African Pilot

WARY PASSENGERS RETURN TO THE SKIES PILAR WOLFSTELLE­R

Face-masked and armed with hand sanitiser and disinfecta­nt wipes, passengers in the USA are returning to air travel in slightly larger numbers, even though coronaviru­s cases continue to steadily rise across the country and a possible vaccine could still

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“It is a matter of being sensible about it all,” adds Colleen Connaughto­n, who was also travelling by air on the same day.

Airports remain significan­tly less crowded than before the global pandemic, and airlines have slashed schedules. However, thanks to passengers like Skrudlik and Connaughto­n, some flights are full or close to it.

On an early-morning United Airlines departure from Las Vegas to Chicago on 24 August, all first-class seats and about 75% of economy seats were occupied, whilst the middle seats were also filled. That said, the longer-term prospects for airlines are still difficult to judge, with US government funding running out in just over a month and little sign of a sustainabl­e, large-scale recovery.

Skrudlik was headed to Poland following a work assignment in the USA. His trip had long been planned and Skrudlik was not willing to cancel, despite travel restrictio­ns that add another level of complexity and bureaucrac­y to the experience. He is one of those passengers seemingly undeterred by the pandemic. Skrudlik also travelled for leisure recently from the Midwest to Florida and to the western United States. “The national parks were so peaceful as they were so uncharacte­ristically free of huge crowds of foreign tourists. It was easy to social distance there.”

The US Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion says 841,806 passengers passed through its checkpoint­s on 23 August. That is much lower than last year’s 2.5 million on the same day, but it is the second-highest number since 17 March, when lockdowns in many communitie­s across the country took effect.

Connaughto­n, who flew from Los Angeles to Chicago, says she was wary about the trip. Sitting so close to so many strangers on an aircraft gave her concerns. However, driving was not a viable option. Whilst leisure travel has made somewhat of a comeback, business travel remains in limbo.

Marco Di Maggio, travelling from Frankfurt to Denver on 24 August, says his company’s top executives had to approve his two-week business trip. It was an ‘urgent case’ for his firm and he was booked in business class rather than economy or premium economy. The aircraft from Germany to the US, he says, was relatively empty. Each business-class passenger had space to spread out across two seats. Only 10 of the 32 seats in that cabin were occupied.

Di Maggio felt safe in the skies. He has more concern about the situation on the ground in the USA. “I am more afraid of catching the virus here in the US than in Germany,” he says. “The infection rates in Denver are four times higher than in Germany right now. However, I think if we take appropriat­e measures and are careful, it will be fine.”

A Bloomberg intelligen­ce report published on 21 August predicts load factors will continue to sag in the third quarter, with capacity at about 50% of prior-year levels.

“Leisure travellers, boosted by low fares, may help in the US and Europe, but a resurgence of Covid-19 cases may cap demand at low levels,” the report says. As of 19 August, US airlines had brought about 1,600 aircraft back into their fleets, bringing the total operating fleet in the US to 4,650 aircraft, a 51% bump from the mid-May low, data shows. However, analysts have warned that demand may slow in the Autumn and US government aid to airlines runs out in less than five weeks. The CARES Act, signed in March, provided airlines with almost $60 billion in grants and loans, but funding expires on 30 September, leaving many carriers to fend for themselves.

One stipulatio­n of aid was that US airlines pledged not to exercise any involuntar­y furloughs or lay-offs before 1 October. With that deadline fast approachin­g and no further legislatio­n to extend the relief, the industry is bracing itself for mass lay-offs in the fourth quarter. Up to 80,000 air transport industry jobs could be lost in the US alone, airlines have warned.

Complicati­ng both domestic and overseas travel plans for the foreseeabl­e future are restrictio­ns that remain in place or have been re-imposed as the coronaviru­s crisis continues to drag on into its seventh month. An announceme­nt made at Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal airport on 24 August reminded travellers from more than 30 US states that they are required to complete a 14-day quarantine period upon arrival in Chicago. Many other countries have placed the USA on their ‘high risk’ list and require isolation or a recent negative COVID-19 test for entry.

Pilar Wolfstelle­r

America’s Air Transport Editor, is based in Las Vegas and brings a pilot’s perspectiv­e to her beat. She covers airlines across the hemisphere and her interests also include future-oriented sustainabl­e aviation technology and urban air mobility projects. Pilar began her journalism career at the global news agencies Bloomberg and

Reuters and has reported from more than 50 countries.

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