The Jerusalem Post

Major US airlines endorse use of temperatur­e checks

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A major US airline trade group on Saturday said it backed the US Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion (TSA) checking the temperatur­es of passengers and customer-facing employees during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Airlines for America, which represents the largest US airlines, including American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines, said the checks “will add an extra layer of protection for passengers as well as airline and airport employees. Temperatur­e checks also will provide additional public confidence that is critical to relaunchin­g air travel and our nation’s economy.”

No decision has been made about whether to mandate the checks, a US official said on Saturday. The issue is the subject of extensive talks among government agencies and with US airlines, the official said, adding that a decision could be made as early as next week.

One possible route would be for a pilot project or to initially begin temperatur­e checks at the largest US airports. Questions remain about what the government would do if someone had a high temperatur­e and was turned away from a flight.

US officials said the temperatur­e checks would not eliminate the risk of coronaviru­s cases but could act as a deterrent to prevent people who were not feeling well from traveling.

No decision had been made regarding possible temperatur­e checks of passengers at airports, TSA Administra­tor David Pekoske told employees during a town-hall meeting on Wednesday. Questions remained about where such checks might take place and which agency might perform them, he said.

“It’s been a discussion that’s been ongoing for several weeks now,” Pekoske said.

A TSA spokesman did not immediatel­y comment on Saturday.

Frontier Airlines said on Thursday it would begin temperatur­e screenings for all passengers and crew members on June 1 and bar anyone with a temperatur­e at or exceeding 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit (38 C).

The move, the first among major US airlines, followed the industry mandating facial coverings for all passengers and heightened cleaning procedures to address coronaviru­s concerns.

The airline group said having temperatur­e checks performed by the TSA “will ensure that procedures are standardiz­ed.”

The endorsemen­t comes amid signs of a modest travel rebound from historic lows. On Friday, TSA screened 215,444 people at airport checkpoint­s, the first time the number topped 200,000 since March 26. But that is still a fraction of the 2.6 million screened on the equivalent day last year.

 ?? (Jim Urquhart/Reuters) ?? FLIGHT ATTENDANTS talk in a nearly empty cabin on a Delta Airlines flight amid concerns of the coronaviru­s disease last month.
(Jim Urquhart/Reuters) FLIGHT ATTENDANTS talk in a nearly empty cabin on a Delta Airlines flight amid concerns of the coronaviru­s disease last month.

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