Houston Chronicle

TSA reports fewer flyers in wake of new rules

- By Shannon McMahon

Following months of climbing air travel numbers that peaked in the wake of the holiday, U.S. passenger volumes dropped this week to their lowest daily number in six months.

Tuesday’s daily traveler screenings totaled 468,933, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion reported. It was the first time since last July that fewer than 500,000 travelers passed through U.S. airports in a single day.

The drop in crowds, which occurred Tuesday, comes less than a week after the Biden administra­tion enacted coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns through an executive order that as of Tuesday requires negative coronaviru­s tests of all travelers for entry into the United States, as well as a sevenday self-quarantine period.

The same day last year, before the coronaviru­s pandemic began in the United States, saw 1.6 million passengers screened.

Tuesdays, along with most other weekdays, also have been a slow travel day during the pandemic, TSA says. Sunday, which now typically is the busiest travel day of the week, saw 838,116 passengers pass through checkpoint­s.

“Since the pandemic hit, Sundays are the busier days. That’s an interestin­g change from pre-pandemic days when Sundays would have been slower due to very low business travelers,” TSA spokeswoma­n Lisa Farbstein said in an email.

The last time passenger levels were below 500,000 was July 4, 2020, a Saturday holiday only a few months into the pandemic. Since last summer, traveler volumes consistent­ly have risen to higher levels that now sporadical­ly surpass 1 million passengers per day.

Farbstein notes that federal holidays also typically are slower travel days.

“Days leading up to and immediatel­y after holidays tend to be busier as people fly to spend the holiday elsewhere,” she said.

While the nation’s airports are seeing far fewer daily travelers than they did before the pandemic (less than half ) experts have said air travel numbers may continue to trend upward overall as vaccines continue to be administer­ed in the United States and beyond and hopes swell for Spring Break and summer travel abroad.

New air travel restrictio­ns enacted by the Biden administra­tion and other nations to prevent the spread of new, more-contagious variants of the coronaviru­s, however, may be impacting hopes for a speedy return to travel.

On Tuesday, the State Department and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention held a news conference during which they discourage­d nonessenti­al internatio­nal travel abroad and raised the scenario of travelers becoming stuck elsewhere if they couldn’t acquire a coronaviru­s test for re-entry into the United States.

The State Department said it does not have the resources to assist with coronaviru­s testing overseas, and CDC global migration director Martin Cetron warned that any person attempting to fly to the United States without a negative test result will be denied boarding and “could be stuck in an extended way” overseas.

Cetron also said on the call that the CDC is considerin­g domestic coronaviru­s testing requiremen­ts for noninterna­tional flights.

The busiest day of the pandemic thus far has been Sunday, Jan. 3, when more than 1.3 million travelers passed through TSA checkpoint­s, heading home from holiday gatherings and vacations.

In October, TSA saw its first 1 million-passenger day since March. Four more came in November around the Thanksgivi­ng holiday period. In the two weeks around Christmas, 11 days hit that benchmark. January so far has seen three travel days with more than 1 million screenings.

 ?? Ricky Carioti / Washington Post file photo ?? This was the scene days before Christmas, with travelers arriving and departing Reagan National Airport.
Ricky Carioti / Washington Post file photo This was the scene days before Christmas, with travelers arriving and departing Reagan National Airport.

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