Are You Safe on a Cruise Ship?
Disturbing
tales about cruise vacations are more common than we'd like. Numerous
passengers have disappeared from cruise ships, including George
Smith IV, whose family is currently suing Royal Caribbean. The
Crown Princess tilted sharply on one of its first voyages, injuring
dozens of guests, and the Star Princess caught on fire, destroying
balconies on several decks. Last year, modern-day pirates attacked
a Seabourn ship off the coast of Somalia.
All of these scary incidents lead holidaymakers to wonder: Am I safe taking a
cruise vacation?
The answer is a conditional yes. In today's uncertain world, you can never be
completely safe anywhere. Going on a cruise does not put you in greater peril
than does any other vacation. But, the responsibility ultimately falls to you
to protect yourself and your interests while onboard.
Fire And Mechanical Problems
A cruise ship creates the image of a floating city, but in many ways it's a machine like an airplane or a car. The possibility of mechanical and navigational problems as well as fires cannot be 100% eliminated. Again, the IMO has stepped in with regulations to govern the design, construction and operation of all ships. The Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) Convention was first adopted in 1914, after the Titanic disaster, and has been updated and amended over the past century to reflect changes in technology and shipbuilding.The SOLAS convention regulates such details as how watertight a ship is, fire prevention, life-saving devices, radio communications, navigational techniques, and the transport of cargo and dangerous goods. The U.S. Coast Guard works with cruise lines to ensure that new ships meet SOLAS standards and inspects ships upon first arrival in the U.S. and quarterly thereafter. Crews are trained in fire-fighting and emergency procedures. If you've ever groaned at donning your life jacket for the muster drill on the first day of a cruise, you should realize that these steps are taken to ensure your safety in the case of an emergency.
As regards the Star Princess fire, Michael Crye, president of the ICCL explains that, "it was never viewed as a significant threat to the ship if a fire was on a balcony." The underlying thought was that outside areas are easy to reach for fire-fighting purposes and fires on outdoor sections of the ship would be easy to spot. The Star Princess fire proved otherwise, and combustible materials used in the balconies' construction only exacerbated the problem. Crye recalls that the ICCL immediately issued recommendations to the industry and proposed SOLAS modifications that would reduce flammable materials used in balcony constructions, prevent the use of open flames in certain outdoor areas, and rethink how balcony partitions are constructed, so they'd be more accessible in the case of a fire. Responses like the ICCL's prove that the cruise industry is constantly rethinking and updating its procedures to keep onboard guests as safe as possible.
Personal Health And Safety
If you're going to worry about anything on a cruise vacation, you should be concerned about your personal health and safety. That's because a cruise line can't always control the behavior of other passengers, despite its strongest efforts.The biggest onboard health concern is the norovirus. Cruise ships may get a bum rap, but the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that 23 million Americans contract the norovirus each year — a rate of one in 12. Of the eight million people who cruise every year, 2,200 cases of norovirus are reported, making your chances of getting ill one in 3,600 (less than one percent).
The ships do their part by adhering to comprehensive CDC vessel sanitation programs. Crye insists that if you held shoreside hotels to the same standards of cleanliness, many of them would flunk the test. Yet outbreaks of the norovirus continue to occur onboard. The best way to protect yourself from the norovirus is to practice good hygiene and wash your hands with soap and warm water after you use the bathroom, before you eat and upon your return from a shore excursion.
Personal safety is an additional concern. Seemingly at odds with the idyllic setting of a cruise vacation, sexual assault, theft and even physical assault or murder are possible during a trip at sea. Excessive drinking by passengers can lead to impaired judgment and violence. In the confined spaces of a ship, guests are likely to let down their guard and not be as careful with their possessions or as alert to their surroundings and companions.
Crye and the ICCL assert that "cruising is one of the safest vacations available." Onboard security cameras and staff monitor the goings-on of the ship. The crew has specific instructions as to how they can fraternize with the paying guests, and the penalty for violating the rules is dismissal. Policies regarding the service of alcohol are in place to prevent underage drinking and excessive consumption. "You're as likely to be sexually assaulted on a cruise ship as you are of getting struck by lightning," says Crye.
Despite these guarantees, sexual assault and passenger disappearances are still occurring onboard, and people are complaining. The International Cruise Victims Organization claims that "cruise companies are largely unregulated and unaccountable for protecting passengers from crime and for assisting passengers after crimes have been committed."
The organization has joined forces with Congressman Christopher Shays to introduce the Cruise Line Accurate Safety Statistics Act. This bill, if passed, would require cruise ships to report crimes to the Department of Homeland Security in a timely fashion, to issue a quarterly public report of onboard crimes and missing persons, to train onboard personnel to investigate crimes, and to pay a fine of up to $250,000 if the regulations are not upheld. While this act will not make a cruise ship safer, it begins to protect the rights of victims and their families once a crime is reported.


