The Mercury News

Airlines opposed to testing passengers

White House looking at virus tests for all 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.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki downplayed speculatio­n that the Biden administra­tion could soon impose a requiremen­t that passengers on domestic flights first pass a COVID-19 test. But she stopped short of taking the idea off the table.

“Reports that there is an intention to put in place new requiremen­ts such as testing are not accurate,” Psaki said. She described the meeting with CEOs as “brief.”

A person familiar with the discussion­s said 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, according to industry officials.

The meeting was arranged after Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that a testing requiremen­t before domestic flights was under considerat­ion.

“We had a very positive, constructi­ve conversati­on focused on our shared commitment to sciencebas­ed 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.

Since late January, the CDC has required that internatio­nal travelers show a negative COVID-19 test or recovery from the virus before they board a flight to the U.S. The airline industry generally supports that rule, believing that testing could eventually replace tougher internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns, such as quarantine­s.

Airlines reacted with alarm, however, when CDC officials raised the possibilit­y of testing the much larger number of passengers on domestic flights. Airlines officials say that 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 taking shorter trips.

The airlines also 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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