The Oklahoman

Is it safe to fly for the holidays?

Airlines working to convince virus-wary travelers it's okay to take to the skies again

- By Kyle Arnold

DALLAS — Jimmy Sweeney, of Fort Worth, will take his first flight since the COVID-19 pandemic to visit family in Florida around the Thanksgivi­ng holiday — and he has reasons to be cautious.

He'll be taking his wife and their 4-month-old baby girl on a Southwest Airlines flight out of Dallas Love Field. And while he's not worried about getting on a plane, he is worried about being in tight spaces with a large group of family members once he arrives.

As millions of Americans make plans to travel for the holidays, the COVID-19 pandemic is upending one of the busiest flying periods of the year. Surveys show most people aren't willing to fly yet and health and government authoritie­s are warning that large family gatherings may be breeding grounds for the spread of the coronaviru­s.

To combat that, airlines are going to great lengths to convince customers — and government­s — that air travel is safe. They've adopted preflight COVID-19 testing to screen out potentiall­y infected travelers before they board flights and they've rolled out studies about the low risk of catching the virus on a plane. Those efforts may open restricted areas to travelers, but as winter approaches, there isn't any sign the pandemic is going away.

In a year where the pandemic has changed the way we work and go to school, it's also set to change the way Americans eat turkey and exchange gifts in the presence of family and friends.

It will be the first major test for airlines since the dismal summer travel season ended. Early indication­s are that the November-December holiday travel season won't be strong either. The major airlines have cut more than 40% of flights from their previous schedules in anticipati­on of tepid demand.

Dallas-based Southwest Airlines and Fort Worth-based American have even reduced their flight schedules on the busiest days of the Thanksgivi­ng travel week by about a third compared with a year ago, according to Dallas-based Airline Data Inc.

Still, CEOs at Delta Air Lines and United Airlines said they have recently seen an uptick in bookings for the peak holiday weeks and are adding flights to match demand.

As leisure travelers slowly return, business travel isn't expected to bounce back for years. New Bank of America research shows that business trips — 400 million in 2019 — contribute­d $334 billion to the travel industry's $1.1 trillion in revenue last year. Its researcher­s don't see that spending coming back until late 2023 or 2024.

IS IT SAFE TO FLY?

Sweeney, who plans to spend about two weeks in Florida, said he researched how safe it is to travel on airplanes before booking tickets. With everyone required to wear a mask, he said he feels comfortabl­e.

The new dad said he is worried about those who skirt the rules.

“If there is one joker that decides he doesn't want to wear a mask after the plane is in the air, then I think I'll have a problem,” he said.

Airline leaders have been trying to convince passengers for months that upgraded cleaning standards, advanced air filters and mask mandates are enough to significan­tly reduce the risk of catching COVID19 while flying. American Airlines CEO Doug Parker has said infection rates for flight attendants and pilots is lower than that of the general population and ground employees.

“These are people that are taking three flights a day,” Parker said. “The act of flying itself is extremely safe.”

Airlines say commercial aircraft are safer than other confined spaces because the air flows from ceiling to floor and cycles out every three to four minutes.

United Airlines and the Department of Defense released a study earlier this month using mannequins and sensors that showed the “exposure risk is minimal even during long-duration flights,” and the risk of transmissi­on is low even in middle seats.

The study was meant to identify the safety of planes being used to transport troops and other Department of Defense employees through the U.S. Transporta­tion Command, which often partners with United and other airlines. But the study applies to all commercial airliners, United's leaders said.

The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, the trade group representi­ng commercial airlines, said there have been 44 cases of COVID19 worldwide tied to airplane flights since the beginning of the pandemic out of about 1.2 billion passenger journeys. There have been close to 41 million cases globally.

The winter months could add a whole new set of complicati­ons to containing the contagion.

“Distinguis­hing the symptoms of COVID-19 and the common flu virus could be difficult,” said Katelyn Gostic, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Chicago. “But my understand­ing is that flu circulatio­n has been pretty low so far, maybe because of social distancing.”

Every sniffle, sneeze and cough in an airport or on a plane will be under increased scrutiny.

ADDING PRECAUTION­S

The newest line of defense for airlines has been pre-flight COVID-19 testing, opening up flights to places such as Hawaii and the Caribbean. Under the programs, passengers can get tested within 72 hours of flying through tests at home, at urgent care centers or in rapid testing centers at airports.

American Airlines started offering 15-minute COVID-19 testing at Dallas/Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport last week through a local urgent care center. The nasal swab tests cost about $250. The tests are required to enter Hawaii without a two-week quarantine.

“We've started small, doing Hawaii and looking at some internatio­nal locations first,” said

Kim Cisek, American's managing director of customer experience innovation and delivery.

It's a program that could spread. Rapid test centers opened last week at London Heathrow Airport in the United Kingdom. Many places are still off-limits to most travelers. Americans can't travel freely to the European Union, and New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t don't allow travelers from most states without a two-week quarantine.

On Tuesday, Chicago added travelers from Texas to its list of states where visitors must quarantine for two weeks.

United Airlines, which also has rapid testing facilities at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport, said its program could expand to other closed-off regions.

“United supports an increased testing regimen in the near term to lower borders and remove quarantine­s for those that can produce a negative COVID test within 72 hours of departure,” said United Airlines chief commercial officer Andrew Nocella in a call with investors. “We hope that by spring 2021, testing will be widely available and government­s around the world will adopt consistent measures to reduce or eliminate quarantine­s for those that test negative.”

 ?? [CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS/LOS ANGELES TIMES/ TNS] ?? Masked passengers fill a Southwest Airlines flight from Burbank, California, to Las Vegas on June 3, with middle seats left open.
[CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS/LOS ANGELES TIMES/ TNS] Masked passengers fill a Southwest Airlines flight from Burbank, California, to Las Vegas on June 3, with middle seats left open.

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