The Mercury News

San Jose airport sees increase in travel

June travel shows signs of bigger increases than May

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Passenger trips through San Jose Internatio­nal Airport soared in May compared with April, and early indicators hint at further upswings in June, a sign the Silicon Valley aviation hub has begun to rebound from coronaviru­s-linked travel woes.

“We are seeing an uptick of travelers these past few months,” said Demetria Machado, a spokespers­on for San Jose Internatio­nal Airport.

However, the number of travelers using the San Jose airport during May represents a small fraction of the travelers in May 2019.

“We only welcomed about 6 percent of passengers this past May compared to May 2019,” Machado said.

During May, 79,600 people traveled through the San Jose airport, measured by both departures and arrivals. That was up 112 percent from the 37,600 who traveled through the airport in April.

Both months are far below the same months the year before.

The May trips were down 94 per

cent from the 1.36 million trips through San Jose airport in May 2019. The April trips were 97 percent below the April 2019 passenger trips, which totaled 1.3 million.

Business shutdowns ordered by state and local government agencies, as well as a collapse in interest for air travel, have unleashed a meltdown in air travel worldwide.

The slump in air travel has also bludgeoned the hospitalit­y and leisure sectors and triggered layoffs and furloughs at hotels and resorts worldwide.

However, recently measured outbound trips through the TSA checkpoint­s at San Jose airport point to a further dramatic upswing in air travel.

Passages through the TSA checkpoint­s totaled 18,500 in April, 40,300 in May, and 88,600 in June.

TSA checkpoint exits to the gates and other secure areas at the airport represent an imperfect barometer for airport activity. They also don’t measure arrivals. However, the TSA activity can serve as an early indicator of how the official monthly report for passenger travel at the airport might look.

In this case, the TSA activity in June was more than double the transits through the checkpoint­s during May.

“We are ready and waiting for those who choose to travel as we have deployed many health and safety measures throughout our airport to protect our employees and passengers,” Machado said.

Airport workers and managers, as well as TSA workers, are constantly sanitizing high-contact, frequent-touch areas and modules, such as conveyor belts at the TSA checkpoint­s, trays for personal belongings, ticket booths, and counters.

Plus, hand sanitizers and safety warnings such as social distancing signs and reminders to wear masks are almost as ubiquitous as slot machines in a Las Vegas casino. Airport employees are manufactur­ing custommade plexiglass shields and hand sanitizer stations at the San Jose aviation hub.

An estimated 330 safety decals have been deployed through the complex, said Graham Ritz, airport operations supervisor in terminal management.

San Jose airport custodians use an electrosta­tic sprayer daily to clean hard-to-reach areas. Among those: spaces between seats and keyboards at ticket counters.

“When travelers are ready to travel, we are ready for them,” Machado said.

 ?? STAFF ARCHIVES ?? San Jose Internatio­nal Airport had 79,600 passengers in May; that is an increase of up 112% from April’s 37,600.
STAFF ARCHIVES San Jose Internatio­nal Airport had 79,600 passengers in May; that is an increase of up 112% from April’s 37,600.

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