Lundstram wrote: » Off to the UK in the morning for a few days. Been working non-stop since January, all through lockdown and just need a break away from this place. Work were saying I might have to quarantine for two weeks, I said, grand I'll do that but just make sure I'm paid for those weeks and it doesn't affect my annual leave. They backed down pretty fast then. It's a reccommendation not a requirement. I'll fill out their form, maybe put Bart Simpson's details on it for all it's worth. Flights were €24 return and 4 star hotel is €220 for 3 nights. Wouldn't get a day in Ireland for that. Staycation my arse.
irishproduce wrote: » Irish people however are not to be encouraged to go abroad and spend, therefore the "no non essential travel" message remains for us thinking of going away for a break. Result is that money here in the country is kept in the country and spent on local tourism.
irishproduce wrote: » Is the purpose (although not explicitly stated as such) of the travel advice not as follows. Foreign travellers who we would like to come here with their money are to be granted a reprieve from the 14 day isolation. Result is that money comes in to the economy and the politicians have cover by allowing travel from similar countries. Irish people however are not to be encouraged to go abroad and spend, therefore the "no non essential travel" message remains for us thinking of going away for a break. Result is that money here in the country is kept in the country and spent on local tourism. It's quite clever actually and you have to give credit to our leaders for manoeuvring such a move.
moritz1234 wrote: » Analysis 6th - 20th July 14 days Cases per 100,000 peopleRep of Ireland 4.86UK 13.81Spain 25.52 *Germany 5.85Italy4.67France 12.63 ** * Spain includes historical antibody test results as well. Figures can't be correct for true analysis. **France includes overseas territories, some of which have high rates still ***France and Spain also produce the same figure for a Saturday and a Sunday and World of Meters have not addressed this issue! Omitting the weekend duplicationsSpain 20.80 *France 11.31** The French and Spanish figures can't be correct
Sleety_Rain wrote: » That headline on RTE on Varadkars comments regarding the Green list is so disingenuous!!! Varadkar wants a green list, but one would assume by the headlines that he doesn't. Incredibly poor reporting.
Strazdas wrote: » I see there is a lot of confusion on social media too. People think Varadkar has said he wants the green list scrapped and that citizens not be allowed travel anywhere (when he is saying the opposite in fact).
RebelButtMunch wrote: » I agree with your sentiment but wasn't there a case yesterday in Spain ?https://www.mirror.co.uk/travel/news/breaking-spain-campsite-lockdown-250-22364935
Wallander wrote: » For the second time this week, RTE is also quoting a doctor saying don't go to a green list country as you may encounter visitors from the US there, when the only EU country to permit flights from the US currently is Ireland.
jonnny68 wrote: » DR Jack Lambert seems to be the one who is making total sense here.https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/telling-people-not-to-travel-overseas-on-holiday-is-wrong-headed-1.4297275
MickeyLeari wrote: » A beacon of common sense. That man is living in the real world and is an expert in the field.
jonnny68 wrote: » yes agree totally, yet the government continue to come out with this drivel about not travelling, if it wasn't so pathetic it would be funny.
HalloweenJack wrote: » I'm one of the potential 'foreign' travellers ready to come in and spend money. Have flights (with Aer Lingus btw) and accomodation booked and will be renting a car to travel about. However, I haven't a ****ing clue whether I'll be able to or not because of all this dilly-dallying. Yes, I'm based a in a country (Spain) that was badly hit but it is being handled very well here, far better than back home from what I'm hearing. If I were based in the US or the UK (even though you can just walk in from there at the moment, as far as I understand), I'd understand the concern but things are actually under control here and there is a coherent message coming from all quarters. It stings to be told that we can't go when things are being managed a million times better here. FF seem intent on destroying the economy once again.
MickeyLeari wrote: » I feel your pain. All you are required to do is fill out a form indicating where you will be staying.
HalloweenJack wrote: » Is that true? Because my understanding is, as things stand, I have to quarantine for 14 days upon entering the country. That's not what I intend to do. I intend to go on a holiday and visit a few different places, not sit in my ma's house for two weeks. I understand I'll be checked up on. I've seen news items quoting politicians mention that it's mandatory and to do otherwise would be breaking the law. Maybe I've got this wrong, which is possible given that the Gov have been absolutely terrible at getting a coherent, uniform message across. I just want a yes or no answer to these questions: If I travel to Ireland on the 13th of August, will I have to self-isolate for 14 days? Am I going to be checked up on? Will I be in trouble if I decide to travel around? Right now, I haven't a ****ing clue and with the different quotes coming out about no non-essential travel despite the green lists, it's a ****ing nightmare to know what actually applies to me and what doesn't.
MickeyLeari wrote: » There is no legal requirement to self isolate. But requested to restrict movements. personally I would find that difficult on holiday but easy at home.
The Irish Authorities require anyone coming into Ireland, apart from Northern Ireland, to restrict their movements for 14 days
You are also asked to restrict your movements for 14 days if you arrive in Ireland from any overseas country. This includes Irish citizens coming home.
The_Brood wrote: » The problem is employers are apparently in their right to force you to stay home from work and suck up 2 more weeks of your holiday for that time or take it as unpaid leave. That obviously negates any positivity in going for a holiday in the first place. So if the government can't punish you, your employer might very well do. Which is all complete farcical shambles.
dartboardio wrote: » I feel for people that can't go on holiday because their employer will force them to quarantine unpaid when they return.