CDC advises against travel while spring break chaos worries some Miami Beach businesses trying to recover from pandemic - Stockxpo - Grow more with Investors, Traders, Analyst and Research

CDC advises against travel while spring break chaos worries some Miami Beach businesses trying to recover from pandemic

People walk along Ocean Drive on March 21, 2021 in Miami Beach, Florida. College students have arrived in the South Florida area for the annual spring break ritual, prompting city officials to impose an 8pm to 6am curfew as the coronavirus pandemic continues.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention again advised against travel on Monday, while Miami Beach business owners fretted about spring break chaos.

Miami Beach officials declared a state of emergency and ordered a rare curfew over the weekend, an effort to avoid spreading Covid-19 and stop large crowds and unruly behavior in the popular tourist destination.

Some businesses in the area eager to recover from a brutal pandemic year that drove down tourist numbers say they are being unfairly punished.

Police have arrested more than 1,000 people since Feb. 3, with 50 cited over the weekend, Miami Beach officials said. The 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew could be extended for up to three weeks to try to control crowds, which could hit businesses during the key spring break season.

“Everything is knee-jerk,” said Ashley Swanson, a bartender at Mac’s Club Deuce Bar in South Beach. “They’re blaming the wrong people. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t be open until midnight.

“The problem is not with me, the problem is with you guys managing a crowd,” he added.

Swanson said Mac’s was closed from March through October because of Covid-19.

Florida, which hasn’t shut down like many other states during the pandemic, has been a top destination for travelers over the past year but still suffered because of the pandemic.

The state received 86.7 million visitors last year, down 34% from 2019, according to an estimate from Visit Florida, the state’s tourism agency.

“Curfews have been incredibly impactful for our business and it is highly disappointing given all the challenges we’ve faced over the last year,” John Kunkel, founder and CEO of the 50 Eggs Hospitality Group, which has 11 restaurants including Yardbird Southern Table & Bar in Miami Beach, said in a written statement. “That said, the environment in Miami Beach is like nothing I have seen in 20 years of living here and is completely unacceptable. Something must be done to help us and all businesses in the area. It’s devastating.”

Demand for flights and hotel rooms has picked up lately, lifting fares and rates, a trend fueled by a rise in vaccinations and travelers eager to take trips after being cooped up for much of the last year.

The Transportation Security Administration screened more than 1 million people at U.S. airports in each of the last 11 days for the first time in more than a year. On Sunday, TSA screened more than 1.5 million people, the most in more than a year but still down 30% from the 2.2 million people compared with the same day in 2019.

Many colleges in the U.S. scaled back their spring breaks to prevent partying and new Covid infections. While Covid-19 cases have declined from the peak in January, but Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Dr. Rochelle Walensky has warned infections could rise if people travel for spring break.

“Now is not the time to travel,” she said in a news conference Monday.

“We are worried not just for what happens when you are on the airplane itself, but what happens when people travel, that is they go out, they mix, they mix with people who are not vaccinated,” she said.

Source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

scroll to top