From News Nation:
“TSA: Over 1
million airline passengers screened Sunday for first time since March”
The U.S.
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) said it screened more than 1
million airline passengers on Sunday for the first time since mid-March. The
number, 1.03 million, is still about 60% lower than the same day last year, but
is a dramatic rise from the collapse in air travel demand caused by the
coronavirus pandemic. Screening fell to as little as 87,000 in a single day in
April. The previous high was 1.26 million screened on March 16. U.S. airlines
are collectively burning more than $5 billion in cash a month and have failed
to date to convince Congress to approve a new $25 billion bailout that would
have kept more than 32,000 workers on the payroll for another six months. American
Airlines furloughed 19,000 workers, while United Airlines furloughed 13,000
workers. Staff for the top Democrats and Republicans on the House and Senate
committees overseeing airlines have been working to try to reach an agreement
on a potential standalone airline bill, but the airlines are not optimistic any
bill will be approved before the Nov. 3 presidential election. A previous
airline payroll support program expired on Sept. 30. At some point, airlines
may shift messaging to seeking new government funds to bring workers back. Airlines
for America, a trade group representing American Airlines, United, Delta Air
Lines and others have said passenger volumes are down about 64%, including 62%
domestically and 79% internationally. U.S. airlines are operating 48% fewer
flights than a year ago and still have nearly one-third of their fleet idled,
the group added. The TSA statement on Monday also said it is adopting new
measures to make security screening safer, including installing credential
authentication devices at some checkpoints enabling passengers to insert IDs
directly into a card reader. New CT scanners at some checkpoints also often
allow officers to check items without having to open a carry-on bag.
^ This is both
good and bad news. It’s good because this milestone is helping the airlines,
the airports and all those who work in the Hospitality Industry (hotels, restaurants,
etc.) as it means people are now travelling again. It’s bad because it means so
many people are travelling – and possibly spreading Covid-19. I am all for traveling
again as long as it is safe and that means that every passenger needs to be tested
and get a negative result before they are allowed to travel. Every airline and
airport employee, TSA officer, etc. on the ground and in the air needs to also
be tested and get a negative result before they are allowed near passengers.
That isn’t happening right now so it just means there is no way to know if you
are truly staying safe and healthy while coming into such close contact with
complete strangers. ^
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