Houston Chronicle

Airline execs fight testing for domestic flights

- By Zeke Miller and David Koenig

WASHINGTON — Leaders of several major U.S. airlines met online Friday with White House officials to press their case against requiring coronaviru­s tests for passengers on domestic flights, saying it would undermine the already fragile industry.

A person familiar with the discussion­s said that the Biden administra­tion is not currently planning to impose a requiremen­t that passengers on domestic flights first pass a COVID-19 test. The airline CEOs talked with White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r Jeff Zients, according to the person, who spoke anonymousl­y to discuss a private meeting.

The CEOs of American, United, Southwest, Alaska and JetBlue all took part in the meeting. The White House declined to comment.

The meeting was arranged after Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg and officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that a testing requiremen­t was under considerat­ion.

“We had a very positive, constructi­ve conversati­on focused on our shared commitment to science-based policies as we work together to end the pandemic, restore air travel and lead our nation toward recovery,” Nick Calio, head of the trade group Airlines for America, said in a statement.

Airlines are strongly opposed to requiring coronaviru­s testing before domestic flights, saying it would further devastate air travel, which has still not returned even to half its pre-pandemic level. They worry that the additional cost of a test would discourage people from flying.

The airlines argue that there isn’t enough testing capacity to test every passenger. More than 1 million people went through checkpoint­s at U.S. airports on Thursday, according to figures from the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion.

They also say that requiring people to take a coronaviru­s test before flights would cause more people to drive — merely shifting the risk of spreading the virus from planes to cars.

Airline unions have joined the push against testing domestic passengers. On Friday, the Southwest Airlines pilots’ union said a testing mandate “would decimate domestic air travel demand, put aviation jobs at risk, and create serious unintended consequenc­es.”

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