- A group of
GOP senators on Friday asked theCDC to end federal mask requirements for travelers. - Sen.
Ted Cruz said the guidelines were an "outdated and unnecessary mandate." - The group introduced a three-page bill in the Senate on Thursday.
A group of Republican senators led by Ted Cruz on Friday announced a bill seeking an end to federal mask mandates for vaccinated travelers on planes, trains, and other public transport.
Mask requirements from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) and
The CDC in February recommended that travellers stayed home until they were fully vaccinated, but still required everyone to wear a mask while on public transport. The same was true for the TSA, which extended its requirement until September. Airlines have their own requirements, too.
"Americans should be able to
In addition to Cruz, the GOP effort involved Susan Collins, Jerry Moran, Roger Wicker, Cynthia Lummis, and Marsha Blackburn. It came as states across the country continued loosening restrictions on daily life.
TSA mask mandates have led to altercations in airports and on flights, where cabin crews have had to deal with unruly passengers. Flight attendants have described "unprecedented" violence. The TSA in July will restart its self-defense training for flight crews.
A frequent flier last week sued seven airlines, saying vaccinated travelers should be able to fly without masks.
The resolution, introduced in the Senate on Thursday, said the CDC could incentivize more people to get vaccines by dropping the mask requirement.
The three-page text said that getting rid of the
In late May, the transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, said the mask requirement on public transit was a "matter of safety, but it's also a matter of respect" for flight crews.
The World Health Organization in a Friday press briefing said vaccines alone won't end the pandemic. The organization urged fully vaccinated people to continue wearing masks.
Collins in a statement said she'd spoken with flight attendants about the mandate. The senator said she'd heard about "horrendous and unthinkable violence" on recent flights.
If vaccinated people on the ground no longer need masks indoors, then fliers don't need them either, Collins said.
"It makes no sense that someone can go to a restaurant without wearing a mask, but they cannot fly on an airplane without one, even though it has a far better ventilation system," she said.