, but experts believe they are a factor.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says “postponing travel and staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others from COVID-19.” People who insist on travel should consider getting tested for the virus before and after their trip and to limit non- essential activities for seven days after travel with a negative test result and 10 days if they don’t get tested.

 ?? WILSON RING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bob Schwartz, director of marketing of the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe, Vt., poses outside the lodge on Tuesday.
WILSON RING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bob Schwartz, director of marketing of the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe, Vt., poses outside the lodge on Tuesday.

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