NEWS
Grant Shapps says the Passenger Locator Form serves a ‘critical’ purpose but has pledged to simplify it
Industry hails ‘landmark day’ as tests axed for vaccinated arrivals
Ian Taylor
Industry leaders greeted Monday’s announcement of the removal of all tests for fully vaccinated travellers as “a landmark day” and “a step change”. Transport secretary Grant Shapps
went further than expected in stripping back restrictions, although his retention of the Passenger Locator Form (PLF) dismayed many and Iata director general Willie Walsh slammed the government for “withdrawing these measures on February 11 when it could have withdrawn them now”. Testing will be scrapped for
Shapps also pledged to simplify STORY TOP
the PLF, replace hotel quarantine for red list arrivals “with measures including home isolation” and develop “a toolbox” for dealing with future variants, promised next month. He justified keeping the PLF saying: “It’s our only way of distinguishing between those vaccinated and unvaccinated. It’s there for a critical reason.” A leading airline source
explained: “Removing the PLF would cause new
fully vaccinated arrivals in time for half-term, children aged 12-15 will be able to prove they’re vaccinated, and the unvaccinated will no longer need to self-isolate and take a second PCR test.
travelweekly.co.uk
complications. How would airlines or Border Force know who is vaccinated? We’d be back to manual checks. The PLF is clunky but we’re on a road to making it as effective as possible. We have to be realistic.” A second aviation source
insisted: “We don’t need a 15-page PLF. They say they’ll simplify it but seeing is believing.”
However, the source agreed:
“This is a big step forward – much better than hoped. The big thing now is we’re out of step with Europe. “The first problem is we’re behind
on vaccinating 12-15-year-olds and some countries are starting to vaccinate 5-11-year-olds. That is going to be a problem. “The second problem is the
validity of vaccines [and certificates]. The UK is not setting a deadline or requiring boosters [to travel]. But it will at some point. We’re in a good position and the boosters have no expiry date yet. But the EU will probably set the standard [on validity] and we’ll end up aligning.” Shapps noted: “For now, we’ll
maintain our current definition of fully vaccinated. [But] my opposite numbers around the world have made clear that, regardless of what we do, they’re very likely to require booster jabs this summer.”
Europe’s leading travel industry
associations warned on Tuesday of “diverging rules” on the validity of vaccination certificates across the EU, with differing validities of nine, seven and even three months emerging. However, the airline source argued:
“It’s great the government didn’t jump in on vaccine validity because any changes on that feed through on everything. This needs more thought. “Now the big question is what
happens when, not if, there is another variant. Shapps said it would take something worse than Omicron to put measures in place and that is promising. We feel we’re pushing at an open door – it has not felt like that for a long time.” But travellers should be reminded
these changes only apply on return to the UK, not in destinations where restrictions continue to vary and
testing is often required. i Business, back page
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PICTURE: flickr/No 10
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