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Hawaii rolls out inter-island vaccine passport system

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HONOLULU – Hawaii's vaccine passport program for inter-island travel has begun.

The program launch allows people who received their vaccine shots in the state of Hawaii to skip testing and quarantine rules for travel among islands, Hawaii News Now reported Tuesday.

Officials have easy access to state vaccinatio­n records that can be quickly verified, so only those who have been fully vaccinated at clinics in the islands can participat­e. The governor says he hopes to open the program to out-ofstate visitors and trans-Pacific travelers later this year.

“We don’t have a firm timeline on trans-Pacific. The challenge is about verificati­on – about vaccinatio­n done in other states,” Gov. David Ige said. “We’ve been working with a couple of other private sector partners about working to get access to the state vaccinatio­n records, and we believe that that would help them to get vaccinatio­n records in other states as well.”

People participat­ing in the program must be more than two weeks out from their final COVID-19 vaccine shot.

Health officials report about 40% of Hawaii’s population is fully vaccinated.

Anyone flying into the state still has to produce a negative COVID-19 test to bypass a 10-day quarantine rule.

Travelers participat­ing in the vaccine passport program can upload their informatio­n to the state's “Safe Travels” website, the same platform currently being used to verify COVID-19 test results for all travelers. They also can bring their vaccinatio­n card to the airport if they have trouble or don't have access to the website.

Anyone caught with a fake vaccinatio­n card is subject to hefty fines, jail time, or both.

The program launch comes as some residents say the state should loosen other coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, but Ige is being cautious.

“The number of cases that we see continues to be higher than we would like, and every case now is the opportunit­y for the virus to mutate and change,” said Ige.

Epidemiolo­gist Dr. DeWolfe Miller, who has worked with the state on its coronaviru­s response, agrees.

“If you don’t go to that last little extra bit to wipe it out and stamp it out, that little brush fire can blow out of control in a second,” Miller told Hawaii News Now.

 ?? ART WAGER/GETTY IMAGES ?? “We don’t have a firm timeline on trans-Pacific. The challenge is about verificati­on – about vaccinatio­n done in other states,” Hawaii Gov. David Ige said.
ART WAGER/GETTY IMAGES “We don’t have a firm timeline on trans-Pacific. The challenge is about verificati­on – about vaccinatio­n done in other states,” Hawaii Gov. David Ige said.

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