Quest for 243

A global nomad's pursuit to see all 195 countries, 39 territories, & 9 de-facto nations

Bora Bora, French Polynesia

WMATA Transit Race 8:54 Record
Segment 0: Getting to Ashburn

Lucas Wall established Nov. 16, 2022, the new speed record to pass through all 97 Washington Metrorail stations in a single day, making the 14-segment journey from the brand new Ashburn Station to Huntington Station in 8 Hours 54 Minutes. This contest is called the WMATA Transit Race – also known as D.C. Metro Challenge (WMATA = Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority).

This is the pre-race video dubbed “Segment 0” in which I walk to the new Innovation Center Station and take the newly opened Silver Line west to the terminal at Ashburn Station to get in position to start the race.


Transit Fanatic Establishes Fastest Time
Through All 97 Metrorail Stations

A 45-year-old travel blogger and transit enthusiast established Wednesday the new speed record to pass through all 97 Metrorail stations in a single day, making the 14-segment journey from the brand new Ashburn Station to Huntington Station in 8 Hours 54 Minutes without a single break.

The new benchmark is 55 minutes longer than the previous Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority record of 7:59, set by Scott Bennett in December 2019 before Tuesday’s six-station Silver Line expansion opened, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. But new title holder Lucas Wall of Washington said that 91-station record is history, and he expected the new speed best time would increase with 11.5 more miles of Silver Line track to traverse.


Travel Blogger Racing Wednesday to
Set New Metrorail Speed Record

A 45-year-old travel blogger will set off Wednesday morning to establish the new speed record to transit through all 97 Metrorail stations in a single day. The previous record before today’s six-station Silver Line expansion was 7 hours 59 minutes, set by Scott Bennett in December 2019, according to the Guinness Book of World Records.

“With today’s opening of Silver Line Phase 2, expanding Metrorail from 91 to 97 stations, the prior record is history,” said Lucas Wall of Washington. “I want to raise awareness of this long-awaited transit expansion in the national capital region and set the mark future transit racers strive to beat. As a frequent traveler who has visited 135 countries, I fly often in and out of Washington Dulles International Airport and have been waiting decades to start and end my journeys with Metrorail.”


Flying MCO-ORD; Stranded in Chicago

Mom and I launched our first international trip since COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organziation nearly 2½ hours ago. We should be on SAS Flight 944 from ORD to CPH right now. Instead we are at a mediocre hotel nine miles from Chicago O’Hare International Airport after our flight here arrived from Orlando 9 hours 23 minutes late and we missed the connection by about 30 minutes.

We are heading to Northern Europe for six weeks, our first time abroad since we returned from Argentina March 3-4, 2020 – one week before the global pandemic declaration shut down foreign travel across the globe and then brought stiffling restrictions such as border closures, mask mandates, and testing requirements that kept us from leaving the United States for an incredibly long period of time. We are taking two cruises: First, Regent Seven Seas Voyager for 12 nights around the Baltic Sea (departing from Cophenhagen), then Oceania Sirena for 18 nights out of Oslo up the coast of Norway to the Arctic Ocean, then out to Faroe Islands, Orkney Islands of Scotland, and down the east coast of Great Britian to end in Portsmouoth, England. We have a week between voyages, during which we’ll visit the U.K. territories of Guernsey and Jersey (the Channel Islands).


Ban CDC Mask & Testing Orders, 335 Airline
Workers, Disabled Passengers, Industrial
Hygienists, & Dual Citizens Tell Court

Four groups of airline workers, disabled passengers, industrial hygiene experts, and dual citizens filed friend-of-the-court briefs Monday night asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to reverse a Florida federal judge’s April 29 decision declaring legal the Federal Transportation Mask Mandate and International Traveler Testing Requirement.

The dual citizens argued against the legality of the testing requirement while the other three groups of amicus curiae took issue with the mask mandate.

“While passengers only have to endure forced masking when traveling on public transportation, we are expected to obstruct our oxygen intake nearly all the time while at work. This endangers our health and imperils aviation safety,” wrote 313 airline workers from 35 states employed by 16 air carriers. “Tens of thousands of our colleagues were laid off or placed on long-term unpaid leave due to the economic devastation caused by the ITTR, FTMM, and other government travel restrictions related to COVID-19 that did nothing to stop the virus’ spread.”


Disabled Nomad Urges Court of Appeals to Block
Any Future Transportation Mask & Testing Orders

A travel blogger who was the first person in the country to sue to stop the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s Federal Transportation Mask Mandate and International Traveler Testing Requirement filed his opening arguments Monday night asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to reverse a Florida federal judge’s April 29 decision declaring both rules legal.

Monday’s 115-page brief filed by Lucas Wall of Washington, D.C., tees up for review by the 11th Circuit conflicting decisions by judges in Florida regarding the bounds of CDC’s legal authority to issue worldwide COVID-19 restrictions. U.S. District Judge Kathryn Mizelle of Tampa vacated the mask mandate April 18, ruling CDC issued it without congressional authority, did not offer a chance for the public to comment, and did not reasonably explain its decisionmaking (known in the law as an “arbitrary and capricious” rule).


13 Travelers Ask Court of Appeals to Prohibit
TSA from Ever Reissuing Mask Requirement

A group of 13 flyers from nine states and the District of Columbia who brought six lawsuits challenging the Transportation Security Administration’s legal authority to require that all public-transportation passengers don face masks filed a 45-page brief Thursday evening urging the Court of Appeals to enjoin the agency from ever reissuing the Federal Transportation Mask Mandate.

A federal judge April 18 vacated the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s mask mandate, declaring the agency issued it without authorization from Congress, failed to allow public comments, and did not reasonably explain the need for travelers to don face coverings. That decision does not apply to TSA, however, which issued its own mask requirements in support of the CDC order.


Grounded Globetrotter Asks Appeals Court to Enjoin CDC’s International Traveler Testing Requirement

A travel blogger who was the first person in the country to sue to stop the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s International Traveler Testing Requirement for airline passengers flying from foreign nations into the United States filed an emergency motion asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit to immediately halt the mandate so he can take a May 13 flight to see his brother in Germany, a trip that’s been postponed since June 2021 because of the testing rule and the now-vacated Federal Transportation Mask Mandate.

Lucas Wall of Washington, D.C., asks the appellate tribunal for a decision by May 12 on his request for a preliminary injunction against the ITTR pending appeal. A federal district judge in Orlando, Florida, held April 29 that the policy is legal, a decision that conflicts with numerous other court decisions striking down Biden Administration COVID-19 pandemic orders that weren’t authorized by Congress.


Globetrotter Appeals Decision Upholding CDC’s Transportation Mask & Testing Requirements

A travel blogger who was the first person in the country to sue to stop the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s Federal Transportation Mask Mandate and International Traveler Testing Requirement lodged an appeal today of an Orlando federal judge’s April 29 judgment declaring both rules legal.

Today’s appeal tees up for review by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit conflicting decisions by judges in Orlando and Tampa regarding the bounds of CDC’s legal authority to issue worldwide COVID-19 and other public-health mandates. District Judge Kathryn Mizelle of Tampa vacated the mask mandate April 18, ruling CDC issued it without congressional authority, did not offer notice and a chance for the public to comment, and did not reasonably explain its decisionmaking (known in the law as an “arbitrary and capricious” rule). But 11 days later, District Judge Paul Byron of Orlando found in Wall’s case that CDC does have statutory authority to issue such broad-sweeping mandates and it had “good cause” to forego notice and comment because of the pandemic. Both judges sit in the Middle District of Florida.


Federal Judge Issues Conflicting Decision Declaring Federal Transportation Mask Mandate Legal

Just 11 days after Judge Kathryn Mizelle of Tampa vacated the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention’s Federal Transportation Mask Mandate worldwide, another federal judge in nearby Orlando ruled today that CDC does have the legal authority to force travelers to wear masks and undergo COVID-19 testing before flying to the United States from abroad.

The stunning 29-page judgment issued by U.S. District Judge Paul Byron, also in the Middle District of Florida., totally conflicts with that handed down by Mizelle on April 18 in a case brought by the Health Freedom Defense Fund.