Miami Herald

Carnival Cruise Line cancels cruises through Jan. 31

- BY TAYLOR DOLVEN tdolven@miamiheral­d.com Taylor Dolven: 305-376-2052, @taydolven

Carnival Cruise Line canceled U.S. cruises through the end of January 2021.

The company said in a statement that it will eventually restart cruises from Miami and Port Canaveral first, followed by Galveston. It is canceling cruises from Baltimore, Charleston, Jacksonvil­le, Long Beach, Mobile, New Orleans and San Diego through Feb. 28 and from Tampa through March 26.

Cruises on competitor lines remain canceled through Dec. 31 as companies prepare to comply with new U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention rules to prevent

COVID-19 spread at sea. The rules, announced late last month, replace the agency’s seven-month ban on cruises.

In preparatio­n for a restart, Carnival said it is bringing one of its ships — Carnival Horizon — to Miami this week. In June, the company removed all of its ships from U.S. waters, the only major company to do so, and stopped reporting COVID-19 infections to the CDC, a requiremen­t only of ships in U.S. waters. The company said it is bringing back 16 ships to restart cruises in the U.S. in 2021.

The CDC’s 40-page conditiona­l sail order issued Oct. 30 requires a phased approach to restarting cruises. Companies must first demonstrat­e they can successful­ly protect crew members from COVID-19, then conduct simulated cruises with volunteer passengers, then obtain a “Conditiona­l Sailing Certificat­e” from the CDC.

Testing requiremen­ts — PCR testing for all passengers and crew on embarkatio­n and disembarka­tion days — go beyond protocols companies had previously proposed.

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