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n95 particulate respirator masks, According to United, travelers won’t be charged a change fee for “new United flights departing between February 27, 2020 - April 30, 2020, as long as travel is rescheduled in the originally ticketed cabin (any fare class) and between the same cities as originally ticketed.” (iStock) United Airlines posted information about the waivers on its website. The affected airports are in the following cities: Bologna, Genoa, Milan, Trieste, Turin, Venice and Verona. According to United, travelers won’t be charged a change fee for “new United flights departing between Feb. 27, 2020 - April 30, 2020, as long as travel is rescheduled in the originally ticketed cabin (any fare class) and between the same cities as originally ticketed.”
n95 particulate respirator masks - United has issued waivers for South Korea and China due to the outbreak. 1ST CORONAVIRUS CASE OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN IN US WAS HOSPITALIZED FOR DAYS BEFORE BEING TESTED: OFFICIALS For flights rescheduled after April 30, the change fee will be waived but a difference in fare may apply. The site also confirmed that the waivers only apply to tickets that were purchased by Feb. 26. FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS Delta Air Lines is also offering travel waivers to ticketholders scheduled to fly to Italy amid concerns over the COVID-19 outbreak, which has killed 11 and sickened over 300 in the European country.
n95 particulate respirator masks, CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Travelers scheduled to fly to airports in Bologna (BLQ), Milan (either LIN or LXP) and Venice (VCE) through March 2 are now eligible to change flights without incurring a change fee, as long as rescheduled travel is booked by March 31. Passengers may also choose to cancel their travel plans and put the value toward future flights booked within one year of the ticket’s issue date, though fare differences and change fees will still apply. Fox News' Michael Bartiromo contributed to this report.
n95 particulate respirator masks - Fox Business co-anchor Connell McShane reported that there are two factors combined, the coronavirus outbreak and the looming possibility of a Bernie Sanders' presidency, which are driving historic losses in the U.S. stock markets. The election uncertainty and the virus are actually connected to each other, said McShane on Fox Nation's Deep Dive on Thursday. I don't think you can argue ... [that] the market is down because people think Bernie Sanders is going to be president, he said. You have to argue, why would people think Bernie Sanders is going to be president? And that's virus-related, in my view, from people we've been speaking to.
n95 particulate respirator masks - U.S. equity markets plunged into correction territory Thursday before bouncing off the worst levels of the session following President Trump’s announcement of a coronavirus task force on Wednesday. The early selling had all three major averages down at least 10 percent from their February peaks. Both the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average were on track for their sixth straight day of losses. [Market analysts] would argue that the economy will weaken and it will... there'll be some sort of a hit to GDP, said McShane, that weakening in the economy will hit the president at an inopportune political time at his strongest point.