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Travel Association of USA urge CDC to lift restrictions on cruise industry

Travel Association of USA urge CDC to lift restrictions on cruise industry

U.S. Travel Association, the national trade group that represents all facets of American travel, is joining the cruise industry is calling for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to lift its conditional sailing order, and for the agency to provide a path forward that allows cruise lines to resume sailing.

“We join the calls to identify the way toward lifting the Conditional Sail Order and allowing the phased resumption of cruise operations as quickly as possible,” Roger Dow, president of theU.S. Travel Association, mentioned in a statement. 

The CDC order, issued Oct. 30, laid out a phased plan that cruise lines must meet before carrying paying passengers again; however, the cruise industry said last week it hasn’t received additional guidance since.

Dow mentioned the CDC’s restrictions have taken a “disproportionately heavy” toll on the journey business and that the rule preserving cruising from resuming is “uniquely particular.”

He continued: “The standard of proof should be exceptionally high for guidelines that effectively single out certain industries as other parts of the economy are allowed to reopen.”

Dow added that it’s “economically imperative” to find “pathways” to reopen, including that “evidence is clear” that a multi-tiered health and safety strategy can provide for a safe resumption of travel.

Cruise Lines International Association, which represents 95% of ocean-going cruise capacity, called out the CDC last week over what it views as unfair treatment. The health authority shut down cruising in U.S. waters in mid-March of 2020 following outbreaks on large passenger ships, including Princess Cruises’ Diamond Princess. The industry has remained idle for over a yr since while other segments of the travel industry, such as airlines and theme parks have been allowed to continue or resume operating amid the pandemic, albeit with added safety precautions.

CLIA also urged the CDC to lift the order barring passenger ships from sailing and permit cruising to resume in phases by July.

Caitlin Shockey, the spokesperson for the CDC, informed earlier that the conditional sailing order will stay in effect till Nov. 1 and that the plan for next phases of the cruise business’s restart plan are in the works.

“Returning to passenger cruising is a phased approach to mitigate the risk of spreading COVID-19,” Shockey mentioned, including that the details for the next phase of the conditional cruising order “is currently under interagency review.”

 

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