The Columbus Dispatch

Rules for travelers heading to US

‘Nothing is off the table’ for tighter restrictio­ns

- David Koenig

President Joe Biden’s latest measures to limit the spread of COVID-19 will increase the hassle factor of flying into the United States, even for American citizens returning from overseas.

Beginning next week, travelers heading to the U.S. will be required to show evidence of a negative test for the virus within one day of boarding their flight. The previous period was three days.

Also, Biden will extend the federal rule requiring passengers on planes, trains and buses to wear face masks through March 18. It was scheduled to expire in mid-january.

Those proposals came about quickly, underscori­ng the urgency for the White House to act before winter, when the virus can spread more easily among people indoors, and since the discovery of a worrisome new variant of COVID-19. The first U.S. case of the omicron variant was discovered in California and reported by the administra­tion Wednesday.

The administra­tion’s moves came just days after the White House announced a ban on travel to the U.S. by foreign nationals who have been to South Africa or seven other African countries within the previous 14 days. That travel ban does not apply to U.S. citizens and permanent residents.

More telling, perhaps, is what’s not included in Biden’s announceme­nt, including some proposals that were floated earlier this week like new quarantine rules for people arriving in the U.S. from overseas.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki was asked why the administra­tion didn’t go further and require vaccinatio­n or a negative test for passengers on domestic flights. She replied that “nothing is off the table.”

“We base our decisions on the advice of the health and medical experts, what is going to be most effective and what we can implement,” Psaki said. “The

president takes their advice and counsel very seriously, but I would say there are discussion­s about a range of options every day.”

Here is a rundown of the new requiremen­ts and their likely impact:

Testing before flights to US

The White House said that early next week, the U.S. will begin requiring all inbound internatio­nal travelers to test for COVID-19 within one day of their flight to the U.S., regardless of their nationalit­y or vaccinatio­n status. That will replace a similar three-day requiremen­t in effect since early November, when the administra­tion scrapped country-specific travel bans.

“This tighter testing timetable provides an added degree of protection as scientists continue to study the omicron variant,” Biden said.

Scott Keyes, founder of travel site Scott’s Cheap Flights, said the shorter time to get tested will weaken demand for internatio­nal travel by Americans going abroad and foreigners coming to

the U.S.

Keyes said, however, that the hassle was somewhat offset by other terms set by the White House, including allowing the use of rapid antigen tests instead of requiring more costly PCR tests, and directing insurance companies to cover the cost.

The U.S. Travel Associatio­n said it hopes the one-day window is temporary “until more is learned about the omicron variant.”

Face masks

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion will extend the requiremen­t to wear a mask on planes, trains, subways and other public transporta­tion including airports and bus terminals through the winter. Fines, which were doubled earlier this year, will remain in a range of $500 to $3,000.

The mask rule has become a flashpoint on flights, and some in the airline industry are eager to see the mandate go away. Airlines have reported more than 5,000 incidents of unruly passengers to

federal authoritie­s since the start of the year, with about three-fourths of the events involving passengers who refuse to wear a mask.

What’s not in the new rules

Administra­tion officials considered other requiremen­ts including testing internatio­nal travelers after they arrive in the U.S. and requiring all travelers, even American citizens, to quarantine for several days even if they test negative for COVID-19.

Kevin Mitchell, founder and chairman of the Business Travel Coalition, said the items in Biden’s announceme­nt aren’t big problems.

“One idea that was floated, that you might have had to quarantine – that would have been a problem,” Mitchell said. “It’s a relief to the entire travel and tourism world” that quarantine­s were not ordered.

Airline stocks, which have been volatile since news broke about the omicron variant, rose between 6% and 9% in trading Thursday afternoon.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? Beginning next week, travelers heading to the U.S. will be required to show evidence of a negative test for the virus within one day of boarding their flight.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP Beginning next week, travelers heading to the U.S. will be required to show evidence of a negative test for the virus within one day of boarding their flight.

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