US warns citizens against traveling to Mexico this month

The U.S. Department of State has issued an alert advising citizens not to travel to Mexico this month for spring vacations, citing the high number of Covid-19 cases.

It’s also warning citizens that they will need to prove that they are Covid-free upon returning to the U.S.

“U.S. citizens should reconsider spring break and other nonessential travel to Mexico due to Covid-19,” the U.S. Embassy said on its website. “Cases and hospitalizations remain high in most of Mexico. Consular services, like appointments for emergency passports, are limited in many locations due to the pandemic … For those returning to the United States by air, there is a requirement to present a negative Covid-19 viral test …”

In February, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control issued a level 4 travel health notice for Mexico, suggesting that citizens avoid all travel to the country as well as travel in general, given the difficulty of social distancing in places like airports and other transportation facilities.

Although travel numbers in the U.S. are still a long way from what they were before the pandemic, officials’ concerns about increased travel this month may not be unwarranted: domestic and international airline travel in the United States  is creeping back upward: according to the Transportation Security Administration, passenger counts in all U.S. airports exceeded 1 million every four days during February.

However, given the inconvenience of having to get tested for Covid upon returning to the U.S., many would-be travelers may be choosing to stay closer to home. Mexico’s tourism ministry is predicting that Cancún — a popular vacation destination for U.S. visitors — will have among the lowest hotel occupancy rates of many of Mexico’s major beach destinations this coming weekend, even though the beaches are open and it will be a long weekend for Mexicans in celebration of Benito Juárez’s birthday.

Cancún is expecting to see 49.5% hotel occupancy, compared to Puerto Vallarta, for example, which is expected to see 70.5%. Mazatlán is expecting 68.2% occupancy, while Los Cabos may see 55.9% and Acapulco 55.2%.

Source: Reportur (sp), USA Today (en), Fox Business

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
blue whale

Rare albino blue whale sighted off coast of Loreto

0
The blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) sighting took place in Loreto Bay National Park (PNBL) and caps an unprecedented whale watching season on the peninsula, which begins annually in December.
Prices for some seafood products are up between 10 and 40% this year.

Annual inflation rate climbs to 4.02% in February, with fruit and vegetable prices soaring

0
The national statistics agency INEGI reported Monday that the annual headline rate rose to 4.02% last month from 3.79% in January, exceeding the Bank of Mexico's 2-4% target range.
Nature trail in a semi-desert park with a wooden entrance sign that says in Spanish El Charco del Ingenio, jardin botanica. The entrance to the trail is winding and ringed on both sides by stone walls with landscaped cacti of various types.

MND Local: Fire put out quickly at San Miguel de Allende’s El Charco del Ingenio

0
The fire — the second at the nature reserve within about a year — was quickly put out but occurred amid heightened concern about local threats to the park's ecosystem.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity