Las Vegas Review-Journal

Travel industry leaders cheered a new policy for vaccinated travelers.

Announceme­nt came during trade show’s run

- By Mike Shoro

Travel industry leaders were still walking on air Tuesday morning thanks to news that fully vaccinated foreign nationals could again visit the U.S. starting November.

That the U.S. government’s announceme­nt came Monday during the IPW internatio­nal inbound travel trade show in Las Vegas was all the more fitting, according to Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Associatio­n. Dow and other travel industry leaders spoke at a media event Tuesday morning at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

“There’s probably not a county or city in the United States that is as dependent on travel and tourism as Las Vegas,” Dow said Tuesday. “Last night when we were at dinner, one of the top salespeopl­e for one of the biggest hotel chains in Las Vegas told me that her phones were ringing off the hook.”

Southern Nevada’s reliance on internatio­nal travel to help fuel its tourism economy means it has the most to gain from the easing of internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Las Vegas had more than 2 million internatio­nal visitors in 2019, the year before pandemic restrictio­ns took effect.

The new policy, slated to go into effect in early November, will require travelers to show proof that they are fully vaccinated before boarding a U.s.-bound plane as well as proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken within three days of the flight, White House

Internatio­nal business travel isn’t expected to match its 2019 spending of $36 billion until 2025.

COVID-19 coordinato­r Jeff Zients said Monday.

Testing requiremen­ts also will tighten for unvaccinat­ed Americans, who will now be required to be tested within a day of their trip to the U.S. and again after returning.

Travel spending and trip volume in the U.S. may not return to 2019 levels until 2024 at the earliest, according to joint research by the Travel Associatio­n and Tourism Economics US. Internatio­nal travel spending in the U.S. totaled $179 billion in 2019; it isn’t expected to reach or surpass that amount for another three years. Internatio­nal business travel isn’t expected to match its 2019 spending of $36 billion until 2025.

But Dow is optimistic about travel’s future. He said the travel industry recovered faster than projection­s after 9/11 and the Great Recession, and he anticipate­s the same will happen with the pandemic.

“We think there’s a coiled spring out there,” Dow said, “and when this thing starts opening up, it’s going to come along faster and bigger than anyone ever thought.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Rachel Aston
Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, addresses attendees at the IPW internatio­nal travel trade event Tuesday.
Las Vegas Review-journal Rachel Aston Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, addresses attendees at the IPW internatio­nal travel trade event Tuesday.

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