AVIATION NEWS: U.S. to require negative COVID-19 tests for arriving international air passengers

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From CP24 New – link to source story

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David Shepardson, Reuters | Tuesday, January 12, 2021 10:26PM EST WASHINGTON, Jan 12 (Reuters) – Nearly all air travellers will need to present a negative coronavirus test to enter the United States under expanded testing requirements announced on Tuesday. Under the rules taking effect Jan. 26, nearly all travellers including U.S. citizens must show a negative test within three days of departure or documentation of recovery from COVID-19, under an order signed by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Robert Redfield. All travellers aged 2 and older must comply except passengers who are only transiting through the United States. The CDC will also consider waivers of testing requirements for airlines flying to countries with little or no testing capacity, including some places in the Caribbean. The order dramatically broadens a requirement imposed on Dec. 28 for travellers arriving from the UK as a more transmissible variant of the virus circulated there.

In an interview, Marty Cetron, director of CDC’s global migration and quarantine division, said, “We to have really up the ante… We have to take these mutations seriously.” Canada imposed similar rules for nearly all international arrivals starting Jan. 7, as have many other countries. The CDC confirmed last week it had circulated a proposal to expand the testing requirement after discussing the idea for weeks. Some senior White House officials opposed it, and officials briefed on the matter said last week that U.S. public health officials had essentially given up winning approval until President-elect Joe Biden took office. At a White House meeting on Monday, Redfield again made an urgent case to adopt the testing requirements, people briefed on the meeting said.

He raised concerns that vaccines could potentially not be effective against virus variants. Airlines for America, an industry trade group, praised the testing plan. Airlines had also wanted a ban to be dropped on most non-U.S. visitors who have recently been in Brazil and most of Europe, but the White House opted not to end it. Cetron said the entry restrictions should “be actively reconsidered.” Cetron confirmed the CDC has discussed the idea of expanding the testing requirement to domestic U.S. flights but emphasized the new order only applies to international flights. (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chris Reese, Dan Grebler and Cynthia Osterman)

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Anyone got the number of that truck driving school ? truckmasters I think it was.

Seriously this is getting stupid
5 out of 2 Pilots are Dyslexic.
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This morning, I asked a nice fellow if he was in Salem MA in 1692
would he agree that the town had been invaded by the agents of Satan?
The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693.

More than two hundred people were accused. Thirty were found guilty, nineteen of whom were executed by hanging (fourteen women and five men). One other man was pressed to death for refusing to plead, and at least five people died in jail.
That was the prevailing narrative at the time. The authorities told
us so. The guilty were put to death.
The episode is one of Colonial America's most notorious cases of mass hysteria. It has been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolationism, religious extremism, false accusations, and lapses in due process
Oddly, people never seem to notice that history repeats itself.
As God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.
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