The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family travel complicate­d by lack of vaccine for kids

- By Debra Kamin

Nearly every summer, Ada Ayala, a teacher, and her husband, Oscar Cesar Pleguezeul­os, travel with their children to visit his parents in Spain. But this year, even though they will both soon be fully vaccinated in their home state of Florida, they are changing their plans. The reason? There is still no pediatric COVID-19 vaccine available for their kids.

The travel industry, buoyed by news of vaccine rollouts, is anticipati­ng a summer rush after a year of devastatio­n. But amid the chatter of travel’s longawaite­d rebound, many families with children — who comprise roughly 30% of the global travel market — say they are largely being left out of the conversati­on.

In a March survey on Bébé Voyage, an online community for traveling families, 90% of respondent­s said that amid unclear guidelines on COVID testing, they were searching for flexible bookings. The topic also comes up often on Bébé Voyage’s Facebook page, particular­ly among parents in the United States.

“It’s the Americans in the group that are the most nervous traveling with kids,” said Bébé Voyage chief executive Marianne Perez de Fransius.

Ayala, 44, is among those nervous parents. “If it wasn’t for the kids, we would definitely be flying this summer,” she said. She already received her shot as a teacher. Her husband, also 44, will soon receive his shots, too, because Florida recently opened vaccinatio­ns to those age 40 and up. But their children, Charlise, 6, and Oscar, 2, will have to wait many more months to be inoculated.

“My 2-year-old isn’t going to wear a mask for 10 hours on a flight, and I don’t know if I want to expose him for a 16-hour trip with layovers,” Ayala said. “I’ll feel more confident when vaccinatio­n reaches more people worldwide, or at least in the destinatio­ns we want to go.”

Nearly 1 in 3 adults in the United States have now received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. But a full pediatric vaccine currently isn’t expected until the end of 2021, at the earliest, and while they wait, parents are struggling to figure out how they, too, can travel safely this summer, and even where their children are welcome as rules on quarantine and testing continue to shift.

“This is the elephant in the room right now,” said Cate Caruso, an adviser for Virtuoso, a network of luxury travel agencies, who also owns her own travel planning company, True Places Travel. The potential that a child could become infected with COVID-19 while abroad and not be allowed on a return flight, she said, is a major deterrent for parents.

“Anywhere you go outside of the U.S. right now, you’ve got to think about how you’re going to get back in,” she said. “It’s leaving behind a whole bunch of people who are ready to go.”

After a year of road trips, RVs and rental cottages, many Americans are now ready to fly again: Online searches for late-summer flights are up as much as 75%, and hotels on both coasts are reporting that they are sold out through October. But families, more than any other travel sector, continue to play it safe.

Rovia, a membership­based global travel agency that works with both travelers and travel agents, reports that beach and camping destinatio­ns within driving distance are the most popular choices for families this summer. An exception? Disney World, which is seeing an uptick in reservatio­ns for summer from families looking

to visit while capacity remains limited (and lines, as a result, remain shorter).

“The rate of couples traveling by air has increased faster, whereas families are still leaning toward travel by car and RV rentals,” said Jeff Gwynn, Rovia’s director of communicat­ions.

Montoya and Phil Hudson, who showcase their travels as a Black family on their popular blog, The Spring Break Family, are among them.

“Most years we go pretty far — Spain, Italy, France, as far as we can go. This year it was about what’s reachable by car,” Montoya Hudson said. She and her husband, who both work in the health care industry, are vaccinated, but admit they probably won’t be willing to fly with their two daughters, Leilah, 11, and Layla, 8, for several more months.

That’s because they want

to wait for herd immunity to help keep their daughters safe.

“The goal is to wait until the majority of the population is vaccinated, or has at least had the opportunit­y to become vaccinated,” Montoya Hudson said.

In addition to preferring driving over flying this summer, travel analysts say families with children will also continue to opt for rental homes over hotel rooms.

In fact, when it comes to the vacation cottage market, parents are booking faster than anyone else.

“Families are the No. 1 group expected to travel in 2021,” said Vered Schwarz, president and chief operating officer of Guesty, a shortterm property management platform, which reports that its summer reservatio­ns are already 110% higher than 2020, with families comprising

more than 30% of those booking.

“For families with unvaccinat­ed children, private rentals are appealing. They are comfortabl­e and they avoid hotels chock-full of crowded common areas,” she said.

The question of how to treat unvaccinat­ed children who may be traveling with their parents is also presenting a legal and ethical minefield for American travel operators.

The European Union is considerin­g a vaccine passport that will allow free travel within the bloc for those who can show proof of inoculatio­n. In Israel, a green pass has been establishe­d for those who have been vaccinated, granting holders not just the ability to cross a border but also check into a hotel or eat inside a restaurant, but children are not exempt — so parents with unvaccinat­ed children must dine outside at restaurant­s and find babysitter­s before heading to the gym or a show.

But in the United States, such policies are unlikely to take hold, said Chuck Abbott, general manager of the InterConti­nental San Diego.

“Most hotels would not ask for that informatio­n because it violates the privacy of the guest,” he said. “Even putting vaccinated guests on a different floor than other guests would likely present a legal issue.”

Compared with summer 2019, families’ plans for summer 2021 are more low-key: Travelocit­y reports that bookings to Mount Rushmore and Nashville, Tennessee, are significan­tly up over two years ago; internatio­nally, family bookings to London, Paris and Rome, destinatio­ns that were top family sites in 2019 but have still not reopened to U.S. travel, are way down, while Cancún, which is currently open to American travelers without quarantine requiremen­ts, is up nearly 50%.

Some European countries, like Iceland, have begun inching open their borders, but only to passengers who are vaccinated. That means individual­s who can present proof of the COVID-19 jab can bypass quarantine when they arrive — unless they are parents traveling with children.

“Unvaccinat­ed children would still need to quarantine for five days, and the parents, of course, must stay with the child,” said Eric Newman, who owns the travel blog Iceland With Kids. “Iceland’s brand-new travel regulation­s are not friendly to families hoping to visit with children.”

After a year of virtual schooling and working from home, parents have no desire to quarantine with their kids, said Anthony Berklich, founder of the travel platform Inspired Citizen.

 ?? TODD ANDERSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ada Ayala and her husband, Oscar Cesar Pleguezeul­os, along with their children, Oscar and Charlise, at home in Winter Garden, Florida. Both parents will soon be fully vaccinated but like many families, their travel plans are in flux as they wait for a COVID-19 vaccine for their children.
TODD ANDERSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Ada Ayala and her husband, Oscar Cesar Pleguezeul­os, along with their children, Oscar and Charlise, at home in Winter Garden, Florida. Both parents will soon be fully vaccinated but like many families, their travel plans are in flux as they wait for a COVID-19 vaccine for their children.

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