Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Federal Tax Revenue Increase in 2021


TAX

U.S. sees biggest revenue surge in 44 years despite pandemic

Revenues jumped 18 percent in the fiscal year that just ended, analysts say — the biggest one-year increase since 1977.

The Treasury Department building is shown.

The Treasury Department is set to release this week its final budget numbers for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

By BRIAN FALER

10/12/2021 12:14 PM EDT

Despite a pandemic, a recession and a slew of tax cuts, federal tax receipts are booming.

Revenues jumped 18 percent in the fiscal year that just ended, analysts say — the biggest one-year increase since 1977.

That translates into $627 billion more than in 2020, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which estimates that, for the first time, total government revenues topped $4 trillion.

“They are just booming,” said Mark Booth, a former top revenue forecaster at the agency. “It is very unusual.”

Though Democrats are hammering the rich for not paying their fair share in taxes, the increase is being driven by levies primarily paid by the well-to-do. For example, corporate tax receipts leapt 75 percent, CBO says. At $370 billion, they easily top where they were immediately before Republicans slashed the corporate rate as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

The surge has gotten relatively little notice, obscured perhaps by the government’s towering budget deficits and congressional battles over taxes and spending.

It is highly unusual, though, for the government to see a big wave of revenue in the wake of an economic downturn. Typically, receipts crash following recessions because, as people’s incomes fall, they owe less to the Treasury.

The coronavirus downturn was much more bifurcated, however, with higher-income people, who pay most federal taxes, doing far better than low earners.

“Usually revenues get hit hard in the year after a recession,” said Booth. “This time it is the opposite.”

The Treasury Department is set to release this week its final budget numbers for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. Those are expected to closely track estimates CBO published Friday.


The increases came across all major categories of taxes, according to CBO, with corporate receipts seeing the biggest jump, thanks to better-than-expected profits.

Payments by big companies had plunged in the wake of Republicans’ 2017 tax cuts, falling by almost a third to $205 billion the following year. They didn’t really begin to bounce back until this past fiscal year and then recovered to an extent that surprised analysts.

CBO repeatedly revised upward its estimates, and still came in too low. At $370 billion, the corporate tax haul would be the biggest, at least in nominal terms, since 2007.

Another big increase — 33 percent — came with “non-withheld” receipts, which include a variety of taxes that are not subject to withholding by employers.

CBO did not provide a breakdown of those levies. But big changes there are usually driven by capital gains realizations and payments by unincorporated businesses. And the agency previously upped its estimates of capital gains taxes over the past year.

Individual income taxes were up 27.5 percent, CBO estimates. Those too are disproportionately paid by the well-to-do, with 80 percent coming from the top 10 percent of earners.

The increases came despite lawmakers approving a series of tax cuts in the wake of the pandemic. At the time, they were projected to cost nearly $500 billion in 2021 — which would make them bigger than the first year’s worth of tax cuts included in Republicans’ 2017 legislation.

But some of the pandemic-related tax cuts, such as an employee retention credit meant to help keep workers on the payroll, were less popular than lawmakers anticipated — just because Congress cuts takes doesn’t mean everyone necessarily takes advantage of them.

The overall revenue increase wasn't only an anomaly compared to 2020, when receipts fell by just 1.2 percent to $3.420 trillion. Revenues in 2021 still rose 17 percent even when compared to 2019 levels, before the pandemic hit.

Receipts are volatile, but double-digit annual increases are uncommon — there have only been 11 such instances since 1977.

In July, CBO predicted receipts in 2022 would amount to 18.1 percent of GDP, the most in 20 years. Now it seems like the agency will have to revise that too upwards.

Above is fromhttps://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/12/tax-revenue-surge-pandemic-515792?cid=apn

VA Nursing Home in Danville did not use proper COVID guidelines

USA TODAY

Illinois VA nursing home didn't follow federal guidelines to contain COVID-19. 11 residents died.

Donovan Slack, USA TODAY

Tue, October 12, 2021, 11:07 AM

Leaders and staff at a federal veterans’ nursing home in Illinois mismanaged a coronavirus outbreak that killed 11 residents in fall 2020, well after employees had been put on notice about the danger the pandemic posed to its elderly population, a government investigation found.

A staff member exposed at home was denied a test and told to just wear a mask while finishing a shift caring for residents. The employee tested positive the next day.

Testing was inconsistent, even after the virus started to spread within the Veterans Affairs complex in Danville, in a rural part of the state near the Indiana border. Isolation of exposed individuals – even those who tested positive – was haphazard.

“Direct care staff described chaos and a lack of awareness of what to do,” the inspector general at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs concluded in a report released last month.

The outbreak lasted for five weeks in October and November 2020. During those two months, 92 staff and 239 patients tested positive at the facility, which includes a nursing home, hospital and outpatient clinic.

Marine Corps veteran Mike Manning, 73, was one of those who died, but his daughter said VA officials didn't cite the virus on his death certificate until she called to complain.

Marine Corps veteran Mike Manning, 73, died of COVID-19 on Nov. 17, 2020, during an outbreak at the Veterans Affairs nursing home in Danville, Ill.

Marine Corps veteran Mike Manning, 73, died of COVID-19 on Nov. 17, 2020, during an outbreak at the Veterans Affairs nursing home in Danville, Ill.

Caitlin Darling told USA TODAY she believes the staff who cared for her father did their best, but management may have left them ill-equipped to handle the outbreak.

"I don't know how many guys they ended up losing in my dad's ward," she said, "but I think last time I asked about it, it was eight out of 18, 10 out of 18."

Nursing homes were hot spots for coronavirus

COVID-19 tore through long-term care facilities across the country, accounting for a third of coronavirus deaths during the first year of the pandemic. Tragic tales of deaths due to problems with testing, personal protective equipment and infection control emerged at state veterans’ homes in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Texas.

The inspector general’s report on the VA Illiana Health Care System in Danville is the first to publicly detail extensive breakdowns at a facility operated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The agency runs a system of 134 nursing homes that serve roughly 9,000 veterans a day across 46 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

An examination by the Government Accountability Office in June found there were 3,944 cases and 327 deaths among residents of VA nursing homes from March 2020 through mid-February. The cumulative case rate among residents was 17%, and the death rate was 1%.

Those numbers are a fraction of the toll in nursing homes nationwide: In a study published by the JAMA Network, researchers estimate there were 592,629 cases and 118,335 deaths last year. The death rate among long-term care residents as of March was 8%, according to the COVID Tracking Project.

A nursing home resident is wheeled on a stretcher from an ambulance into the Canterbury Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center on April 14, 2020. At the time, the nursing home was one of the worst clusters of fatalities from COVID-19 in the country, with 42 deaths.

A nursing home resident is wheeled on a stretcher from an ambulance into the Canterbury Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center on April 14, 2020. At the time, the nursing home was one of the worst clusters of fatalities from COVID-19 in the country, with 42 deaths.

Deaths and infections at VA nursing homes varied, like they did at nursing homes overall. The highest cumulative case rates from March 2020 to mid-February ranged from 38% of residents at the VA nursing home in Los Angeles to 59% at the facility in Montrose, New York.

The highest death rates were at facilities in the Northeast, where they peaked at 8% to 12% during the early months of the pandemic.

The facility in Danville had the fifth-highest death rate – from zero to 6% in a month. The true rate is probably higher. After the GAO counted seven deaths during the outbreak, the inspector general found four other deaths related to COVID-19.

The watchdog launched an investigation after receiving complaints in October 2020 as the outbreak unfolded. Investigators concluded a lack of planning and urgency contributed to failures in testing, training and other infection-control measures.

The facility didn’t provide enough respiratory protection and training for nursing staff and defied a national directive by continuing group therapy sessions, investigators found.

A resident with confirmed COVID-19 was left overnight with a roommate, they found. The roommate wandered the halls and into communal areas before testing positive for the coronavirus.

Officials at the Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington issued a statement that they "deeply regret" coronavirus deaths at an Illinois facility.

Officials at the Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington issued a statement that they "deeply regret" coronavirus deaths at an Illinois facility.

VA officials extended condolences to loved ones of the veterans who died. In a statement provided to USA TODAY on Friday, VA officials in Washington said they "deeply regret" what happened.

Staci Williams, acting director of the Danville VA facility since August, said, “The cases in our Community Living Center (nursing home) impacted our entire staff and reinforced our commitment to learning and improving from the experience.”

Inadequate planning and a lack of urgency

The Danville VA facility, about 90 minutes west of Indianapolis, has primary care and mental health clinics and an acute care medical center with 38 hospital and psychiatric inpatient beds. The facility’s nursing home has more than 100 beds spread across several units, which provide rehabilitation services and long-term care for Alzheimer’s, dementia and other ailments.

When the virus hit last year, administrators developed a 46-item action plan covering everything from staff and visitor screening to signage and personal protective equipment. The facility set up a command center staffed with specialists in infection, quality control and emergency management. The director held town halls with staff. They planned to take coronavirus patients from the community if the need arose.

The inspector general found several critical breakdowns. The action plan included only two items specific to the nursing home – one about providing staff and space for training and another about screening people who entered.

By late June, after the rural area around Danville escaped the waves of infections reported in the Northeast and other urban areas, the director of the VA facility reduced the frequency of town hall meetings and curtailed operations at the command center.

Staff in nursing home units were not included in the facility’s respiratory protection program, so they weren’t all fit-tested and issued N95 masks or trained on the use of other respirators.

Though staff had planned what to do with patients from outside the facility, the inspector general found, “the Facility Director acknowledged that an internal outbreak was not part of the considerations.”

Staff with COVID-19 continued working, untested

The facility was ill-prepared Oct. 12, 2020, when a staffer in a nursing home unit developed a cough and learned that a close family member had tested positive.

Managers told investigators that an associate director told them the employee should work the remaining six hours of a shift. The associate director denied being consulted.

The staff member wasn’t tested and was told to put on a mask and keep working.

“This failure resulted in an employee, who later tested positive for COVID-19, providing direct patient care,” the inspector general found.

Under national VA guidance, after an employee tests positive, all staff and residents should be tested as soon as possible. The inspector general found two-thirds of staff in one Danville nursing home ward, nicknamed “Victory,” and 22% of staff in another, nicknamed “Unity,” were tested on their next shift.

“Three Victory and two Unity staff worked multiple shifts between October 13-19, 2020, before testing occurred and ultimately tested positive,” the inspector general reported.

The Soldiers' Home in Chelsea, Mass., is one of the state-run veterans’ facilities in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Texas that were hit hard in the early days of the pandemic. The VA provided assistance to the Chelsea and Holyoke Soldiers' Homes.

The Soldiers' Home in Chelsea, Mass., is one of the state-run veterans’ facilities in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Texas that were hit hard in the early days of the pandemic. The VA provided assistance to the Chelsea and Holyoke Soldiers' Homes.

Investigators found that staff treated two residents with aerosol-generating equipment such as nebulizers without precautions to contain the droplets. The two residents tested positive.

Group therapy sessions continued. In the days after the initial staff member’s diagnosis, five residents were diagnosed with COVID-19 shortly after attending group sessions with several residents. Before the outbreak, staff said, residents did not wear masks to the sessions, though the facilitator did.

A nursing home manager and recreation therapists told investigators they didn’t know about the directive to cancel group activities.

“Recreation therapists described their concern for both the physical and emotional well-being of the CLC (nursing home) residents and shared they wanted to do the best they could with the information that they had,” the inspector general said.

Resident quarantined, infected

Mike Manning had been at the Danville VA nursing home since January 2020, his daughter said.

Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and dementia, he had deteriorated in a matter of months, from driving, living alone and hanging out in a coffee shop in Springfield, Illinois, to needing the kind of care provided at the VA’s skilled nursing facility in Danville.

"He was not happy," Darling said. "Part of what kept him there and made him stop fighting me was COVID happened. And I said, Dad, you need to stay there where you're gonna be safe."

U.S. Bank in Springfield, Ill., displays five of Mike Manning's paintings of the area in its lobby.

U.S. Bank in Springfield, Ill., displays five of Mike Manning's paintings of the area in its lobby.

In late September, as part of pandemic safety protocols, Manning was quarantined in a room on the Victory ward for 14 days after having a medical test outside the facility, his daughter said. When he got out, he tested negative and was "out and about" on the ward and engaged in programming and his favorite pastime, painting. Within weeks, he was infected and had full-blown, double-lung pneumonia.

“I was a little astounded,” she said.

She said nursing staff told her a couple of other people on the ward had tested positive.

Isolation failures, delays

The inspector general's report, which does not identify veterans by name, detailed incidents when veterans who had tested positive were allowed to remain on their wards.

Shortly after 9 p.m. Oct. 20, a lab notified a doctor that two residents had COVID-19.

One of the veterans had a roommate who was known to wander the halls, and a nurse voiced concerns about leaving the infected veteran in the same room. A doctor decided not to move anyone that night since the roommate had already been exposed.

The infected residents were scheduled to be transferred to a quarantined COVID-19 unit the next morning. That didn’t happen until that evening – 20 hours after the lab results came in.

Staff said that during the ensuing hours, there was confusion about who was supposed to care for infected residents and which isolation protocols to follow.

The exposed roommate paced the ward, “including communal areas where other residents were congregated.”

It was about this time, between Oct. 20 and 22, that facility leaders met to discuss what to do about the outbreak. A plan was finalized Oct. 22 – seven months into the pandemic.

The outbreak continued until Nov. 17, when the last infected resident died.

Manning's daughter said she was allowed to visit him a few days before he died.

"When I went to pick up his stuff, the charge nurse, the other nurses that came out to bring his stuff out, were all sobbing – I mean, they are so heartbroken,” Darling said.

She donated a piece of his artwork to the facility, a painting of Abraham Lincoln, whose words became the motto of the VA: "to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan.”

“Because they're the federal government, they can just go, ‘Oops,’” Darling said. “I don’t want their condolences. I want my dad.”

When investigators conducted a surprise visit in February, they found two employees on a quarantined COVID-19 unit not wearing masks properly. The facility director told investigators he was concerned about the facility’s culture and a lack of accountability on the wards. He has since left the VA.

The acting director pledged to have fixes in place by the end of March.

“As health care professionals, we find it difficult to accept the loss," Williams wrote in response to the findings, "especially as our staff were heavily invested in providing quality care and maintaining patient and staff safety throughout this pandemic.”

Contributing: Jayme Fraser

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: COVID-19 outbreak mismanaged at VA nursing home, kills 11 residents

Above is from:  https://www.yahoo.com/news/va-nursing-home-illinois-didnt-090013283.html

October 12: Johns Hopkins COVID 19 Report

COVID-19 Situation Report

Editor: Alyson Browett, MPH

Contributors: Clint Haines, MS; Natasha Kaushal, MSPH; Amanda Kobokovich, MPH; Christina Potter, MSPH; Matthew Shearer, MPH; Marc Trotochaud, MSPH; and, Rachel A. Vahey, MHS.

WEBINAR: Please join the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security for a webinar, Lessons from eMed: COVID-19 At Home Testing and Verifying the Results, on October 19, 2021 at 10am ET. We will discuss the ongoing importance of COVID-19 testing and the verification of testing results at-home. Please register here.

EXTENDED PRIMARY VACCINE SERIES On October 11, the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization recommended additional doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines for immunocompromised individuals. The recommendation applies to all 7 vaccines that have received an Emergency Use Listing (EUL) from the WHO and to all individuals who are moderately or severely immunocompromised individuals. SAGE also recommended a third dose of the Sinopharm and Sinovac vaccines for individuals aged 60 years and older. The advisory group emphasized that countries should initially prioritize administering the full original vaccine regimen to increase vaccination coverage, but an additional dose would provide extra protection for individuals at the highest risk for severe disease.

Notably, SAGE clearly distinguished its updated guidance from booster dose policies being implemented in some countries, including several in Europe, Israel, and the US. Specifically, the additional doses recommended under the new SAGE guidance are intended “as part of an extended primary series since [immunocompromised] individuals are less likely to respond adequately to vaccination” rather than as a general boost to protection for otherwise healthy individuals. The SAGE experts met for 4 days to discuss myriad vaccine-related issues, including non-pandemic topics such as the world’s first malaria vaccine, and the full meeting report is expected to be published in December. Reportedly, SAGE will address waning immunity and the need for broader booster doses in healthy individuals at a meeting scheduled for November 11.

MOLNUPIRAVIR EUA REQUEST Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics on October 11 submitted an application with the US FDA for Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) of molnupiravir, an investigation oral antiviral medication, for the treatment of mild-to-moderate COVID-19 in adults at high risk of severe disease. Notably, if authorized by the FDA, the drug would be the first COVID-19 treatment to be administered orally, as all other authorized or approved medications are delivered intravenously or via injection. The companies’ submission is based on a Phase 3 clinical trial interim analysis showing molnupiravir reduced the risk of hospitalization or death by about half when compared with people who received a placebo. The data are not yet published or peer-reviewed. An effective therapeutic that is taken by people recovering at home could relieve some pressure on hospitals, particularly in areas with low vaccination rates.

Two Indian generic drug manufacturers last week requested permission to end late-stage clinical trials of generic versions of molnupiravir, after the drug did not show “significant efficacy” among people with moderate COVID-19 disease. A Merck spokesperson noted that the Indian studies defined moderate disease differently than the FDA and included patients with more severe disease. The Indian companies are continuing to research the treatment among people with mild COVID-19.

COVID-19 IN PREGNANCY Echoing guidance by the US CDC, England’s National Health Service (NHS England) on October 11 encouraged pregnant people to get vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 and released data showing that, since July, nearly 1 in 5 of England’s most critically ill COVID-19 patients—those who required intensive care unit support including extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)—have been unvaccinated pregnant women. Notably, of all women between the ages of 16 and 49 who have required ECMO in an intensive care unit, 32% of them have been pregnant, up from 6% at the beginning of the pandemic. NHS England is working to dispel misinformation and fears surrounding SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, pointing to safety data showing the shots are safe for pregnant individuals and their fetuses. According to data from the CDC, COVID-19 poses a significantly higher risk to pregnant people compared with non-pregnant people.

Several other recently released studies suggest that pregnant people with symptomatic COVID-19 are at a higher risk of emergency complications and other adverse perinatal and neonatal outcomes. A not-yet-peer-reviewed study presented over the weekend at the Anesthesiology 2021 Annual Meeting and a peer-reviewed study published October 10 in the Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine showed that pregnant people with COVID-19 who were symptomatic had an increased risk of giving birth in emergency circumstances and were more likely to have complications endangering their newborns, compared with those who had asymptomatic COVID-19 or who were not infected. Researchers writing in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology found that the recent surge of the Delta variant was associated with increased morbidity among pregnant people with COVID-19, particularly in underserved populations with low vaccine acceptance, prompting them to highlight the urgency of preventive measures during pregnancy, including vaccination. Additionally, experts attending the recent American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) virtual meeting discussed neonatal outcomes, an apparent increase in preterm birth incidence among infected pregnant people compared with the 2019 incidence, as well as higher-than-expected maternal mortality among pregnant people testing positive at or around the day of delivery. All of the studies support emerging trends showing that COVID-19 can severely impact pregnant people and neonates, and provide evidence that vaccination is critically important for this population.

MENTAL HEALTH Prior to World Mental Health Day on October 10, a study published online on October 8 in The Lancet documented a grim and startling rise in cases of major depressive disorder (53.2 million new cases; 27.6% increase) and anxiety disorders (76.2 million new cases; 25.6% increase) globally from January 1, 2020 to January 29, 2021. The study was a systematic review of the prevalence of major depressive disorder and anxiety orders during the COVID-19 pandemic across various comprehensive sources, culminating in a meta-regression to estimate the rise in these 2 disorder types during the pandemic associated with COVID-19 impact indicators (e.g. mobility, daily SARS-CoV-2 infection rate). Impact indicators were found to be associated with increased prevalence of major depressive disorder and anxiety disorders, particularly among women and younger age groups.

The US CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) also published a similar study last week on national and state trends related to anxiety and depression during the pandemic. Findings noted that anxiety severity scores and depression severity scores increased from August 2020 to December 2020 before decreasing until June 2021.

RACIAL/ETHNIC DISPARITIES American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN), Black, and Latino individuals in the US have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, with the disease causing more deaths by population size—both directly and indirectly—among these groups when compared with White or Asian populations. In a study published last week in the Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers reported that during the first 10 months of the pandemic (March-December 2020), an estimated 477,200 excess deaths occurred in the US than would have been expected based on 2019 data. Of these deaths, about 74% were directly attributable to COVID-19. After adjusting for age, overall excess deaths per 100,000 persons in 2020 were 2 to 3 times higher among AI/AN, Black, and Latino individuals compared with White and Asian individuals. Although the reasons for excess mortality are unknown, the researchers noted that “structural and social determinants of health with established and deep roots in racism”—including an increased risk of occupational exposure and lack of access to healthcare, possibly caused by fear during the pandemic—or misattribution of causes of death could have played roles.

The racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19-related deaths spill over into the pandemic’s impacts on children. According to a modeling study published last week in Pediatrics, children of racial and ethnic minorities accounted for 65% of the more than 140,000 children who experienced orphanhood or lost a caregiver due to COVID-19 between April 2020 and June 2021. Compared to White children, AI/AN children were 4.5 times more likely to lose a caregiver, Black children were 2.4 times more likely, and Hispanic children were 1.8 times more likely. The highest burden of caregiver deaths due to COVID-19 occurred in states on the Southern US border, in the Southeast, and those with tribal areas. The researchers concluded there is an “urgent need” to provide affected children access to support services. An October 8 analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation using CDC data shows that racial disparities in COVID-19 cases and death rates persist among Black, Hispanic, and AI/AN individuals, but data suggest the gap has recently narrowed for Black and Hispanic people. Notably, AI/AN individuals remain at disproportionate risk for COVID-19 disease and death, despite having the highest vaccination rate across racial/ethic groups. While the narrowing disparity in some groups could be due to increasing vaccination rates, other factors definitely play a role in ongoing disparities, and more research is needed to understand and address them.

AUSTRALIA On October 11, Australia began to emerge from its strict pandemic lockdown when New South Wales (NSW) began to allow fully vaccinated residents to return to restaurants, bars, hair salons, and gyms after nearly 4 months of restrictions. About 74% of NSW residents aged 16 and older are fully vaccinated, enabling the state—including Sydney, Australia’s most populous city—to ease its lockdown despite an ongoing outbreak. NSW State Premier Dominic Perrottet called it a “freedom day” and pledged to lead the nation out of the pandemic, but not without challenges. He warned that the number of new COVID-19 cases will rise following reopening, as virus-free Western Australia and Queensland and other so-called “zero COVID” countries in the Asia-Pacific region watch closely to see whether NSW can adapt to living with COVID-19.

ITALY’S GREEN PASS From October 15 through the end of 2021, Italian workers will be required to present a digital or printed “Green Pass” certificate upon entering their workplace, demonstrating that they have recovered from COVID-19 in the last six months, received a negative COVID-19 rapid antigen test result in the last 48 hours, received a negative COVID-19 molecular test result in the last 72 hours, or have been at least partially vaccinated. Workers who do not comply with the new mandate risk fines or suspension. Both civil and violent protests have broken out in response to the September 16 announcement regarding the new mandate in Italy, including reported clashes over the weekend between neo-fascists or other individuals associated with the far right and police. Some employees and policymakers are concerned that a rise in vaccinations may not occur, instead leading to worker shortages due to a lack of available tests.

The Green Pass already is required in Italy in order to access schools and universities, utilize public transport, participate in gatherings related to civil or religious ceremonies, visit medical facilities or long-term care facilities, access certain public gathering events or spaces, and pass through areas with higher COVID-19 risk—so-called “red” or “orange” zones. The Green Pass also is recognized by the European Union to help travelers avoid COVID-19 travel restrictions.