Dulles airport, Ebola and Enhanced Screening
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The Secretary of Homeland Security is ordering all U.S.-bound flights carrying travelers who were in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda or South Sudan within the past 21 days to land only at Washington–Dulles International Airport following the discovery of a rapidly spreading Ebola outbreak.
International travelers entering the United States who have recently been to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, or South Sudan will all be routed through Dulles Airport, after an order
Enhanced Ebola screening now required at Dulles for U.S.-bound travelers from three African nations.
A draft Department of Homeland Security (DHS) memo obtained by NBC News directs commercial airline passengers who traveled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan or Uganda in the past 21 days to land at Dulles International Airport.
The US Department of State directed all flights with American passengers who have recently visited countries impacted by the Ebola outbreak to Washington Dulles International Airport for enhanced screening,
The Department of Homeland Security is routing certain travelers through Dulles for Ebola screening.
The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority wants to eliminate those frustrating exit lines at Dulles and Reagan National parking lots. Here's how.
The Washington Dulles International Airport will receive $41.8 million in federal grant money for a planned new terminal building, lawmakers announced May 18.