Lodi News-Sentinel

Flight attendants unions want to extend mask mandate on airplanes

- Kyle Arnold

Flight attendants want the federal government to extend face mask requiremen­ts on commercial airplanes beyond next month’s expiration date, even with pressure growing against mask mandates on planes, airports and elsewhere.

Unions for flight attendants at American Airlines, United Airlines and several regional carriers say it’s not the appropriat­e moment to drop mask rules, even though they are “are looking forward to a time when face coverings are no longer a requiremen­t for air travel.”

“While more of the world now has access to life-saving vaccines, we still have a significan­t portion of the population that are vulnerable, including our youngest passengers,” said Paul Hartshorn, a spokesman for the Associatio­n of Profession­al Flight Attendants, which represents about 24,550 employees at Fort Worth-based American Airlines.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion mandate requiring masks to be worn in airplanes, on interstate bus travel and in transporta­tion terminals such as airports expires March 18, about 14 months after the original mandate from the Biden administra­tion went into effect. Many parts of the country are starting to drop mask requiremen­ts, including states such as Connecticu­t and New Jersey, along with many businesses that required face masks to be worn throughout much of the pandemic.

TWU Local 556, which represents flight attendants at Dallas-based Southwest Airlines, did not respond to a request for comment.

The White House hasn’t indicated whether it will extend the airplane masking order beyond next month.

Southwest Airlines has made masks optional at its headquarte­rs campus at Dallas Love Field.

But whether or not masks should be required in the air on commercial flights is still a contentiou­s issue. Last week, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Congresswo­man Beth Van Duyne, R-Texas, sued the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention over masks mandates on airplanes, saying the agency lacks authority to enforce the rule. The TSA has also issued a rule mandating masks in airports.

While COVID-19 cases have come down from the omicron variant surge that peaked in January, flight attendants and others argue that masks help protect vulnerable travelers.

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