Houston Chronicle

U.S. eases coronaviru­s testing requiremen­ts

- By Lori Aratani

Internatio­nal travelers flying to the United States will no longer need to show proof of a negative coronaviru­s test before boarding their flights to the U.S., a senior Biden administra­tion official said Friday, ending one of the nation’s last pandemic-related travel requiremen­ts.

The requiremen­t ended Sunday.

The administra­tion official, speaking on the condition of anonymity ahead of the announceme­nt, said science and data show the requiremen­t is no longer necessary. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will reassess the decision in 90 days and would reinstate the requiremen­t if necessary, officials said.

The Biden administra­tion in April dropped its requiremen­t that people wear masks on airplanes, buses and in other public transporta­tion settings after a federal judge ruled the CDC oversteppe­d its authority by putting the mandate in place. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle of Florida is being appealed.

When the administra­tion dropped enforcemen­t of the mask mandate, the travel industry hoped the administra­tion also would drop the requiremen­t that people flying to the U.S. show proof of a negative coronaviru­s test before boarding their flights. Instead, it remained in place.

The U.S. began requiring proof of a negative test from all internatio­nal travelers age 2 and older in January 2021. Federal health officials viewed testing and masking as key strategies for stopping the spread of the coronaviru­s, particular­ly as new, more transmissi­ble variants emerged.

In November, as the Biden administra­tion prepared to lift a ban on travelers from 33 countries — including China and more than two dozen European nations — it also began requiring non-U. S. citizens to show proof of vaccinatio­n in addition to a negative test result.

The travel industry initially supported testing as a way to reopen the country but in recent months has become increasing­ly vocal about the need to end it.

In a letter sent last month to Ashish Jha, the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, industry officials noted many countries, including the United Kingdom, Germany and Canada, no longer require predepartu­re testing for travelers who have been vaccinated. They also pointed out the U.S. does not require proof of a negative test for those who come to the country via land borders, although travelers who are not U.S. citizens must provide proof of vaccinatio­n.

“Given the slow economic recovery of the business and internatio­nal travel sectors, and in light of medical advancemen­ts and the improved public health metrics in the U.S., we encourage you to immediatel­y remove the inbound testing requiremen­t for vaccinated air travelers,” industry officials wrote in the letter.

Travel groups recently met with White House officials to press their case.

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