This was published 4 years ago
Returning travellers will need to fork out $3000 for NSW hotel quarantine
By Kate Aubusson and Andrew Taylor
International travellers flying into NSW will pay $3000 for their two-week stint in hotel quarantine from midnight on Saturday, July 18, no matter where they ordinarily reside in Australia.
Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the decision to charge all returning travellers, including Australian citizens, came after the national cabinet announced caps on the number of people arriving in Australia on Friday.
"Australian residents have been given plenty of time to return home, and we feel it is only fair that they cover some of the costs of their hotel accommodation," Ms Berejiklian said.
Travellers who buy their flight before 11.59pm AEST on Sunday, July 12, will not be charged for their hotel quarantine no matter when they ultimately arrive in Australia.
On Friday, Ms Berejiklian indicated that NSW would charge overseas visitors for hotel quarantine rather than NSW residents, but the new charges announced on Sunday apply to all travellers.
From Saturday, July 18, travellers arriving in NSW will be charged $3000 for one adult, $1000 for each additional adult and $500 per child aged three and over. Children under three years old will stay free of charge.
The new charges mean a family of two parents and two children aged over three will pay $5000 for their 14-day stay in a designated quarantine hotel.
Other state and territories are expected to introduce similar charges, and Queensland already charges returning travellers.
Sydney's quarantine hotels have taken the bulk of Australia's returned travellers since Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews called for all international flights to be diverted from Melbourne amid the city's worsening coronavirus resurgence.
The NSW minister responsible for hotel quarantine Stuart Ayres said contending with the large numbers of returning travellers to Australia "posed a major logistical challenge, however it’s one that has been successfully managed".
The new charges include accommodation and meals. The state government will still foot the bill for security, transport and logistics.
At the end of their quarantine period travellers will be given an invoice to pay within 30 days. Hardship arrangements will be available for families that will struggle to find the money.
More than 35,000 Australian citizens and permanent residents returning from overseas processed through the hotel quarantine system since March 29. About two-thirds were NSW residents and the rest were residents of other states and territories in transit.
"Over the past few weeks, the majority of new COVID-19 cases in NSW have come from overseas travellers in hotel quarantine," Mr Ayres said. On Saturday, five of NSW's seven new COVID-19 cases were travellers in hotel quarantine.
"NSW Police, NSW Health officials and the accommodation industry will continue to work together to provide the nation’s leading hotel quarantine system," he said.
On Friday Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the number of international arrivals would be cut by more than half, resulting in 4000 fewer arrivals per week and a nationwide review of hotel quarantine.
Australians living overseas have been rattled by the move. Matthew Spence, who worked in the aviation industry in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, until he was made redundant on June 30, said flights to Sydney were sparse and he was booked on the first available flight on July 18.
"I am concerned the intake cut will result in flight cancellations, further adding to the stress of Aussies trying to return," Mr Spence said. "If you are an Australian citizen you have the expectation that you can always return home when you need to."
Mr Spence said he didn't have a problem with paying the costs of hotel quarantine, but "we should not be blaming people for not returning earlier without understanding their predicament".
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