Caribbean Cruise Line Lies and Steals?

A television station in Louisville, Kentucky reported on an interesting story today entitled "Woman Claims Cruise Company Promising Free Cruise Lied, Stole."

Amy Zetina, a hard working mother of three in Kentucky, responded to an ad which offered a "free cruise."

Ms. Zetina was taken for a ride, but it wasn't on a cruise ship. 

It turns out that "Caribbean Cruise Line" offers “free” Caribbean cruise package, with some ads featuring Carmen Electra promoting a "free" cruise.

Ms. Zetina received a packet in the mail telling her that she was the lucky winner of a "free" cruise, including a $1,300 voucher.  She agreed to pay only for port taxes and then gave her credit card number over the telephone.  The cruise company then began sucking money out of her account.

Ms. Zetina did not know that 458 customers had lodged complaints against Caribbean Cruise Line.  Nor did she know about it's "F" rating with the Better Business Bureau.  An investigation by the television station revealed that the company made unauthorized charges against customers' credit cards. 

After Ms. Zetina contacted the television station, she called the Better Business Bureau, the Attorney General's office and the local police.  Only then did she get her money back.

You can find complaints about this company on the Complaints Board and Ripoff Report and throughout the internet. 

Moral of the story?  There are no free cruises in life.  And when someone rips you off, fight back.

Enjoy the official ad of Caribbean Cruise Line with Carmen Electra (in Spanish - Cruceros Gratis!

 

 

PS:  There have been criticism of marketing scams by "Caribbean Cruise Line" which is not a cruise line at all but a marketing company which also sells time shares in the Bahamas.  We last mentioned this company two weeks ago in a story about an affiliated company, Celebration Cruise Line -  Report of Rape on Bahamas Celebration Cruise Ship.    

 

Photo Credit:  Celebration Cruise Line website

Another Carnival Crew Member Busted for Child Porn

The Chronicle Herald in Canada reports today that a crew member on a Carnival cruise ship which that visited Halifax was arrested and charged with smuggling child pornography into Canada.

Carnival Cruise Child PornographyThe newspaper indicates that 26-year-old crew member Nyoman Putra, an Indonesian working as an assistant room steward on the Carnival Glory, allegedly had child pornography on a laptop computer.

Canada Border Services Agency officers were inspecting crew members getting off the cruise ship when they nabbed the Carnival crew member at Pier 22 in Halifax.  Canada's border agents do a good job catching crew members who try and enter the country with child pornography.  

The Canadian newspaper writes that Putra is the second cruise ship employee to be charged with having child pornography so far this year in Halifax.  In May, a Filipino who was an assistant waiter on the Costa Atlantica was sentenced to four months in jail for possession and importation. 

Putra was an assistant cabin attendant.  It should concern any parent who cruises with their children to think of pedophile cabin attendants coming into the stateroom.

Parents don't like to think about these things, and the cruise lines and travel agents hate to admit these things happen.  Consider the following articles:

Costa Crew Member Caught With Child Pornography  (caught at Pier 22 in Halifax too!)

Carnival Cruise Ship - Child PornographyPerverts, Child Predators and Cruise Ships (Carnival crewmember caught with child pornography in Halifax!!)

Another Crew Member Arrested for Child Pornography  (NCL crew member caught with child porn in Halifax!!!) 

Carnival Cruise Ship Bartender Arrested On Charges Of Raping 14 Year Old Passenger

Sexual Predator Abuses 6 Year Old Aboard Royal Caribbean's Liberty of the Seas

Passenger Indicted for Sexual Abuse of 13 Year Old Girl on Disney Wonder Cruise Ship

Cruise Ship Passenger Sentenced in Child Porn Case

Most Wanted Rape Suspect Arrested On Carnival Cruise Ship - Worked As Manager Of Onboard Hair Salon

Top Ten Reasons Not To Cruise: No. 1 - Cruise Lines Are A Perfect Place To Sexually Abuse Children

Avoid Depression and Heart Disease - Take A Royal Caribbean Cruise?

Two months ago I commented on the absurd press releases issued by Royal Caribbean Cruises in an article "Royal Caribbean Press Statements And Other Gobbledygook."

Heart Attack?  Take a Royal Caribbea Cruise! Well here we go again!

Yesterday Royal Caribbean released a PR statement entitled "Over-Worked Americans Give Up an Average of 459 Million Vacation Days Each Year."  Royal Caribbean points out that most Americans are "over-worked, over-tired and stressed-out."  I agree, this sound like my law office. 

In response, Royal Caribbean suggests that a cruise will solve everything.  The cruise line tries to relate to the average Joe by reminding him " . . . if the President of the United States, who just returned from a respite on Martha's Vineyard, can still find time, then shouldn't everyone?"

Yikes.  I can just see an employee, struggling to pay the house mortgage and car note, telling his boss - I'm  going spend a few thousands of dollars and chill out on a cruise with my family.  See ya later!     

The cruise line's marketing people even came up with a catchy phrase - "Cruise Them Or Lose Them."

The cruise line claims that vacations reduce the chances that a woman will suffer depression by 50% and reduce a man's risk of suffering a heart attack by 32%.  Maybe the marketing slogan should have been even more straight forward: "Cruise Or Lose Your Life!" 

Now, this strikes me as some pretty desperate marketing.  Take a cruise or you are going to have a stroke?  How exactly is a week long drinking binge and all-you-can-eat buffets on a cruise ship going to avoid a coronary? 

But this is the "Nation of Why Not?"  So ladies throw away your Paxil and gentlemen flush your Lipitor down the drain.  All you need is a Royal Caribbean cruise. 

You can have your heart attack when you get back to work.

More Cruise Ship Violence - A Drunken Brawl On Carnival's Dream

Last year I wrote a blog entitled "Cruise Ship Brawls - A Problem that Will Get Bigger with Bigger Ships" addressing the increasing violence on cruise ships.  I posted the following comments and questions: 

"Complicating matters is the huge amount of alcohol which the cruise lines sell to the passengers, which often leads to drunken brawls in the bars and discos and sometimes around the pools. It will be interesting to see how Carnival and the other cruise lines handle the "wider audience" flocking onto the larger cruise ships. If cruise ships are like cities and "stuff happens," what steps are they taking to protect U.S. families?

Will the cruise lines elect to hire a full complement of well trained and experienced Carnival Cruise Ship - Violence - Alcoholsecurity guards?  Or will they continue to try and save money with only 2 or 3 inexperienced "guards" trying to protect 2,000 or 3,000 passengers?"

Well, the answers to these questions may be found in YouTube videos which have surfaced regarding a brawl which broke out in the Caliente Club on Carnival's Dream cruise ship three weeks ago.

The August 12th fight was widely reported by the news media, including Professor's Ross Klein's Cruise Junkie which contained the following account from a passenger: 

"We were on the Carnival Dream sailing 08/07 to 08/14 and heard that a brawl broke out in the dance club around 3:00 a.m. on the morning of the 12th. We heard from passengers and a bartender that the brawl started over a song. It involved so many young people (men and women) that the security on board was unable to handle everyone and had to call in assistance from wait staff and other crew members. The fight spilled over into the art gallery located next door and apparently a $10K painting was ruined with blood spatter. Flat screen tvs were smashed and there was a lot of damage done. We heard that people on the ground were getting kicked in the head by men and women and that one person needed to be revived because he was hurt so badly. We also heard that the crowd spilled out of the dance club and that innocent people were getting punched in the face as they were walking by.

The next morning in Costa Maya there were a bunch of people (10 people) sitting by the side of the ship with all of their luggage as they were kicked off the ship and their relatives were shipped off to Mexican jails. Carnival needs to learn a lesson here and not serve alcohol after a certain time and perhaps shut down the 18+ dance club before 3:00 a.m. Nothing good can come of drunk teenagers at 3:00 in the morning."

An article in Florida Today "10 Cruise Passengers Evicted After Brawl" contained a rather understated PR statement by Carnival:

"A fight occurred on the vessel. It was broken up by ship's security and the cause of the fight was investigated which resulted in 10 guests being disembarked in Mexico . . .  The safety and security of our guests and crew is of utmost importance and we will not tolerate behavior that could put any of them at risk."

Carnival has a problem with way too much alcohol served on their cruise ships and way too few security guards to handle the unruly drunks.  Here are two videos of the fight.  

 

 

 

 

 

Video credits:    i008 YouTube

Photo credit:      Szymek S.'s Flickr photostream

Passenger With Meningococcal Disease Rescued From P&O Cruises' Pacific Sun Cruise Ship

A "Careflight Rescue" helicopter winched a 48 year-old passenger with a suspected case of the potentially fatal meningococcal disease from a cruise ship off the south-east  coast of Australia. 

P&O Cruises Pacific Sun Cruise ShipSeveral news have reported the incident; however, no one disclosed the name of the cruise ship or cruise line.  The passenger was taken to a hospital in Australia.

ABC News in Australia has finally identified that the passenger was rescued from the Pacific Sun cruise ship (web cam photo left).  The news station reports that the ship is traveling from Sydney to New Caledonia. 

The Pacifc Sun is operated by P&O Cruises in Australia.  Information about P&O Cruises and the Pacific Sun can be read here.

It is not uncommon for the press to try and avoid publishing the name of the cruise line or cruise ship in cases like this.
 

Photograph Credit:  P&O Cruises Pacific Sun webcam

#MaritimeMonday - Top 20 Maritime Twitters

Today, I'm recommending a list of my favorite maritime web sites and blogs.  Each Monday, I'll shout out my recommendations for other interesting maritime Twitters using the hashtag #MaritimeMonday.
 
There are other top maritime Twitter lists based on the number of followers or the "influence" of a Twitter page.  But there is nothing mathematical or scientific about this list.  It's just my favorites.  The only criteria I used in compiling the list is that the tweets must contain information which is current, useful and interesting.  
 
Here's the list, in alphabetical order.  If you have your own favorites which I omitted, please leave a comment below or list your favorites each Monday using the #MaritimeMonday hashtag.      
 
Amver - Top Maritime Twitters@Amver is the acronym for the "Automated Mutual Assistance Vessel Rescue System" sponsored by the United States Coast Guard.  It is a voluntary global ship reporting system used worldwide by search and rescue authorities to arrange for assistance to persons in distress at sea.  @Amver is one of the best maritime Twitters around today, with a steady stream of timely and informative tweets.  The Amver blog is interesting.  Its all about saving lives and helping mariners in distress.
 
Cruise Bruise - Top Maritime Twitters@CruiseBruise is the twitter account for the popular web site known as the "Cruise Ship Bruising Report."  The sinking ship logo says it all - the blog covers missing passengers, shipboard murders, sinkings and fires, overboard crew members, and injuries, sexual assaults and sicknesses on cruise ships.  I advertise on the site, so perhaps I'm biased, but Cruise Bruise is one of the best sites covering crimes and cover-ups on cruise ships.  Its the one site which the cruise industry wishes would just go away.
 
CruiseLaw - Cruise Law - Cruise Law News - Top Maritime Twitters@CruiseLaw:  Who lists their own twitter account on a top  20 list?  I do.  Yes, it's self promotion, but around 8,000 people follow my tweets about the strange world of cruising - a sub-section of the maritime community unique to itself.  I link to my blog - Cruise Law News - where you will find lots of information and legal commentary on cruise ship accidents and crimes.  We try and keep the cruise lines honest, while having a lot of fun in the process.
 
International Cruise Victims - Ken Carver - ICV - Top Maritime Twitters@CruiseVictims is the Twitter voice of the non-profit organization, International Cruise Victims (ICV) Association. Its President, Ken Carver, lost his daughter on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship and leads the ICV in assisting victims of violent crimes aboard cruise ships. The ICV website is packed with first hand accounts of how things can go terribly wrong on cruise ships, and contains suggestions on how to protect yourself during a cruise vacation. President Obama just signed the Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act due to the efforts of the ICV.  Making cruises safer is its goal.
 
gCaptain - John Konrad - Top Maritime Twitters@gCaptain is the Twitter page of John Konrad, who accurately bills himself as the "Master Mariner Tweeting From The High Seas."  Like Amver, gCaptain routinely delivers the most relevant and interesting tweets about the maritime world.   If you had to follow only one person on Twitter to find out what is happening on the high seas, I would recommend gCaptain.  Master Konrad's blog is probably the best maritime blog around and is worth reading on a daily basis.
 
Gentedimare  - La Voce dei Marinai - Top Maritime Twitters@Gentedimare is the Twitter page of the Italian maritime web site La Voce dei Marinai which reminds us of the international nature of the maritime industry.  Gentedimare reminds us that "Seafarers are the keystone of the society . . . without them society doesn't develop - - 2010 Year Of The SEAFARER."   Gentedimare tweets are straightforward and informative and, don't worry, he tweets in Italian and English too.
 
Rio Itajaí Práticos - Top Maritime Twitters@Itajaipraticos is the Twitter page of the Brazilian maritime website Itajai Praticos.  Like his Italian seafarer brother Gentedimare, Itajaipracticos focuses on maritime pilots,international shipping stories, piracy issues and the well being of seafarers around the world.
 
John Jensen - Jensen Maritime - Top Maritime Twitters@JensenMaritime  is the Twitter feed of John Jensen who has a wide perspective of maritime issues and approaches his interests from a practical point of view.  He is a marine surveyor, a ABYC master technician, and NTSB trained in accident scene investigation and documentation.  You can count on Mr. Jensen, a consultant to the recreational boating industry and vessel owners in New England and around the world, for interesting maritime tweets on a daily basis. 
 
Matt Shaffer - Top Maritime Twitters@JonesAct is the Twitter page of Houston Texas lawyer Matt Shaffer.  He tweets about maritime issues in the Gulf of Mexico like the BP oil spill, injuries to workers in the offshore oil and gas industry, and the rights of injured crew members.  Mr. Shaffer links to his firm's informative web site.   He is a trusted source for information regarding maritime law.
 
James Tweed - Coracle - Top Maritime Twitters@jtweed is the shipping feed on Twitter from U.K.'s James Tweed.  He has a keen interest not only in maritime issues but on line education, shipping podcasts and social media. His website Coracle contains internet shipping courses for maritime professionals. He publishes the "Shipping Industry Twitter Top 40," which contains no mention of cruise ships or me for that matter.  Hmmm. 
 
LloydsList - Lloyds List - Top Maritime Twitters@LloydsList is the Twitter feed from Lloyd's List - a leading daily newspaper for the shipping industry.  The page links to the Lloyds List's website which is worth a daily read, particularly the excellent Bill Bantry's Blog, billed as "an irreverent view of the shipping industry."  Some witty insight here.
 
MadMariner - Mad Mariner - Top Maritime Twitters@madmariner Mad Mariner is an online boating magazine that publishes daily articles about boat buying, boat restoration, boating equipment, boating tools, inflatables, marine electronics, boating safety, seamanship, and marine piloting.  It has a number of related Twitter pages, like DIY BoatBoatingLine, and Maritime Network.  You will find a consistent number of tweets about everything nautical in nature.
 
Maritime Accident Casebook - MaritimeAccide - Top Maritime Twitters@maritimeaccide is the Twitter page of Bob Couttie whose motto is "empowering seafarers to keep themselves, their ships and the seas safer."  Mr. Couttie publishes the interesting web site Marine AccidentCasebook (MAC). The MAC site contains great materials regarding mariner safety and links to some of the leading mariner blogs, many of which don't have Twitter feeds. 
 
MarineSurveys - Marine Surveys - Top Maritime Twitters@MarineSurveys comes from Captain Henriquez who is a master mariner, certified marine surveyor and maritime consultant from Maracaibo,Venezuela.  Master Henriquez has his finger on the pulse of the international maritime community and shares timely tweets about shipping issues from his perspective from South America.
 
Maritime Lawyers - Top Maritime Twitters @MaritimeLawyers is the twitter page from maritime lawyer Lisa O'Neill, who is not only my law partner but my spouse.  Yes, nepotism is alive and well - I am not crazy enough to leave my wife off of a top 20 list.  Ms. O'Neill is the only female maritime lawyer on Twitter.  She tweets about maritime issues and cruise line and yacht cases involving passengers and crew members. 
 
Mar_Ex - Maritime Executive - Top Maritime Twitters@Mar_Ex is the Twitter page of the Maritime Executive publication.  Its Twitter profile is "strategies & solutions through case studies, interviews and articles that address the most critical issues in the maritime industry today."  Mar_Ex links to its web site Maritime-Executive.com which contains news about the  shipping and cruise industries, shipbuilding, executive interview and other interesting articles.
 
Peter Mello - Top Maritime Twitters@petermello is the founder of Sea-Fever Consulting LLC and the Weekly Leader (a leadership forum).  He writes a blog called - the Sea Fever Blog - which contains well written content, a great design, and an interesting use of mixed internet media.  Mr. Mello's tweets are an eclectic mix of maritime issues, technology, innovation and leadership.  He is one maritime Twitter who entertains while he educates.
 
Safe Seas - Top Maritime Twitters@safeseas is by Brazilian maritime pilot and lecturer Alexandre Gonçalves da Rocha from Itajai, Brazil. The Brazilian has been working as a maritime pilot at the port of Itajai for the past decade.  He tweets about maritime related news from an international perspective.  The Safe Seas web site is one of the better maritime blogs covering shipping, environmental issues, piracy issues and other international topics.
 
TradeWinds - Top Maritime Twitters@tradewindsnews is the Twitter feed for the TradeWinds publication which is a best selling international shipping newspaper. The TradeWinds tweets are similar to the tweets from Lloyds List.  I became a  fan of TradeWinds when it interviewed me in a article entitled "Man For The Other Team."   TradeWinds focuses more on international shipping issues, and less on the cruise industry, but is clearly an authoritative source of international maritime information.
 
Vincent Pica - USCGAuxVin - Top Maritime Twitters @USCGAuxVin is from sea captain and master mariner Vincent Pica who tweets about Coast Guard issues and boating safety.  He is the District Captain in the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary for USCG Auxiliary activities on Long Island, New York.  He writes a seamanship column for a number of newspapers.  Captain Pica's Twitter page links to the  Atlantic Marine Academy which teaches boating skills and seamanship.  He is a patriot and a real supporter of the U.S.C.G. whose Twitter page is here.  

 

Top number of Twitter followers: @CruiseLaw - 7,951

Top number of tweets: @USCGAuxVin - 19,517

  

Did we forget your favorite?  Please leave a comment below.  And don't forget to mention your favorite maritime Twitters on #MaritimeMonday.  

Clipper Adventurer Cruise Ship Runs Aground in the Arctic

Canada's National Post reports that a cruise ship has run aground in the Arctic. 

Clipper AdventurerThe newspaper reports that the Clipper Adventurer, operated by Adventure Canada and carrying around  200 passengers and crew, ran aground Friday evening  in "three meters of water." The location of the grounding is about 55 nautical miles from Coppermine, Nunavut, near the border with the Northwest Territories

But the cruise operator claims that the cruise ship ran aground on an "uncharted rock."  

Sounds like a PR statement to explain some bad navigational skills by whomever was at the helm.

Evacuation efforts are underway.  A Canadian Coast Guard ice breaker is en route to the scene to transport passengers to Coppermine where the ship was headed.  The cruise began in Greenland.

The newspaper indicates that there were no reports of injuries or environmental damage.  This again is probably a report from the cruise ship operators.  It will be interesting to hear what the passengers say happened when they get home.   

This is the second time in recent months that an incident like this occurred.  Earlier this year, we reported on an incident where the Clelia II ran into rocks in Antarctica - The Clelia II - Another Antarctic Cruise Ship Skirts Disaster

In 2009, the Ocean Nova cruise ship, ran aground. To see some amazing photographs of a similar cruise ship grounded, look at the Komar.org website.  Ironically, the Clipper Adventurer came to Clipper Adventurer Cruise Ship Ran Aground the rescue of the passengers aboard the Ocean Nova.    

Cruise Junkie has a list of cruise ship groundings on its web site.

The tour operator's PR statement is below:

"MV Clipper Adventurer, en-route from Port Epworth to Kugluktuk NU, was grounded on an uncharted rock at 67 58 N 1112 40 W. At the time the seas were calm, sunny conditions and good visibility with no wind or swell.

Efforts of the vessel's crew to dislodge the vessel during high tide on August 28th were unsuccessful.

The vessel now rests with a slight list. Conditions are stabilized. All passengers and crew are safe and unharmed. Weather remains favourable as passengers continue to enjoy onboard programming and hospitality.

Canadian authorities have been notified and the Canadian Coast Guard Vessel Amundsen is en-route set to arrive 0900 August 29th to assist with disembarking passengers.

Flight arrangements have been made to ensure passengers return to Edmonton for the evening of August 29th."

Clipper Adventurer RescueUpdate August 29, 2010:

The Canadian Coast Guard has released a photograph of the grounded cruise ship (above right).   

The Edmonton Sun interviewed the owner of the tour company who was quoted saying: "we were simply following the chart that we had and right where there wasn’t any indication that there was something in the water, there was this large rock.”  

Hmmm . . .

The newspaper also reports that the company will fly the passengers home, but they won’t be receiving any type of refunds.  

Update August 30, 2010:

The  Nunatsiaq Online reports that more than 120 passengers and crew, taken off the Clipper Adventurer cruise ship by the Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker, the Amundsen, arrived in Kugluktuk after midnight on August 30th.  Photograph of rescued passenger is above left. 

 

Do you have information or photos/video about this latest incident?  Please leave us a comment below.

PhotoCredit:       

Top:    cruzeirospdl.blogspot

Middle:  Canadian Coast Guard (via CNN)

Bottom:  Jason Evans/Angut Pedersen (via Nunatsiaq Online) 

California Ban On Cruise Dumping To Be Enforced

The San Jose Mercury News reports that the Obama administration will enforce a California law designed to prohibit cruise ships from dumping any kind of sewage -- even highly filtered wastewater -- along California's coast out to three miles from shore.

California will now have among the strictest laws in the nation limiting pollution from large ships.

"This is going to cover the entire California coastline," said state Senator Joe Simitian "Oceangoing vessels should not consider our coastline a place for dumping sewage."

In 2005, Simitian wrote a bill that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger which signed banning sewage discharges in state waters from cruise ships. The bill -- the first of its kind in the nation -- made it Crystal Harmony - Pollution - Dumping Sewageillegal for such ships to discharge oily bilge water, "gray water" from sinks and showers and other hazardous waste. But a key provision that also banned sewage releases could not legally take effect until the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency gave permission under the federal Clean Water Act.  The Bush administration did not act on California's request to enforce the state law.

The impetus behind the bill was a cruise dumping incident in In 2003.  The Crystal Harmony (photo left) dumped around 35,000 gallons of grey water, sewage, and bilge water in a marine sanctuary in Monterey Bay.  

According to the L.A. Times, Crystal Cruises said didn't have to report the incident to authorities because it broke no laws. It is "perfectly legal" under maritime laws to discharge even untreated wastewater more than 12 miles offshore, and the ship was 14 miles offshore at the time, said Crystal spokeswoman Mimi Weisband. 

"We didn't break any law," Weisband said. "We did break a promise."

The city of Monterey thereafter banned all Crystal cruise ships for life. 

"I remember picking up the paper and thinking, 'you gotta be kidding me,' " Senator Simitian said. "Their answer was 'we didn't break any rules.' I remember thinking, if this isn't against the law it ought to be."

In the 2010 Green Report Card by the environmental group Friends of the Earth, Crystal Cruises received the lowest grade - "F."   Cruise spokesperson Weisband responded by saying that Crystal Cruises "deserved an A ... if not an A+."

Seven Clauses To Be Aware Of In Your Cruise Contract

MSNBC published an article yesterday about cruise passenger tickets entilted "Seven Clauses to Be Aware Of In Your Cruise Contract."  There is a lot of "fine print' designed to take away or limit passenger rights drafted in the ticket by the cruise lines.   

Compared to the one page ticket issued to passengers on the Titanic 100 years ago, the cruise contracts today read like mini enclyclopedias crammed full of every imaginable clause to protect the cruise line.  

Cruise Contract - Cruise Passenger Ticket - Titanic The article is by Christopher Elliott who is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine. He also is a consumer travel advocate who writes at Elliott.org.

Mr. Eliott interviewed me and some others in the article:

Seven Clauses To Be Aware Of In Your Cruise Contract

If you ever want to feel confused, outraged and powerless all at the same time, just read your cruise line’s ticket contract.

Carrie Streahle didn’t know what was in hers until her cruise arrived late in Houston, and she had to pay an extra $1,900 in airfares and accommodations to get home. She contacted Carnival, asking for reimbursement.

“Carnival’s first response was that we didn’t have travel insurance,” she says. She protested. The cruise line responded again, this time blaming Mother Nature. “They said they can’t control the weather,” she says.

No kidding. Carnival’s ticket contract specifically says it can change arrival or departure times without notice, for any reason whatsoever, including weather. “Carnival shall have no liability for any compensation or other damages in such circumstances,” it adds.

“Carnival is not at fault because they were delayed by an act of nature,” says Anita Dunham-Potter, who writes the blog ExpertCruiser. “When this happens, they have no control over the port, or the time it takes customs to clear the ship, which is ultimately what decides the time you can get off the ship.”

Cruise contracts are filled with clauses and supported by laws that the average passenger doesn’t know about. If they did, they might think twice before setting sail. The paperwork addresses everything from what the cruise line owes you when something goes wrong (not much) when it’s responsible for your well-being (hardly ever) to where and when you can sue them (in a faraway court, and almost never).

“No one reads the fine print,” says Al Anolik, a travel attorney in San Francisco. But if you do — and a warning to all you non-attorneys out there, this isn’t light reading — you’ll find the law limits the rights of passengers in many key areas, such as a cap on damages you can collect from a cruise line and time limits on any lawsuit.  

“There are no consumer protections in the ticket,” adds maritime attorney James M. Walker, who writes a blog about cruise law. “It was drafted by the cruise lines lawyers to protect the cruise lines at the consumer’s expense. It is a one-sided document.”

So what do you need to know before you set sail?

Your laws aren’t our laws. That’s not hyperbole. It’s literally true, according to Robert M. Jarvis, a maritime law professor at Nova Southeastern University Law Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “The law governing cruises has nothing to do with where a passenger lives or buys a ticket,” he says. “Instead, federal maritime law, international law, the law of the country where the cruise ship is registered — typically the Bahamas, Liberia, or Panama — and the law selected by the cruise line are going to control, and all of these favor the cruise line.” That’s why it’s so hard to find a good lawyer to sue a cruise line. There aren’t many. Maritime law, or admiralty law, is “incredibly complex,” says Jarvis. “Only a few lawyers have the necessary training and experience to deal with such matters, and most of them are working for the cruise lines,” he adds.

Don’t hold us to the brochure. The ship may — or may not — keep the promised schedule. This is perhaps the most irritating contract provision. Here’s Royal Caribbean’s: “Carrier may for any reason at any time and without prior notice, cancel, advance, postpone or deviate from any scheduled sailing, port of call, destination, lodging or any activity on or off the Vessel, or substitute another vessel or port of call, destination, lodging or activity.” What’s more, it owes you nothing if it does. “Everything is subject to change and availability,” says Kristen Bentz, a travel consultant in Mesa, Ariz. “Basically, prices, rooms, excursions, itineraries, and anything not guaranteed is up to the cruise line’s discretion.”

The quack who treated you isn’t our problem. Most medical care on cruise ships is perfectly adequate. But just in case it isn’t, cruise lines have a clause that say they aren’t responsible for the malpractice of the ship’s doctors. Have a look at paragraph 13 of Princess’ passage contract: “Doctors, nurses or other medical or service personnel work directly for Passenger and shall not be considered to be acting under the control or supervision of Carrier, since Carrier is not a medical provider. Similarly, and without limitation, all spa personnel, photographers, instructors, guest lecturers and entertainers and other service personnel shall be considered independent contractors who work directly for the Passenger.” In other words, when a doctor’s negligence leads to the death of a family member, the cruise line is off the hook. “The passenger is left with the problem of having to bring a claim against the doctor who inevitably is not a U.S. citizen, often has no insurance, and is not subject to personal jurisdiction here in the U.S.,” says Walker.

Kids and retirees are second-class citizens. The survivors of children or retired passengers who die on cruise ships have no right to compensation except for burial and funeral expenses, according to Walker, who recently wrote about this quirky provision on his blog. It turns out that when passengers die on the high seas, the “Death On The High Seas Act” applies. “It limits the recovery of the surviving family members to what is called pecuniary losses,” he says. “This means that only lost wages and burial or funeral expenses are permitted.” If you’re a child or a retiree, and not earning wages, the only compensation is for the costs of the burial.

Wanna sue us? Come to Miami. These are called “forum selection” clauses, and they require you to sue the cruise line in a particular court. “Forum selection clauses have been routinely enforced for many years,” says Thomas Dickerson, author of the book Travel Law. “However, recently, the courts have consistently enforced a federal forum selection clause, which requires injured passengers to sue in federal court in Miami instead of state court — the significance being that jury trials may not be available in federal court.” That makes suing a cruise line difficult, and often impossible.

Time is short. There’s a one-year limitation period to file a claim, and a six-month period to write a letter to the cruise line when the passenger has been injured, says Walker, the maritime attorney. “This is a relatively short period of time, compared to the statute of limitations of most states,” he says. “Florida, for example, has a four-year limitations period.” What if you miss your deadline? Walker says people who have, contact him all the time. “There is nothing we can do for them.”

If you think that’s bad, get this: Experts agree that the contracts are getting worse. “In the last decade, cruise lines have had to tighten the reins,” says Bentz. “Contracts have gotten a little longer and a little less customer-friendly.” That means we may one day look back on 2010 as a time when cruise lines still cared about their passengers.

I have a sinking feeling that might be true.


Christopher Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine. You can read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org or e-mail him at celliott@ngs.org .

Cruise Ships Turn British Columbia Waters into "Toilet Bowel of Raw Sewage"

The Vancouver Sun published a provocative headline this weekend entitled "B.C. Waters a Toilet Bowl of Raw Sewage."

It caught my attention after my family just returned from a vacation from British Columbia, where my kids surfed and we went whale watching in the B.C. waters.

Environmentalists' believe that waters off British Columbia in Canada are the "toilet bowl of North America" as dozens of cruise ships heading to and from Alaska dump sewage in Canadian waters.  U.S. regulations in states like Alaska and Washington have tightened in the last decade Cruise Ship Pollution - Waste Water - Black Water - Grey Waterforcing cruise ships to follow stringent sewage treatment rules before disposing of waste those states.

The article indicates that cruise ships have another option: they can dump sewage and grey water —waste water from showers, sinks and laundry — into B.C. waters where rules are "lax."

Cruise ships are taking advantage of Canada's weaker laws on sewage discharge to save money.

"B.C. is now the toilet bowl of the West Coast of North America. In Canada, says Ross Klein, a professor in Canada.  Klein points out that Alaska and Washington monitors grey water discharges, but there is no such monitoring in Canada where cruise ships are free to dump.

The article points out that the U.S. cracked down on cruise ships in 2007 when the Mercury cruise ship operated by Celebrity Cruises was caught illegally dumping into waters between Washington and Vancouver Island.

The Mercury faced 10 charges, but three charges were dropped because the infractions were in Canada.  Celebrity received a $100,000 fine in Washington, but didn't face any punishment in Canada.

I have written many articles about the cruise industry's practice of pollution  Here are a few to consider:

Earth Day - Spotlight on Cruising - A Dirty Business

Cruise Industry: "Notorious Polluters"

Reason No. 8 Not To Cruise: Blackwater, Blackwater, Blackwater

Reason No. 9 Not To Cruise: Bunker Fuel - Nasty Tar Sludge!

Dirty Cruise Industry Tries to Wiggle Out Of Clean Air Law

When I began practicing maritime law, cruise lines openly dumped raw sewage into the water and threw hundreds of black garbage bags overboard during every cruise.  Only through the enactment and enforcement of legislation has there been an improvement in the U.S.   But the cruise lines are free to pollute in the waters of countries like Canada and the powerless Caribbean islands which are desperate for U.S. tourist dollars.  

 

Credits:

Cruise Ship Cartoon      Shields via EarthIsland.org and Campaign to Safeguard America's Waterways