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Buttigieg says he’s confident new vaccine mandates won’t impact airline holiday travel

(Photo supplied/Pete For America)

The U.S. Transportation Secretary is confident that new COVID vaccine mandates for federal workers and contractors will not impact airline travel over the Thanksgiving holiday.

“I have seen no indication that vaccine requirements are going to impact travel in any way, certainly in terms of our ability as a federal administration to provide the services that are needed,” said Pete Buttigieg, transportation secretary and former mayor of South Bend.

Buttigieg says about 99% of people have “gotten in their information.”

“That means they’re vaccinated, they’re in the process of it, or they’ve put in a request for their exemption. I expect numbers are similar across the board,” said Buttigieg. “This is about ending the pandemic.”

Buttigieg was asked why there is no federal coronavirus vaccine mandate for air travel.

“Well, there is for international travel. When it comes to domestic travel, we have found other strategies are highly effective. Between the masking and the other travel mitigations, we’re very confident in the safety of air travel,” said Buttigieg.

Rural Hoosiers are paying close attention to this year’s legislative session at the State Capitol in Indianapolis for many reasons.

Andy Tauer, the executive director of public policy with the Indiana Farm Bureau, tells Indy Politics there are several topics of discussion that they are keeping an eye on in hopes that some parts of their legislative agenda get addressed by state lawmakers.

He said the passage of the bipartisan infrastructure package in Congress has had a lot to do with what they want to see done this year, particularly when it comes to the continued increases in people moving to more urban areas from rural parts of the state.

“How do we find those solutions to keep rural main street viable,” asked Tauer. “So this year our focus is really going to be shifted. In terms of broadband, how do we make sure those dollars that have been allocated make it to the right communities?”

The infrastructure bill has set aside billions of dollars for states to invest in rural broadband Internet access. Other parts of the package address climate conversations such as investing more in wind and solar energy. These two energy sources need rural land in order to generate enough energy.

“As wind farms continue to expand we’ve had more conversations about ‘how do we balance local control with local units of government as well as local property rights’,” Tauer said. “As we look at this overall energy strategy, I think we need to find that balance.”

Tauer said what he’d like to see is more of a conversation involving alternative liquid fuels, such as Ethanol. He says it is certainly more environmentally friendly than regular gasoline and is a viable energy source as the discussion has shifted more towards electric vehicles.

Finally, Tauer said that another priority for the legislative session will be to address a gap between urban lawmakers and rural Hoosiers. The gap appears to have widened with the recent redistricting showing that more Hoosiers are moving to urban areas of the state.

“I think there is a bridge there between those more urban legislators and agriculture,” said Tauer. “At the end of the day agriculture is all about food. So, that greater food conversation about food availability is an opportunity for us to find a bridge to some of those more urban legislators.”

The legislative session has technically started already, but lawmakers won’t start hashing out new legislation until after Jan. 1.​

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4 comments

Charles U Farley November 23, 2021 at 8:33 pm

Both of the quoted individuals are pretty clueless. Completely ignoring Bootyjudge’s hypocrisy, the farm bureau guy thinks rural broadband investment is needed (Starlink says it’s not), that the infrastructure bill was a good deal, that wind or ethanol are good, and that rural voters only care about agriculture. What a load of bollocks!

Reply
Benny Roseland November 24, 2021 at 2:28 pm

Please refrain from the use of “bollocks” when referring to Mayor Pete. Just the thought makes his infrastructure tingle.

Reply
Charles U Farley November 24, 2021 at 6:43 pm

Your comment makes me wish we had upvotes here. Well done!

Reply
Slacker06 November 25, 2021 at 3:14 pm

When was the trans–portation secretary given the authority over health care or anything else. Just like when he was the pretend mayor of South Bend, he is AWAL for his actual duties. When things got a little hot in SB he went (actually volunteered) on deployment and left his deputy to pick up the pieces. During the present supply chain issues he quietly went away to nurse his adopted newborn. Can’t think of a more confused individual than this fool.

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