Apple Magazine

AIRLINE INDUSTRY PUSHES US TO STANDARDIZ­E HEALTH PAPERS

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Leading airline and business groups are asking the Biden administra­tion to develop temporary credential­s that would let travelers show they have been tested and vaccinated for COVID-19, a step that the airline industry believes will help revive travel.

Various groups and countries are working on developing so-called vaccine passports aimed at allowing more travel. But airlines fear that a smattering of regional credential­s will cause confusion and none will be widely accepted.

“It is crucial to establish uniform guidance” and “the U.S. must be a leader in this developmen­t,” more than two dozen groups said in a letter to White House coronaviru­s-response coordinato­r Jeff Zients. However, the groups said that vaccinatio­n should not be a requiremen­t for domestic or internatio­nal travel.

The groups include the main U.S. and internatio­nal airline trade organizati­ons, airline labor unions and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The White House did not immediatel­y comment.

The World Health Organizati­on and the United Nations’ aviation arm are working on the type of informatio­n to include in a credential. The airline industry groups are particular­ly interested in having the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention take a leading role, believing that would increase certainty that informatio­n in the credential­s is legitimate.

The CDC issued new guidelines for fully vaccinated people, saying they can — without face masks — meet other vaccinated people and visit unvaccinat­ed people in a single household who are at low risk for severe disease. However, the health agency still recommends against travel.

“Every time that there is a surge in travel, we have a surge in cases in this country,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky.

Walensky noted that many variants of COVID-19 now spreading in the U.S. started in other countries. Still, she held out the possibilit­y that with more data CDC might soon approve of travel by vaccinated people.

Airlines have been particular­ly hard hit by the pandemic. Despite a partial recovery, U.S. airlines are still losing $150 million a day, according to the Airlines for America trade group.

In the U.S., the number of people going through airports remains down nearly 60% so far this year compared to 2019, the last normal, prepandemi­c year. Most of those people are flying within the United States.

Airlines are counting on widespread vaccinatio­ns to boost travel, and for vaccine passports to give a boost to highly lucrative internatio­nal flying.

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