No Federal Mandates For Masks On Planes Or Empty Middle
Seats
Airlines tired of largely empty flights because of
coronavirus fears want to fill planes - and the federal government isn't
stopping them - now that more travelers are venturing out.
The Trump
administration is urging airlines to leave some airplane seats empty to help
protect travelers and crew members from the coronavirus but it is stopping short
of requiring airlines to keep seats open to create physical distancing on
flights.
The federal COVID-19 guidelines also encourage all passengers to
wear face coverings or masks but again, the administration will not mandate
it.
And that's a problem, according to some consumer groups, public
health officials, airline employee unions and members of Congress, who say there
needs to be enforceable federal rules that are consistent across the air travel
industry to minimize the risk for transmission of the virus.
As air
travel demand begins to slowly recover from the pandemic, the U.S. Departments
of Homeland Security, Transportation, and Health and Human Services jointly
issued guidelines for the air travel industry Thursday in a report called the
Runway to Recovery.
It encourages airlines and airports to promote social
distancing, enhance disinfection and cleaning procedures, create barriers such
as plastic shields at counters, conduct health assessments of passengers and
employees and collect passenger information for possible contact tracing; all
are measures most airlines and airports have already implemented, as they follow
recommendations issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention months
ago.
A Transportation Department press release says, "The guidance will
enhance public health risk reduction to support an increase in travel volume
while ensuring that aviation safety and security are not
compromised."
"This document provides clear guidance to airlines and
airports to protect the traveling public, and we encourage people to pay
attention to it," added Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao in a
statement.
But traveler and consumer advocacy groups say the guidelines
are inadequate.
"Americans are rightfully concerned that they may be
putting their health and safety at risk if they choose to fly during a global
pandemic," said William McGee, aviation advisor for Consumer Reports. "The DOT
shouldn't leave it up to the airlines and airports to decide which COVID-19
safety precautions they will follow to keep passengers safe."
Consumer
groups, airline employee unions and some members of Congress say the Trump
administration needs to create mandatory public health standards to ensure
passengers are protected when they travel during the pandemic.
"There's
very few, I think, worse environments to be in than trapped in a tube that's
crammed full of people who are rubbing shoulders with recirculated air for five
or six hours while flying across the country," said Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore.,
chair of the House Transportation Committee, who says the administration "should
require masks under the penalty of federal law on airplanes."
While many
airlines are requiring passengers masks or face coverings, enforcement has been
inconsistent. United, Delta and a few others say they have removed some
passengers from planes and prohibited others from boarding for not wearing
masks, but such enforcement actions have only been taken recently after a rising
number of complaints from other passengers.
And flight attendants are
somewhat frustrated because they are the ones who often must police the mask
wearing and social distancing requirements.
"Without a federal mandate
and a coordinated effort to address these issues, we're left to the airlines
putting in place policies that are inconsistent, leave people confused and leave
us to deal with the consequences on the front lines," said Sara Nelson,
president of the Association of Flight Attendants.
The new federal
guidance encouraging airlines to leave some seats open comes in a week in which
American Airlines joined rival United and discount carrier Spirit in saying
they'll fill every seat on every plane if there is enough demand.
It's a
move that drew sharp criticism from two of the nation's top public health
officials in a Senate committee hearing on the coronavirus pandemic
Tuesday.
"I think it sends the wrong message," said Dr. Robert Redfield,
director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"Obviously
that is something that is of concern. I'm not sure what went into that decision
making," Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Disease and a member of the White House coronavirus task force told
senators. "I think in the confines of an airplane that (lack of physical
distancing) becomes even more problematic."
Other airlines, including
Delta, Southwest and JetBlue say they will continue to temporarily block out
middle seats or keep planes no more than two-thirds full in order to create more
space between passengers.
But officials at United and American defend
their decisions to fully book flights saying social distancing is impossible on
a plane. Even if the middle seats are empty, passengers are less than three feet
apart, and there is even less distance between rows in economy
seating.
"You can't employ distancing on an airplane like you can in a
grocery store line," said Nick Calio, president of the industry group Airlines
for America in a conference call with reporters this week. He contends other
safety measures, such as enhanced cleaning of airplane cabins, physical
distancing when boarding and deplaning, and wearing face coverings will minimize
the risk of transmitting the coronavirus.
"We don't fly people if we feel
it's not safe to fly them," Calio said.
Nonetheless, many people are
still reluctant to return to flying.
In regard to where to travel safely
and how to get there this summer, "things are still incredibly uncertain and
confusing," says Melanie Lieberman, senior travel editor at The Points Guy
website, who adds, "Air travel is definitely one of the more complicated ways of
traveling."
To minimize potential risk, she suggests travelers consider
short haul flights rather than long haul flights, airlines that have more
stringent airplane cleaning regimens, and airlines that are still blocking out
middle seats or restricting capacity in other ways.
Some airline pilots
would like to see more government help in that regard. The Allied Pilots
Association, which represents pilots at American Airlines, wants the next
federal coronavirus relief package to include funding to "purchase enough seats
on each flight to eliminate the need for any passenger to sit next to a
stranger."
APA President Capt. Eric Ferguson says under that sort of
"uniform social distancing, passengers would be encouraged to fly more, airlines
would be encouraged to operate more flights, and the government would ensure the
preservation of critical transportation infrastructure and associated jobs."
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