Lodi News-Sentinel

CDC lifts cruise ban, says voyages can resume once companies prove COVID-19 protocols work

- By Taylor Dolven

MIAMI — The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention set the stage for the return of U.S. cruising with the release Friday of a detailed series of requiremen­ts that could put ships back in operation in the coming months.

The decision from the CDC to let its no-sail order expire in exchange for a conditiona­l sail order is a win for the Florida-based cruise industry, which has been paralyzed since it shut down passenger operations on March 13 amid COVID-19 outbreaks on several ships. Still, cruise companies will have to prove to the agency that COVID protocols are working with specific testing requiremen­ts and trial runs before passengers can return.

Most cruise companies — Carnival Corporatio­n, Royal Caribbean Group, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, MSC Cruises, Disney Cruise Line, Bahamas Paradise Cruise Line and Virgin Voyages — have canceled all cruises leaving from U.S. ports until at least Dec. 1. Companies are promoting protocols they say will limit much of the evacuation­s, stranded ships and death the industry experience­d in the spring once cruising resumes, like testing for all passengers, but have not yet announced what kind of testing.

Looming over the CDC decision is the fast approachin­g Nov. 3 election. Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden has vowed to listen to scientists when crafting his response to the COVID-19 pandemic if he wins the White House. Last month, the Trump administra­tion overruled scientists at the CDC who wanted to ban cruises until February 2021 in favor of extending the no-sail order just one additional month, until Oct. 31.

The CDC still has its Level 3 travel notice for cruise ships in place, which warns against anyone taking a cruise because of the high risk of COVID-19 infection on ships. The agency first put the notice in place on March 8, nearly one week before cruise companies decided to shut down passenger operations amid outbreaks on several ships.

At stake is the $7 billion cruise economy linked to PortMiami and thousands of people left unemployed because of the ban. With Washington D.C. deadlocked over a second COVID-19 relief bill, and Florida’s decision to end federal aid for the state’s jobless, the longshorem­en, shuttle drivers, travel planners and others who make the industry run are receiving at most $275 per week.

Ahead of the CDC’s Friday release, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said he thinks cruising can be done safely and is working with the White House to get cruises restarted. Last week, Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez attended a rally with PortMiami workers urging the CDC to let the nosail order expire. Both argue that since companies Carnival Corp. and MSC Cruises have restarted cruises in Italy, they should be able to restart in the U.S. Meanwhile, COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations in MiamiDade county are on the rise.

Cruise companies told MiamiDade commission­ers last month that the CDC has been unresponsi­ve to their efforts to get cruises going again after first institutin­g its ban in mid-March.

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