Guest Editorials, Opinion

The pandemic is global; the road to recovery is, too

The Biden administration announced two important steps that should bolster the nation’s recovery from the pandemic. Last Tuesday, the White House said it would lift travel restrictions at the borders with Canada and Mexico, reestablishing some ties after months of lockdowns spurred by COVID-19. And last Wednesday, the administration unveiled a brokered agreement with major ports, retailers and shippers to operate around the clock, a move that should ease the backlog in consumer goods. They are more reminders that America must confront a global pandemic on a global front.

The U.S. will lift restrictions at its land borders with Canada and Mexico for fully vaccinated foreign nationals in early November, opening the border to non-essential travel for the first time since the pandemic exploded in March 2020. The closures have been devastating for many families and border communities, and reopening them is another step toward normalizing tourism and trade along these busy corridors.

The administration also moved to clear a logjam in the supply chain that’s holding up the delivery of consumer goods. President Joe Biden announced that the Port of Los Angeles would begin operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week, following a commitment the Port of Long Beach announced two weeks ago. These are among the largest ports in the world, and together, they account for 40% of the shipping containers that America imports into the country.

The extended hours will help speed the offloading of dozens of containers ships that are currently waiting to berth. Biden also announced Wednesday that the nation’s largest retailer, Walmart, and other companies, including Target, Home Depot, FedEx and UPS, had agreed to vastly expand operations in off-peak hours, in what the president called a “step toward moving our entire freight transportation and logistical supply chain, nationwide, to a 24/7 system.” The shortages have helped increase inflation, which jumped more than expected last month, and have also helped sap Biden’s approval ratings.

The administration waited too long to act, but these moves will grease the economy and inject some much-needed confidence among Americans as the holiday season approaches. More locally, the same’s true for the return of the cruise industry to Tampa Bay.  Cruises normally bring in more than one-fifth of Port Tampa Bay’s annual revenue. Their return marks the reemergence of a vital industry and an engine for a growing port.

Of course, there’s only so much that opening the borders, working midnight hours, and resuming cruises can do to strengthen the global recovery. The pandemic has shut down manufacturing and closed transportation loops across the worldwide supply chain. And many countries that play a key role in producing consumer goods are still plagued by low vaccination rates. Returning the international order to normal will take time.

But opening the ports and borders is an essential step in managing the pandemic. And it shows America’s self-interest in upping the fight against COVID-19 abroad.

This editorial first appeared in Tampa Bay Times on Monday. This commentary should be considered another point of view and not necessarily the opinion or editorial policy of The Dominion Post.