COVID-19 Impacts Send Tucson Airport Passenger Numbers Down 55 Percent
Airline passenger traffic at Tucson International Airport (TUS) dropped by more than half in 2020 to less than 1.7 million travelers as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic took effect. The last time TUS had fewer than 2 million passengers was 38 years ago, in 1982.
Total passengers at TUS for the calendar year fell to 1,698,777, down 55.3 percent from 3,797,201 in 2019.
The statistics were reported Jan. 25 during the Tucson Airport Authority’s annual meeting, which due to COVID-19 protocols, was a hybrid meeting with most members participating remotely while some participated from socially-distanced venues at the airport.
“After four consecutive years of passenger growth, we were looking forward to 2000 being another robust year. We were on track in January and February to exceed 4 million passengers for the year, then the COVID-19 pandemic hit and the world radically shifted,” Danette Bewley, president and CEO told the TAA membership. “In March and April the airport terminal became still and quiet as airlines canceled flights and grounded aircraft.”
All airlines at TUS reported declines. American remained the airport’s busiest carrier, followed by Southwest, Delta and United.
The rapid drop is shown in the daily numbers of departing passengers screened by the Transportation Security Administration at the airport. The highest total was 7,303 on Feb. 23 and the lowest bottomed out at just 250 on April 16.
Despite the decline, Bewley told authority members that COVID-19 “has not beaten us, and we will persevere.” She acknowledged, however, “Recovery will be a slow process and may take a few years.”
Bewley credited the TUS Cares initiative for helping the airport maintain higher percentages of traveling passengers than most other airports and the national average. She said the TAA spent more than $250,000 on equipment and infrastructure improvements to improve cleaning and sanitization of the facility. The effort included up-leveling all cleaning and sanitization protocols, which resulted in TUS being the fifth airport in the world to earn STAR accreditation for cleanliness from the Global Biorisk Advisory Council.
Bewley said the TAA worked with airlines throughout the year to restore and enhance air service. Of 19 nonstop destinations that were served from TUS before the pandemic, all but five had resumed before the end of 2020 and three more are due to be restored in February and March.
The pandemic also prompted Southwest Airlines to look at new opportunities. As a result, in October Southwest added new nonstop flights between TUS and Houston Hobby Airport and in December announced that on March 11 it will start new nonstop flights to Oakland, California.