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Major U.S. airline CEOs to hold White House meeting Friday

Published 2020-06-25, 07:50 p/m
Updated 2020-06-26, 03:06 a/m
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: American Airlines passenger planes crowd a runway where they are parked due to flight reductions to slow the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Tulsa International Airport in Tulsa

By David Shepardson and Tracy Rucinski

WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - The CEOs of major U.S. airlines are set to hold a meeting Friday to discuss several coronavirus-related travel issues, including a push to convince the federal government to mandate temperature checks for passengers, three people briefed on the matter said.

The meeting with Vice President Mike Pence and other senior U.S. officials is expected to include the chief executive officers of American Airlines (O:AAL), Delta Air Lines (N:DAL), Southwest Airlines (N:LUV), United Airlines (O:UAL) and JetBlue Airways Corp (O:JBLU), the sources said.

The White House confirmed Pence would meet with airline executives Friday afternoon, but did not identify the companies.

The discussions will also include potential extended European Union travel restrictions on U.S. travelers, contract tracing of passengers and the impact of COVID-19 on travel demand, among other issues, the sources said.

The airlines declined to comment on the meeting.

U.S. airlines are pushing the Trump administration to require temperature checks for passengers in a bid to reassure customers about the safety of travel in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Airlines for America, which represents the largest U.S. airlines, said on Thursday its members voluntarily pledged to refund tickets for passengers with high temperatures during federal screenings.

Reuters reported May 9 the U.S. government has been studying imposing temperature checks at airports, but two U.S. officials said on Thursday no decision has been made - and the government still has not decided what agency would conduct tests.

Many believe the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) would conduct tests, but questions remain including whether passengers with high fevers would be reported to public health authorities.

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"Nobody wants to be the person that tells a flying, paying customer they can't fly that day," United Executive Chairman Oscar Munoz said during a video conference Thursday.

U.S. officials said temperature checks would not eliminate coronavirus risks but could deter unwell people from traveling.

Earlier this month, Reuters reported the White House wants a plan in place by Sept. 1 for airlines to collect contact tracing information from U.S.-bound international passengers after convening a high-level White House meeting.

The White House tasked a interagency working group with adopting an interim solution by June 30 and ahead of any potential coronavirus second wave.

In February, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued an interim final rule to require airlines to collect five contact data elements from international passengers and electronically submit them to Customs and Border Protection to facilitate contact tracing.

In the face of airline opposition the CDC plan has not taken effect.

Airlines for America said earlier this month airlines "strongly support a contract tracing solution that will provide the most secure data to the U.S. government in a timely and efficient manner."

Latest comments

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James Hood, your negative statements and Hate do not change the status of what is the truth. Regardless of how much you Hate Canada, Canadians will always be known for flattening the Covid-19 curve during this period in history, contrary to what the US Administration had done at a cost 3x great per capita than Canada. Your Hate and Hate for Canadians will never change that.
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Air Canada raised nearly $1.6 billion by selling shares and convertible debt to strengthen its balance sheet, in a sign investors are willing to back sectors hard hit by the coronavirus outbreak. So, if Air Canada can do it, why are all the American airline CEOs looking for handouts when the stock market is willing to support the industry? If the US Administration bails them out, it will just increase the 3x per capita Covid-19 debt in excess of that generated by Canada. So, well done Air Canada for your effort to support your company and Awesome work by Mr. Trudeau for creating a viable Canadian business environment by flattening the Covid-19 curve to allow Air Canada to raise $1.6B on the financial markets. We are surviving this war and are the envy of our neighbors to the south. Canadians should be proud of their efforts and their sacrifices during this unprecedented period in Canadian history.
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