Sydney Airport ground transport worker tests positive for COVID-19

Sydney Airport ground transport worker tests positive for COVID-19

A Sydney Airport ground transport worker has tested positive for COVID-19, marking the first community case of the virus in NSW since 3 December.

The worker is a 45-year-old man who works for Sydney Ground Transport, Alexandria, which provides transport for aircrew from the airport to their hotel.

NSW Health said in a Facebook post that the cause of the case remains under investigation and that urgent genome sequencing, as well as testing of close contacts of the man, was underway.

Sydney Ground Transport, Alexandria has temporarily ceased operations while investigations and cleaning are underway.

The man first developed symptoms on Saturday and was tested for COVID-19 late on Tuesday night, according to SBS.

“Our preliminary information is that we will be looking at the trips that he has undergone, the people he has escorted, between the airport and the hotels,” the state’s chief health officer Kerry Chant said at a press conference.

“His contact in those settings was to basically help people out with their baggage and help them exit a minivan or buses.”

According to NSW Health, flight crew members who have been in a country other than Australia in the 14 days before arrival must undertake a mandatory quarantine period in a quarantine or medical facility, but may instead quarantine in their homes or accommodation under certain circumstances.

NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard said international aircrews arriving in NSW would likely be required to quarantine in line with other arrivals.

He said discussions with international airlines would be taking place in the next 24 to 48 hours.

“You can’t expect in a COVID world pandemic that we won’t from time to time have a case. It will happen,” he said. 

On Monday, Hazzard told The Sydney Morning Herald that NSW Health officials have begun discussions with international airlines on whether it’s possible to test passengers and airline staff before their board an international flight and again upon arrival in Australia.

“We might have to look at determining the most high-risk countries and which countries have tests we can rely on by developing a system that recognises the relative risk on a number of criteria,” he said.

“Whatever we come up with in NSW by working with international airlines, we then need to see if it can be adopted in other states and territories so there’s consistency across Australia.”


Featured image source: Facebook/NSW Health

Latest News

  • Destinations
  • News

APT Launches 2025 Asia Adventures

APT has launched its Asia Adventures for 2025, including new luxury holidays in India, Sri Lanka and Japan. Five new tours lead guests to the highlights of India, including a seven-night cruise along the rarely travelled Lower Ganges aboard the Ganges Voyager. Further south, Sri Lanka’s greatest destinations are revealed on a new 15-day Land […]

  • Cruise
  • Luxury
  • News

Seabourn announces Western Kimberley Traditional Owners as Godparents of Seabourn Pursuit

Seabourn has named Western Kimberley Traditional Owners, the Wunambal Gaambera, as Godparents of the ultra-luxury purpose-built Seabourn Pursuit. It is the first cruise line to appoint Traditional Owners as godparents of a ship. Seabourn Pursuit embarks on its inaugural season in the Kimberley region this June. The naming ceremony will take place on Seabourn Pursuit’s […]

  • Luxury

Malolo Island Resort opens brand new Spa

Fiji’s Malolo Island has added another string to its bow – opening its $1.3 million day spa on Thursday, 18th April 2024. (Lead Image: matriarch Rosie Whitton with spa staff) Located at the edge of the resort’s luscious patch of tropical rainforest, the new “Leilani’s Spa” adds another level of elevated experiences to Malolo’s already […]