旅客11月8日起来美 须打2剂FDA或WHO核准疫苗
中央社
10/25/2021
白宫今天宣布入境新规细节,11月8日起所有外籍旅客须打完2剂获美国FDA或WHO核准疫苗才可入境,包括台湾目前施打的AZ、BNT与莫德纳疫苗,仅未满18岁孩童与少数族群例外。
根据白宫今天提供的数据,美东时间11月8日零时起,所有赴美外籍旅客登机前须出示2种文档,包括完整接种证明及出发前3天内检验阴性报告;若是施打两剂型COVID-19(2019冠状病毒疾病)疫苗,第2剂打完2周以上才算完整接种。
这项新规将取代美国前总统川普(Donald Trump)任内对中国、印度、英国、欧洲申根区等33国实施的旅游禁令。新规适用所有国家,包括目前赴美不受限的台湾。
在认可疫苗方面,美国疾病管制暨预防中心(CDC)决定接受获美国食品暨药物管理局(FDA)核准与世界卫生组织(WHO)紧急使用清单(EUL)上疫苗。
这包括莫德纳(Moderna)、辉瑞/BNT、单剂型娇生(Johnson & Johnson)、AZ(AstraZeneca,阿斯特捷利康)、印度版AZ疫苗Covishield、中国国药和中国科兴疫苗。台湾国产疫苗高端目前并不在列。
根据美国CDC规定,由于混打在许多国家越来越普遍,混打任两剂获认可疫苗也会被视为完整接种,得以入境美国,但两剂间隔不得少于17天。
美国入境新规上路后,仅5大主要族群能在未完整接种疫苗下入境美国,包括未满18岁孩童与青少年、特定COVID-19疫苗临床试验参与者、患有疫苗接种禁忌症民众、因紧急或人道因素须赴美(须持美国政府核发认证信函),以及来自疫苗完整接种率10%以下的国家且持非旅游签证的民众。
至于美国是否可能扩大认可未在WHO紧急使用名单上的疫苗,根据美国一名资深官员今天在背景简报会中的回答,几率恐怕不高。
这名官员表示,美国之所以选择美国FDA与WHO认可名单,是因为这些疫苗经过容易定义的国际认可标准程序。但官员强调,WHO与旗下免疫专家战略咨询小组(SAGE)定期查看紧急使用清单,待其他特定疫苗效力数据出炉,未来也会经过审查程序。
在筛检规定方面,新规上路后,外籍旅客仍维持目前规定,持出发前3天内检验阴性报告即可。但所有未完整接种民众,包括美国公民、美国永久居民及上述5大豁免族群,则须在出发前1天内进行筛检。
此外,2至17岁的孩童与青少年虽不受疫苗规定限制,但仍须持检验阴性报告。若随行大人已接种完疫苗,未打疫苗的2至17岁孩童则可持出发前3天内报告;若是单独旅行或随行大人未打完疫苗,则须持出发前1天内报告。
为加强接触者追踪,未来所有飞往美国航班的航空公司都须备好乘客联系资讯,待需要时提供给美国疾管中心。
美国总统拜登(Joe Biden)今天在新规公告中表示,美国CDC与卫生部认定,接种疫苗是减缓疫情传播最佳方式。截至10月24日,29国疫苗覆盖率已超过70%,许多国家努力鼓励民众施打疫苗,部分国家也考虑或正把疫苗接种列为入境条件。
有鉴于这些事实与情况,拜登指出,他认定摒弃先前针对特定国家的入境限制,改采以疫苗接种为主要依据的航空旅游政策,并借此推动安全恢复国际赴美旅游,这么做符合美国利益。
Fact Sheet: Biden Administration Releases Additional Detail for Implementing a Safer, More Stringent International Air Travel System
OCTOBER 25, 2021 • STATEMENTS AND RELEASES
As we continue to work to protect people from COVID-19, today, the Biden Administration is releasing additional detail around implementation of the new international air travel policy requiring foreign national travelers to the United States to be fully vaccinated. This updated policy puts in place an international travel system that is stringent, consistent across the globe, and guided by public health.
Starting on November 8, non-citizen, non-immigrant air travelers to the United States will be required to be fully vaccinated and to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination status prior to boarding an airplane to fly to the U.S., with only limited exceptions. The updated travel guidelines also include new protocols around testing. To further strengthen protections, unvaccinated travelers – whether U.S. Citizens, lawful permanent residents (LPRs), or the small number of excepted unvaccinated foreign nationals – will now need to test within one day of departure.
Today, the Administration is releasing the following documents to implement these requirements: 1) a Presidential Proclamation to Advance the Safe Resumption of Global Travel During the COVID-19 Pandemic; 2) three Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Orders on vaccination, testing, and contact tracing; and 3) technical instructions to provide implementation details to the airlines and their passengers.
With science and public health as our guide, the United States has developed a new international air travel system that both enhances the safety of Americans here at home and enhances the safety of international air travel. The additional detail released today provides airlines and international air travelers with time to prepare for this new policy ahead of the November 8 implementation date. As previously announced, fully vaccinated foreign nationals will also be able to travel across the Northern and Southwest land borders for non-essential reasons, such as tourism, starting on November 8. Additional detail on amendments to restrictions with respect to land borders will be available in the coming days.
Travelers can find full details about today’s air travel announcement on the CDC and Department of State websites. A summary is below:
Fully Vaccinated Status:
- Starting on November 8, non-citizen, non-immigrant air travelers to the United States will be required to be fully vaccinated and to provide proof of vaccination status prior to boarding an airplane to fly to the U.S.
Proof of Vaccination:
- For foreign nationals, proof of vaccination will be required – with very limited exceptions – to board the plane.
- Passengers will need to show their vaccination status, and the airlines will need to:
- Match the name and date of birth to confirm the passenger is the same person reflected on the proof of vaccination;
- Determine that the record was issued by an official source (e.g., public health agency, government agency) in the country where the vaccine was given;
- Review the essential information for determining if the passenger meets CDC’s definition for fully vaccinated such as vaccine product, number of vaccine doses received, date(s) of administration, site (e.g., vaccination clinic, health care facility) of vaccination.
- The Biden Administration will work closely with the airlines to ensure that these new requirements are implemented successfully.
Accepted Vaccines:
- CDC has determined that for purposes of travel to the United States, vaccines accepted will include FDA approved or authorized and World Health Organization (WHO) emergency use listed (EUL) vaccines.
- Individuals can be considered fully vaccinated ≥2 weeks after receipt of the last dose if they have received any single dose of an FDA approved/authorized or WHO EUL approved single-dose series (i.e., Janssen), or any combination of two doses of an FDA approved/authorized or WHO emergency use listed COVID-19 two-dose series (i.e. mixing and matching).
- More details are available in the CDC Annex here.
Enhanced Testing:
- Previously, all travelers were required to produce a negative viral test result within three days of travel to the United States.
- Both nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs), such as a PCR test, and antigen tests qualify.
- As announced in September, the new system tightens those requirements, so that unvaccinated U.S. Citizens and LPRs will need to provide a negative test taken within one day of traveling.
- That means that all fully vaccinated U.S. Citizens and LPRs traveling to the United States should be prepared to present documentation of their vaccination status alongside their negative test result.
- For those Americans who can show they are fully vaccinated, the same requirement currently in place will apply – they have to produce a negative test result within three days of travel.
- For anyone traveling to the United States who cannot demonstrate proof of full vaccination, they will have to produce documentation of a negative test within one day of departure.
Requirements for Children:
- Children under 18 are excepted from the vaccination requirement for foreign national travelers, given both the ineligibility of some younger children for vaccination, as well as the global variability in access to vaccination for older children who are eligible to be vaccinated.
- Children between the ages of 2 and 17 are required to take a pre-departure test.
- If traveling with a fully vaccinated adult, an unvaccinated child can test three days prior to departure (consistent with the timeline for fully vaccinated adults). If an unvaccinated child is traveling alone or with unvaccinated adults, they will have to test within one day of departure.
Limited Exceptions from the Vaccination Requirement:
- There are a very limited set of exceptions from the vaccination requirement for foreign nationals. These include exceptions for children under 18, certain COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial participants, those with medical contraindications to the vaccines, those who need to travel for emergency or humanitarian reasons (with a US government-issued letter affirming the urgent need to travel), those who are traveling on non-tourist visas from countries with low-vaccine availability (as determined by the CDC), and other very narrow categories.
- Those who receive an exception will generally be required to attest they will comply with applicable public health requirements, including, with very limited exceptions, a requirement that they be vaccinated in the U.S. if they intend to stay here for more than 60 days.
Contact Tracing:
- The CDC is also issuing a Contact Tracing Order that requires all airlines flying into the United States to keep on hand – and promptly turn over to the CDC, when needed – contact information that will allow public health officials to follow up with inbound air travelers who are potentially infected or have been exposed to someone who is infected.
- This is a critical public health measure both to prevent the introduction, transmission, and spread of new variants of COVID-19 as well as to add a critical prevention tool to address other public health threats.
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拜登签署命令 11月8日中国旅客可入境 来看细则
来源:美国中文网
10/25/2021
白宫表示,拜登总统周一签署一项命令,对大多数外国航空旅客实施新的疫苗要求,并取消对中国、印度和欧洲大部分国家的严格旅行限制,自11月8日起生效。
美国2020年初首次实施特殊的旅行限制,以解决新冠病毒传播问题。该规则禁止大多数在过去14天内去过英国、欧洲申根国家、爱尔兰、中国、印度、南非、伊朗和巴西的非美国公民入境。
一名政府官员周一表示,从11月8日开始,未接种疫苗的美国公民和长期居民必须提交在重新入境前一天进行的呈阴性的新冠病毒检测结果,而完全接种疫苗的美国人必须提交在旅行前三天内进行的新冠检测结果。
白宫称,2岁以下儿童不需要进行检测,如果2至18岁未成年人与完全接种疫苗的成年人一起旅行,他们可以提供出发前72小时内新冠检测呈阴性的结果。
拜登政府于9月份宣布,将解除入境限制,要求所有外国公民在来美之前全面接种疫苗。周一公布的指南概述了这一要求的豁免对象,包括18岁以下游客;患有某些疾病的人;临床试验参与者以及那些因紧急情况或人道主义原因需要旅行的人。
一名高级政府官员补充道,那些来自疫苗接种率低于10%的国家的旅客在提供了令人信服的来美理由后也将被允许入境。第二名高级官员指出,世卫组织会定期更新疫苗供应紧缺国家的名单,该名单大约包含50个国家,将每季度评估一次。
高级官员称,获得豁免的人只占“前往美国城市的实际游客数量的非常、非常少的一部分。”
此前,包括美国公民在内的所有旅客——无论其是否接种疫苗,都被要求提供在航班出发之前72小时内新冠检测呈阴性的证明。来自33个国家的旅客被禁止进入美国,即使他们已经完全接种了疫苗。
新规下,旅客在登机前需要提供疫苗接种证明和阴性的检测结果,航空公司将负责执行这些措施,包括确认旅客提供的记录是否是由官方发布,他们的接种状态是否符合疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)对“完全接种疫苗”的定义。
官员称,美国将接受世界卫生组织(WHO)批准的任何疫苗,旅客可提供官方发布的电子版疫苗卡。目前,已被列入世卫组织紧急使用清单的疫苗包括辉瑞疫苗、印度血清研究所疫苗、阿斯利康疫苗、强生疫苗、Moderna疫苗,以及中国的科兴和国药疫苗。
另一名高级官员表示,美国政府“非常清楚”还有其他新冠疫苗不在清单上,其中一些疫苗正在接受世卫组织的审查,他们将随时更新疫苗清单。
航空公司还被要求保留旅客的联系信息,以便CDC在出现潜在感染的情况下进行接触者追踪。
陆路边境旅行指南预计也将很快出台,可能会与航空旅行规则相呼应。
U.S. to ease Covid travel entry rules, require vaccinations for foreign visitors on Nov. 8
Foreign nationals from 33 countries will be allowed to enter the U.S. if they are vaccinated.
By Rebecca Shabad
10/15/2021
WASHINGTON — Travel restrictions that the U.S. imposed because of the Covid-19 pandemic will be partially lifted for nearly three dozen countries on Nov. 8, the Biden administration announced Friday.
White House assistant press secretary Kevin Munoz said in a tweet that the new policy will begin Nov. 8 and will require foreign national travelers from 33 countries to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19.
“This announcement and date applies to both international air travel and land travel. This policy is guided by public health, stringent, and consistent,” he said.
Foreign nationals from these countries were previously barred from entering the U.S. because of the virus.
The new policy will apply to a number of European nations — including the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Spain — as well as China and Iran, among others.
The administration announced the new policy in September and said that it would take effect in early November. Foreign nationals will be allowed to fly into the U.S. if they are fully vaccinated and able to show proof of vaccination prior to boarding a U.S.-bound flight, officials said at the time.
Officials said that the new system will put stricter requirements in place for travelers coming from outside those 33 countries.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will also require airlines to collect personal information for each U.S.-bound traveler, including their phone number and email address, to help public health officials with contact tracing.
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New U.S. travel rule excludes those vaccinated with Russia’s Sputnik V
By Ivana Saric
9/28/2021
New rules allowing fully vaccinated international travelers to enter the U.S. beginning in November will exclude those vaccinated by Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine, the Washington Post reports.
Why it matters: Sputnik V’s exclusion will mean millions of fully vaccinated individuals won’t be eligible to travel to the U.S., per the Post.
- It will also have a wider international impact, as Russia has plans to distribute its vaccine to around 70 countries.
State of play: According to the new rules, non-citizens entering the country must be inoculated with vaccines approved for emergency use by either the Food and Drug Administration or the World Health Organization, per the Post.
- These include the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines used widely in the U.S., as well as the AstraZeneca vaccine. It also includes the Sinopharm and Sinovac vaccines developed by China.
- The WHO has paused its review process of the Sputnik V vaccine over concerns about its manufacturing process, the Post notes.
The big picture: While addressing the UN General Assembly on Saturday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called for the mutual recognition of vaccines by national oversight bodies.
- The Post notes that 300,000 Russians visited the U.S. in 2019, citing data from the U.S. Travel Association.
美国拟11月初开始放宽国际航班旅客入境限制
文 / 陈慧璋
9/20/2021
(早报讯)美国政府计划从11月初开始对“完全接种冠病疫苗”的外国旅客放宽入境限制。
新华社报道,白宫冠病疫情应对协调员津茨周一(20日)说,新规定适用于所有抵美国际航班,所有外国旅客入境美国时须出示“完全接种冠病疫苗”证明,以及出发前72小时内冠病检测阴性证明。
已完全接种冠病疫苗的国际旅客入境美国后不需要隔离。该规定将于11月初生效,以便相关机构和各航空公司做好准备。
津茨说,白宫将遵从美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)对“完全接种冠病疫苗”的具体解释,包括哪些疫苗符合规定要求。此外,美国疾控中心计划发布一项“追踪令”,要求航空公司收集并保留30天内抵美旅客的电话、电子邮箱等联系信息,以提醒旅客可能发生的接触感染风险。
津茨说,对未接种冠病疫苗的返美美国公民,美国政府将施行“更严格的检测要求”,包括须提供出发前一天内冠病检测阴性证明和已交纳返美后检测费用的证明。
美国政府周一继续把与加拿大、墨西哥的陆水两路跨境旅行限制令延长一个月至10月21日。这一陆水跨境限制令自2020年3月起实施,每月延长一次。今年8月9日起,加拿大允许接种过冠病疫苗的美国公民进入加拿大。
美国政府在去年冠病大流行初期开始实施国际旅行限制令,并不断扩大到新的国家和地区。此间媒体援引美国航空协会的数据说,截至今年8月底,国际旅行规模较疫情前缩水43%。美国旅游协会此前估计,如果美国的国际旅行限制令持续到今年年底,将使美国损失110万个就业岗位,并给美国经济造成约3250亿美元(约4394亿新元)的损失。
U.S. to lift international air travel restrictions on vaccinated adults in November
BY FRANCESCA CHAMBERS
9/20/2021
The United States will require all adult non-U.S. citizens to provide proof of vaccination and negative COVID-19 test results to enter the country, as part of a new set of rules for international air travel the White House announced on Monday.
White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said Monday that the new rules, which will allow individuals from nations that are currently banned from entering the U.S., would go into effect starting in early November.
“In implementing additional strict safety protocols, we will protect Americans here at home, and enhance the safety of international travel,” Zients said.
Zients said the new rules would also authorize the collection of passenger data for the purposes of contact tracing.
The Biden administration had for months pushed off updating its international travel restrictions, citing a rise in coronavirus case counts over the summer, despite mounting opposition from travel industry groups, foreign government officials and legal residents of the U.S. who have not left the country for the last 18 months out of fear they would not be let back in.
Non-U.S. citizens who have been in the UK, Ireland, India and European nations in the Schengen area, including Italy, Spain, France, Denmark and Sweden, within the last 14 days are currently prohibited from traveling to the U.S., with some exceptions.
The travel restrictions that have been in place since last year have effectively kept most family members, tourists and business travelers from those nations from visiting the U.S., even as affected nations have opened their borders to Americans traveling abroad.
Pete Sibner, a Swedish national who lives in Lakewood Ranch, Fla., said two members of his extended family had died in the last several weeks, and neither he nor his wife, who is also from Sweden, were able to travel to their funerals.
“It’s been a rough couple of weeks,” he said, recounting how his wife had to say goodbye to her dying grandfather in a video call.
“She couldn’t be there when he passed away, and there was no way she could travel for the funeral, so she had to watch the funeral on FaceTime,” he added.
Sibner said a cousin he was close to also died recently, and the funeral is this week, but he will not be able to attend. “So that hurts.”
Individuals from other countries, including those with far lower vaccination rates than nations on the prohibition list, are currently able travel to the U.S., if they present proof of a negative coronavirus test prior to departure. Americans who travel abroad must also show negative COVID-19 test results to airlines in the 3-day period before their flight back to the U.S.
The human toll of the travel restrictions is one reason that a growing number of people inside and outside the U.S. have been pushing the Biden administration to introduce uniform standards. Travel and tourism groups have pushed hard for individuals from banned nations to travel to and from the country again to help boost the economy.
Caroline Beteta, president and CEO of the nonprofit marketing organization Visit California, said that pre-COVID, international visitors spent $28 billion in the state. Beteta said that international travel is California’s number one export and is a bigger boon for the state than agriculture.
“California experienced a 55% decline overall in travel, and we’re not expecting to reach that point again until 2024. And it’s largely because of the international market, as well as group meetings,” said Beteta, a member of the U.S. Department of Commerce Travel and Tourism Advisory Board, who wants the U.S. reopen to international travel.
The new rules for international travel will be similar to the systems other advanced nations now have in place.
Americans may travel to Italy if they show they are fully vaccinated, produce a negative COVID test taken 72 hours prior and submit a passenger locator form. France is currently open to fully vaccinated Americans, as well as minors accompanied by a vaccinated adult, who attest they have not been in contact with someone with COVID-19 and are not experiencing COVID-like symptoms.
Elliott Ferguson, president and CEO of the nonprofit marketing corporation Destination DC, said in an interview prior to Monday’s announcement that it is time for the U.S. to think along the same lines.
“If the concern is, you could still have COVID and have been vaccinated, then let’s by all means, consider some other alternatives such as testing before a person is able to get on a flight and testing negatively before they are able to physically fly to the United States,” Ferguson said.
For foreign nationals in the U.S. desperate to see their families, any new requirements that might accompany the lifting of travel restrictions are welcome.
“We’d undergo any kind of, whatever ordeal, it would take,” Sibner said. “My father, he hasn’t seen his grandchildren in two years now. My mother hasn’t seen her grandchildren in three years now, and they’re all back there, you know they would do anything, they would quarantine for two weeks if they had to.”
Sibner concluded, “We’d be willing to go through a lot.”
U.S. will limit some Chinese passenger air carriers to 40% capacity -order
By David Shepardson
8/18/2021
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Transportation Department on Wednesday said it will limit some flights from Chinese carriers to 40% passenger capacity for four weeks after the Chinese government imposed similar limits on four United Airlines flights.
China told United on Aug. 6 it was imposing sanctions after it alleged five passengers who traveled from San Francisco to Shanghai tested positive for COVID-19 on July 21.
The U.S. order said the department will limit over a four-week period each of four Chinese carriers to 40% capacity on a single China-U.S. flight.
United Airlines said it was “pleased to see this action by the (Transportation Department) in pursuit of fairness in this important market.”
The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately comment.
The U.S. government says China’s “circuit breaker” policy violates the nations’ air services agreement and “places undue culpability on carriers with respect to travelers that test positive for COVID-19 after their arrival in China.”
The department added carriers “have no means to independently verify positive test results alleged by Chinese authorities. Furthermore, there is no way to establish where or when a traveler may have contracted” the virus.
Chinese authorities gave United three options: cancel two San Francisco to Shanghai flights; operate two without passengers; or operate four flights with up to 40% of passenger capacity.
The limits were imposed on four Wednesday United San Francisco-Shanghai flights, beginning with an Aug. 11 flight.
The Biden administration said it will impose identical limits on four flights over four weeks – one each from Air China, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines Co and Xiamen Airlines.
The limits come as many Chinese students are headed to the United States for the start of fall classes.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, China and the United States have sparred over air services.
In June 2020, the United States threatened to bar Chinese passenger flights after Beijing did not immediately agree to restore flights by U.S. airlines.
U.S. carriers voluntary halted flights to China after the coronavirus outbreak. Then-President Donald Trump on Jan. 31, 2020 barred nearly all non-U.S. citizens from traveling to the United States who had been in China within the last 14 days.
Those restrictions on Chinese travelers remain in place. The Biden administration in April eased restrictions on Chinese students traveling to U.S. schools effective Aug. 1.
A long-standing air agreement between China and the United States allows both countries to operate more than 100 weekly flights between the two nations but only a fraction of those are currently operating.
美国将从8月1日允许中国留学生赴美上课
4/28/2021
美国政府周二宣布,将在今年秋季放宽针对中国和其他国家的国际学生进入美国的旅行限制,这一调整可能会为一些在大流行期间招生人数下降的大学带来经济帮助。
据路透社报道,美国国务院声明,将从8月1日起将国家利益豁免扩大到来自世界各地的留学生和学者,此前美国国务院在3月为来自欧洲的留学生作出了上述调整。
在美学习的国际学生中中国学生人数最多。根据国际教育交流(IEE)的数据,2019-20学年约有35%的国际学生来自中国,几乎是排在第二位的印度留学生人数的两倍。
受疫情影响,美国禁止大多数在两周内去过中国、巴西、南非、伊朗和欧洲大部分地区的非美国公民入境美国。现在,所有来自这些国家的留学生都可以在今年秋季前往美国。
IEE在2020年11月发布的一份报告中写道,2019-20学年,37.2万名中国公民在美国的大学和学院就读。
根据美国国家学生信息交换所的数据,2020年秋季,美国大专院校入学总人数下降了2.5%,几乎是2019年秋季入学人数降幅的两倍。
2020年1月,时任美国总统特朗普首次宣布实施限制,禁止几乎所有去过中国的非美国公民入境美国。美国大专院校一直在敦促国务院在国际学生不得不做出入学决定前采取行动。
一位政府官员说,尽管宣布了这一消息,但官员们正在“密切关注疫情状况和演变轨迹”。
目前尚不清楚美国的大专院校或政府是否会承认中国学生接种的、没有获得美国食品药物管理局(FDA)批准的疫苗。部分美国学校要求学生在复课前完成疫苗接种。
另一个大问题是,首次申请学生签证的人员需要在美国大使馆和领事馆进行面签。美国国务院周二说,“正继续在遵循卫生部门科学指引的情况下,寻求处理更多签证申请的方法。”
美国教育理事会(ACE)援引一项研究称,2019-20学年,国际学生带来的总体经济影响从上一年的405亿美元(537.20亿新元)下降了18亿美元。
IEE报告称,2019学年,中国学生带给美国的经济影响约为159亿美元。
Travel.State.Gov
U.S. DEPARTMENT of STATE — BUREAU of CONSULAR AFFAIRS
National Interest Exceptions for Certain Travelers from China, Iran, Brazil, South Africa, Schengen Area, United Kingdom, and Ireland
Last Updated: April 26, 2021
On April 26, 2021, the Secretary of State made a national interest determination regarding categories of travelers eligible for exceptions under Presidential Proclamations (PPs) 9984, 9992, and 10143 related to the spread of COVID-19. As a result of this determination, together with national interest determinations already in place, travelers subject to these proclamations, due to their presence in China, Iran, Brazil, South Africa, the Schengen area, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, who are seeking to provide vital support for critical infrastructure; journalists; students and certain academics covered by exchange visitor programs, may now qualify for a National Interest Exception (NIE). Students and academics subject to these proclamations due to their presence in China, Iran, Brazil, or South Africa, may qualify for an NIE only if their academic program begins August 1, 2021 or later. Qualified travelers who are applying for or have valid visas or ESTA authorization may travel to the United States following the procedures below, even as PPs 9984, 9992, and 10143 remain in effect.
Students with valid F-1 and M-1 visas intending to begin or continue an academic program commencing August 1, 2021 or later do not need to contact an embassy or consulate to seek an individual NIE to travel. They may enter the United States no earlier than 30 days before the start of their academic studies. Students seeking to apply for new F-1 or M-1 visas should check the status of visa services at the nearest embassy or consulate; those applicants who are found to be otherwise qualified for an F-1 or M-1 visa will automatically be considered for an NIE to travel.
Travelers in categories described above who have a valid visa in the appropriate class or who have a valid ESTA authorization for travel under the Visa Waiver Program and seek to travel for purposes consistent with ESTA authorization, should contact the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate before traveling, if they believe they may qualify for a National Interest Exception. If a National Interest Exception is approved, they may travel on either a valid visa or ESTA authorization, as appropriate.
The Department of State also continues to grant NIEs for qualified travelers seeking to enter the United States for purposes related to humanitarian travel, public health response, and national security. These travelers and any others who believe their travel to be in the United States’ national interest should also review the website of the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate for instruction on how to contact them.
As with all NIEs for qualified travelers seeking to enter the United States under a Presidential Proclamation, if circumstances warrant, the Secretary of State may revise the national interest determination.
CDC Expands Negative COVID-19 Test Requirement to All Air Passengers Entering the United States
Media Statement
For Immediate Release: Tuesday, January 12, 2021
Contact: Media Relations
(404) 639-3286
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expanding the requirement for a negative COVID-19 test to all air passengers entering the United States. Testing before and after travel is a critical layer to slow the introduction and spread of COVID-19. This strategy is consistent with the current phase of the pandemic and more efficiently protects the health of Americans.
Variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus continue to emerge in countries around the world, and there is evidence of increased transmissibility of some of these variants. With the US already in surge status, the testing requirement for air passengers will help slow the spread of the virus as we work to vaccinate the American public.
Before departure to the United States, a required test, combined with the CDC recommendations to get tested again 3-5 days after arrival and stay home for 7 days post-travel, will help slow the spread of COVID-19 within US communities from travel-related infections. Pre-departure testing with results known and acted upon before travel begins will help identify infected travelers before they board airplanes.
Air passengers are required to get a viral test (a test for current infection) within the 3 days before their flight to the U.S. departs, and provide written documentation of their laboratory test result (paper or electronic copy) to the airline or provide documentation of having recovered from COVID-19. Airlines must confirm the negative test result for all passengers or documentation of recovery before they board. If a passenger does not provide documentation of a negative test or recovery, or chooses not to take a test, the airline must deny boarding to the passenger.
“Testing does not eliminate all risk,” says CDC Director Robert R. Redfield, MD, “but when combined with a period of staying at home and everyday precautions like wearing masks and social distancing, it can make travel safer, healthier, and more responsible by reducing spread on planes, in airports, and at destinations.”
This order was signed by the CDC Director on January 12, 2021 and will become effective on January 26, 2021.
Source: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2021/s0112-negative-covid-19-air-passengers.html
Millions of Americans expected to travel for the holidays
The CDC is advising against it
2020/12/23
Despite a recent spike in COVID-19 cases, millions of people are expected to travel for the holidays.
AAA projects as many as 84.5 million Americans may travel from Wednesday, Dec. 23 through Jan. 3, a decline of at least 29% from 2019.
Hannah Buchner is in the Army and flew into the San Luis Obispo airport Wednesday from North Carolina. She noticed extra safety precautions in place.
“Everyone was wearing masks. Just a little more distancing, and there’s a lot more cleaning procedures on the plane,” she said.
While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is urging Americans not to go anywhere for the holidays this year, for those who do, they recommend taking a COVID-19 test one to three days before travel and another three to five days after travel, in addition to reducing nonessential activities for seven days after.
Maureeni Stanislaus, who flew into San Luis Obispo Wednesday after visiting her mother, says she did get tested.
“I did a COVID test right before I left and I was lucky enough to get the first dose of the vaccine on Friday,” she said.
As for methods of travel, AAA says most Americans who do go somewhere in the next few weeks will do so by car, with road trips accounting for 96% of holiday travel.