Business

Alaska to join Florida in suing the CDC for its ‘job-killing’ pause on the US cruise industry

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy
Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy in 2019.

  • Florida announced on April 8 that it would be suing the CDC to bring cruises back “immediately.”
  • Now, Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy says the state will be joining Florida’s lawsuit against the CDC.
  • Alaska lost $3 billion when the CDC canceled the 2020 cruising season due to COVID-19, according to Dunleavy.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy announced on April 20 that Alaska will be joining Florida in suing the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to bring cruising back.

The CDC has maintained its pause on the cruise industry – via its no-sail order and recently updated Conditional Sailing Order (COS)– since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic when cruise ships around the world initially became inundated with coronavirus outbreaks.

In an effort to “fight back” against this halt on cruising, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced on April 8 that the state would be suing the CDC to bring cruise ships back “immediately.” Now, Alaska will be joining this cause in an effort to push the CDC to either remove or revise its order.

Alaska has lost $3 billion due to the 2020 cruise halt, and is projected to continue this loss as the 2021 cruising season remains in limbo, Dunleavy said in a news release.

“Alaskan families and small businesses need fast action to protect their ability to work and provide for their families,” Dunleavy said.”We deserve the chance to have tourism and jobs.”

According to the news release, the CDC doesn’t have the authority to continue this “job-killing” pause, and its COS hasn’t acknowledged that cruise ships have already been operating successfully outside of the US. The release also noted Alaska’s high vaccination and “low” hospitalization rates.

“Through this lawsuit, Alaska seeks to protect its citizens and its interests by forcing the CDC to act within the limited authority Congress granted it,” Treg Taylor, Alaska’s attorney general, said in the news release. “CDC simply does not have the authority to arbitrarily shut down an entire industry.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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