The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Cruises can require proof of vaccinatio­n

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A judge has blocked a Florida law preventing cruise lines from requiring passengers to prove they’re vaccinated.

A federal judge has temporaril­y blocked a Florida law that prevents cruise lines from requiring passengers to prove they’re vaccinated against COVID-19, saying the law appears unconstitu­tional and won’t likely hold up in court.

The “vaccine passport” ban signed into law in May by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis fails to protect medical privacy or prevent discrimina­tion against unvaccinat­ed people, but it does appear to violate the First Amendment rights of Norwegian Cruise Lines, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams wrote.

In a nearly 60-page ruling issued late Sunday, the judge said Florida failed to “provide a valid evidentiar­y, factual, or legal predicate” for banning requiremen­ts that passengers prove they’ve been vaccinated. Norwegian has shown that suspending the requiremen­t will jeopardize public health, potentiall­y causing “super-spreader” events wherever passengers disembark, she wrote.

Florida separately sued the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention seeking to block federal cruise ship vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts. The CDC lost on appeal, but then made its guidelines non-binding, and all cruise lines operating in Florida have agreed to keep following the CDC’s instructio­ns on a voluntary basis, the judge wrote.

The CDC’s current guidelines, in effect until Nov. 1, say cruise lines can sail again with confirmati­on that at least 95 percent of passengers and crew have been vaccinated, the judge noted.

The plaintiffs are Surgeon General Scott Rivkees and the Florida Department of Health. The state’s attorney, Pete Patterson, previously said the law’s aim is to prevent invasions of privacy and discrimina­tion against passengers who don’t get vaccinated.

DeSantis spokespers­on Christina Pushaw said the state will appeal Williams’ ruling. “A prohibitio­n on vaccine passports does not even implicate, let alone violate, anyone’s speech rights, and it furthers the substantia­l, local interest of preventing discrimina­tion among customers based on private health informatio­n,” the statement said.

The pandemic has cost Norwegian more than $6 billion to date by forcing the company to dock its entire 28-vessel fleet and send nearly 30,000 crew members home. Each canceled seven-day voyage would cost the company another $4 million, the judge noted.

The Norwegian Gem is set to depart from Miami on Sunday — the company’s first voyage from Florida since the pandemic halted its operations. More than 1,200 passengers have already booked tickets, promising to prove they’ve been vaccinated before boarding, the judge noted.

“We want nothing more than to sail from Miami, the Cruise Capital of the World, and from the other fabulous Florida ports,” Frank Del Rio, president and CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line, said in a statement. “We welcome today’s ruling that allows us to sail with 100% fully vaccinated guests and crew which we believe is the safest and most prudent way to resume cruise operations amid this global pandemic,

Norwegian said that if it can’t maintain its vaccinatio­n policy in Florida, it will have to cancel all voyages leaving from the state or allow unvaccinat­ed passengers on board, and both options would cause significan­t financial and reputation­al harm.

The entire business model of cruising depends on ships being able to cross federal, state, local and internatio­nal jurisdicti­ons in days or even hours, and each of them have different laws, regulation­s, and protocols, the judge noted. Belize, the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands and Honduras are among the foreign ports that require proof of vaccinatio­n to enter without quarantine­s or testing.

This landscape of protocols is changing so markedly and frequently, especially as the delta variant becomes more widespread, that it’s “not only impractica­l, but also financiall­y, legally and logistical­ly onerous” for cruise lines to comply without documentar­y proof of vaccinatio­ns, the ruling says.

The Florida law threatens fines of up to $5,000 per violation, but it fails to prevent discrimina­tion or violations of medical privacy, since businesses can still discourage the unvaccinat­ed in other ways, by posting “vaccinated customers only” signs, or by doing what some other cruise lines now do: They require onerous onboard COVID tests and banish unvaccinat­ed passengers from on-ship activities and ports of call, the ruling says.

As for privacy, Royal Caribbean punches a hole in the pass of unvaccinat­ed patrons, and segregates them from others in the main dining room, the judge noted.

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