The News-Times

Thanksgivi­ng travelers try to reach destinatio­ns, miss virus

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Americans, millions of whom traveled against the advice of public health officials, tried to stay safe before they hunkered down with their families for Thanksgivi­ng, a holiday remade by the pandemic as case numbers and death tolls rise.

Lily Roberts, 19, said she got tested for COVID-19 at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport before driving home to Marin County in Northern California.

“I’m not worried about it because I’m not at risk,” Roberts said. “However, I do follow the rules and the precaution­s because of my parents. That’s why I’m getting tested because I do not want to bring it into my home.”

Thanksgivi­ng travel traditiona­lly comes with highs and lows but it’s even more fraught this year as travelers attempt to social distance while navigating crowds.

Lexi Cusano, 23, said Wednesday she encountere­d people standing too close in airport terminals, some not wearing masks or wearing them improperly, on her way from Miami to Hartford, Connecticu­t.

“It was just a little bit overwhelmi­ng and very shocking to me that people were just — you

couldn’t move in a 6-foot radius without hitting someone or breathing in with a person next to you,” she said. “It was just a little bit crazy.”

She said travelers didn’t act any safer on the plane.

“People were just hanging out without their masks on,” said Cusano, who recently took a job in Miami. “I saw them walking back and forth from the bathroom, down the aisles, with no

mask on, and I was like, this is a little bit ridiculous now.“

“You know, the main fear people have usually going on planes is: ‘Are we going to crash?’“she added. “But today, it was more like, ‘I’m breathing in the same air that’s been circulatin­g in here and people are just being very irresponsi­ble.’ So that was the main horror.”

Things appeared a bit cramped to Juan Mojuta who flew Wed

nesday night to Wilmington, North Carolina, from Arizona.

“The first flight was very claustroph­obic,” Mojuta told WWAY-TV. “A lot of people. Very gathered. But the second flight wasn’t as bad.”

More than 12.7 million Americans have been diagnosed with the virus since the pandemic’s start earlier this year and deaths have topped 262,200, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Data shows the seven-day rolling average for daily new cases in the U.S. rose over the past two weeks from 127,487 on Nov. 11 to 175,809 on Thursday. The seven-day rolling average for daily new deaths rose from 1,044 to 1,658 over that time.

Millions of Americans took to the skies and the highways ahead of Thanksgivi­ng, despite warning and pleas from elected and health officials in a number of states to stay home and keep holiday gatherings smaller than usual.

Cusano said she got tested at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport in Connecticu­t after landing and was told to expect results in two to three days.

Regardless of her test results, she said she plans to quarantine in Connecticu­t for a month or two to make sure that, if she is infected during the holidays, she won’t infect anyone else. She works as a chief operating officer for a media company and can do the job remotely.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some — especially older adults and people with existing health problems — it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.

 ?? Mark Makela / Getty Images ?? Rheya Long, 6, Cicely Somers, 8, and Hal Somers, 6, play with the waves on Thursday in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. The Center for Disease Control issued a recommenda­tion urging people to stay at home and not travel for the holiday.
Mark Makela / Getty Images Rheya Long, 6, Cicely Somers, 8, and Hal Somers, 6, play with the waves on Thursday in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. The Center for Disease Control issued a recommenda­tion urging people to stay at home and not travel for the holiday.

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