The Columbus Dispatch

Travelers skittish about delta variant

Airlines, hotels feel effects of cancellati­ons

- Bailey Schulz USA TODAY

Three months ago, Jackie Henderson of Oregon finally felt comfortabl­e enough with the country’s COVID-19 case counts to book a trip with her husband and three kids to a family reunion in Pennsylvan­ia.

Their trip, scheduled for this month, has since been canceled. Henderson said her family didn’t feel safe traveling with their kids, all of whom are too young to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

“I just thought flying six hours on a plane is like being in a petri dish, and then we’re going to walk into this family reunion with about 80 people, and the majority of them are over age 65,” Henderson said. “I just really didn’t feel like it was responsibl­e for us to do that.”

Henderson joins a growing number of travelers who have been second-guessing plans amid a surge in COVID-19 cases. About one-third of American travelers surveyed by marketing firms Longwoods Internatio­nal and Miles Partnershi­p have postponed travel because of the delta variant, compared with a quarter of travelers two weeks prior, according to the Aug. 4 survey of 1,000 adults.

“Even a little bit of a dip here is concerning for businesses that have already been in a difficult position,” said Tori Emerson Barnes, executive vice president of public affairs and policy for the U.S. Travel Associatio­n trade group. “I think we’re still very optimistic, and there is still a strong desire for folks to be out there … but we need to get back to a more consistent state.”

Hotels, airlines notice more cancellati­ons

Optimism around travel has plummeted since early June, hitting a year-todate low of 20.4% as of Aug. 6, according to surveys of more than 1,200 American travelers from research firm Destinatio­n Analysts.

The firm’s most recent report found more than half of American respondent­s expect travel to get worse in the U.S. over the next month, and 23% canceled travel plans because of the delta variant.

That attitude shift comes as COVID-19 cases spike across the country, with the highly contagious delta variant making up more than 80% of all cases as of the end of July, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Airlines and hotels are starting to feel the effects.

On Thursday, hotel research firm STR eased its growth projection­s for 2022, citing a lack of business travel to supersede leisure travel.

“With more concern around the delta variant as well as delays in companies returning their employees to offices, it’s possible that businesses wait until early 2022 to put their people back on the road,” STR president Amanda Hite said in a news release.

Marriott Internatio­nal spokeswoma­n Julie Rollend told USA TODAY that the company has seen some cancellati­ons for group bookings later this year that could be related to the spread of the delta variant, but added that cancellati­ons have “slowed significantly” compared with earlier in the pandemic.

Southwest Airlines’ outlook for thirdquart­er revenues dipped after the company noticed an increase in trip cancellati­ons in August, according to a Wednesday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The company pinned it on the rise of COVID-19 cases.

Glenn Fogel, president and CEO of Booking Holdings Inc., told USA TODAY that the company saw a “modest pullback” in July’s booking trends compared with June, but noted that bookings were still up from the second quarter.

“When infections were going up because of delta, you would see cancellati­ons in those particular areas (with more COVID-19 cases),” Fogel said. “But it doesn’t change the long term at all. The long term is pandemics all end. They do. This will end, too.”

Southwest and AAA have both recently noted that Labor Day travel remains strong despite the uptick in COVID-19 cases, and other travel executives have echoed Fogel’s long-term optimism, including United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby.

“Certainly, over the medium to the long term there’ll be some ups and downs, but I think that air travel is going to continue to recover,” Kirby told NBC Nightly News. “The silver lining of what has happened with the delta variant is it’s driving much higher vaccinatio­n rates across the country, and at the end of the day, that’s the only thing that’s going to really get us out of this crisis.”

A little more than half of all people in the U.S. are fully vaccinated.

Travelers’ response to COVID-19 delta variant

While many Americans will follow through with plans, the way they travel has changed.

Kyle Baker, 26 of Kansas City, Kansas, has been to Las Vegas four times and Florida once since being fully vaccinated but draws the line at cruises, especially now that COVID-19 cases are up. While he had been considerin­g a cruise in 2019, Baker said watching the COVID-19 outbreak on the Diamond Princess in February 2020 was “terrifying.”

“That makes my anxiety go crazy,” he said. “Even at the very beginning of COVID, I was of the mind-set of, I’m not going to do a cruise.”

Others, such as Doris Wright, 74, feel safe on cruises thanks to their heightened safety protocols. Wright plans to take a 21-day cruise in October.

“I am confident in the new protocols the cruise lines have set up to combat this variant,” she wrote to USA TODAY. “I’m a world traveler and I have been going (nuts) without travel.”

Nicholas Sanford of Charlotte, North Carolina, plans to go to Greece with his partner this month, despite the hassle of having to complete additional Covid-19related forms to enter and test for COVID-19

before returning.

COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective, but a small percentage of people who are fully vaccinated still will get COVID-19 if exposed to the virus that causes it, according to the CDC. Vaccinated people who have breakthrou­gh infections are much less likely to get severely sick or die.

Is it safe to travel during the delta surge?

Amber Schmidtke of Kansas City, Missouri, who is an associate professor of biology at the University of Saint Mary and former CDC employee, postponed a family vacation to Hawaii two weeks ago.

The vacation was booked in March, and Schmidtke expected a pediatric vaccinatio­n to be approved by this point. Without it, she said she doesn’t feel comfortabl­e traveling with her unvaccinat­ed child.

Children 12 and older in the U.S. can receive the Pfizer vaccine, but clinical trials on vaccinatio­ns among younger children are still ongoing.

“The risks (to travel with an unvaccinat­ed child) just felt much worse than they did a year ago,” Schmidtke said. “The thought of being in a high-risk environmen­t, potentiall­y an airport terminal ... it seemed like a bridge too far.”

Health experts say travel risks can vary based on many factors, such as vaccinatio­n status and the destinatio­n’s transmissi­on rates.

Speaking to the USA TODAY Editorial Board last week, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases, said travelers should follow CDC guidance and restrict themselves to necessary travel.

The CDC recommends all travelers, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, wear masks and self-monitor for COVID-19 symptoms. If they’re traveling internatio­nally, fully vaccinated travelers should also get tested three to five days after travel. Unvaccinat­ed people traveling both domestical­ly and internatio­nally are advised to get tested one to three days before and three to five days after travel and self-quarantine seven days after returning.

Contributi­ng: Jennifer Portman, USA TODAY.

 ?? PROVIDED BY JACKIE HENDERSON ?? Jackie and Michael Henderson and their kids, seen in 2018, have not visited extended family in two years.
PROVIDED BY JACKIE HENDERSON Jackie and Michael Henderson and their kids, seen in 2018, have not visited extended family in two years.

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