Foreign, Visiting The US? White House Plans Could Mean You Must Be Vaxxed
The White House has indicated that when it revamps the current pandemic travel restrictions, it may include a requirement that international visitors have had covid vaccinations. A former Department of Transportation chief is also urging the Biden administration toward similar strict moves.
AP:
US Working On New COVID-19 Rules For International Visitors
The Biden administration is considering requiring vaccinations against COVID-19 and contact tracing of international visitors after the U.S. revamps current broad restrictions that bar many foreigners from traveling to the U.S., a top White House adviser said Wednesday. Jeffrey Zients, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, said that because of the recent increase in COVID-19 cases, current travel restrictions will remain in place until the administration rolls out a “new system” for regulating international travel. (9/15)
Politico:
Obama’s Transportation Chief To Biden: Mandate Vaccines For Airline Travel
The man who ran former President Barack Obama's Department of Transportation thinks President Joe Biden is going too soft on airlines and airline travelers as part of the government's efforts to get the pandemic under control. Former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood says the White House should push airlines to put a vaccine mandate on airline travelers in place. If the airlines refuse, LaHood said, the White House should do it itself. What’s more, he contends it wouldn’t be a heavy lift operationally. (Korecki, Pawlyk and Fuchs, 9/15)
And immigrants will need to show they are vaccinated —
NPR:
U.S. Will Require Immigrant Visa Applicants To Prove COVID Vaccination Status
People applying to immigrate to the U.S. will have to show they've been vaccinated against COVID-19 as part of a required medical exam, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services says. The new policy takes effect on Oct. 1. The requirement includes an exception for children who are too young to receive the vaccine as well as for people with medical conditions that rule them out for the shot. It also outlines a waiver process for people who refuse to be vaccinated due to religious and other reasons. The COVID-19 shot joins a list of well-established vaccines required by the U.S., from hepatitis A to polio and varicella (chickenpox), according to a policy update issued by USCIS. (Chappell, 9/15)
In other White House news —
The Wall Street Journal:
Biden Meets With Top Executives On Covid-19 Vaccine Mandate
President Biden met Wednesday with executives from companies including Walt Disney Co. , Microsoft Corp. and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. to advance his Covid-19 vaccination requirements for the private sector. The White House meeting comes after a plan Mr. Biden announced last week designed to bring the coronavirus pandemic under control, which includes vaccine requirements affecting roughly 100 million workers. (Siddiqui, 9/15)
AP:
White House Offers Nicki Minaj Call To Answer Vaccine Qs
The White House offered Wednesday to connect Nicki Minaj with one of the Biden administration’s doctors to address her questions about the COVID-19 vaccine, after the Trinidadian-born rapper’s erroneous tweet alleging the vaccine causes impotence went viral. The White House said that they’ve offered such calls with others concerned about the vaccine, part of an aggressive public relations campaign to beat back rampant disinformation about the vaccine’s safety and effectiveness. Minaj tweeted Wednesday that “the White House has invited me” and “yes, I’m going,” but a White House official said the rapper was simply offered a call. (Jaffe, 9/16)
CBS News:
Fauci Says There Is "No Evidence" To Support Nicki Minaj's Suggestion That The COVID Vaccine Causes Impotency
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, has debunked a viral tweet from rapper Nicki Minaj that suggested the COVID-19 vaccine could cause reproductive issues. Minaj, who has over 22 million Twitter followers, sparked controversy Monday for a series of tweets she posted about the COVID-19 vaccine ahead of the Met Gala. "They want you to get vaccinated for the Met," the 38-year-old wrote. "if I get vaccinated it won't for the Met. It'll be once I feel I've done enough research. I'm working on that now. In the meantime my loves, be safe. Wear the mask with 2 strings that grips your head & face. Not that loose one" (Jones, 9/15)