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        <title><![CDATA[Qantas will offer dirt-cheap flights without social distancing]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Qantas will offer dirt-cheap flights without social distancing</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Australian airline Qantas plans to lure back wary travelers with flights as cheap as $12.50 – admitting Wednesday that it wants to pack planes without social distancing in its new coronavirus safety protocols.</p><p>The <strong>hard-hit airline</strong>&#8216;s chief executive, Alan Joyce, announced plans for $19 flights between Melbourne and Sydney – equivalent to $12.50 US – as part of a push to get back to &#8220;40 to 50 percent of pre-COVID-19 operation&#8221; by July.</p><p>&#8220;We have to offer really cheap airfares to get people to overcome their reluctance around COVID-19,&#8221; he <strong>told 9News&#8217; &#8220;Today&#8221; show</strong>, with current bookings just 5 percent of normal.</p><p>His company also revealed a series of new<strong> &#8220;Fly Well&#8221; safety measures</strong> to start on June 12, including contactless check-in, sanitizer wipes, extra cleaning and masks handed to every traveler.</p><p>But the airline – which previously planned to remove middle seats to maintain space – insists it is not needed because the pressurized cabin along with medical-grade filters keeps travelers safe.</p><p>Joyce said that because passengers face the same direction with “a barrier of a seat in front of them” there is “a very low risk of transmission.&#8221;</p><p>He also claimed that “we don’t know of a single person-to-person transmission on an aircraft” connected to the pandemic that has infected more than 4.9 million people worldwide.</p><p>&#8220;With the cabin, with the measures we&#8217;re introducing – the masks, the sanitizers for people to wipe down, the extra cleaning we&#8217;re doing ourselves, hand sanitizers all the way through the terminals – we&#8217;re very comfortable you don&#8217;t need social distancing on an aircraft,&#8221; he told the show.</p><p>If Qantas had to fulfill even 5 feet between passengers, it would leave just 22 people onboard an Airbus SE A320 made for 180, the chief executive said.</p><p>&#8220;That means airfares are going to be eight to nine times more than they are today,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It economically will not be justified.&#8221;</p><p>Joyce claimed that 98 percent of the company&#8217;s frequent fliers had indicated they were raring to get back in the air.</p><p>While masks will be handed out, they will not be mandatory to wear, the company said in announcing its &#8220;Fly Well&#8221; safety features.</p><p>“We’re relying on the cooperation of passengers to help make these changes work for everyone’s benefit,&#8221; Joyce said in a statement.</p><p>As of Wednesday morning, Australia had recorded 7,079 confirmed coronavirus cases, with 100 deaths, <strong>according to Johns Hopkins University data</strong>.</p><p><em>With Post wires</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
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