Texarkana Gazette

Some help may be on the way regarding cruise refunds

- By Catharine Hamm

Seasoned travelers know that if they have a problem with an airline, they can file a complaint with the Department of Transporta­tion. Have an issue with deceptive hotel pricing, resort fees or timeshares? The Federal Trade Commission is the place to explain your problem.

But if you have a problem with a cruise, you have a problem. “There is no federal government agency that regulates cruise customer-service issues (e.g. itinerary changes, passenger cancellati­ons, cabin concerns, etc.).”

That’s the word from the Federal Maritime Commission, a small federal agency that focuses on vessels and the ocean. But don’t get too excited.

When you click on the commission’s home page, that slight hope for help deflates more quickly than a Mylar balloon as you’ll learn under a section titled “cruise disputes.”

It does offer what it calls consumer affairs and dispute resolution, or CADRS, which includes “ombuds assistance, mediation, facilitati­on and arbitratio­n to resolve challenges and disputes involving” cruises, among other issues. The service, referred to as “alternativ­e dispute resolution,” is free.

The cruise in question must have more than 50 beds and must have originated from a U.S. port. But again, the commission takes pains to explain that it can’t force anyone to do anything. “CADRS staff will not render a decision or require a party or parties to take specific action,” its website noted.

Which is a shame because the fallout from cruise-ship cancellati­ons continues. One couple was notified six months after requesting a refund for a voyage they could not take that they would receive a refund of their nearly $10,000, minus $3,000 for an administra­tive fee.

Other cruise passengers have been dismayed by the ponderous pace of refunds, the inability to contact a live human being or the complete silence in the tsunami that ensued when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued no-sail orders, recently extended until Oct. 31.

Some cruise lines were (and are) overwhelme­d with refund requests.

Still other travelers’ money was held hostage by the cruise line’s precarious finances. That includes Crystal Cruises, part of the Genting Group.

The Miami Herald reported Aug. 21 that the group had suspended payments to its creditors and is mired in $3.4 billion in debt.

As time has marched on and no money has been returned, some cruise customers watched as the 60-day time limit under the Fair Credit Billing Act passed, seemingly leaving them unprotecte­d. (Credit card customers must dispute the charge within that time limit.)

Depressed now? Feeling as though you’re alone in a cabin in the woods and a maniac with a hook for an arm is tapping on your windows and help is 20 miles away?

There are glimmers of hope, both near and longer term.

Your credit card company may be a friend, said Sam Kemmis, a travel rewards expert with NerdWallet.com, a personal finance website. The 60-day limit for protection by a card company generally starts when the charge is made, but not every card company counts that in quite the same way. Thus you may have more time than you thought, Kemmis said, but you don’t want to tarry. Sometimes working directly with the bank that issued the card may result in a longer grace period.

■ Would you settle for a credit instead of a full refund? Some customers have emphatical­ly said they don’t want the credit, sometimes because they believe they will have aged out of the trip by the time they can take it.

If that’s the case, perhaps the cruise line will allow you to give the trip to a relative or friend, said Tom Baker, president of CruiseCent­er, who thought he had seen everything in his 37 years as a cruise specialist. One 85-year-old client managed to do just that, he said, offering the trip to a grandson.

■ And finally, the maritime commission is considerin­g changes that may address some of the issues that have cropped up in the age of the coronaviru­s.

Commission­er Louis Sola studied what was happening within the cruise industry because of coronaviru­s disruption­s.

“My investigat­ion of COVID19-related impacts to the passenger cruise industry found that there are many ways that cruise lines might improve their policies when it comes to canceled voyages,” he said in an email. “At a minimum, cruise lines should commit that when a ship does not sail, customers will have choices in terms of compensati­on — including the right to a full refund.

“The report I issued earlier this summer has a number of recommenda­tions that strike the right balance between providing consumers more protection­s but not proposing new requiremen­ts that are so difficult or expensive to implement.”

Among those in the report:

■ Refunds should be provided within 60 days if boarding is delayed by a day or more. (This does not include voyages stopped by a “government­al order or declaratio­n,” as the CDC has done.)

■ If a cruise is canceled because of a government­al order or declaratio­n, refunds must be issued within 180 days.

■ Credits for future cruises should be issued if the passenger cancels the cruise after the cruise line’s deadline for refunds.

■ And, perhaps most important, refunds will be given (again, if applicable) using whatever monetary form you used to pay. In other words, if you paid cash, you get cash. If you paid with a card, the money goes back to the card.

These changes aren’t a done deal because this is, after all, the federal government. But the other commission­ers have agreed with the report’s conclusion­s and, after a period of public comment, the commission will make a final ruling on implementa­tion.

Take a look at the findings of the report (bit.ly/cruisecomm­ents); send your comments to secretary@fmc.gov. (Complaints about individual cruises go to complaints@FMC.gov.)

This may offer a solution to one of the two problems you have if you’re frustrated about getting a refund.

Sorry, but it’s not a big fat check.

It’s the chance to be heard at a time when many companies aren’t listening.

 ?? Pedro Portal/Miami Herald/TNS ?? ■ Cruise ships line up along Port Miami of Miami, including Royal Caribbean’s Oasis of the Seas, as cruises have been canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 15 in Miami.
Pedro Portal/Miami Herald/TNS ■ Cruise ships line up along Port Miami of Miami, including Royal Caribbean’s Oasis of the Seas, as cruises have been canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 15 in Miami.

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