CDC Stays Hush on Cruise Lines’ Call to Resume Sailing

Caribbean News…
27 March 2021 7:13pm
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Despite calls from travel industry trade groups, the CDC does not plan to lift the Framework for Conditional Sailing Order (CSO) ahead of schedule.

In a statement to the Travel Market Report, the CDC said the CSO will remain in effect until Nov. 1, 2021. “Returning to passenger cruising is a phased approach to mitigate the risk of spreading COVID-19. Details for the next phase of the CSO are currently under interagency review

Both Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) and the American Society of Travel Advisors (ASTA) put out statements calling for the agency to lift restrictions and allow for cruising to resume from U.S. ports by July 1, 2021.

Zane Kerby, president & CEO of the American Society of Travel Advisors (ASTA), said that while the CDC continues to suspend all cruise ship operations in U.S. waters, “nearly every other form of human activity has been cleared for resumption, including dining in restaurants, attending movies and sporting events, overnight hotel stays and traveling by air” thanks to the observance of proper masking and social distancing protocols.

Kerby also pointed to the fact that to cruise lines, Royal Caribbean and Celebrity Cruises, announced that they would resume cruise operations in the Caribbean by bypassing U.S. ports altogether. Both lines announced they would begin sailing by homeporting in the Bahamas and St. Maarten, respectively. Crystal also opened Bahamas sailings to “record bookings” for its first sailings in the Americas since last March.

CLIA called the CSO “outdated,” as it was issued almost five months ago on Oct. 30, 2020, and “does not reflect the industry's proven advancements and success operating in other parts of the world, nor the advent of vaccines, and unfairly treats cruises differently," said Kelly Craighead, CLIA's CEO.  “Cruise lines should be treated the same as other travel, tourism, hospitality, and entertainment sectors.”

Source: Travel Market Report

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