The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Air travel remains sluggish, despite a Labor Day boost,

July decline better than previous months, but recovery stalls.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

Americans are still mostly avoiding airplanes amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, despite a busy Labor Day, according to the latest traffic reports.

Passenger traffic on U.S. airlines was down 73% in July from a year earlier, the U.S. Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics said Tuesday.

That’s improved from the yearover-year declines seen in April, May and June, when airline pas

senger traffic was down 96%, 90% and 80% respective­ly.

But the recovery appeared to stall in August and early September, when year-over-year declines in passenger counts were still in the 70% range on some days, according to Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion data on people passing through airport security checkpoint­s.

The Labor Day holiday weekend brought some significan­t increases in traffic through airports, with more than 900,000 passengers on both Monday and last Friday. That’s the first time passenger counts have exceeded 900,000 since March 17, but still down from more than 2 million passengers on the same days a year ago.

The 18 largest U.S. airlines carried a total of 21.4 million passengers in July, according to preliminar­y federal data for the month. That’s up significan­tly from April’s 3 million passengers, which was a record low based on federal records dating back to 1974.

Domestic passenger traffic was down 70% in July, while interna

tional passenger traffic on U.S. airlines was down 90%.

Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines scaled back its plans for flight additions in August, but continues to make plans for resuming more internatio­nal flights this fall and next year. It said its schedule is subject to change “due to the evolving nature of COVID-19, customer demand, government travel regulation­s and federal health guidelines.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Delta Air Lines customers wear masks as they wait to be helped Friday at the ticket counter in the domestic terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Delta Air Lines customers wear masks as they wait to be helped Friday at the ticket counter in the domestic terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport.

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