You people kept saying that the vaccine passport wasn’t coming to America.
But it’s already here.
AP:
Seeking to beat back a COVID-19 surge, Honolulu will soon require patrons of restaurants, bars, museums, theaters and other establishments to show proof of vaccination or a recent negative test for the disease, the city’s mayor said Monday.
The move comes after the highly contagious delta variant caused a surge of infections across the state. Before the Fourth of July, Hawaii had a seven-day average of 46 daily cases. On Monday, that figure hit 874.
Mayor Rick Blangiardi said the program called “Safe Access Oahu” takes effect on Sept. 13. Honolulu joins other cities such as New Orleans, New York, San Francisco and the U.S. territory of Guam that have implemented similar requirements.
Children under the age of 12 will be exempt. Employees of the establishments will have to show proof of vaccination or undergo weekly testing, Blangiardi said. He said businesses that don’t comply could be fined or potentially shut down.
The mayor said the program was a way to control the spread of COVID-19 while avoiding a lockdown.
“This is a common sense, logical approach. We’ve been very much in favor of life going on,” Blangiardi said.
They’re implementing this in the most liberal places first, and then it will slowly spread out across the country. They won’t even necessarily need a national mandate.
There eventually will be a national mandate. But by that time, it will have already been normalized.