CDC
month after the CDC lifted its cruise ban, following heavy lobbying from the industry group Cruise
Lines International Association to let ships sail again. The Oct. 30 sail order, however, lists conditions to allow cruise ships to resume their operations, including testing requirements and written agreements with medical facilities on land.
U.S. cruises are most likely to resume from
South Florida since the $7 billion industry was forced to halt all operations on March 13. PortMiami is the world’s busiest cruise port; South Florida is also home to headquarter offices of the cruise industry’s largest companies, which collectively employ around 10,000 local workers.
But so far, several major cruise lines have canceled trips until 2021, including three Carnival Corp. cruise lines. For others, like Princess Cruises, all trips are canceled through March 31, 2021. Royal Caribbean International announced earlier this month it was suspending all U.S. cruises at least through Dec. 31, 2020.
And the first cruise company to operate in the Caribbean since the pandemic began, SeaDream, shut down all its cruises after announcing last week that seven passengers and two crew members had tested positive for COVID-19.
No government or independent agency is publicly
tracking infections linked to cruise ships. But according to a comprehensive Miami Herald analysis, at least 3,908 people contracted COVID-19 after boarding an ocean cruise ship. At least 111 people died as a result of the respiratory virus.
The industry as a whole has also struggled to repatriate all crew members aboard, leaving thousands of workers stranded at sea for months without pay after the industry shut down in March. At least 29 of them died from the virus, a Miami Herald
investigation shows. Dozens more have still not made it back home.
The toll of the ban has left thousands of people linked to South Florida’s ports unemployed for months, many receiving, at most, $275 per week in unemployment assistance.