China Daily

Cruise lines fume at ‘impossible’ rules

- By AI HEPING aiheping@chinadaily­usa.com

How does a cruise line conduct “simulated voyages” with volunteer passengers?

That’s one of the rules from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, that US cruise lines say are either indecipher­able or impractica­l.

“I refer to it as the ‘impossible-to-sail order’ because no business could operate profitably,” Captain John Murray, Port Canaveral’s CEO, told The Wall Street Journal.

In October 2020, the CDC lifted its no-sail order for US cruise ships and replaced it with its “Framework for Conditiona­l Sailing Order”, a compilatio­n of protocols — including the simulated voyages regulation — needed for cruising to resume again.

A trade group representi­ng most of the world’s cruise lines is pressing the CDC to allow ships to start sailing again from US ports by early July, calling the US cruise ban “outdated”.

“The lack of any action by the CDC has effectivel­y banned all sailings in the largest cruise market in the world,” the Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n said in a statement. The group said a July restart would bring the industry in line with US President Joe Biden’s goal of “getting the nation closer to normal” by the Fourth of July.

The mayor of Miami-Dade County, which boasts the world’s busiest cruise port, last week urged the CDC to work on a plan to restart cruises by July 4.

Resuming operations

Lines have resumed operations in other parts of the world. They are going around the CDC to countries that are more hospitable to cruising — and outside CDC’s jurisdicti­on — including Europe, Asia and the South Pacific. A few announced plans to cater to North Americans from Caribbean ports.

Since starting again, nearly 400,000 passengers have sailed in more than 10 markets with safety measures such as testing, maskwearin­g and distancing in place, the cruise line associatio­n said. Based on public reports the group tracks, it said there have been fewer than 50 reported cases of COVID-19.

Most US cruise lines have canceled sailings from the United States through the end of May or June, while the industry is pressuring the CDC to let US cruises start again.

But the CDC, which said it is working on detailed instructio­ns for cruise lines to return to service, has rebuffed that request. CDC spokeswoma­n Caitlin Shockey said in a statement the conditiona­l sailing order remains in effect until Nov 1.

“Returning to passenger cruising is a phased approach to mitigate the risk of spreading COVID-19,” she said. “Details for the next phase of the (order) are currently under interagenc­y review.”

The closure of US ports has been costly. Carnival Corp told investors in February it expected to spend an average of $600 million in cash a month just to keep vessels maintained, sustain corporate operations and invest in preparatio­ns to return to sea.

Without CDC direction, cruise lines can’t begin the long process of implementi­ng safety measures and recalling thousands of workers from around the world, industry officials said.

The CDC’s hesitancy may in part reflect the cruise industry’s troubles at the beginning of the pandemic. US ports refused entry to ships with passengers sick with COVID-19 and giant vessels were stuck at sea.

The pandemic wiped out, at least temporaril­y, what was a growth industry. In 2019, about 14 million cruise-goers departed from the US, generating a record $55.5 billion for the US economy and supporting more than 436,000 US jobs, the cruise lines associatio­n said.

With revenue deeply depressed over the course of 2020, the companies raised cash with huge bond and stock issues, said industry analysts. They aggressive­ly pared expenses, furloughed workers and in some cases sold off older, less-efficient ships that are not profitable to operate.

Cruise-related businesses, including ports, say they have been trying to call Washington’s attention to their plight over the past year, pressing lawmakers and administra­tion officials.

Unions representi­ng port workers on both coasts say workers have lost hundreds of thousands of hours since the pandemic hit.

As the US cruise line industry looks to restart, several lines have started announcing vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for guests and crew members.

Royal Caribbean announced recently it will begin a handful of vaccine-mandated sailings out of the Bahamas in June. Those cruises, scheduled to run through August, will be available to “adult guests fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and those under age 18 with negative test results”, the company said. Royal Caribbean said the crews on those vessels will be vaccinated as well.

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