GUIDELINES on how England’s “red list” quarantine rules would work were reportedly only given to Border Force staff a few hours before they came into effect.

Starting yesterday, travellers arriving in England must quarantine in a hotel if they have been in one of the UK Government’s 33 “red list” countries – which covers Portugal, the United Arab Emirates, South America and southern Africa – in the past 10 days.

In Scotland all passengers on international flights must enter “managed isolation”, unless they are coming from within the Common Travel Area which includes the UK and Ireland.

READ MORE: Nicola Sturgeon defends Scotland's stricter Covid hotel quarantine rules

Border Force sources reportedly told The Guardian immigration control staff in England received a lengthy email with five attachments, detailing official guidance for executing the new border checks, at 9.25pm on Sunday.

Under the new rules, immigration control staff must check each traveller’s completed passenger locator form and hotel quarantine booking.

They must also verify passengers have received a negative Covid test, along with evidence of two additional test bookings for their 10-day quarantine period.

Sources told the newspaper that a significant number of staff would not have seen the email by the time they began their shifts the next day.

One Border Force staff member, who was on duty at Heathrow Airport for the first day of the new checks, reportedly described the process as “an absolute joke”.

A spokesman for the PCS union, which represents Border Force staff, told the paper: “It is a disgrace our members in Border Force only received new guidelines on hotel quarantine late last night.

“It’s vital that Border Force are equipped to deal with helping the public stay Covid safe. However, many feel underprepared and under valued by a department that is not doing its job.”

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The email, sent by senior Home Office staff, reportedly said the new process “will be a lot to absorb” and admitted there will be “bumps along the way”.

A UK Government spokesman said: “We are in a global pandemic which is why every traveller is subject to enhanced monitoring at UK airports.

“People should not be travelling unless absolutely necessary. Every check from pre-departure testing, to the passenger locator form is to strengthen our borders and prevent the spread of coronavirus.

“Border Force operational guidance on the measures has been issued and is regularly updated to ensure staff are supported on how to apply the new guidance.”

Meanwhile, a father and daughter who went into hotel quarantine in Scotland yesterday were told they could leave after a day due to a loophole with their arrival.

READ MORE: Covid in Scotland: US traveller happy to do 'whatever it takes' under new quarantine rules

Chun Wong told BBC Scotland that they flew into the country from the United States via Dublin, and went straight to a hotel at Edinburgh Airport.

Wong told the broadcaster: “I received a call from reception saying a gentleman from the airport would like to talk to me.

“He said that since I landed in Dublin first and then got a connecting flight to here, I was not required to quarantine in a hotel.

“I still have to quarantine and do the self-testing kit on the second and eighth day, but they said it was an error on their part.”

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has expressed concern about gaps in the current system for international arrivals, telling a coronavirus briefing in Edinburgh on Monday: “It would be better if we had that four nations approach, or at least a three nations approach where the border of the island that Scotland, England and Wales share, had the same provisions in place.”