On Thursday,
U.S. Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) introduced the
Healthy Skies Act in the House of Representatives, along with Rep. Ted Budd (R-NC) and Rep. John Larson (D-CT). This bill will require the Transportation Security Administration ("TSA") to conduct a limited experimental trial program to check passenger temperatures before those passengers are allowed to proceed through airport security.
This legislation carves out exceptions for identifying medical conditions unrelated to COVID-19 that could result in a passenger's temperature exceeding CDC guidance for a fever, which is 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
It's understood that checkpoint temperature screening are not likely to identify travelers who have COVID-19 but are asymptomatic. As such, the purpose of this legislation is simply two-fold:
First, it aims to discourage and prevent travelers who have one of those common symptoms of COVID-19 from boarding a commercial aircraft and possibly placing other travelers at risk;
And second, it will allow Congress and health officials to better understand the degree to which TSA checkpoints could serve, in some limited capacity, as a way to help mitigate the spread of COVID-19 and future pandemics.
Rep. Norman issued the following statement after filing this legislation:
"As we work to get our nation back on its feet, we must continue to identify ways to help slow the spread of COVID-19. Air travel poses unique challenges on this front, and it's important to study and understand how TSA checkpoints might play a role in our fight against this and future pandemics. I want to thank Congressman Budd and Congressman Larson for their insight and co-sponsorship of this important bill."
Rep. Budd (R-NC) also issued a statement on Thursday:
"Reopening America should be the top priority of our government. Making sure air travelers are healthy enough to fly is a common sense way to boost passenger confidence and jumpstart economic activity. That’s how we can stop the spread of the virus and continue a great American comeback.”