Thanksgiving week air travel is expected to set a pandemic-era record despite officials' calls to stay home
Thanksgiving week air travel is expected to remain strong enough to set a pandemic-era record despite urging from federal health officials to spend the holiday at home. The US CDC recommended Americans to not travel for Thanksgiving last week -- but that didn't stop more than 1 million travelers from passing through US airport security on Sunday and more than 900,000 on Tuesday, according to the TSA. Since the CDC issued that warning, nearly 5 million people have boarded airplanes. The agency receives passenger information from the airlines as part of its screening responsibilities, and the data does not show widespread cancellations in recent days, TSA spokesman Andy Post said. From September to October, the number of scheduled available seats departing US airports was down nearly 50% compared to the same timeframe last year. Due to increased demand, that number is only down 39% for the Thanksgiving holiday period, according to Airlines for America, a trade association that represents major North American airlines. Still, officials still expect Sunday -- when everyone heads home from their holiday travels -- to be the busiest day of travel since the pandemic began. While the number of travelers passing through airport security on Sunday is concerning, many Americans are heeding the warnings from officials and health experts. Sixty-one percent of Americans said they changed their Thanksgiving plans, according to a poll released on Tuesday by Axios-Ipsos. More surprising is that nearly one in 10 Americans that were polled say they do not plan to celebrate the holiday at all.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/imagelibrary/news/hot-topics/2020-11-26/general/thanksgiving-week-air-travel-is-expected-to-set-a-pandemic-era-record-despite-officials-calls-to-stay-home
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Thanksgiving week air travel is expected to set a pandemic-era record despite officials' calls to stay home
Thanksgiving week air travel is expected to remain strong enough to set a pandemic-era record despite urging from federal health officials to spend the holiday at home. The US CDC recommended Americans to not travel for Thanksgiving last week -- but that didn't stop more than 1 million travelers from passing through US airport security on Sunday and more than 900,000 on Tuesday, according to the TSA. Since the CDC issued that warning, nearly 5 million people have boarded airplanes. The agency receives passenger information from the airlines as part of its screening responsibilities, and the data does not show widespread cancellations in recent days, TSA spokesman Andy Post said. From September to October, the number of scheduled available seats departing US airports was down nearly 50% compared to the same timeframe last year. Due to increased demand, that number is only down 39% for the Thanksgiving holiday period, according to Airlines for America, a trade association that represents major North American airlines. Still, officials still expect Sunday -- when everyone heads home from their holiday travels -- to be the busiest day of travel since the pandemic began. While the number of travelers passing through airport security on Sunday is concerning, many Americans are heeding the warnings from officials and health experts. Sixty-one percent of Americans said they changed their Thanksgiving plans, according to a poll released on Tuesday by Axios-Ipsos. More surprising is that nearly one in 10 Americans that were polled say they do not plan to celebrate the holiday at all.<br/>