Dayton Daily News

Despite virus spread, millions expected to travel over holiday

- Ceylan Yeginsu and Christine Chung

Coronaviru­s cases are surging, gas prices keep hitting record highs, and heat waves and storms are forecast for many parts of the United States. But millions of Americans are still expected to take to the skies and roads this Memorial Day weekend, in what is likely to be one of the busiest travel periods since the start of the pandemic.

About 39.2 million Americans plan to travel over the long weekend, and most will be traveling by road, according to estimates by AAA, the automobile owners group. This holiday weekend’s travel volume, expected to increase 8.3% from 36.2 million who traveled over the same weekend in 2021, is inching closer to pre-pandemic travel figures, said AAA spokespers­on Ellen Edmonds.

“We believe this is due to pent-up demand from the last two years when many people chose not to travel,” Edmonds said.

Americans are hitting the road in big numbers, despite a steady surge in coronaviru­s cases. Over the past week, an average of 110,000 coronaviru­s cases has been reported each day in the United States as of Thursday,

an increase of 26% from two weeks ago, according to a New York Times database. Hospitaliz­ations are up 29% over the last two weeks, to roughly 26,100 per day, and new deaths have been at an average of fewer than 400 a day over the past two weeks.

Paula Twidale, a senior vice president of travel at AAA, said that Memorial Day was a reliable indicator of the summer season.

“Based on our projection­s, summer travel isn’t just heating up; it will be on fire,” Twidale said in a statement.

But a severe weather forecast for the weekend could embroil travel plans. Parts of the Southwest are under elevated fire warnings, currently experienci­ng a dangerous combinatio­n of low humidity, warm temperatur­es and forceful winds.

From Friday through Sunday, showers and thundersto­rms are anticipate­d across much of the country — including the Northeast, the Southeast, the Gulf Coast and the Pacific Northwest — potentiall­y bringing flash floods, hail and strong wind gusts, according to the National Weather Service.

Air travel this year has outpaced passenger levels from last year, according to data from the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion.

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