Miami Herald

S. Florida cruise is delayed after 8 in crew test positive for COVID-19

Royal Caribbean’s Odyssey of the Seas sailing was postponed from July 3 to July 31, CEO Michael Bayley said. The cruise is scheduled to begin in Fort Lauderdale.

- BY MICHELLE MARCHANTE AND TAYLOR DOLVEN mmarchante@miamiheral­d.com tdolven@miamiheral­d.com

Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal postponed the inaugural sailing of its Odyssey of the Seas cruise ship “out of an abundance of caution” after eight crew members tested positive for COVID-19, the company’s CEO said.

Odyssey of the Seas, one of the world’s biggest cruise ships, was scheduled to cruise from Fort Lauderdale on July 3 and make stops in the Caribbean after conducting a test cruise with volunteers in late June. Its first cruise is now postponed until

July 31. Its test cruise — required for ships that don’t have 95% of passengers vaccinated, a threshold set by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before revenue cruises can begin — will also be reschedule­d.

Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal President and CEO Michael Bayley announced the changes late Tuesday in a statement posted on Facebook.

“During routine testing, eight crew members received a positive test result for COVID-19. All 1,400 crew onboard Odyssey of the Seas were

vaccinated on June 4th and will be considered fully vaccinated on June

18. The positive cases were identified after the vaccinatio­n was given and before they were fully effective,” Bayley said.

Of the eight crew members who tested positive, six are asymptomat­ic, he said. Two have mild symptoms. They are all quarantine­d and are being monitored by the cruise line’s medical team.

“To protect the remaining crew and prevent any further cases, we will have all crew quarantine­d for 14 days and continue with our routine testing . ... While disappoint­ing, this is the right decision for the health and well-being of our crew and guests,” Bayley said.

Celebrity Cruises, Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal’s sister company under Royal Caribbean Group, is moving forward with the June 26 cruise of its Celebrity

Edge ship, the first from a U.S. port since March 2020.

Bayley’s transparen­cy about the crew members’ test results presents a sharp contrast to the way Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal and other cruise companies handled the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. Then, the company often declined to comment on virus outbreaks among shipboard crew.

The newfound transparen­cy is a welcome change, said Rockford Weitz, director of the Maritime Studies Program at Tufts University’s Fletcher School.

“How they’re handling it this time shows that the industry has learned from the mistakes of last year and knows that the population has much greater familiarit­y with COVID than it did a year ago,” he said.

Positive cases are expected given the havoc that the COVID-19 pandemic is still wreaking on much of the world. The climbing vaccinatio­n rate

in the U.S. has brought a dramatic decline in cases and deaths, but the virus is still spreading freely in many countries where doses remain scarce.

This month, two passengers aboard the Celebrity Millennium ship, the first cruise from a Caribbean

port in seven months, tested positive for COVID-19. Like almost all passengers aboard, the cabin mates were vaccinated and reportedly asymptomat­ic. Celebrity Cruises, owned by Miamibased Royal Caribbean Group, required all crew

and passengers 16 years old or older to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Ships sailing from Florida waters might have fewer vaccinated passengers due to a recently passed Florida law that bans vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts aboard cruise ships leaving from Florida ports. While most cruise lines are following CDC recommenda­tions and requiring vaccinatio­ns for all adult passengers on cruises from other states, in Florida they have implemente­d additional health protocols at the expense of unvaccinat­ed passengers.

Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal’s decision to delay the first Odyssey of the Seas cruise will bolster consumer confidence, said Colleen McDaniel, who is editor in chief of Cruise Critic and was a passenger on the Celebrity Millennium.

“People are encouraged that businesses are looking out for them, and that applies to the cruise lines,” she said. “They know they’ve been working on the protocols for a long time, they are putting their faith on the fact that when something happens, they are able to keep everyone safe.”

 ?? SUSAN STOCKER South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? Royal Caribbean’s Odyssey of the Seas arrives at Port Everglades on June 10 in Fort Lauderdale. The ship’s cruise on July 3 has been pushed back to July 31.
SUSAN STOCKER South Florida Sun Sentinel Royal Caribbean’s Odyssey of the Seas arrives at Port Everglades on June 10 in Fort Lauderdale. The ship’s cruise on July 3 has been pushed back to July 31.

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