thehill | Annually, millions of passengers travel by plane to see family for Thanksgiving; in 2019, 26 million travelers and crew passed through U.S. airport screening in the 11-day period around the holiday. This year, waves of Americans could see their flights canceled or delayed because of a severe lack of workers within the Transportation Security Administration (TSA). In June the agency warned of serious staffing shortages at nearly 150 of the nation’s airports. The situation was so bad that TSA office employees were asked to volunteer at airports for up to 45 days.
Given these existing issues, the timing of President Biden’s
Nov. 22 vaccine mandate for federal employees — just three days before
Thanksgiving — could not be worse. As of October, only about 60 percent
of TSA workers were vaccinated. If employees call in sick or organize a
walkout days before the holiday, it would create a nationwide travel
nightmare for potentially hundreds of thousands of people, leading to
massive delays and waves of flights being canceled. President Biden
could get stuck with a Reagan-air traffic controllers situation.
It
is not just the TSA that is impacted by staffing shortages — airlines
face similar challenges. The past few months have seen airlines such as
Southwest and American cancel thousands of flights because of a shortage
of workers; the latter is attempting to make due with just
three-quarters of its pre-pandemic staff. The coming vaccine mandate for
large private companies will make existing staffing issues that much
more acute at a time when the airlines have no spare capacity, and it
could spark a flood of resignations and layoffs. While most large
airline workforces are mostly vaccinated — United reports more than 90
percent — even losing a small fraction of employees during the busiest
travel period of the year would be disastrous. How many pilots will
simply cash in their retirements instead of dealing with a sweeping
federal mandate? How many mechanics or support staff will call in for a
week or just quit?
Those who travel by car to see family this
Thanksgiving will face burdens, as well. The cost of fuel is nearing an
all-time high, impeding the ability for average families to drive long
distances to see their loved ones. The increasing price of fuel (crude
oil is anticipated at $120 next year) also leads to higher plane ticket costs and will drive up the price of most consumer goods and food. Plus, heating the family home will be much pricier.
Americans already are being pushed to the brink with inflated costs across the board. Food prices are at their highest point since the 1970s and global food prices increased 3 percent during just the month of October. Simultaneously, a worsening fertilizer shortage
because of supply chain disruptions threatens to spike food costs even
more. Prices are inflating across the board — a whole turkey doubled in price over the past two years. The New York Times said that 2021 could be the costliest Thanksgiving in history.
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