flazio wrote: » And how exactly are you going to make Arlene Foster close all Northern Ireland air and sea ports off from her fellow country folk?
Sleety_Rain wrote: » Should we just save the effort and copy the Hungarian green list, or will ours be even more conservative?
Limpy wrote: » If Tommy from Derry travels from Dublin will he be stopped? Probably not.
Lillyfae wrote: » Well seeing as they’re not going to be flying anywhere, it’s obviously not as risky.
YellowBucket wrote: » Just pulling stats from European reports, Ireland spends €6bn per annum on tourism abroad, with 8 million trips a year made, including same-day travel (a lot of Irish-UK stuff in that bulking the number of trips) Per capita and even in raw numbers, we're one of the biggest spenders in the EU on outwards tourism. Income from international tourism (including NI) the Republic is about €5.6 billion per year and domestic tourism is worth about €2bn / year. By European and North American standards, Ireland's not that dependent on tourism in terms of GDP and if we could move some of the 6bn we spend on foreign trips into the domestic tourism market we would stimulate and keep a lot of jobs. Bringing in high risk tourism from parts of the US with outbreaks risks spooking both Irish and potentially European tourists if things open a bit more in a few weeks, sharing hotel accommodation. All it will take is one cluster in a hotel and you'll have hosed the domestic tourist market for the sake of placating a trickle of Americans who aren't even travelling in large numbers this year anyway. We should be trying to pitch the fact that holidaying at home is a safe option, not portraying a risk of being in a hotel and suddenly having breakfast with a bus tour from Texas. Opening travel's great, but open it to places that are safe first! What happened to the notion of airbridges with similarly low risk places?
YellowBucket wrote: » The other issue that's not being mentioned is that while EU travellers entering Ireland are always insured under EHIC, and UK travellers under a mutual post-Brexit system, US travellers are entirely dependent on the quality of their health insurance and there's been several articles talking about how they may not be covered at all if they're travelling against advisory notices or during a pandemic. So, we could well end up with a bus load of Texans in ICU, at our expense.
Oxter wrote: » I just looked at FlightRadar24, there were 7 flights about to land here from high risk countries, including usa.
Tenzor07 wrote: » Cargo flights? Many passengers on it? Any Irish citizens?
Oxter wrote: » Passenger flights.
[Deleted User] wrote: » So how many passengers Reason I ask is that I’d read all the social media stories about lines of UK cars rolling off the ferry at Rosslare. You’d think we were being invaded. Well, my wife went back to the UK to pick up our car, drove it back on that ferry. Turns out only one deck of the 4 was operational, there was only one line of cars on that deck, and all but 5 had Irish plates. Of the 5, one was mine, an Irish citizen, and a couple more were tradesmen’s vans. Hardly a rolling stream of UK cars heading around the country spreading disease There is so much hysteria out there, fueled by anecdotes and fear
Mr.S wrote: » How many passengers per flight? How much cargo per flight?
ReginaldSmythV wrote: » One is one too many. Flights shouldn’t be allowed in.
is_that_so wrote: » Is that all flights or do you have specific ones in mind?
Limpy wrote: » Wasn't that long ago Irish people were chastising China for putting an Irish couple in a hotel to quarantine.
unhappys10 wrote: » The country is fcuked when there are the likes of you lads up above trying to be clever asking how many passengers were on a flight. If you were half as smart as you think you are you'd realise this whole worldwide pandemic had to start with one person. Doesn't matter how many were on a flight, all it takes is one to spread it even more and if that one person causes the death of only one Irish person because they had to have a holiday that is one death too many.
Posting on r/Ireland is all well and good - but don't forget to contact your TDs regarding your views on Ireland's Tourism/Travel policies. Social Media is great for raising awareness on ongoing issues - and we've had a lot of posts today in regards to passenger flights arriving into Ireland, from Countries with extremely high Coronavirus Incidence cases. However, your local TD likely does not spend a lot of time on Reddit. Or at least, we hope they don't. You can look up your local representatives at https://www.whoismytd.com/ . Their public/official Social Media profiles are listed, along with their official email address and phone number contacts where relevant. Reddit might prove cathartic, but making sure your local representatives are aware of your concerns does a lot more to help in the long run, especially when so many have the exact same concern. Please remember to be respectful when contacting your TD. Real life doesn't reflect the comments section, and your local representative is likely no more thrilled about a rollback in restrictions than you are.