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Regional perimeter closures: what it means for bank holiday travel in Spain
Friday, October 30, 2020 @ 7:33 PM

As the All Saints bank holiday weekend kicks off, the Spanish government has taken steps to try to slow the second wave of coronavirus contagion by restricting movement around the country.

Spain currently has over 40 million people in lockdown and a new daily record in the number of COVID-19 cases registered, although many would argue that these figures are due, in large part, to the enormous rise in the number of tests being done.

The latest State of Emergency declared by the government on October 25th limits travel around the country in an attempt to avoid, above all, the usual huge exodus from major cities like Madrid and Barcelona to coastal areas for the long weekend.

Whilst Madrid is only applying perimeter closure over the bank holiday weekend, all the other regions of Spain (with the exception of Galicia, Extremadura, the Canary and Balearic islands) have announced perimeter closures until November 9th. The Catalonian regional government announced the perimeter closure of the autonomous region for a full 15 days and stricter local lockdown over the weekend. These measures come into force at 6am on Friday 30th October, with 6am on Monday 2nd November being considered the end of the weekend.

Travel outside the regional perimeters will only be permitted in the following circumstances:

- To attend health or medical centres.
- To fulfil employment, professional, business, institutional or legal obligations.
- To attend universities or schools, including nursery schools.
- To return to usual or family residence.
- To care for elderly people, children, dependents, vulnerable people or people with disabilities.
- To go to banks or insurance companies or to go to petrol stations in adjacent municipalities.
- To attend urgent or compulsory appointments at public institutions, courts or notary offices.
- To renew licences or official documents or to carry out urgent administrative procedures.
- To sit exams or official tests that cannot be postponed.
- Due to force majeure or an emergency.

People crossing regional borders for one of the reasons listed above need to have a document justifying their travel. Regional authorities can provide the necessary documentation, which needs to show the person's name, their DNI/NIE, the reason for their travel and their origin and destination addresses. If a person crosses a regional border in order to fill up with petrol, it's imperative to keep the receipt showing the time and date in case of border controls. In order to prove one's normal residence, in the case of those returning home, a certificate of residency or 'empadronamiento' available from the local town hall is sufficient.

Healthcare
In order to attend health centres or hospitals, people will need a doctor's certificate, a referral note, and in the case of a pharmacy visit, people will have to show a receipt for medication purchased.

Read more at thinkSPAIN.com

 



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