Orlando Sentinel

Poll: Cruisers prefer to sail with vaccine

- By Ron Hurtibise

Eighty percent of likely cruisers want to resume sailing on ships that require vaccinatio­ns, according to a survey conducted over the Memorial Day weekend by the consumer-focused travel website CruiseCrit­ic.com.

Results of the poll, which generated 5,025 responses, indicate that a majority of cruise industry consumers do not agree with Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to extend his “vaccine passport” ban to the cruise industry.

The respondent­s weren’t cruise novices. Sixty-five percent said they’ve taken 10 or more cruises, according to CruiseCrit­ic.com.

Of the 80% who favor vaccinated ships, 89% said they would feel more safe sailing on a ship with fellow vaccinated travelers and 69% said they want a more traditiona­l cruise experience, without masks, social distancing or testing requiremen­ts.

Just 14% of the 5,025 respondent­s said they would prefer to sail on a ship without a vaccine requiremen­t. and 7% said they had no preference.

The governor’s office did not respond when asked if the poll results indicate that his position opposing vaccine requiremen­ts for cruising is out of step with the desires of most of the industry’s own customers.

Miami-based maritime attorney Jim Walker said the poll results clearly show a split between DeSantis and nearly everyone else with an interest in seeing the cruise industry resume operations.

“The governor’s theoretica­l ‘right to personal freedom’ is crashing into the reality that most people want the vaccinatio­n, most cruise lines are requiring it, and the federal government is strongly recommendi­ng it,” Walker said in an email. “Of course there is no right to go on a cruise (no inalienabl­e right, no constituti­onal right, no statutory right, no moral right). He is elevating the wishes of anti-vaxxers over the health and well-being of the general public who wish to travel by cruise ship.”

The poll results echo what several cruise enthusiast­s told the South Florida Sun Sentinel in late March, a year after numerous outbreaks aboard cruise ships prompted cruise lines to voluntaril­y halt operations worldwide, and the CDC to ban cruising from U.S. ports.

Michele Alakozai of New York City said she agreed generally with DeSantis’ orders banning businesses from requiring vaccines. But cruise ships should be an exception, she said.

“I would not consider going on a cruise unless the entire population on the ship was required to be fully vaccinated 10 days prior to sailing,” she said.

DeSantis has been fighting since March — first with an executive order and later with a new state law — to prevent any Florida-based business from requiring customers to be vaccinated.

“In Florida, your personal choice regarding vaccinatio­ns will be protected and no business or government entity will be able to deny you services based on your decision,” the governor said when signing the vaccine passport bill on May 3.

But decisions announced by several major cruise lines to require all or nearly all of their customers to be vaccinated soon put DeSantis in a tight political spot.

He could have declared that cruise ships, which operate primarily in internatio­nal waters, were not Florida businesses and therefore not subject to his vaccine passport ban.

Instead, DeSantis doubled down, declaring in early April that cruise lines were subject to the edict. He outlined his position just days after appearing with cruise industry leaders in Miami in late March to demand that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provide clear ground rules for a resumption of cruising from Florida by summer.

Those demands were followed by a highly publicized lawsuit by Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody challengin­g the legality of the CDC’s ban — imposed in March 2020 while Donald Trump was president — on cruising from U.S. ports.

Next, the CDC provided the guidelines requested by the industry: Ships can bypass required “test cruises” if they verify that 95% of passengers and crew members are vaccinated.

Suddenly DeSantis found himself opposing a CDC-provided clear path to resumption of cruising just weeks after standing with industry leaders and demanding one.

Meanwhile, the number of cruise lines declaring that passengers would have to be vaccinated increased last week. Celebrity Cruises said it had secured the CDC’s OK to launch a seven-day voyage from Port Everglades on June 26.

That followed earlier announceme­nts of vaccine requiremen­ts by other cruise lines, including Silversea Cruises and Norwegian Cruise Line, for Florida-based voyages.

According to a report by the unofficial Royal Caribbean Blog, Celebrity Cruises’ senior vice president of sales, Dondra Ritzenthal­er, told travel agents in a teleconfer­ence last Thursday that DeSantis was close to signing off on a compromise that would recognize cruise ships at port as being in internatio­nal waters and thus not subject to the vaccine passport ban if they required proof of vaccinatio­ns after customers come aboard.

When Politico asked DeSantis secretary Christina Pushaw about the report, Pushaw said that Ritzenthal­er’s statement should not be cited as though it reflects the governor’s position.

 ?? LEN KAUFMAN PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Gov. DeSantis’ insistence that cruise lines may not require vaccinatio­n of passengers clouds the future of cruising from Port Everglades, seen here on a busy day in 2013.
LEN KAUFMAN PHOTOGRAPH­ER Gov. DeSantis’ insistence that cruise lines may not require vaccinatio­n of passengers clouds the future of cruising from Port Everglades, seen here on a busy day in 2013.

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