CT Tightens Coronavirus Thanksgiving Travel Restrictions

CONNECTICUT — On what is traditionally the busiest travel week of the year, state health officials are advising residents to stay put. The guidance applies to those who live in the state as well as visitors planning to celebrate Thanksgiving here in Connecticut on Thursday.

The U.S. Virgin Islands was added to Connecticut's coronavirus travel advisory list Tuesday and no states or territories were dropped. That brought the number of restricted states and territories to 48, according to the latest report from the state Department of Public Health.

About 3 million Americans boarded planes over the weekend, and the number of people in transit is only expected to grow, peaking next Sunday as everyone makes their way back to wherever they came from. If the predictions hold, it will be the biggest crowd to pass through turnstiles in the shortest time since the pandemic began in March.

Still, experts expect Thanksgiving travel to be down more than half in 2020.

If you cannot be dissuaded from traveling, cars are the safest way to go, according to a new report. Buses, not surprisingly, are at the other end of the scale.

States or territories are added to Connecticut's travel advisory list if they have a daily positive coronavirus test rate higher than 10 cases per 100,000 residents or a 10 percent or higher positive rate over a seven-day rolling average. Travelers must complete a travel health form or risk a civil penalty of $1,000 for each violation.

Workers traveling from affected states to Connecticut and vice versa who work in critical infrastructure as designated by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, including students in certain health care professions, and any state, local and federal officials and employees, are exempt from the quarantine requirement, provided such travel is work-related. Those essential workers must still complete the travel health form, however.

While there currently are no Connecticut-imposed restrictions on international travel, the federal government continues to provide international travel recommendations for anyone living inside the United States. For guidance on international travel, see the "COVID-19 Travel Recommendations" published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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As of Tuesday, the following 48 locations were included in Connecticut's travel advisory:

  1. Alabama

  2. Alaska

  3. Arizona

  4. Arkansas

  5. California

  6. Colorado

  7. Delaware

  8. Florida

  9. Georgia

  10. Guam

  11. Idaho

  12. Illinois

  13. Indiana

  14. Iowa

  15. Kansas

  16. Kentucky

  17. Louisiana

  18. Maine

  19. Maryland

  20. Massachusetts

  21. Michigan

  22. Minnesota

  23. Mississippi

  24. Missouri

  25. Montana

  26. Nebraska

  27. Nevada

  28. New Hampshire

  29. New Mexico

  30. North Carolina

  31. North Dakota

  32. Ohio

  33. Oklahoma

  34. Oregon

  35. Pennsylvania

  36. Puerto Rico

  37. South Carolina

  38. South Dakota

  39. Tennessee

  40. Texas

  41. Utah

  42. Vermont

  43. Virgin Islands

  44. Virginia

  45. Washington

  46. West Virginia

  47. Wisconsin

  48. Wyoming

This article originally appeared on the Across Connecticut Patch