From News Nation:
“EU takes US off safe travel
list; backs travel restrictions”
The European Union recommended
Monday that its 27 nations reinstate restrictions on tourists from the U.S.
because of rising coronavirus infections there, but member countries will keep
the option of allowing fully vaccinated U.S. travelers in. The decision by the
European Council to remove the U.S. from a safe list of countries for
nonessential travel reverses the advice that it gave in June, when the bloc
recommended lifting restrictions on all U.S. travelers before the summer
tourism season.
The EU’s decision reflects
growing anxiety that the rampant spread of the virus in the U.S. could jump to
Europe at a time when Americans are allowed to travel to the continent. Both
the EU and the U.S. have faced rising infections this summer, driven by the
more contagious delta variant. The guidance issued Monday is nonbinding,
however. American tourists should expect a mishmash of travel rules across the
continent since the EU has no unified COVID-19 tourism policy and national EU
governments have the authority to decide whether or how they keep their borders
open during the pandemic.
More than 15 million Americans a
year visited Europe before the coronavirus crisis, and new travel restrictions
could cost European businesses billions in lost travel revenues, especially in
tourism-reliant countries like Croatia, which has been surprised by packed
beachesand hotels this summer. “Nonessential travel to the EU from countries or
entities not listed (on the safe list) … is subject to temporary travel
restriction,” the council said in a statement. “This is without prejudice to
the possibility for member states to lift the temporary restriction on
nonessential travel to the EU for fully vaccinated travelers.” U.S. travelers
would have to be immunized with one of the vaccines approved by the bloc, which
includes Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca and Johnson&Johnson.
Possible restrictions on U.S.
travelers could include quarantines, further testing requirements upon arrival
or even a total ban on all nonessential travel from the U.S. The EU recommendation
doesn’t apply to Britain, which formally left the EU at the beginning of the
year and opened its borders to fully vaccinated travelers from the U.S. earlier
this month. The United States remains on Britain’s “amber” travel list, meaning
that fully vaccinated adults arriving from the U.S. to the U.K. don’t have to
self-isolate. A negative COVID-19 test within three days before arriving in the
U.K. is required and another negative test is needed two days after arriving. The
EU also removed Israel, Kosovo, Lebanon, Montenegro and North Macedonia from
the safe travel list on Monday. Meanwhile, the United States has yet to reopen
its own borders to EU tourists, despite calls from the bloc to do so. Adalbert
Jahnz, the European Commission spokesperson for home affairs, said Monday that
the EU’s executive arm remained in discussions with the Biden administration
but so far both sides have failed to find a reciprocal approach. In addition to
the epidemiological criteria used to determine the countries for which
restrictions should be lifted, the European Council said that “reciprocity
should also be taken into account on a case-by-case basis.”
The European Council updates the
safe travel list based on criteria relating to coronavirus infection levels
every two weeks. The threshold for being on the EU list is having not more than
75 new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 inhabitants over the last 14 days. The U.S. ,
meanwhile, is averaging more than 155,000 new coronavirus cases and 1,200
deaths per day, and several U.S. states have more COVID-19 patients in the
hospital now than at any other time during the pandemic. Authorities in Oregon
are seeking extra refrigerated trucks because morgues are at capacity and
Florida is in a similar situation after a week in which more than 1,700 people
died from the virus in the state. Hospitals are desperately running out of
staff in several states, and the start of the school year has brought even more
fears that the outlook will worsen as millions of unvaccinated students return
to their classrooms. U.S. school districts have been struggling over whether to
impose mask mandates, sometimes even suing in states where officials are
against such requirements.
Vaccine hesitancy also remains a
problem in many locations in the U.S., where 61% of the eligible population is
inoculated against the virus. In contrast, Britain has fully vaccinated over
78% of adults and EU countries have inoculated nearly 70% of those over 18.
^ This doesn’t surprise me. Not only
are US Covid cases rising quickly, but the US Federal Government still doesn’t
allow non-Americans (including the vaccinated) to enter the country. ^
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