I think all applicants this year want to do aways. What we're worried about is the SNS statement saying "external rotations will be looked upon unfavorably". It's great that some programs will continue to offer them, but students don't want to take the risk of being blacklisted from how many ever programs follow the SNS guidelines. Especially since neurosurgery is getting tougher and tougher to match. No one wants to burn any bridges
I'm sure what they're trying to do is to even the playing field. There will be certain states/institutions that will have fewer travel restrictions than others. Discontinuing sub I's across the board puts everyone at the same disadvantage. It also keeps students in cities with multiple programs (NYC, Boston, Houston, Phily, LA, Bay Area... Many more) from doing aways at institutions in their city. Also, if travel restrictions are just in the state students could rotate at programs in their state. I agree that for the students from more well connected programs may have an advantage over someone from a place with no program. However, with that being said board scores, pubs, grades will still matter. If you're from a big name program and you have trash scores compared to someone who killed it on boards and has published it would be stupid to think that person has a disadvantage compared to the big name low score person.
Remember, just because the state allows travel doesn't mean your institution will. everyone has worked hard. Those who are going to match will match regardless of away rotations or a random general surgery letter. People may not match at a place they initially had hoped for, but you'll still be a neurosurgeon. Don't let a little adversity get in your way now or else residency will be difficult and short for you.
So seem like current agreement now is: do subI as your own risk WITHOUT letter after and general surgery rotation for general surgery letter? This is like stress...after stress after stress from COVID.