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Clean is the New Secure : Fusion Cell Reimagines Cleanliness Standards at Manchester-Boston Regional Airport

Share this article MANCHESTER, N.H., April 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/   FUSION CELL AND MANCHESTER-BOSTON REGIONAL AIRPORT ( MHT ) have partnered to redefine airport cleanliness standards in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Manchester-Boston Regional Airport Fusion Cell s health and safety team consists of current and former military specialists with decades of experience in epidemiology, infection control, and risk mitigation. The board-certified team conducted an investigation of the Airport s enhanced health and safety practices implemented when the pandemic began. Their investigation focused on what Fusion Cell calls the Big Six for COVID-19 intervention filtered air, sanitation/disinfection, health screenings, distancing guidelines, mask mandates, and hand hygiene. With these elements in mind, they analyzed everything at the Airport from sick worker policies to passenger flow and check-in procedures to HVAC and other facility-specific disinfection procedures.

TSA: Passenger volume is steadily rising at New England airports

The TSA has screened more than two million passengers at the following six major New England airports since Jan. 1: Logan International Airport in Boston, Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn., T.F. Green Airport in Warwick, R.I., Portland International Jetport in Portland, Maine, Manchester-Boston Regional Airport in Manchester, N.H., and Burlington International Airport in Burlington, Vermont. The rise in New England passengers is mirroring flight activity across the country, according to the TSA. On April 2, the TSA reported 22 straight days of at least one million passengers screened nationwide. In comparison, between March 16 and December of 2020, passenger volume only reached one million 14 times nationwide.

New England Airports See Second Busiest Weekend of 2021

“If you are vaccinated, it is lower risk,” she said. According to the CDC, nearly 100 million people in the U.S. or about 30% of the population have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. A person is considered fully vaccinated two weeks after receiving the last required dose. The agency had said it would update its guidance as more people got vaccinated and evidence mounted about the protection the shots provide. The CDC is sticking to its guidance for unvaccinated people to avoid unnecessary travel. If they do travel, the agency says to get tested one to three days before the trip, and three to five days after. People should also stay home and quarantine for seven days after travel, even if their COVID-19 test is negative, the agency says.

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