Florida a coronavirus and spring break hotspot
Spring breaks are being cut back or canceled at colleges around the US
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Spring breakers are flocking to Florida this year amid a prolonged coronavirus pandemic to take advantage of its sunny beaches and rapid reopening guidelines, photos and videos show.
It comes as some colleges are cutting back or canceling their spring breaks amid fears that vacation partying could lead to subsequent outbreaks on their campuses.
University of California, Davis is offering students $75 to choose a "staycation" instead of traveling. Texas A&M University scaled down to just a three-day weekend. And the University of Alabama canceled spring break altogether.
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But many students, eager to get outside after nearly a year of pandemic lockdowns, are packing up and heading to the beach.
"Life is normal – with a mask," said a health care worker from Palm Beach, where there is still a county-level mask mandate.
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Andrew Cohen, co-owner of a party boat charter service, said he was nearly booked for the rest of the month in both Tampa and Fort Lauderdale.
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"A lot of them are coming down from the colder states," he told the Associated Press. "And they were just sick of being cooped up for the year."
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Despite the Sunshine State’s relaxed health guidelines and aggressive reopening plan, Centers for Disease Control of Prevention reports indicate coronavirus cases and deaths have declined between Jan. 1 and March 10.
The state has also vaccinated more than 4 million residents, including more than 2.6 million senior citizens, according to state officials. The state’s population is about 21.5 million.
Still, the CDC lists the majority of Florida counties as having a "high" risk for community transmission. The rest are either "substantial" or "moderate." None of the state’s counties carry a "low" risk rating. And it remains a hotspot for coronavirus infection, with the fourth-highest death toll of any state, behind California, New York and Texas.
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And Miami-Dade County, a premium spring break destination, has already seen the most new cases this month.
Yet Miami Beach’s hotel industry expects to see occupancy reach 70% this spring break, 15% lower than usual but significantly higher than the 43% it saw last year at the start of the pandemic.
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Photos from there already show crowded beaches with few masks and little social distancing.
Meanwhile California, which before COVID times would also be an ideal spring break destination but currently has much stricter coronavirus regulations than Florida, has roughly the same infection and death rates.
The big difference, it seems, is that Florida is open for business.
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.