Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Cruise line could face lawsuit over norovirus outbreaks

- By Chabeli Herrera Miami Herald

For two months from late 2016 to early 2017, eight consecutiv­e voyages on Princess Cruises’ Sun Princess, sailing from Australia, were blighted by a string of norovirus outbreaks that rendered some passengers “violently ill.”

“On my deck, every third cabin had a ‘do not disturb sign’ on it and there was constant cleaning of the ship,” recounted passenger William Noney, via a news release. “On one of the lunchtimes, an elderly passenger vomited with people all around him.”

Noney got sick on the Sun Princess during a 14-night New Year’s cruise to Bali. Noney said he became nauseous after dinner on New Year’s Eve 2016, 10 days into his cruise voyage.

“I must have vomited for about five minutes and I am a man with a fairly strong stomach,” he said.

Now, an Australian law firm is investigat­ing bringing a class action lawsuit against Carnival Australia, which represents seven of Doral-based parent company Carnival Corporatio­n’s cruise lines in Australia, including Princess. The firm, Shine Lawyers, alleges Carnival was negligent in its sanitation of the vessel, leading to continued outbreaks.

Shine Lawyers estimates that more than 16,000 cruise ship passengers could be eligible for compensati­on if they were on one of the eight sailings, departing from Dec. 5, 2016, to Feb. 16, 2017, on which passengers reported falling sick with the stomach virus, typically referred to as norovirus.

“Our investigat­ion revolves around an alleged failure of a duty of care by Carnival to properly and adequately sanitize the Sun Princess on each cruise and also to give adequate guidelines and safeguards to passengers in preventing them from coming down with norovirus,” said Thomas

Janson, an attorney with Shine Lawyers, via a release.

Janson said his firm had been told there were very short turnaround­s between voyages, about two hours each time, to clean the vessel.

“That’s manifestly inadequate to sanitize a ship that’s the size of a skyscraper,” said Janson. He is seeking restitutio­n for passengers to be equal to a refund for the prices of the cruise and twice the amount in damages.

Princess Cruises declined to comment on the case.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vessel Sanitation Program works to inspect ships that dock in ports in the United States for cleanlines­s.

During inspection­s from 1996 through August 2016, when the Sun Princess was stopped in a U.S. port, the ship always earned satisfacto­ry scores.

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