Call & Times

Resorts promise free stays, private flights to wary guests

- By CHADNER NAVARRO

On Jan. 12, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced a new requiremen­t that air travelers arriving in the U.S. from internatio­nal destinatio­ns produce a negative PCR test or a medical letter stating they are free of covid-19 following an infection.

But what happens if you test positive while on vacation?

The U.S. government won’t allow you onto a commercial flight until you’ve fully recovered, so hoteliers across the Caribbean are stepping in with an attractive insurance policy: free rooms. It’s a bid to salvage the business they’ve rebuilt since reopening borders in summer and fall 2020.

Provided that you’re asymptomat­ic and not in need of medical attention, they say, you’re welcome to self-isolate on their dime until you’re permitted to go home.

At Ladera, a lush, eco-friendly, all-inclusive in Saint Lucia, a two-week quarantine could translate into $12,600 of compliment­ary room nights, during which you’d bunker down in a villa with a plunge pool. Within the stately sanctuary of Rosewood Baha Mar, which reopened in Nassau, the Bahamas, on March 4, you might be confined to a $1,565-per-night suite-costing the hotel nearly $22,000, before you factor in also-covered (and mandatory) room service orders from the in-room dining menu.

It’s a steep financial risk should there be an outbreak on a property. But it’s a calculated one aimed at recapturin­g business from travelers who are more afraid of getting stuck than of getting sick.

When the Maldives reopened its borders in July, one of its top resorts, Soneva Jani, offered to comp a two-week quarantine for guests who get infected during their Indian

Ocean holiday. The hotel’s medical team has been trained to care for patients with either asymptomat­ic or mild cases; a speedboat whisks anyone requiring more critical care to a hospital on a neighborin­g island.

“We remind guests to ensure that they organize appropriat­e travel insurance ahead of their visit,” the hotel’s website says.

At the time, the idea was revolution­ary. If you’ve gotten covid, where better to ride it out than in a $2,300-a-night overwater bungalow with staff on-hand to provide alfresco movie screenings and special meals on your patio.

Now hotels in the Caribbean and Mexico are following suit with nearly identical policies.

Nobu Hotel Los Cabos not only will arrange compliment­ary preflight coronaviru­s tests for guests who booked at least a three-day stay, but should they come up positive-and remain asymptomat­ic-the hotel will allow them to quarantine free in one of its minimalist, desert-inspired rooms for up to 14 days. Nobu includes the cost of medical-assistance insurance in its nightly rates, so if the illness progresses, guests will have coverage for local hospitaliz­ation.

Among other seaside retreats offering free quarantine stays: the brand-new resort Palmaïa, the House of AïA in Playa del Carmen, Mexico; Eden Roc Cap Cana in the Dominican Republic; and all of the 15 Karisma Hotels & Resorts in Mexico’s Riviera Maya, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica.

Ladera, in Saint Lucia, has set aside three of its 37 cliffside suites for anyone who may need to isolate. Meals from the resort’s restaurant, plus nonalcohol­ic beverages, are included in the tropical quarantine.

On Feb. 22, the three hotels comprising the Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas collective­ly upped the ante with

their Travel with Confidence program. If you test positive for covid-19 ahead of your return to the U.S., you’ll be upgraded to a suite with a $150 daily food and beverage credit per person to put toward grilled rib-eyes, fish tacos, and sorbet mimosas.

The Bahamas already requires all incoming travelers to have insurance that will cover potential quarantine expenses, but this separate initiative from Baha Mar means being able to avoid the red tape of insurance claims altogether.

If the additional time away is too much (guests are still confined to a room, after all), or if having access to the U.S. health care system is more desirable, a special arrangemen­t with the CDC is allowing the resort to charter private flights-also compliment­ary-for asymptomat­ic, positive-testing guests to return to the U.S.

Graeme Davis, Baha Mar’s chief executive officer, expects these offerings to cost no more than 1% of the resort’s current revenue-what he considers a negligible operating expense. His reasoning? After spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to administer more than 40,000 tests since reopening in December, Baha Mar’s positivity rate has been

just .002%, or two per 1,000.

“Since launching this program, there’s been a significan­t increase in bookings, both short-term for March and for June and July,” Davis says, adding that advance bookings across the island resort are on pace with pre-pandemic numbers. By comparison, the industry-wide global occupancy average has hovered from 30% to 40%, according to industry analyst STR.

According to Ladera’s general manager, Christian Gandara, the hotel has not yet had a guest test positive. So far, the policy has made money in increased bookings. Soneva, meanwhile, has quarantine­d about a dozen guests since July-running to an estimated $386,000 in room nights.

Whatever the number, it’s the cost of consumer confidence. Henley Vasquez, CEO and co-founder of Passported, a luxury trip-planning agency that focuses on family travel, says that the major concern among her clients right now isn’t getting sick but getting stuck abroad if they do.

“They want to know what happens if they catch covid-19 outside the country,” she says. That may be especially true of vaccinated travelers, who run little risk of developing serious illness from the coronaviru­s but who may still be able to test positive.

As a result, Vasquez explicitly asks hotels about their contingenc­y plans before she books a client, and has found that all luxury properties-whether or not they’re advertisin­g it-have something in place.

“Now that Americans have to get tested before they can go home, a hotel can’t afford not to have a procedure in place,” she says. The difference in policies, she says, boils down to who’s paying for what.

Still, since the provision at many of these properties applies only to those with zero symptoms, travelers must consider the potential risk to themselves, as well as those in the community they’re visiting. Hospital systems in the region are small and often heavily burdened should symptoms become worse. Even travelers who believe themselves to be immune or who think covid might be no worse than the flu would be wise to have a Plan B in placesuch as “medevac” insurance that would airlift a seriously ill passenger to a hospital of choice.

For Lawrence Norman Tuck, general manager of the Nobu Hotel in Cabo, shoulderin­g the quarantine costs was a no-brainer. The January announceme­nt spooked his clients in a palpable way, leading to last-minute cancellati­ons and a slowdown in new bookings. Offering free quarantine stays, he reasoned, would be the most effective way to stop the bleeding.

A few weeks in, his reasoning has borne out: “Guests tell us that one of the reasons they’ve decided to stay is because of this program,” he says.

Tight border protocols, such as requiring a negative PCR test result and a “health visa” for entry into the Bahamas, has made Baha Mar’s offerings possible, says Davis.

“If I were a resort in Miami Beach, for example, and I wasn’t doing any testing-and there’s no requiremen­t for testing to come in-this Travel With Confidence initiative would not be a good investment.”

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Brett Gundlock ?? People walk along the beach in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, on July 11, 2017.
Bloomberg photo by Brett Gundlock People walk along the beach in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, on July 11, 2017.

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