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Celerity

(43,415 posts)
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:30 PM Apr 2022

The End of Airplane Masking Feels Momentous

Why is this mandate different from all other mandates?

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/04/cdc-mask-mandate-transportation-planes/629614/

https://archive.ph/2UgKw



If you commuted to work today on a bus, train, or metro system, you probably saw more mouths and noses than usual. On Monday, a Trump-appointed federal judge struck down a CDC rule that mandated masks on all U.S. transportation networks, including in airports and on planes. Airline passengers who were mid-flight when the news broke cheered and ripped their masks off, discarding them in trash bags that unmasked flight attendants helpfully brought up and down the aisle.





Over the past several months, vaccine requirements in restaurants, mask mandates in schools and retail spaces, and testing requirements for workers have all been reversed. But the end of airplane masking in particular has inspired a disproportionate reaction—of both extreme relief and utter outrage. One pilot reportedly called the end of the mandate “the most important announcement I’ve ever made.” An ER doctor wondered how “people who claim to love kids are totally cool” with babies dying from COVID. Why, exactly, is this rollback so different from all other rollbacks?







In some ways, the masking rules on transportation should matter less for public health than other masking mandates, not more. Most people who don’t work in transportation probably spend relatively little time in train stations, buses, and Jetways, as compared with workplaces, where mask requirements are already scarce. Joseph Allen, who directs Harvard’s Healthy Buildings program, told me that, in general, ventilation is also better on trains and airplanes than it is in restaurants, offices, and homes. (That’s true only as long as the HVAC system is actually turned on, which it tends not to be while a plane is on the tarmac.) On buses, ventilation depends on whether the driver has the vehicle in air-recirculation mode. “There’s been too much attention on the risk in airplanes for a long time,” Allen said. “Airplanes are not where super-spreading is happening.”

In the broadest sense, removing the transportation-network mandate is not likely to have an enormous, near-term effect on the trajectory of the pandemic. Even if mask compliance on subways and buses suddenly went down to, say, 10 percent in a major American city, any increase in cases or hospitalizations “would probably be small—small to the level of not being detectable by our current surveillance systems,” David Dowdy, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, told me.

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The End of Airplane Masking Feels Momentous (Original Post) Celerity Apr 2022 OP
I'm ok it's lifted. It was going to happen May 3rd anyway. Phoenix61 Apr 2022 #1
It won't move any needle on Covid numbers SoonerPride Apr 2022 #2
My trip by Amtrak to visit family for mother's day is now off. Grasswire2 Apr 2022 #3
What about a subway? A bus? A store? Movie theatre? Art gallery? TIA Celerity Apr 2022 #5
I bought new KN95 masks today. Tetrachloride Apr 2022 #4
They should be sued for doing this mid flight Meowmee Apr 2022 #6
Sued for what? Celerity Apr 2022 #7
For potentially exposing people to covid who thought everyone would be masked Meowmee Apr 2022 #9
It would be tossed out of court instantly, as it was done under protection of following the state Celerity Apr 2022 #10
Iyo. It would be hard to litigate but if harm occurs someone should Meowmee Apr 2022 #13
Breach of consent seems possible leftstreet Apr 2022 #15
I think the fact it was an exogenously-mandated rule would negate any standing against the airline Celerity Apr 2022 #19
Would depend on the language in their safety policies leftstreet Apr 2022 #20
I'm not a lawyer, but I just don't see a path forward for a successful lawsuit. I might be wrong. Celerity Apr 2022 #21
The people who cheered, like they were at a sporting event or something, tishaLA Apr 2022 #8
"Airplanes are not where super-spreading is happening." Hugin Apr 2022 #11
I've lost count of the number of colds I've caught on planes. greatauntoftriplets Apr 2022 #12
I feel bad for this family... Nevilledog Apr 2022 #14
An internal investigation? Hugin Apr 2022 #17
I had the same reaction. Nevilledog Apr 2022 #18
Fucksake. This article is idiotic nonsense. Spider Jerusalem Apr 2022 #16
I'm going to channel my crazy grandma here, she could say the most horrible things imaginable... hunter Apr 2022 #22

Phoenix61

(17,006 posts)
1. I'm ok it's lifted. It was going to happen May 3rd anyway.
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:36 PM
Apr 2022

Seriously pissed they did it mid-flight. I’m sure there were people in the air or on their way to an airport because they believed everyone would be masked. No excuse for this other than an unqualified judge having no idea how to issue a judicial opinion.

SoonerPride

(12,286 posts)
2. It won't move any needle on Covid numbers
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:41 PM
Apr 2022

Masks really help the unvaccinated.

Vaccines help the vaccinated.

Anyone can continue wearing a mask if they want.

Grasswire2

(13,571 posts)
3. My trip by Amtrak to visit family for mother's day is now off.
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:41 PM
Apr 2022

Can't imagine spending four hours in a train car with non-maskers.

Meowmee

(5,164 posts)
6. They should be sued for doing this mid flight
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:50 PM
Apr 2022

I hope they are. This country is full of stupidity, lack of intelligence and narcissism and bankrupt on caring for the welfare of others. The pandemic brought it out even more than any other event imo.

Meowmee

(5,164 posts)
9. For potentially exposing people to covid who thought everyone would be masked
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:55 PM
Apr 2022

For the entire flight. There could have been, and undoubtedly were, people who are immune compromised and high risk who were endangered. The fact that a pilot thinks this is his most important announcement is disgusting. Just fly the plane please and keep your opinions to yourself.

Celerity

(43,415 posts)
10. It would be tossed out of court instantly, as it was done under protection of following the state
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:59 PM
Apr 2022

of the current law/rules/regulations, and even if someone did test positive post-flight, there is no way to prove they caught it on the flight.

Meowmee

(5,164 posts)
13. Iyo. It would be hard to litigate but if harm occurs someone should
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 10:29 PM
Apr 2022

What this was a disgusting publicity stunt on the part of many so called professionals. If someone was exposed and suffers harm they are responsible, not that they care most probably obviously, whether any potential suit would be allowed or would be successful or not. Part of the reason it would be difficult to litigate and to prove is that the US did very poor or no contact tracing during this entire pandemic.


People on those flights were guaranteed a certain level of safety thinking that passengers/ crew were required to mask for the entire flight, not that they would take them off when the pilot decided to tell everyone mid flight it was now ok to remove them.


The people doing this type of thing are part of the many major issues here.

leftstreet

(36,109 posts)
15. Breach of consent seems possible
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 10:36 PM
Apr 2022

Passengers board a flight under safety policy guidelines that change while they're in the air?

Seems dicey

Imagine being halfway through a zoo and they announce cages can be opened

leftstreet

(36,109 posts)
20. Would depend on the language in their safety policies
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 11:23 PM
Apr 2022

Wouldn't matter where a ruling originated. They write their own policies that you consent to when traveling with them.

I know it's just all in the details, but that's what lawyers will be looking at if someone decides to sue

tishaLA

(14,176 posts)
8. The people who cheered, like they were at a sporting event or something,
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 08:55 PM
Apr 2022

I just don't get. A mask isn't such a burden that losing it deserves applause or cheers.

Hugin

(33,164 posts)
11. "Airplanes are not where super-spreading is happening."
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 09:06 PM
Apr 2022

I would not and will not ever listen to anything Joseph Allen says. Air travel was responsible for spreading Omicron globally in less than a month.

The largest super-spreader event yet.

greatauntoftriplets

(175,742 posts)
12. I've lost count of the number of colds I've caught on planes.
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 09:42 PM
Apr 2022

All those people sitting in a very small space when someone might have COVID? No thanks, I'll still mask.

Nevilledog

(51,122 posts)
14. I feel bad for this family...
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 10:32 PM
Apr 2022


Tweet text:

Jonathan Evans
@jhewiz
·
Apr 19, 2022
I had never been shamed for wearing a mask until my @AlaskaAir Orlando-Seattle flight today. The pilot created an anti-mask party from the start, which encouraged the non-mask wearers to chide the mask-wearers. The most uncomfortable experience for me and my family. Really sucked

Jonathan Evans
@jhewiz
Just so everyone knows, @AlaskaAir has reached out and said they'll be investigating, but won't be able to tell me the results. Which is fair enough, but I told them I was taken aback by how all the staff went with it and didn't try to help those of us wearing masks.
12:39 PM · Apr 20, 2022
 

Spider Jerusalem

(21,786 posts)
16. Fucksake. This article is idiotic nonsense.
Wed Apr 20, 2022, 10:42 PM
Apr 2022

This, right here:

Most people who don’t work in transportation probably spend relatively little time in train stations, buses, and Jetways, as compared with workplaces


Except for people who spend 2 hours a day on a bus or train, 10 hours a week, 40 hours a month, because they can't afford a car/don't have a license/etc. I would guess that the number of Americans who spend a substantial part of their day commuting by public transit is in the millions and potentially tens of millions; it's not negligible.

hunter

(38,317 posts)
22. I'm going to channel my crazy grandma here, she could say the most horrible things imaginable...
Thu Apr 21, 2022, 12:02 AM
Apr 2022

... as a shipyard welder handy with knives and guns.

Soon after she retired she was removed from the home she owned as a danger to herself and others.

I can hear her voice in my head, my head at least a quarter crazy as she was, saying "Fuck off, I wouldn't touch you if I was wearing a full body condom."



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