The number of Americans getting on airplanes has sunk to a level not seen in more than 60 years as people prefer to stay in their homes to avoid catching or spreading coronavirus. The Transportation Security Administration screened less than 100,000 people on Tuesday, a drop of 95% from a year ago.
The official tally of 97,130 people who passed through TSA checkpoints includes some airline crew members and people who are still working at shops inside airport security perimeters.
The last time the nation averaged 97,000 passengers a day was in 1954, according to figures from trade group Airlines for America. It was the dawn of the jet age. The de Havilland Comet, the first commercial jetliner, was just a few years old, and Boeing was running test flights with the jet that would become the iconic 707.
TSA, which was created after the 9/11 attacks, has been chronicling the plunge in air traffic, posting numbers on how many people the officers screen each day.
On March 1, it was nearly 2.3 million almost the same as a year earlier. The one-way roller coaster ride a sheer downward turn began in the second week of March and slowed only in the last several days, when there wasn't much more room to drop.
"The falloff is amazing to see," said Henry Harteveldt, a travel industry analyst. "The good news is that it shows people are taking shelter-in-place orders seriously."
Some of the people who are still travelling are health care professionals on their way to pandemic hot spots such as New York, where they will help in the treatment of Covid-19 patients.
The nation's largest flight attendant union, which is worried about the safety of its members who are still flying, is demanding that the government ban all leisure travel. Representatives at several airlines said they don't know how many leisure travellers are left, since they don't routinely ask people why they are flying.
Airlines have drastically cut the number of flights to match demand and save cash, but even with far fewer flights, most seats are empty.
Air travel is much more affordable and accessible to the masses than it was in the 1960s. Still, both leisure and business travellers have above-average incomes.
"Theoretically, these consumers should be better-positioned financially to be able to travel again," Harteveldt said, "but we are seeing people at all income levels and all ages affected by job loss or reduction in hours or working for companies that have closed."