BrianLo
Well-Known Member
Looks like Royal Caribbean has caved to political pressure. Vaccinations will not be required for passengers on cruises leaving FL and TX. I wouldn’t be caught dead on a cruise ship any time soon anyway, but that seems like a real recipe for disaster. My biggest concern for the US from this is these ships stop at other International ports so unvaccinated guests could get off and come back with these more contagious variants. They won’t require you to show a negative covid test before getting back on the ship. At least with International flights everyone has to pass a Covid test before coming back into the country.
Royal Caribbean reverses vaccination mandate for passengers on cruises departing from ports in Florida and Texas as tension over vaccine passports intensifies
The company announced that guests are "strongly recommended to set sail fully vaccinated" but will not be mandated to do so, nor show verification.www.yahoo.com
I hope their bookings plummet as a result of this, but the opposite is just as likely.
There’s actually just two streams that the CDC had proposed. One for 95+ vaccinated passengers and the other for ones under the threshold. It’s not so much of a Royal problem (they are sailing to Alaska and other countries with vaccine requirements), but the make up of guests in their Caribbean ports and political pressure. NCL seems confident they can fill ships without families so it will be interesting to see how they clash with Florida.
On the non-vaccination required cruises there will be more restrictions in place and testing for unvaccinated individuals on boarding and disembarkment are still required. I’m not sure exactly how that will be enforced though... but theoretically it’s not different than allowing air travel.
DCL will also have to take this route because of the volume of Under 12 they’d predictably have.
Personally, I’d gladly take a one of the fully vaccinated itineraries. Which rules out DCL most of all.