The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rising cases likely to keep more Georgians home for the holiday

Airport eyes dip of 30K people on busiest day; most will make car trips.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kelly.yamanouchi@ajc.com

Fewer Georgians are expected to take trips for Thanksgivi­ng this year as the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to keep travelers at home.

During what is normally one of their biggest times of the year, airlines expect a slight increase in traffic over the last eight months, but nothing close to past years.

Around the country, passenger counts for Thanksgivi­ng are expected to be down by 47.5% compared with 2019, according to the auto club AAA. That would be the largest one-year decrease on record for the holiday.

Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal Airport expects its busiest day to be Nov. 25, the Wednesday before Thanksgivi­ng, when an estimated 63,000 passengers will pass through security checkpoint­s. That’s down from more than 93,000 passengers on the busiest day during the holiday

period last year.

In normal years, more than 31 million passengers around the country take to the skies during the holiday period, according to the industry group Airlines for America.

Wednesday, Nov. 25, is also expected to be the busiest day on the roads, with I-85 South expected to have the most congestion and delays in the Atlanta area, AAA says.

Trips by automobile, which will account for 95% of all holiday travel, are expected to fall 4.3%, according to AAA. Other travel on buses, trains and cruise ships is forecast to decline by 76%.

Overall, 50.6 million Americans, including 1.6 million in Georgia, are expected to travel for Thanksgivi­ng.

Compared to last year, that’s down nearly 10%, the largest oneyear decline since 2008 during the Great Recession, AAA says. In Georgia, travel is expected to drop 6.1% for the holiday

The decline in travel comes as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been reporting more than 100,000 new COVID19 cases a day.

Gabe Friedman had planned to fly from New York to Atlanta, then drive to visit his parents in Montgomery, Alabama. Because both of his parents are at increased risk for severe illness if they contract COVID-19, he intended to come early, quarantine in a room above their garage for two weeks, then join them for Thanksgivi­ng.

But, just this week, he found out he had been exposed to the virus. So, he canceled his trip.

“It was a pretty big gut punch,” said Friedman, who never misses going home for the holiday. “I wasn’t expecting to spend my first Thanksgivi­ng of my life without my family in 2020, but here we are.”

The CDC warns that travel increases the chances of getting and spreading COVID-19, Staying at home, the agency said, “is the best way to protect yourself and others.”

It suggests that families consider alternativ­es to gathering in person, such as hosting virtual Thanksgivi­ng get-togethers for friends and family who live far away.

While the hope for vaccines has risen in recent days, “it’s going to take many months for distributi­on and widespread acceptance of those vaccines,” noted Sharon Pinkerton, senior vice president of legislativ­e and regulatory policy for Airlines for America, which is pushing for another round of stimulus funding and new protocols to avoid quarantine­s.

Airlines also continue to encounter passengers who refuse to wear masks. Delta Air Lines said it has put nearly 550 passengers on its no-fly list for refusing to comply with its mask requiremen­t on planes.

“Fortunatel­y, that number represents a tiny fraction of our overall customers, the vast majority of whom follow our guidelines and appreciate the steps we are taking to keep them safe and healthy,” said Delta CEO Ed Bastian in a memo on Thursday.

Nationally, more than 2 million passengers are forecast to fly on the Sunday and Monday after Thanksgivi­ng. The least crowded day in airports will be Thanksgivi­ng Day itself, when 1.2 million passengers will get on planes.

This holiday, it’s harder for airlines to predict how many passengers will actually board their flights because many airlines are being more flexible with reservatio­ns during the pandemic and allowing customers to make changes without paying a change fee. That means people may book trips for Thanksgivi­ng and decide at the last minute to cancel.

Delta has extended its change fee waiver for all bookings through the end of the year.

Friedman, who had to cancel his flight to visit his parents for Thanksgivi­ng, was able to get a credit for a future flight. But he thinks it will be a while before he’ll be able to use it to visit his family.

“It’s been incredibly stressful dealing with unemployme­nt and dealing with all the chaos that the pandemic has caused. ... I was really looking forward to a break and spending time with my parents,” said Friedman, who was employed in the entertainm­ent industry and has been out of work since the pandemic hit. “It’s been hard this week realizing that I’m not going to be able to go home.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? While the Thanksgivi­ng holiday is regularly a bustling time of year at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal Airport, often referred to as the busiest airport in the world, experts expect the pandemic will decrease air travel considerab­ly.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM While the Thanksgivi­ng holiday is regularly a bustling time of year at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-jackson Internatio­nal Airport, often referred to as the busiest airport in the world, experts expect the pandemic will decrease air travel considerab­ly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States