I will add that despite the chaos, it's good to see action happening relatively quickly in regards to this new variant.
Everyone knows the twats in charge royally fucked up with Delta earlier in the year, so at least some lessons appear to have been learnt.
I just think the whole system is flawed.
If a couple have been out in South Africa, you're asking them to pay £3700 to sit in an airport hotel for 11 days. It's a fucking obscene amount and encourages people to bend the rules.
Said example couple out in SA have done nothing wrong, have travelled perfectly legally and are about to be financially hammered through no fault of their own.
I know certain people will chirp up 'going abroad comes with risks so no sympathy from me', but that really isn't the right disposition to have. The world is global and even closing borders doesn't keep the virus out, as we've seen time and time again. And not forgetting that not everyone travels for leisure purposes.
For the unfortunate people caught up in red list changes, there needs to be a better plan in place, that doesn't line the pockets of someone. There should be a nominal charge, which is much more in line with the realistic prices of the accommodation offered. I think Norway, a notoriously expensive country, charged £50 a night for their equivalent hotel quarantine. A figure in that ballpark feels about right, so a couple who get stung with a red list change are looking at a 500 quid bill (manageable for most) and not close to 4 grand (not manageable for most)
The same logic applies to the PCR tests. There is absolutely no justification to be charging £50+ for a single test, and again pushes people to bending rules.
Cap the price, make it a more nominal amount and people will mostly accept that this is par for the course of travelling abroad.
Also, after so long, why aren't airports geared up for rapid PCR testing on arrival? We've had 18 months to implement this and although it might not be feasible at somewhere like Heathrow/Manchester, it should be up and running in the regional airports as a minimum.
Again, charge a nominal fee and get people tested immediately on arrival, if this is the route the Government are wanting to go down again.
Unfortunately the only winner in all this is gonna be these cowboy private testing companies, who can have our collective pants down again for at least another 3 weeks.