Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas restarts sailing: Unvaccinated cruise passengers are second-class citizens

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Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas restarts sailing: Unvaccinated cruise passengers are second-class citizens

The deck on Freedom of the Seas.

The deck on Freedom of the Seas.Credit: Royal Caribbean

Royal Caribbean's 4,275-passenger Freedom of the Seas has restarted sailings from Miami to the Bahamas with two classes of passengers on board-those who've been vaccinated against Covid-19, and those who have not. Jabbed guests, identified with special wristbands, get full run of the ship; those unprotected from the virus won't even be able to walk into the sushi bar, casino, or spa.

Freedom is the first ship to depart the US without a vaccination requirement, and it's also the first to depart from the nation's cruise capital of Miami. For all the city's influence on the cruising industry, it's also proved to be a difficult place to restart business, given that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has barred businesses from requiring vaccine cards.

"The cruise experience benefits from being impromptu," says Jukka Laitamaki, a tourism marketing expert and professor at the NYU School of Professional Studies Jonathan M. Tisch Centre of Hospitality. Cruisers are typically free to hang out where they want, do what they want to do, and make friends. But unvaccinated cruisers on Freedom will find much of that restricted.

Royal Caribbean employee volunteers walk on the deck of the Freedom of the Seas cruise ship before sailing.

Royal Caribbean employee volunteers walk on the deck of the Freedom of the Seas cruise ship before sailing.Credit: AP/MARTA LAVANDIER

"It is the cruise lines' worst nightmare to have to have separate areas for the vaccinated and unvaccinated," Laitamaki says.

The system has proved necessary. Even on cruises with strict Covid-19 vaccine requirements for adults, issues have already cropped up. In late June, Royal had to pay to repatriate two unvaccinated teenagers who tested positive-and their families-from the Bahamas. Sister line Celebrity also had an incident of two asymptomatic guests testing positive on a sailing from St. Maarten. (Remember, you can still carry the coronavirus even when vaccinated.)

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's rules for cruise companies require lines to enforce mask-wearing and social distancing when unvaccinated cruisers are on board. But companies have some discretion about the finer points.

Royal Caribbean's list of restrictions for Freedom, issued in mid-June, is a long one. It applies to all sailings on the ship in July-and likely to four other ships the line plans to launch from Florida this summer, with capacities of up to 6,680 passengers.

Those with a hole punched in their SeaPass-indicating that they haven't been jabbed or declined to show a vaccine card-will be segregated to one deck of the main dining room and will be banned from some of the better, more intimate for-a-fee dining venues. (That includes families with unvaccinated kids, too, so long as they're sticking together.) Off limits will be the popular maritime-themed Schooner Bar pub and Viking Crown nightclub, the casino, art auctions, and the indoor Solarium pool and bar. Gatherings such as the 1970s-themed party will be open only to vaccinated guests. If you aren't immunised and want to see a show, you'll sit in a segregated area in the back of the theatre. And you can only use the gym during specified hours.

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At least for now, mask wearing is required indoors (but not outdoors) of everyone on board Freedom when not eating or drinking-though some venues that are only open to vaccinated guests will be able to nix the rule.

The trip will cost more for unvaccinated guests, too. Anyone over the age of 12 who doesn't voluntarily show proof of vaccine will have to provide a negative result from a Covid-19 PCR test taken within three days of departure. They'll also have to pay for a second test at the pier and a third upon disembarking on the last day-totaling $US136 or $US178 per person, depending on the sailing.

In addition, Royal is requiring unvaccinated travellers leaving from Florida to purchase travel insurance-at least $US25,000 per person for medical expense coverage and $US50,000 per person for medical evacuation-from Aug. 1 through the end of 2021. On a one-week cruise, this can add $US200 or more to the combined fare of an unvaccinated family of four.

And that's just on the ship. Each port of call has its own constantly changing rules, some requiring guests without immunity to stay on board or limit themselves to select shore excursions.

For cruise lines, which have already lost billions of dollars in the pandemic and are just getting back to business, the two-class system may have an impact on the revenue stream. Onboard spending accounted for 28.3 per cent of Royal Caribbean's total revenue in 2019, according to Bloomberg Intelligence senior analyst Brian Egger. If there are many unvaccinated passengers, those figures may end up suppressed.

So far that's not the case. Only 7 per cent of the passengers on the first Freedom cruise are unvaccinated, and most are kids. At that rate, onboard spending losses may tap out at about $US50,000-a drop in the bucket on a ship that, say, rakes in $US1.5 million per trip. Mark Tamis, senior vice president of hotel operations for Royal, said lost revenue didn't even enter into the equation.

But the line is currently only sailing at 40 per cent capacity to allow for social distancing and put new health protocols to the test-with plans to ramp up capacity throughout the summer. What's more, immunised guests may not want to co-mingle with the un-jabbed, potentially hampering ticket sales or driving cancellations, which have been high since Royal announced its protocol.

"The people who are not vaccinated don't want restrictions," says Mindy Breitman, a travel adviser with Cruise Planners, who has been busy fielding cancellation requests. "And the people who are vaccinated don't want to wear masks because of the non-vaxed on board," she says.

Both cruisers and cruise executives agree that a vaccine requirement would be the ideal way to go. The CDC recommends at least 95 per cent of passengers and crew be vaccinated. And in fact both Royal's sister line Celebrity Cruises and Carnival Cruise Line are appearing to put DeSantis's decree to the test, with carefully worded policies that boil down to vaccine requirements for anyone on board.

In places like Alaska and Galveston, Texas, where they've been given the choice, major cruise lines have also only allowed inoculated guests on board-making exceptions only for children. Norwegian Cruise Line says its ships only will sail with vaccinated passengers through October. And all the lines are aiming for 100 per cent crew vaccinations.

Richard Fain, chairman of Royal Caribbean Cruises, parent of both Royal Caribbean International and Celebrity Cruises, has said repeatedly that he'd prefer that all guests get the jab-adding that surveys show that more than 90 per cent of the line's customers are vaccinated. Micky Arison, chairman of Carnival (parent company of brands such as Carnival Cruise Line, Princess Cruises, and Holland America Line), has taken to Twitter to urge vaccines.

Cruisers don't need much persuading. Most are showing a strong desire to sail with other vaxed passengers-a survey of 5,000 readers of the popular website Cruise Critic found last month that 89 per cent would cruise if vaccines are a requirement.

But there has also been some pushback. When Mike Bayley, president and chief executive officer of Royal Caribbean, explained policies for unvaccinated guests on Facebook recently, the hundreds of responses he received included both applause and vitriol from opponents espousing anti-vax rhetoric.

"My only request is please share your opinion or comments in a polite way," Bayley said in a follow-up. "If you could read some messages I have received! It's scary!"

The Washington Post

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