Tourism and transport: Commission's guidance on how to safely resume travel and reboot Europe's tourism in 2020 and beyond*

Date of article: 13/05/2020

Daily News of: 14/05/2020

Country:  EUROPE

Author:

Article language: en

Today, the Commission presents a package of guidelines and recommendations to help Member States gradually lift travel restrictions and allow tourism businesses to reopen, after months of lockdown, while respecting necessary health precautions.

The Commission's guidance aims to offer people the chance to get some well-needed rest, relaxation and fresh air. As soon as the health situation allows, people should be able to catch up with friends and family, in their own EU country or across borders, with all the safety and precautionary measures needed in place.

The package also aims to help the EU tourism sector recover from the pandemic, by supporting businesses and ensuring that Europe continues to be the number one destination for visitors.

The Commission's Tourism and Transport package includes:

  • An overall strategy towards recovery in 2020 and beyond;
  • A common approach to restoring free movement and lifting restrictions at EU internal borders in a gradual and coordinated way;
  • A framework to support the gradual re-establishment of transport whilst ensuring the safety of passengers and personnel;
  • A recommendation which aims to make travel vouchers an attractive alternative to cash reimbursement for consumers;
  • Criteria for restoring tourism activities safely and gradually and for developing health protocols for hospitality establishments such as hotels.

 

For tourists and travellers

The Commission is looking to give people the ability, confidence and safety to travel again with the following measures:

  • Safely restoring freedom of movement and lifting internal border controls:

Free movement and cross-border travel are key to tourism. As Member States manage to reduce the circulation of the virus, blanket restrictions to free movement should be replaced by more targeted measures. If a generalised lifting of restrictions is not justified by the health situation, the Commission proposes a phased and coordinated approach that starts by lifting restrictions between areas or Member States with sufficiently similar epidemiological situations. The approach must also be flexible, including the possibility to reintroduce certain measures if the epidemiological situation requires. Member States should act on the basis of the following 3 criteria:

  • epidemiological, notably focusing on areas where situation is improving, based on guidance by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and using the regional map developed by the ECDC;
  • the ability to apply containment measures throughout the whole journey including at border crossings, including additional safeguards and measures where physical distancing may be difficult to ensure and
  • economic and social considerations, initially prioritising cross-border movement in key areas of activity and including personal reasons.

 

The principle of non-discrimination is of particular importance: when a Member State decides to allow travel into its territory or to specific regions and areas within its territory, it should do so in a non-discriminatory manner – allowing travel from all areas, regions or countries in the EU with similar epidemiological conditions. In the same vein, any restrictions must be lifted without discrimination, to all EU citizens and to all residents of that Member State regardless of their nationality, and should be applied to all parts of the Union in a similar epidemiological situation.

  • Restoring transport services across the EU while protecting the health of transport workers and passengers:

 

The guidelines present general principles for the safe and gradual restoration of passenger transport by air, rail, road and waterways. The guidelines put forth a series of recommendations, such as the need to limit contact between passengers and transport workers, and passengers themselves, reducing, where feasible, the density of passengers.

The guidelines also include indications on the use of personal protective equipment such as face masks and on adequate protocols in case passengers present coronavirus symptoms. The guidelines also make recommendations for each mode of transport and call for coordination among Member States in light of re-establishment of gradual connections between them.

  • Safely resuming tourism services:

The Commission sets out a common framework providing criteria to safely and gradually restore tourism activities and developing health protocols for hotels and other forms of accommodation, to protect the health of both guests and employees. These criteria include epidemiological evidence; sufficient health system capacity being in place for local people and tourists; robust surveillance and monitoring and testing capacity and contact tracing. These guidelines will allow people to safely stay at hotels, camping sites, Bed&Breakfasts or other holiday accommodation establishments, eat and drink at restaurants, bars and cafés and go to beaches and other leisure outdoor areas.

  • Ensuring cross-border interoperability of tracing apps:

Member States, with the support of the Commission, agreed on guidelines to ensure cross-border interoperability between tracing apps so that citizens can be warned of a potential infection with coronavirus also when they travel in the EU. This will guide developers working with national health authorities. Such tracing apps must be voluntary, transparent, temporary, cybersecure, using anonymised data, should rely on Bluetooth technology and be inter-operable across borders as well as across operating systems. Interoperability is crucial: EU citizens must be able to receive alerts of a possible infection in a secure and protected way, wherever they are in the EU, and whatever app they are using. The Commission is supporting Member States in finding the right solution, in line with the principles set out in the EU toolboxand the Commission guidance on data protection.

  • Making vouchers a more attractive option for consumers:

Under EU rules, travellers have the right to choose between vouchers or cash reimbursement for cancelled transport tickets (plane, train, bus/coach, and ferries) or package travel. While reaffirming this right, the Commission's recommendation aims to ensure that vouchers become a viable and more attractive alternative to reimbursement for cancelled trips in the context of the current pandemic, which has also put heavy financial strains on travel operators. The voluntary vouchers should be protected against insolvency of the issuer, with a minimum validity period of 12 months, and be refundable after at most one year, if not redeemed. They should also provide passengers sufficient flexibility, should allow the passengers to travel on the same route under the same service conditions or the travellers to book a package travel contract with the same type of services or of equivalent quality. They should also be transferable to another traveller. 

 

For tourism businesses

The Commission aims to support Europe's tourism sector by:

  • Ensuring liquidity for tourism businesses, in particular SMEs, through:

o  Flexibility under State aid rules allowing Member States to introduce schemes, such as guarantee schemes for vouchers and further liquidity schemes, to support companies in the transport and travel sectors and to ensure that reimbursement claims caused by the coronavirus pandemic are satisfied. The schemes for vouchers can be approved by the Commission very rapidly, upon notification by the Member State concerned.

o   EU funding: EU continues providing immediate liquidity to businesses affected by the crisis through the Coronavirus Response Instrument Initiative, under shared management with Member States. In addition, the Commission has made available up to €8 billion in financing for 100,000 small businesses hit by the crisis, with the European Investment  Fund.

  • Saving jobs with up to €100 billion in financial relief from the SURE programme:

The SURE programme helps Member States cover the costs of national short-time work schemes and similar measures allowing companies to safeguard jobs. The Commission also supports partnerships between employment services, social partners and companies to facilitate reskilling, especially for seasonal workers.

  • Connecting citizens to local tourism offer, promoting local attractions and tourism and Europe as a safe tourist destination:

The Commission will work with Member States to promote a patronage voucher system under which customers can support their favourite hotels or restaurants. The Commission will also promote pan-European communication campaigns featuring Europe as a number one tourist destination. 

To complement short-term measures, the Commission will continue to work with Member States to promote sustainable tourism in line with the European Green Deal and encourage a digital transformation of tourism services to offer more choice, better allocation of resources and new ways of managing travel and tourist flows.

The Commission will organise a European tourism convention with EU institutions, the industry, regions, cities and other stakeholders to jointly build the future of a sustainable, innovative and resilient European tourism ecosystem – the ‘European Agenda for Tourism 2050'.

 

Members of the College said:

Vice-President for Promoting our European Way of Life, Margaritis Schinas, said: "Tourism is vital to the Single Market and its four freedoms and a key contributor to the EU's economic, social and cultural way of life. It has also been deeply impacted by the measures needed to contain COVID-19. As our Member States gradually lift restrictive measures, we are putting in place the foundations for rebooting the tourism eco-system and Single Market in a safe, proportionate way that will prevent the resurgence of the virus within the EU, whilst safeguarding our way of life.”

Commissioner for the Internal Market, Thierry Breton, said: Millions of SMEs and family -run businesses working in accommodation, restaurants, passenger transport and travel agencies risk bankruptcies and job losses – they urgently need to go back to work. We are helping European tourism get back on track while staying healthy and safe. Today we propose a common European approach to managing what will remain a difficult 2020 summer season, while preparing for a more sustainable and digital tourism ecosystem in the future.”

Commissioner for Health and Food Safety, Stella Kyriakides, said: “We know how much European citizens are looking forward to summer and to travel. Their huge sacrifices over the past months will make a cautious and gradual reopening possible - for now. But deconfinement and tourism will not be risk free as long as the virus circulates among us. We need to maintain vigilance, physical distancing and rigorous health precautions across the whole tourism and transport ecosystem to prevent further outbreaks as much as possible. We will not allow our efforts to be lost.”

Commissioner for Justice and Consumers, Didier Reynders, said: “European consumers can be reassured: The Commission will not downgrade their EU rights for reimbursement for cancelled travel. We recommend, however, making vouchers more attractive for those who chose this option. In the meantime, freedom of movement is the right European citizens cherish most. It is important to restore this right as soon as the circumstances allow it.”

Commissioner for Transport, Adina Vălean, said: “We aim to create safe conditions in every mode of transport, to the extent possible, both for people traveling and transport workers. As we re-establish connectivity, these guidelines will provide authorities and  stakeholders a standard framework. Our priority is to restore mobility as soon as possible, but only with clear provisions for safety and health.

 

BACKGROUND:

Europe is home to a vibrant tourism ecosystem. Travel, transport, accommodation, food, recreation or culture, contribute to almost 10% of EU GDP and provide a key source of employment and income in numerous European regions. 267 million Europeans (62% of the population) make at least one private leisure trip per year and 78% of Europeans spend their holidays in their home country or another EU country.

The tourism ecosystem has also been one of the most affected by the heavy restrictions on movement and travel imposed in the wake of Coronavirus outbreak. The World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) foresees a 60% to 80% reduction in international arrivals, amounting to losses of between €840 and €1.100 billion in export revenues worldwide. In Europe, the summer is a crucial season for tourism:during an average summer season (June-August) residents of the EU make 385 million tourism trips and spend 190 billion. 

Today's package follows the pathway set by the Joint European Roadmap published by the Commission on 14 April in cooperation with the European Council. The Roadmap provided a gradual approach to phasing-out containment measures introduced due to the coronavirus outbreak.

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION :

Questions & Answers on Tourism and Travel Package

Questions & Answers on Tracing Apps

Factsheet: The EU helps reboot Europe's Tourism

Factsheet: Travel and tourism in Europe: A practical guidance for travelers and companies

Communication on tourism and transport in 2020 and beyond

Communication on a phased and coordinated approach to free movement

Communication: Guidelines on transport and connectivity

Communication: Guidelines on tourism services and hospitality establishments

Recommendation on vouchers

*Updated on 13/05/2020 at 15:25  

 

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National Ombudsman calls for greater clarity (Annual Report 2019)

Date of article: 14/05/2020

Daily News of: 14/05/2020

Country:  Netherlands

Author:

Article language: en

A call for clarity!’ This is the title of the third joint annual report published by the National Ombudsman, the Ombudsman for Children and the Ombudsman for Veterans, and presented to parliament today by the National Ombudsman, Reinier van Zutphen. The way in which we as a society have organised our public services has become very complex in recent years. Not least for our citizens. They are expected to take a more active role and to organise things for themselves. But how they should go about this and who they can turn to for help or support is often unclear. There is a lack of clear guidance and structure. The Ombudsman has appealed to parliament to make smart and clear choices so that policy and implementation are future-proof. That way everyone will know where they stand, today and tomorrow.

In recent years, a major shift towards decentralisation has been implemented with the aim of bringing the government closer to its citizens. In 2019, the National Ombudsman, the Ombudsman for Children and the Ombudsman for Veterans found that this is not yet the case. In fact, the distance between the government and its citizens seems to have increased rather than decreased. Reinier van Zutphen explains, “In almost every field in which we are active, we found evidence of a lack of structure and clarity. Not only the citizens themselves, but also local and regional authorities, lack clear guidance or the opportunity to influence their situation. And if municipalities outsource certain tasks to other organisations, many in the private sector, where does the ultimate responsibility lie? As a result, people find themselves dealing with a different kind of government, one they no longer feel they know. This calls for a government that can provide clarity and structure.”

Citizens are entitled to proper treatment

Citizens are entitled to proper treatment, even in areas where the government no longer provides direct support. It is precisely by focusing on the propriety of government action that the National Ombudsman is able to call government bodies to account in cases where they seem to have lost sight of citizens’ interests. This also means that the National Ombudsman has a role to play when public services for the common good are provided by third parties, private sector or otherwise. That role is to continue helping people to find the assistance and support they need and to consistently remind the government of its responsibilities. For the Ombudsman for Children, the Convention on the Rights of the Child provides the ethical compass; for the Ombudsman for Veterans it is the special duty of care. This is how we come to the aid of citizens, veterans and children who encounter problems in their dealings with government agencies and other organisations.

Today, citizens and politicians expect more from the government than ever before. Problems often turn out to be highly complex and not limited to a single field. The government seems to be overwhelmed by the continually growing number of new policy questions. In order to meet expectations while delivering quality in the future, choices need to be made. Above all, people want honest and simple answers which show that the government understands their needs. The last thing they want is for things to become more complicated. But it often seems as if the government’s knee-jerk response is to make things more complicated rather than simpler when faced with new questions, priorities or technical possibilities. And, if the implementation becomes too complex, to demand a special complaints officer or an expert committee be appointed to solve the problems.

A call for clarity

The National Ombudsman and the Ombudsman for Children are therefore making a fourfold appeal to politicians, administrators and executives:

  • Be honest about what the government does and does not do. Be transparent about the role of government and that of the citizen in specific situations.
  • Trust your citizens. The government is expecting more and more from its citizens, yet often fails to give them the options or the trust to organise things for themselves. A mistake is easily made. The government is there to help in such cases, not to impose sanctions that only make the problems worse.
  • Put the child’s best interests first in all life decisions and involve the child in the decision-making process. The central question is: what does this child need and how are we going to make it happen?
  • Provide clarity, guidance and structure! Make smart and clear choices so that policy and implementation are future-proof. That way everyone will know where they stand, now and in the future.

Unprecedented circumstances

This annual report covers the year 2019: the year before the coronavirus transformed life throughout the world at a single stroke. We greatly appreciate the tremendous efforts being made by central government, municipalities, healthcare professionals, emergency services, the business community and many others in the Netherlands and beyond in dealing with the corona crisis. Within a short timeframe, unprecedented steps have been taken to protect the health and safety of the Dutch people, but also to safeguard the economic position of individual citizens and businesses, and to ensure social cohesion. It is an achievement that shows creativity and decisiveness. But even in the current situation, we will continue to perform our duty of drawing attention to the needs of those most deeply affected, such as small businesses, children, the elderly, informal caregivers and veterans. It is essential that the measures taken by the government at this time are as effective as possible when it comes to helping those in need.

In this video National Ombudsman and Ombudsman for Veterans Reinier van Zutphen outlines the main points of the joint annual report.

 

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(Equinet) Equality Today | Issue 1 | May 2020

Date of article: 12/05/2020

Daily News of: 13/05/2020

Country:  EUROPE

Author:

Article language: en

Equinet meets (online) EU Commissioners to discuss equality and COVID-19 aftermath

Equinet representatives were invited to share their expertise on the impact of COVID-19 on equality in Europe with Vice-President Věra Jourová, and Commissioner for Equality, Helena Dalli in a videoconference on 22 April. The Commissioners underlined the importance of putting equality on the agenda when addressing this crisis, rather than focusing solely on economic concerns. They also recognised the importance of having independent equality bodies, and of protecting them from being undermined or underfunded in the context of the crisis. Read more about the main takeaways from the online meeting on our website!  

 

Hot off the press

Taking Stock” is Equinet’s latest report on the work of equality bodies on European equality policy strategies, equal treatment Directives, and standards for equality bodies. It is a must read for anyone keen to learn more about current equality and non-discrimination practices across Europe. The European Commission will also use our report in its review of equal treatment legislation.   
 

Equinet response to COVID-19

Based on responses from national equality bodies (NEBs), the Equinet Secretariat has published examples of discrimination cases received by NEBs. We are regularly posting blog entries on the equality effects of the COVID-19 crisis. Make sure to keep checking our COVID-19 response page. Have a look at some of our publications below.  

 

Health workers facing discrimination

Health workers have been universally acclaimed as the heroes in the current crisis, saving lives on the frontline while risking their own. However, they too can be victims of blatant discriminatory acts. This blog post dives into this issue. 

 

#StayingHome when home is not safe

All over the world, we have been urged to #StayHome. But what if home is the most dangerous place to stay? In this blog post we explore the rise of domestic violence and how the lockdown measures act as a catalyzer.  

 

Being queer under COVID-19

The ongoing health crisis is intensifying difficulties for marginalized groups in our society. Our guest blog post by ILGA-Europe addresses the impact on LGBTI persons.  

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(Court of Justice of the EU) Judgments of the General Court in Cases Volotea v Commission

Date of article: 13/05/2020

Daily News of: 13/05/2020

Country:  EUROPE

Author:

Article language: en

Link: https://curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/docs/application/pdf/2020-05/cp200059en.pdf

Languages: bg es cs da de et el en fr hr it lv lt mt nl pl pt ro sk sl fi sv

 General Court of the European Union

PRESS RELEASE No 59/20 Luxembourg, 13 May 2020
Judgments in Case T-607/17

Volotea v Commission, T-716/17 Germanwings v Commission, and T-8/18 easyJet v Commission 
 
The General Court dismisses the actions against the Commission decision declaring illegal the aid from Italy to several airlines serving Sardinia
The operators of the Sardinian airports were not the beneficiaries of the aid but merely intermediaries between the Autonomous Region and the airlines, which must therefore reimburse it the public aid
By the judgments easyJet v Commission (T-8/18), Volotea v Commission (T-607/17) and Germanwings v Commission (T-716/17), delivered on 13 May 2020, the General Court dismissed the actions brought by the airlines easyJet, Volotea and Germanwings (‘the airlines’) seeking the annulment of the decision of the European Commission of 29 July 2016 which declared partly incompatible with the internal market the aid granted by Italy to several European airlines, including the three at issue, serving Sardinia.1
According to that decision, the aid scheme instituted, in Italy, by the Autonomous Region of Sardinia (‘the Region’) for the development of air transport constituted State aid granted not to the operators of the main Sardinian airports (Alghero, Cagliari-Elmas and Olbia), but to the airlines concerned.
In 2010, a regional law,2 notified by Italy to the Commission pursuant to Article 108(3) TFEU, authorised the financing of the island's airports with a view to the development of air transport, inter alia through the de-seasonalisation of air routes to and from Sardinia. That regional law was implemented by a series of measures adopted by the executive of the Region (the regional law and the adopted measures are hereinafter referred to together as the ‘measures at issue’).

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