Miami Herald

Cruise companies cancel U.S. cruises until Oct. 31

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Cruise companies are canceling U.S. cruises until at least Oct. 31.

The industry lobbying group Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n announced Wednesday that its member lines won’t be coming back until at least that date. In June, the group agreed to cancel U.S. cruises through mid-September, before the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention banned cruises until Oct. 1.

CLIA member companies include Florida-based Carnival Corporatio­n, Royal Caribbean Group, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, MSC Cruises, Disney Cruise Line and Virgin Voyages.

“CLIA cruise line members will continue to monitor the situation with the understand­ing that we will revisit a possible further extension on or before 30 September 2020,” the group said in a statement. “At the same time, should conditions in the U.S. change and it becomes possible to consider short, modified sailings, we would consider an earlier restart.”

The announceme­nt comes as cruise companies struggle to repatriate crew members, some of whom have been stuck at sea since mid-March when the industry first shut down, most without pay. Ships continue to experience outbreaks of COVID-19 among crew. Early Wednesday, there were 15 cruise ships in and around U.S. waters designated as red by the CDC, meaning they have COVID-19 or COVID-like illness on board, have not quarantine­d recently arrived crew, or have missed a weekly health report to the agency. By the end of the day, 12 ships marked as red had left U.S. waters and were no longer reporting to the CDC.

Four cruise companies that have started cruising — Hurtigrute­n, Ponant, UnCruise and SeaDream — have been forced to cancel cruises after passengers tested positive this week.

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