Big Island Coronavirus Updates

Interisland Travel Restrictions Ended in Hawai´i

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PC: Hawaiian Airlines

At long last, intrastate travel has returned to normal in Hawai´i.

All restrictions on interisland travel throughout Hawai´i are set be lifted on Tuesday, June 15, marking the first time state residents and qualified visitors will be able to move between islands entirely unencumbered in more than a year. The rollbacks will apply to all individuals, regardless of vaccination status.

Those travelling between Hawaiian Islands will no longer be subject to COVID-19 quarantine requirements of any kind. Interisland travelers will also be exempt from taking a pre-travel coronavirus test.

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Formerly, those coming from O´ahu to any of the neighbor islands needed to provide a negative test or proof of vaccination to avoid quarantine.

Trans-Pacific travel requirements are also changing Tuesday. Anyone vaccinated within the state of Hawai´i will no longer be forced to take and pass a COVID-19 test before returning to the islands in order to avoid a 10-day mandatory quarantine. Proof of vaccination is required for the exemption, including uploading a copy of a valid vaccine card to the state’s Safe Travels website.

Those who were vaccinated outside of the state are still required to take and pass a coronavirus test within 72 hours of departure to Hawai´i to avoid quarantine. Once they have arrived and fulfilled all requirements, those travelers can move between islands absent any restrictions.

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Governor David Ige announced the changes earlier in this month, saying they are based on statewide vaccination rates. As of Monday, the Hawai´i Department of Health reported that 55% of the population was fully vaccinated, with at least 61% having initiated the inoculation process.

When the fully vaccinated population hits 60% across all islands, the governor said the state will have enough protection to allow for the second step in his rollback plan. At that point, any trans-Pacific travelers coming to Hawai´i from someplace in the US or its territories will be allowed to forego testing and quarantine requirements simply by producing their hand-held vaccination cards. Where they were vaccinated will not matter, as long as it was somewhere inside the US.

Hawai´i will abandon its Safe Travels Program entirely when the state reaches a fully vaccinated rate of 70% of its residents. This is also when indoor mask restrictions will be abolished. However, the governor reserved the right to alter that benchmark.

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“I can, and will, change policies based on health conditions we see and the rate of virus circulating in our community,” Ige said.

The governor added that if Hawai´i does not appear as though it will reach a 70% vaccination rate, he may do away with all COVID-19 restrictions regardless. The decision, he said, will depend on COVID-19 infection and hospitalization rates, among other factors.

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