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Delta Air Lines Drops Surcharge For Unvaccinated Employees

ATLANTA (AP) — Delta Air Lines has dropped a $200 per month surcharge that it had been levying against unvaccinated employees who were on the company’s health plan.

CEO Ed Bastian said on a call Wednesday with analysts and reporters:

“We have dropped as of this month the additional insurance surcharge given the fact that we really do believe that the pandemic has moved to a seasonal virus.

“Any employees that haven’t been vaccinated will not be paying extra insurance costs going forward.”

U.S. airlines tried different approaches to get employees vaccinated against COVID-19, including a mandate by United Airlines, which ended up dismissing about 200 employees.

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Delta was the only one to impose an insurance surcharge, and it credited the move with helping get more than 90% of its U.S.-based workers vaccinated.

When Delta imposed the surcharge last year, Bastian said it was necessary because the average hospital stay for an employee with COVID-19 was costing the company $50,000.

Delta is self-insured and sets premiums for its plans, which are administered by UnitedHealthcare.

Airlines tried to get employees vaccinated to help reassure travelers that they wouldn’t contract the virus during a flight.

In the U.S., air travel is now nearly back to 90% of pre-pandemic levels.

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