天美视频

Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

About the Author

Denby Fawcett

Denby Fawcett is a longtime Hawaii television and newspaper journalist, who grew up in Honolulu. Her book, is available on Amazon. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.


If you ask me, the issuance of COVID-19 vaccination passports cannot come soon enough.

I embrace the idea of the opportunity to travel again with a health 鈥減assport”聽 鈥 聽a government issued card or smartphone app offering proof of COVID-19 vaccination 鈥 instead of having to聽 scramble for another virus test with a Q-tip shoved up my nose, or worse, having to endure quarantine in some sleazy hotel.

This has been a long year. Everyone is looking for the chance to break out. I see a vaccine passport as a ticket to freedom.

Lt. Gov. Josh Green, the architect of Hawaii鈥檚 Safe Travels program, said in a phone interview Monday that he sees the potential for a virtual vaccine passport or an inoculation card to be rolled out for arrivals to the islands as early as the summer.

That would be a godsend to travelers and local residents, weary and frustrated by having to scramble to find often expensive 鈥渢rusted partners鈥 to administer COVID-19 tests.

It would allow travelers to Hawaii with proof of vaccine to bypass the state鈥檚 pre-travel testing and quarantine requirement.

The state is also working with the Biden Administration to establish a national standard for vaccination passports.

Gov. David Ige鈥檚 office says, at Ige鈥檚 request, the White House will be briefing the National Governors Association Tuesday on the latest information on President Biden鈥檚 effort to establish a national standard for proof of vaccination credentials.

Anti-vaxxers can flip into a tizzy at the mere mention of allowing vaccinated people holding passports to travel seamlessly to the neighbor islands, then, when feasible, across all the different states and eventually internationally.

A recent Civil Beat story on vaccination passports sparked a heated debate, with passport critics slamming the idea as unconstitutional, asserting that they should not be denied travel rights because they opt not to get vaccinations for a variety of reasons, including religious and health objections.

The salient fact to remember is such passports when they become available 聽not a mandate to force people to get vaccinated to travel.

For those who refuse to be vaccinated or cannot be vaccinated for health reasons, versions of would allow people to show they have tested negative for the virus.

A vaccination passport would make travel easier by giving passport holders the ability to skip quarantine and pre-travel testing regulations just like the Global Entry program allows pre-approved, low-risk travelers to get through U.S. Immigration and Customs faster.

An inoculation card is not a new idea. For years I remember carrying a yellow international vaccine card to show I had received shots against diseases like yellow fever and cholera as required by certain countries in Africa and Asia.

COVID-19 Vaccination card.
A COVID-19 vaccination card could be a ticket to freedom to travel. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2021

The difference is now the card would be electronic instead of paper. It would be like an airline boarding pass and use a secure QR code that could be stored in a smartphone or printed out.

To be successful, such vaccine credentials would have to meet medical privacy concerns and be available to anyone who wants one, with a paper version available to people who do not have smartphones.

In some countries and states, vaccination passports are under development not just for travel but also for entrance into stores, gyms, restaurants and large sports and entertainment events.

digital passes Friday to allow holders to download proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test to get into art, entertainment and sports events in places like Madison Square Garden or Times Union Center in Albany.

Israel’s vaccine pass was launched last month to allow inoculated people to go to hotels and gyms.

Hawaii Emergency Management Agency 鈥 the lead agency for a program for Hawaii 鈥 says different options for vaccine passports are still under discussion with no starting date yet.

The main concern here is finding a way to create a passport that offers verifiable proof of vaccination.

鈥淲e want to make sure we maintain the safety efficacy of our current Safe Travels program,鈥 HI-EMA spokesman Douglas Carroll wrote in a text message Thursday.

State Department of Health Director Dr. Libby Char must be assured.

鈥淭he challenge is to find a mechanism that would prove that someone has been vaccinated,鈥 Char said in a briefing to state lawmakers Thursday.

Char told lawmakers, 鈥淲e鈥檙e in conversations right now looking at various commercial entities that could help to do that for Hawaii, to create some sort of passport system where they can validate, in conjunction with some sort of registry, that a person has been vaccinated.鈥

Dose #1 of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in syringe during press event held at Queen's Medical Center. December 15, 2020
Documenting vaccinations is nothing new. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2020

Lt. Gov. Green says Hawaii is working with a company called FirstVitals Health and Wellness to establish a data collecting system to keep verified records of who has been vaccinated.聽

鈥淎t some point a passport program will come. There is a lot of optimism,鈥 Char said.

But there are other issues, lots of them.

New York Times columnist Max Fisher called the vaccination passport issue

The issue he raises is that health passports will create a divide between the vaccinated and unvaccinated; the privileged with passports will enjoy multiple benefits while poor people and minority groups聽 鈥 often vulnerable people who have suffered most during the pandemic 鈥 will be left out.

鈥淕ranting special rights for the vaccinated, while tightening restrictions on the unvaccinated, risks widening already-dangerous social gaps,鈥 Fisher writes.

Another issue with passports allowing travelers to skip testing and quarantine is uncertainty about how long travelers鈥 immunity will last, and if the vaccinations will stand up to new and more contagious variants of COVID-19; also, if vaccinated people who develop an asymptomatic infection can pass it on to others while they are traveling.

However, there was welcome news Monday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that a new clinical trial has found the at blocking symptomatic and asymptomatic infections of the virus, making the vaccinated unlikely to transmit it to other people.

Yet another issue is that with the many different companies and agencies rushing to come up with their own passport programs, it will be difficult and take time to come up with a single vaccine passport that will be accepted everywhere in the world.

Some in Hawaii also worry that without time to make tourism less invasive, the ease of traveling with a vaccination passport will speed a return to the overbooked, overcrowded tourism residents endured before the pandemic when the islands were flooded with more than 10 million tourists a year.

Still, the vaccination passport idea is one I continue to embrace for the hope it offers us to finally get up and go where we want and how it will help speed a return to normal life for all of us.

For critics who worry that issuing vaccine passports is a taking of our rights, I say it is a granting of freedom.


Read this next:

Hawaii Shouldn鈥檛 Wait To Ban Harmful Chemical Sunscreens


Local reporting when you need it most

Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.

天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.

Contribute

About the Author

Denby Fawcett

Denby Fawcett is a longtime Hawaii television and newspaper journalist, who grew up in Honolulu. Her book, is available on Amazon. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views.


Latest Comments (0)

On the surface the VP may sound聽reasonable but looking deeper: there are many transmittable virus芒聙聶 out there. Where does it end? Will we be carrying around a whole catalogue of immunizations in order to live our lives?聽When "herd immunity " kicks in the only vulnerable "at risks" will be the voluntarily unvaccinated and those with little risk to serious consequence. So who exactly benefits with this new intrusion? There is no valid reason for a vaccine "Passport" !

Chcurnan · 3 years ago

Maui is already overbooked and overcrowded without the vaccine passport. The last several weeks have been a literal nightmare working with pre-pandemic levels of visitors who don't want to comply with state/county regulations for masks, 6 ft distancing, limited capacity, etc. I'm not a restaurant hostess on Front St., I'm a bouncer now. Enforcing the safety rules on people who are combative and confrontational is exhausting. There's no way around it, the bouncer responsibilities are the "new normal" for service industry employees in Hawaii for at least another 6-12 months. So state and federal government officials need to get as many people as possible vaccinated to keep us safe while working in close contact to hundreds of visitors per work shift. If passports can increase vaccination rates for people who want to travel here, then it needs to be done asap. The crowds are already here, vaccinated or not.

Lee1011 · 3 years ago

Then there are those of us who can't take any sort of vaccine, approved or not. We're tired of being lumped in with the anti-vaxers. Our doctors can't give us paperwork to say we can't have them because of "liability issues". So does this mean we'll be prisoners for who knows how long without a vax passport?

redahi · 3 years ago

Join the conversation

About IDEAS

IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

Mahalo!

You're officially signed up for our daily newsletter, the Morning Beat. A confirmation email will arrive shortly.

In the meantime, we have other newsletters that you might enjoy. Check the boxes for emails you'd like to receive.

  • What's this? Be the first to hear about important news stories with these occasional emails.
  • What's this? You'll hear from us whenever Civil Beat publishes a major project or investigation.
  • What's this? Get our latest environmental news on a monthly basis, including updates on Nathan Eagle's 'Hawaii 2040' series.
  • What's this? Get occasional emails highlighting essays, analysis and opinion from IDEAS, Civil Beat's commentary section.

Inbox overcrowded? Don't worry, you can unsubscribe
or update your preferences at any time.