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No more masks on flights to and from the United States

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In a surprise move, the US federal mask mandate on public transport – including planes and trains – has been scrapped following a ruling by US District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle in Florida.

This is despite the fact that the CDC extended the mask mandate until 3rd May as recently as last week as Omicron sub-variant BA.2 makes its way through the US population.

However, the new ruling means that this is no longer the case, and the US government issued a statement:

“Today’s court decision means that the CDC’s public transportation masking order is not in effect at this time. Therefore TSA will not enforce its security directives requiring mask use on public transportation and transportation hubs at this time.”

Given the mandate’s short extension, the administration is unlikely to challenge the decision. The mandate has had dwindling support and the Democrats cannot afford to alienate middle American voters as the country prepares for midterm elections this Autumn.

Airlines are making masks optional

Virtually all US airlines have now issued statements that wearing masks on board aircraft will become optional, unless a destination requires it.

That means that you will no longer need to wear masks on British Airways and Virgin Atlantic flights to or from the USA. Both airlines have confirmed this on social media.

It makes the the US one of the first (and certainly the biggest) long haul destination where masks are no longer required. However, you still need to take a lateral flow or PCR test before heading to the United States.

Delta, American Airlines, United and other US carriers as well as Amtrak are similarly choosing to make masks an optional part of the travel experience.

Airlines and passengers are happy

Airlines are likely to welcome the move, despite the political way in which it happened: Airlines4America, a lobby group, said it was “encouraged by the lifting of the federal transportation mask mandate”.

The mask mandate came up against considerably opposition in the US where the issue was split along partisan lines. The order was challenged by the ‘Health Freedom Defense Fund’ in Florida where US District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle ruled in favour of the plaintiffs.

Mizelle was appointed to the District Court in 2020 by Donald Trump; the American Bar Association rated her as ‘Not Qualified’ for the job based on her lack of experience: “since her admission to the bar Ms. Mizelle has not tried a case, civil or criminal, as lead or co-counsel.”

Despite the political nature of her appointment and of the plaintiffs, airlines will be happy to be rid of the mandate given the issues they have had enforcing it. Cabin crew are also likely to be sighing in relief now that they no longer have to challenge the maskless. In the last year, the TSA jailed 22 people for violating the mandates and issued 2,709 fines totalling $640,000.

Comments (67)

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  • Mike says:

    Yikes. Was flying out for a funeral before May 2nd in lowly Y. This does worry me, immune system isn’t the best unfortunately.

    • Fred says:

      Then YOU wear a mask. Not my problem.

    • Qrfan says:

      Nothing stops you buying your own ffp3 respirator and wearing it throughout the flight. The idea that others wearing cloth masks that are removed for 1 to 2 hours of eating and drinking per flight were going to keep you safe is dubious.

      • k says:

        you spelt ludicrous wrong…

      • memesweeper says:

        (K)N95 masks are also effective for the wearer when handled and worn correctly.

        • The Savage Squirrel says:

          Slightly geeky comment as I’ve had to spend far too much time paying attention to this stuff. KN95 is the Chinese standard equivalent to N95 or FFP2 but in reality lower. There are a huge number of badged KN95 marked masks that don’t even reach this (and fakes of all badge levels to be fair; one easy spot – anything with ear loops, rather than two straps that go behind your head, will not reach FFP2/N95 standard, let alone FFP3/N99), so don’t bother with these as they likely offer reduced comfort for no benefit.

          FFP2/N95 and FFP3/N99 will offer increased protection when handled and worn correctly throughout the flight. Do note that’s quite a big ask over 10+ hours, particularly if you’re not used to them – a lot of people have the mask but don’t sustain correct face-sealed wear which defeats the whole point.
          I’d agree that mask use as carried out by the public on a plane (I.e. cloth chin strap) was unlikely to be offering great benefit to anyone.

          • Numpty says:

            and to add, the Chinese kn95 are self certified, no external verification of standard required. KF94 (Korean) are a safer bet, much better seal around face. I’m in KL at moment, almost the entire population are wearing KF94 indoors and outside. The only exceptions are the occasional western tourist.

          • Jon says:

            The Boots FFP2 masks have ear loops.

    • Rhys says:

      Mortality is now the same as flu, according to the FT last month.

      • Alan says:

        If vaccinated is probably the key caveat there though, Rhys! (look at China and HK mortality rates for unvaccinated elderly)

    • Mike says:

      Buy a ffp3 (n99 equivalent) mask and do not remove it for the entire flight. You are much better protected by you alone wearing a N95 mask and your neighbour wearing nothing than you both sitting there in cloth masks or even you both wearing surgical masks.

      The mask mandate was pretty much theatre as most were wearing crappy cloth masks which are virtually useless according to the CDC’s own published data and secondly on an flight to the US at least an hour of the flight time is people not wearing masks to eat and/drink. I’m not in anyway a mask denier however if you are going to have mask mandates then do it properly and mandate a N95/ffp2 or better and don’t allow it off for any reason (eating, drinking or medical conditions) and certainly don’t have a mandate satisfied by a piece of unwashed cloth.

    • NorthernLass says:

      Everyone wore masks on our BOS flights last month, yet we all caught Covid. It could only really have been on the plane or at the airport as we mainly did outdoor sightseeing while in Boston and barely mixed with other people. We all tested negative the day before we travelled, and OH was the first to get symptoms on the 3rd day after we flew so the window for infection is pretty small.

      • NorthernLass says:

        And we travelled in F so that doesn’t keep you safe!

      • JP-MCO says:

        Pre-COVID I often remember getting the odd sniffle after being on a long flight. I never ran out to get a test or thought it was a reason to wear a mask. I don’t now either. Were any of you seriously ill or was it just like any other upper respiratory infection?

    • KB says:

      Mike – wear an FFP3 mask, sanitise the arm rests and tray and anything you touch onboard, and you’ve protected yourself as much as you can really. I’ve been flying regularly since Sept 2021 doing this, and continue to do so. More because I can’t afford to be off sick and lose income as a freelancer. They feel a bit restrictive to start with, but you quickly get used to it. After 8 months it’s just an easy habit now. Btw – If you can breath easily when you first put it on, you haven’t got it sealed to your face! So readjust or it’s pointless 🙂

  • Tim says:

    Yes! Amazing news… time to enjoy flying again.

    And to those like Mike with a not so great immune system, I would urge you to seek out some non-partisan info on masks. You’ll find that prior to 2020 it was agreed they do no work when worn by the public. It seems they never had and never will.

    The use of masks is/was 99.9% political theatre.

  • Ruth Findlay says:

    Still no movement on the 24 hour LFT/PCR test though? I’m due to travel to NYC end of May and am hoping it’s scrapped by then.

    • Dave P says:

      Same here – hoping that they will be gone, but I have not seen any indication that they will be scrapped.

    • Tariq says:

      Flying 01 May. Bit the bullet today and ordered tests from Qured.

    • DAJ says:

      Me too! Travelling beginning of June.

      Slight complicating factor is that my routing is AMS-LHR-JFK-LAX – has anyone any advice as to when/where to obtain a LFT prior to travel when travelling ex EU?

      As I understand it, it has to be a supervised test so don’t know if I could do this at LHR as a connecting passenger to the US or would it be best to get one at AMS? If AMS, anyone any advice as to who I could use? All a bit of a palaver!

      • A says:

        Klarity.health £9.99 basic antigen self test option with an NHS test.
        Certificate for observed and unobserved makes no distinction between them, and simply states a supervisor name, and yes, it works for the US.

        • Alan says:

          Didn’t know about that one, but there are certainly video-supervised options too where it wouldn’t matter whether you were in the UK or elsewhere for the video call.

          • Ruth4325 says:

            But does the airline or USA border officials actually check that your test certificate says ‘supervised’? I’ll probably pay for a supervised one as I’m risk averse when it comes to these things but I have read in several places that the certificates looks pretty much the same for self/supervised tests.

      • Harry T says:

        Do the Qured supervised one – it’s done online.

      • DAJ says:

        Thanks for the info all – it’s appreciated 👍🏻

  • David says:

    Flying back from MIA with BA on Friday so I’m really excited to finally travelling without having to wear a mask for twelve hours (including airport time) !

  • StanTheMan says:

    And the world slowly returns to normal…..

    Out of interest, I seem to read/hear more and more people who are unfortunately immunosuppressed these days. Has there been an increase of this since people caught Covid ? I just cant remember ever seeing people wearing masks out in public pre 2020.

    • bafan says:

      Yeah a lot of the immunosuppressed crowd are very quiet about what exactly is the issue with them. I’d be interested to know. I have HIV and Asthma and I have Neutropenia and I was on that Extremely Vulnerable list but I’m also under 30 -, life has to go on at some point. The Americans on social media who are acting like this is the end of the world are as obnoxious at the Trumpers.

    • Panda Mick says:

      “I just cant remember ever seeing people wearing masks out in public pre 2020.”

      Unless you were in the far east where mask wearing is quite common when you’re feeling ill…

      • StanTheMan says:

        So they wear masks to stop spreading germs, not as protection due to their weakened immune system??? Interesting

      • Wanderlust says:

        Surely “when you’re feeling ill” is the key part of that.

        I think a lot of (not all) people wouldn’t mind so much if it was just when you feel unwell that you should wear a mask- but it would be nice if that was more a common courtesy rather than mandated by law which is the case in Asia as far as I know.

    • Kiran_mk2 says:

      I think there have always been a lot of people with poor immune systems (or more likely, overactive immune systems). These are the people that seem to catch a cold every month or for whom a cold knocks them out for a week. Most of the time they just get on with it, but in covid times they worry about how catching it may impact them in terms of recovery time which is why you are hearing more about it.

    • ianM says:

      My wife’s immune system was fine until she had her vaccine booster, now it’s screwed.

      Personally I don’t have a problem wearing a face-covering indoors or on public transport, I’ve done so pragmatically for over two years and not had even the slightest sniffle. So it sure does no harm.

    • stevenhp1987 says:

      I take 2 immunosuppressants and was on the Extremely Clinically Vulnerable list.

      I’m happy with the mask removal! Cannot stand the things. I’ve had 4 covid vaccine doses (eligible for the spring booster which would be the fifth…). What more can be done? Life has to continue at some point. People just like to complain.

      I had covid last month and it was little more than a cold/flu hybrid. Symptoms disappeared within a day of taking Paxlovid anti-virals though that are given out to vulnerable people with a positive test. It’s no longer the threat it once was.

  • chris james says:

    Appalling decision when cases are growing. As much as HK rules can be a pain at times, shows more responsibility.

  • Andrew J says:

    Excellent news, time to enjoy the flight again without faffing about with a mask. Virgin are publicising the change in policy on their social media.

    • mradey says:

      To be fair, they’ve only been paying lip service to mask usage on the TATLs I’ve flown with them since November. Not worn one on board and not asked to.

  • Frankie says:

    Is there a plan or timeline to scrap the testing required for USA?

    • Rhys says:

      Doesn’t appear to be.

      • A350 says:

        Though Delta’s president has stated that he is apparently receiving positive signals from the White House that this will be gradually phased out over the “coming weeks”. Guess that’s the best we’ll get for now. I suspect the dust will have to settle slightly for this court-directed removal and then it’ll be rescinded perhaps in late May or June. 🙂

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