Travellers flying to New York state from other states with high COVID-19
infection rates are required to provide contact information starting on Tuesday.
Travellers flying
to New
York state from other states with high COVID-19 infection rates are
required to provide contact information starting on Tuesday, according to
Governor Andrew Cuomo.
A travel enforcement operation commences at airports across the state, and enforcement teams will greet arriving passengers from those states and request a completed form with their basic information, the governor said at Monday's briefing, Xinhua news agency reported.
Travellers who
leave the airport without completing the form, which is distributed by
airliners before arrival, will be subject to a US $2,000 fine and even a
mandatory quarantine, the governor said.
Travellers coming
to New York from designated states through trains and cars must also fill out
the form online, according to the governor's office.
Minnesota, New
Mexico, Ohio and Wisconsin have met the metrics to qualify for the travel
advisory, bringing the total number of on the quarantine-restricted list to 22,
the office said on Tuesday.
Of the 60,045
tests conducted in New York state on Monday, 912, or 1.5 per cent, were
positive, bringing the statewide total to 403,175. The rate was a little bit
higher than those recorded in the past two weeks, which were around 1 per cent.
Cuomo said in a
press release on Tuesday that many of the new cases in the state are a result
of a lack of compliance during the July 4 weekend. For example, he said, more
than one-third of attendees of a party got infected with COVID-19.
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