The Trump administration won鈥檛 approve a travel ban for Hawaii unless it receives input from Gov. David Ige first.

While three of Hawaii鈥檚 four county mayors have sent a letter to President Donald Trump asking that nonessential travel to the islands be suspended, Ige has so far been reluctant to sign on to such a proposal.

The governor said Friday that a mandatory 14-day quarantine for travelers in the islands is the best way to restrict visitor travel. A travel ban could come with too many complications, Ige warned.

鈥淚t would be difficult to implement, and impossible to enforce,鈥 Ige said.

Hawaiian Airlines aircraft fronting an Oil tanker offshore the Daniel K. Inouye International Airport, Reef runway.
Gov. David Ige says there are too many complications with a travel ban for Hawaii. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

A White House spokesman said the president has received the letter and that he is looking forward to working with the governor and local officials to address the pandemic.

Ige had previously said during a Wednesday evening press briefing that he would consider signing on to the mayors鈥 letter to Trump.聽

Later that evening, according to his spokeswoman Cindy McMillan, he decided against it.聽

鈥淗is rationale was that he was concerned about the unintended consequences,鈥 McMillan said.

Ige elaborated on those unintended consequences Friday. He said a travel ban poses a number of challenges. For one, Ige said an airline couldn鈥檛 discriminate against who decides to fly. Deciding what could be essential travel could also complicate matters, Ige said.

Ige said that he has been in contact with the Federal Aviation Administration and federal officials regarding a possible travel ban, but has decided it鈥檚 too hard to implement.

Only the federal government has the authority to halt air travel anywhere. The FAA can ground flights and restrict access to airspace, as they do when officials are investigating a crash site.

Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell said at a press conference Thursday that the White House wanted Ige to weigh in first.

鈥淲e are hoping he will,鈥 Caldwell said. 鈥淲e are grateful for what he鈥檚 done. We just want to take it one more step.鈥

Caldwell鈥檚 office did not respond to a request Thursday for a copy of the mayor鈥檚 correspondence with the White House.

Only Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim did not sign the mayors鈥 letter. Kim worries that a travel ban could hinder Hawaii鈥檚 economic recovery coming out of the pandemic, .

Kim also believes the mandatory quarantines are enough to halt travel.

Air travel has nearly stopped for the islands. But even with the quarantines, found their way to Hawaii Thursday, according to the Hawaii Tourism Authority.聽

At last count, there were almost no international passengers, and domestic travel is down 99% compared to this time last year, according to the state .

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