USA TODAY US Edition

Our View: Require flyers to show COVID vaccinatio­n proof

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The nation remains locked in a life or death debate with 66 million Americans over the rightness of being vaccinated against COVID-19.

About half of the unvaccinat­ed – an estimated 12% to 18% of eligible Americans – stubbornly refuse the shot for reasons ranging from distrust of government or health institutio­ns, to an embrace of conspiraci­es, to a fear of needles. The rest of the holdouts are those who simply haven’t gotten around to it (a dwindling percentage), are in still a wait-and-see frame of mind or will be vaccinated only if required to do so.

Sixty-six million unvaccinat­ed people are more than enough to fuel another surge in infections as winter approaches, and they carry the added risk of generating a variant capable of rendering vaccines less effective.

Across the country, more than half the population in many counties (and three states) have not received even one vaccine dose.

President Joe Biden has rightly mandated vaccines for federal workers and the military and is attempting to do the same for large businesses through federal workplace health-safety requiremen­ts. He could do more, as we wrote in July, and require vaccinatio­ns for domestic flights that carry about 2 million passengers per day and an anticipate­d 2.5 million daily during the upcoming holidays.

The reality is that mandates work. And that’s despite complaints from those who argue that mandates violate Americans’ individual liberties. (None other than the American Civil Liberties Union argues the opposite is true.)

Among the many examples of mandate efficacy is United Airlines, which last month required vaccinatio­ns of its 67,000 employees on penalty of being fired. All but 232 complied.

More mandates, including for domestic air travel, could compel holdouts who will take the shot only if forced to do so.

The United States already requires internatio­nal travelers entering the country to show proof of a negative test result and will start requiring proof of vaccinatio­n starting Nov. 8.

Canada will begin mandating shots for domestic flights later this month.

Much has been made of the filtered air on flights and mask mandates. But passengers are crammed together on

What’s unclear is why Biden has refrained from ordering a vaccinatio­n mandate for domestic air travel.

planes, and masks are helpful only when worn properly and not taken off for meals.

What’s unclear is why Biden has refrained from ordering a vaccinatio­n mandate for domestic air travel. The nation’s top infectious disease expert and presidenti­al adviser, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said in September he would support it, although he has since appeared to back off from that opinion.

Federal legislatio­n that would require COVID-19 vaccinatio­n or negative testing has been introduced by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. But action is needed now.

While coronaviru­s infections are mercifully tracking downward and 57% of the population is fully vaccinated, cases among children remain exceptiona­lly high, and about 1,300 Americans die each day from a disease that is all but preventabl­e if they had been vaccinated.

Air travel is a funnel point through which millions of Americans pass each week. Requiring vaccinatio­ns would save lives and help to end the COVID-19 pandemic.

 ?? SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Among the many examples of mandate efficacy is United Airlines, which last month required vaccinatio­ns of its 67,000 employees on penalty of being fired. All but 232 complied.
SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY IMAGES Among the many examples of mandate efficacy is United Airlines, which last month required vaccinatio­ns of its 67,000 employees on penalty of being fired. All but 232 complied.

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