CDC Lifts Cruising Ban: What Happens Next? | 'Conditional Sailing' Analysis
Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.
Creator's Key Takeaways
the expiration of the no sail order and the creation of this framework is a step in the right direction
the requirements are complicated so we'll do our best to explain and outline what needs to happen
it's not impossible it's a matter of satisfying the cdc's requirements
the reward at the end is being able to take revenue cruises and start paying off the massive amounts of debt
Creator's Tips & Advice
Questions This Creator Answers
Topics Covered
Scale: 0โ5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = โmehโ, 5 = โbacon blissโ. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.
About our Bacon Score methodologyYouTube Video Descriptionโ
On October 30, 2020, the U.S. Centers for Disease control lifted the no sail ban that was placed on cruise ships. The order, which was first signed back in March 2020, prohibited any passenger ship that carried over 250 guests to sail in U.S. waters. Explained: https://cruiseradio.net/explained-the-cdcs-conditional-sailing-order-for-cruise-ships/ But that doesn't mean that the cruise ship will be able to start sailing immediately. The CDC issued a conditional sailing order, or benchmarks that have to be met before vessels can start sailing again. Included in that order is mandatory testing for passengers and crew, notifying the CDC within 28 days before entering US waters, running a series of test sailings, and having contingency plans in place for anything situation that can go wrong. #cruise #CDC #travel [Social Links] Twitter: @CruiseRadio Facebook: /CruiseRadio Instagram: @CruiseRadio Email: doug@cruiseradio.net