Privacy Advocates Slam NYC's New COVID Checkpoints for Travelers
New York City opened new traveler checkpoints on Thursday to register visitors and residents returning from nearly three dozen states who are required to quarantine for 14 days — an initiative that drew swift criticism from privacy advocates.
The checkpoints target busy entry points like Penn Station and are intended to reduce the city’s COVID-19 infection rate and forestall a second wave.
Authorities said this week a fifth of all new COVID-19 cases in New York City have been from travelers entering the city from other states.
Teams began stopping travelers arriving in the city by train on Thursday, requiring them to complete a state Department of Health traveler form and warning they could face fines as high as $10,000 for failing to quarantine.
The checkpoints don’t involve the police, but the city’s Sheriff’s Office, which enforces civil law, said it would pull over motorists at random on city bridges.
“If we’re going to hold at this level of health and safety in this city and get better, we have to deal with the fact that the quarantine must be applied consistently to anyone who’s traveled,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
Despite the specter of fines, officials acknowledged the effort relies on voluntary compliance.
“We’re not going to be in everyone’s apartment monitoring them,” de Blasio said. “Even if we’re not going to be able to reach every single person with a checkpoint, I think it’s going to help really get the message across.”
The campaign was criticized for sowing confusion and raising questions about how travelers’ personal information would be retained.
It’s not clear how long the registration checkpoints will remain in place. De Blasio said the city will use the approach “for as long as we think makes sense and as extensively as we think makes sense.”
“Calling a law enforcement action a public health measure does not make it one,” according to Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union.
“We know that law enforcement should not have any role in contact tracing — it is ineffective and raises serious questions on inequitable enforcement and what information will be mandated.”
Sheriff Joseph Fucito said his teams would stop every sixth or eighth car on bridges and follow “a uniform procedure that will be applied to all New Yorkers.”
“We’re looking at a full-fledged checkpoint where it is viable,” Fucito said, “and we’re also looking at individualized stops where we think it would be more suited to avoid having a traffic condition.”
Ted Long, executive director of Test and Trace Corps, said his team was working “as fast as humanly possible to set up” a support system for travelers required to quarantine, including offers of free food delivery and in some cases even hotel stays.
He said officials have made more than 86,000 phone calls and sent more than 20,000 text messages to travelers entering New York City from states with high infection rates.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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