Dayton Daily News

Cruise bookings smash records, despite COVID

Passengers accept that virus likely will be aboard.

- By Anna Jean Kaiser

‘I don’t think that people really understand what they’re getting into when they’re going on a cruise. I didn’t understand what I was getting into.’

MIAMI — Jennifer Chatham, a real estate agent who splits her time between Miami and Houston, recently took her third Carnival cruise during the pandemic.

Her first two cruises, in September 2021 and January this year, were without incident. Then in April on an eight-night cruise around the Caribbean on Carnival Horizon, she tested positive for the coronaviru­s on day six.

“I don’t think that people really understand what they’re getting into when they’re going on a cruise. I didn’t understand what I was getting into,” she said, noting she was extremely ill with COVID-19 and left alone in an isolated cabin with no one checking on her. “I really, really hate to say it, Carnival has been my ship that I’ve cruised with for a long time, but I wish I had had a more positive experience when I was sick.

“I definitely learned that COVID is still out there,” Chatham said. “I have no one to blame but myself. Everyone else wasn’t masking. It felt back to normal.”

Nearly a year since cruising restarted in North American waters following a 15-month pandemic hiatus, many cruise vacation travelers appear willing to accept the risk of getting the infectious disease that’s gripped the world for two years.

Two of the global cruise line leaders based in Miami — Carnival

and Royal Caribbean — are reporting record reservatio­ns for voyages, despite COVID-19 infecting the large majority of ships now sailing.

Of 92 cruise ships in U.S. waters on Thursday, 70 of them are under investigat­ion by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for coronaviru­s outbreaks. The CDC investigat­es outbreaks when at least 0.3% of a ship’s passengers and crew members test positive for the virus.

The federal health agency data shows the outbreaks are nowhere near as widespread as in December 2021 and January when the omicron variant emerged, and eventually all 92 ships sailing in the U.S. early this year were being scrutinize­d for onboard virus cases. In late December, the CDC had suggested all travelers, even those vaccinated, should avoid cruising.

In March, the CDC dropped all risk warnings related to COVID19 on cruise ships, and left it to consumers to decide for themselves whether they would cruise.

Cruise industry leaders have acknowledg­ed that having coronaviru­s cases on ships is the new normal, but say the infection rates are less than in the general population and the industry’s public health safety protocols are more stringent than most public settings.

“Yes, there will be COVID on the ships, but there’s COVID everywhere in society,” said Arnold Donald, the soon-departing CEO of Carnival Corp., at the Seatrade global cruise conference in April in Miami Beach.

Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n, the cruise industry trade and lobbying group in Washington, D.C., said in April its global market research found that 84% of people who had cruised in March said they would cruise again.

“Overall, we are very pleased with the public response to and support for our protocols, which has allowed us to be the first major U.S. cruise line to return its full fleet back to operation,” Chris Chiames, Carnival’s chief spokesman, said in an email.

Jonathan Fishman, director of corporate and incident communicat­ions for Royal Caribbean, said the cruise line has safely transporte­d 2 million passengers since the North American cruise restart in June 2021.

“Cruising has consistent­ly shown COVID-19 incidence rates lower than the rest of society, a testament to the rigorous protocols the industry has put in place and our collaborat­ion with public health authoritie­s,” Fishman said.

Through the ongoing pandemic, cruise lines never have shared publicly their respective figures on coronaviru­s infections among passengers and crew on individual ships, leaving passengers to discuss that and their experience­s with the virus on social media.

Jennifer Chatham real estate agent

 ?? JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL/TNS CARLINE ?? Cruise lines such as Carnival Cruise Line, which operates the Carnival Horizon shown here in 2018, and their customers, are beginning to see coronaviru­s cases on ships as inevitable, even acceptable.
JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL/TNS CARLINE Cruise lines such as Carnival Cruise Line, which operates the Carnival Horizon shown here in 2018, and their customers, are beginning to see coronaviru­s cases on ships as inevitable, even acceptable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States