US: Weekend air travel hits pandemic-era record, despite health officials' pleas to stay home

Warnings from public health officials not to travel for Thanksgiving didn't stop passengers from packing US airports and planes this weekend. From Friday to Sunday, more than 3m people passed through airport security checkpoints in the US — a record weekend for air travel since the pandemic hit in March. Sunday was the biggest day for air travel since March 16, with 1.05m people screened. US health officials have pleaded with the American public not to travel for the Thanksgiving holiday this week as new Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths soar. Friday saw a one-day record of 196,000 new US cases, according to Johns Hopkins. The airlines say that the cleaning procedures used between flights, the exchange of fresh air in the cabin throughout flights and the hospital-quality air filters now used on planes make it safe to fly. The airlines also require passengers to wear masks. But officials from the CDC say the risk of spreading disease lies less in the flight itself and more with large family gatherings, especially with hospitals in many parts of the country already at capacity treating Covid patients. The traffic is forecast to get even busier later this week. American Airlines said it will increase its schedule by about 15% during Thanksgiving week, compared to the rest of November -- from a daily average of 3,500 flights to more than 4,000 flights. The airline industry is neither encouraging nor discouraging holiday travel, the head of the industry's trade group said Thursday. "Do we want to see them travel? Yes, but only if it's safe for them," said Nick Calio, CEO of Airlines for America. "There's a variety of factors involved in that for each individual traveler."<br/>
CNN
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/11/23/business/thanksgiving-air-travel-pandemic/index.html
11/23/20