Jamaica Gleaner

Judge threatens to stop Carnival cruise ships from docking in US

-

AFEDERAL judge has threatened to temporaril­y block Carnival Corp from docking cruise ships at ports in the United States as punishment for a possible probation violation.

The Miami Herald reports that US District Judge Patricia Seitz said on Wednesday that she will make a decision in June, and she wants company Chairman Micky Arison and President Donald Arnold to attend that hearing.

“The people at the top are treating this as a gnat,” Seitz said. “If I could, I would give all the members of the executive committee a visit to the detention centre for a couple of days. It’s amazing how that helps people come to focus on reality.”

Miami-based Carnival has been on probation for two years as part of a US$40-million settlement for illegally dumping oil into the ocean from its Princess Cruises ships and lying about the scheme, according to court filings.

Despite this, prosecutor­s say ships have dumped grey water into Alaska’s Glacier Bay National Park, prepared ships in advance of court-ordered audits to avoid unfavourab­le findings, falsified records and dumped plastic garbage into the ocean. The company has acknowledg­ed these incidents in court filings.

In a statement after the hearing, Carnival said, “It appears there were some mischaract­erisations made by others to the court. We intend to fully address the issues raised at today’s court conference.”

Carnival’s Chief Communicat­ions Officer, Roger Frizzell, said “our environmen­tal responsibi­lity has been, and continues to be a top priority for the company”.

The five-year probation began in April 2017 and requires a thirdparty auditor to inspect ships belonging to Carnival and its subsidiari­es. Carnival owns nine

cruise brands and has 102 ships.

The court filings say that during 2017, Carnival had a programme in place to prepare ships in advance of the audits to avoid negative findings. Seitz ordered the company to stop in December 2017, and it stopped. But federal prosecutor­s said the practice continued in 2018.

Prosecutor­s said internal emails shared among Carnival’s subsidiari­es discussed the practice. An email from Carnival’s Germanbase­d cruise line AIDA Cruises said, “It would be really important to go onboard on August 12 for one week in order to have time to manage issues before the audits and avoid findings.”

They said a similar email from Carnival’s Seattle-based Holland America Line mentioned “prevent audit findings” as a goal in early 2018.

The court filings said the monitor found that Carnival and its subsidiari­es repeatedly falsified records, as recently as September 2018, when an engineer on Holland America’s Westerdam ship falsified maintenanc­e records to make it appear he had cleaned and tested equipment when he had not. The same ship, according to court filings, dumped 26,000 gallons of grey water into Glacier Bay National Park in September 2018.

Monitors also found that the

Carnival Elation ship dumped plastic garbage overboard during an audit in December. The plastic was not being separated from food, court filings said.

The judge on Wednesday mentioned a 45-minute presentati­on she received as a guest onboard Carnival Corp’s ultra-luxury cruise line Seabourn about how plastic straws are damaging the marine environmen­t.

“I was thinking to myself, ‘I’m impressed,’” she said, “Obviously they talk the talk, but they aren’t walking the walk.”

 ??  ?? A Carnival cruise ship docked in Miami Beach, Florida.
A Carnival cruise ship docked in Miami Beach, Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica