The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board are Pierre Omidyar, Patti Epler, Nathan Eagle, Chad Blair, Jessica Terrell, Julia Steele, Lee Cataluna, Kim Gamel and John Hill. Opinions expressed by the editorial board reflect the group’s consensus view. Chad Blair, the Politics and Opinion Editor, can be reached at cblair@civilbeat.org.
As COVID-19 vaccinations continue to ramp up and the local economy shows more signs of improvement, it鈥檚 time for the state of Hawaii to lift its restrictions on interisland travel.
The health of the population and the health of our finances go hand in hand in this pandemic. Maintaining the mandatory quarantine without a coronavirus test for passengers flying from island to island is a hindrance to the long-term prospects of both.
Business leaders, economists and Lt. Gov are joining a growing chorus of experts saying the time has come to implement changes to the Safe Travels program.
But Gov. David Ige, who has the sole authority to change the rules, continues to resist the idea.
Asked about Green鈥檚 wish to 鈥渄ump the interisland travel quarantine all together鈥 because it鈥檚 鈥渁 total waste of time and money,鈥 Ige on Wednesday , 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy for someone who lives on Oahu to talk about, (that) it鈥檚 more of a hassle than it鈥檚 worth.鈥
The governor鈥檚 response to his lieutenant governor鈥檚 views was yet another unfortunate example of the disconnect among Hawaii’s top leaders on major policy matters. But there is little logic in continuing to make it hard for people to move between islands for pleasure, for business, for family or for medical reasons.
While Oahu-bound interisland travelers are not subject to quarantine, those traveling from Oahu to neighboring islands in Maui, Kauai and Hawaii counties are subject to a 10-day quarantine unless they receive a negative COVID-19 test within three days of travel, or secure an exemption or get approval for a shorter quarantine period.
Kauai-bound travelers are subject to a quarantine with or without a test, although Mayor Derek Kawakami has asked Ige to approve the county moving back into the Safe Travels program.
Maui-bound travelers, in the meantime, must download the AlohaSafe Alert App that tracks their encounters with people who are potentially infected, among other requirements.
These requirements remain in place even as a tsunami of positive news on the COVID-19 front has emerged in just the past few days. It all helps support the argument 鈥 our argument 鈥 on how important it is for Hawaii to capitalize on the momentum.
Nationally, the Biden administration on Tuesday announced that there will be for every adult in the country by the end of May. And on Thursday Senate Democrats voted to take up the president鈥檚 $1.9 trillion that includes a new round of stimulus checks and $350 billion for state and local governments.
Also this week Hawaii received the first shipment of 11,900 doses of vaccine from Johnson & Johnson 鈥 sooner than expected 鈥 just as health officials said they would allow residents ages 70 and older to be eligible for shots beginning Monday.
Hawaiian Airlines, Hawaii鈥檚 largest private employer, said it would delay a decision on more layoffs until May 1. And the state could see a significant economic recovery over the next six months as pent-up desire for travel coincides with the increased vaccinations on the mainland and the expected new wave of federal stimulus money.
The need to relax interisland travel barriers is all the more pressing since state officials have yet to allow use of a vaccine passport. It could be weeks or months before that happens, even as Hawaii should already be putting out a welcome mat to entice summer travelers.
COVID-19 remains a threat and Hawaii should certainly not follow the path of Texas and Mississippi in lifting mask-wearing mandates. But daily cases and infection rates have steadily and augur well for recovery.
Unfortunately, what is also on the decline are visitor arrivals and spending. In January arrivals dropped 80% compared to a year ago, according to from the Hawaii Tourism Authority, while spending was down $383 million, a drop of more than 77%.
It鈥檚 no surprise that a roundtrip ticket from, say, Honolulu to Hilo on Hawaiian Airlines can be had for as little as $78. Businesses are literally on life support. It鈥檚 time for our governor to extend them a lifeline.
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The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board are Pierre Omidyar, Patti Epler, Nathan Eagle, Chad Blair, Jessica Terrell, Julia Steele, Lee Cataluna, Kim Gamel and John Hill. Opinions expressed by the editorial board reflect the group’s consensus view. Chad Blair, the Politics and Opinion Editor, can be reached at cblair@civilbeat.org.
I believe we are the only state to restrict movement within the state. Based on population Oahu is very safe especially compared to visitors with a negative test from areas with high covid-19 cases. I would love to see family on the Big Island without quarantine or an expensive and uncomfortable covid test when I've been fully vaccinated.
puapoo·
3 years ago
Are there any stats available on how many covid cases have been intercepted due to interisland pretravel testing? Maybe Kaiser could release that stat for their in-house pretravel testing.
Moss·
3 years ago
Will we each follow the masking & physical distancing mandates that has allowed for us to reach the doorstep to Tier 4?聽 Do we have the ability to contact trace should numbers increase?聽 Our elected leaders have it rough when making decisions for the people, and am glad to see that the Governor has the gumption to care for us as individuals in our community and not as a metric in the economy.聽 Who are the business leaders looking out for?
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