Nearly a
year into the COVID-19 pandemic, the aviation industry continues to face
complex questions with enormous implications for public health, passenger
safety, and employee welfare
Washington (February 26, 2021) - Senator Edward J. Markey
(D-Mass.), Senate Commerce Committee Ranking Member Roger Wicker
(R-Miss.), and Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) today sent a
letter to the Departments of Transportation (DOT), Health and Human Services
(HHS), and Homeland Security (DHS), urging these agencies to convene a joint
task force on air travel during and after the coronavirus pandemic. This
task force – advised by aviation, security, and public health experts – would
develop recommended requirements, plans, and guidelines to address the health,
safety, security, and logistical challenges for air travel moving forward.
“We were pleased when the Biden administration recently
called for interagency cooperation to develop national public health
recommendations for domestic travel,” write the lawmakers in their letter to
DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg, HHS Acting Secretary Norris Cochran, and DHS
Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. “However, we believe that a more structured
process remains necessary — one that includes robust collaboration among
government, industry, labor, and other experts, with the goals of solving the
pressing problems created by the pandemic and charting a path forward as
vaccinations accelerate and travel demand returns.”
During the ongoing emergency, airlines and airports have
largely had to develop their own rules for ensuring coronavirus-related health
and safety. Unfortunately, a patchwork of rules simply cannot address the
interconnected and widespread risks of a global pandemic. The letter calls for
the federal government to lead and promulgate clear and consistent safety
standards that apply across the entire aviation industry.
A copy of the letter can be found
HERE.
The lawmakers’ letter specifically calls for a task force
modeled after bipartisan legislation they recently
reintroduced, and that passed the Senate
unanimously last Congress. While the Senators will continue to
fight for their legislation, the DOT, HHS, and DHS need not wait before acting
on this initiative. These agencies can immediately convene a task force on
aviation health and safety and begin the process of developing national
solutions to protect the flying public.