USA TODAY US Edition

Norwegian cancels all November cruises

- Jayme Deerwester Contributi­ng: Morgan Hines

The White House cleared the way for cruising to return to U.S. waters Nov. 1, but Norwegian Cruise Line won’t go out to sea until at least December.

Norwegian’s parent company, which also owns Oceania Cruises and Regent Seven Seas Cruises, announced Monday that it suspended all cruises through Nov. 30.

Norwegian Holdings said in a news release that it will “continue to work in tandem with global government and public health authoritie­s and its Healthy Sail Panel expert advisors to take all necessary measures to protect its guests, crew and the communitie­s visited.”

It advised guests with reservatio­ns on any of its cruise lines to contact Norwegian or their travel agent for more details.

On Oct. 1, Carnival Cruise Line announced it scrubbed all remaining 2020 cruises except those sailing out of its home ports in Florida, and even those aren’t a sure thing. Royal Caribbean suspended cruises through Oct. 31 and canceled trans-Atlantic, European and Australian itinerarie­s beyond that date.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention order originally suspended cruising in U.S. waters beginning in mid-March and has been extended multiple times.

Last month, the Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n, the trade group that represents 95% of the world’s oceangoing passenger ships, unveiled a list of mandatory health and safety changes designed to make it safe to sail during the COVID-19 pandemic – ideally with a phased-in U.S. start before the end of the year.

CLIA’s mandatory “Core Elements of Health Protocols” includes crew and passenger testing, mask wearing, enhanced cruise ship ventilatio­n, stringent response procedures and shore excursion protocols.

The new protocols will apply to all CLIA member vessels that can carry 250 or more passengers. CLIA, which voluntaril­y suspended sailing in the USA until Nov. 1, requires each cruise company’s CEO to provide written verificati­on that the elements are being applied to their individual fleets, according to a news release shared by Bari Golin-Blaugrund, vice president of strategic communicat­ions and public affairs for CLIA.

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