View Full Version : Carnival To House Katrina Refugees
Castillo Mom
09-03-2005, 02:42 PM
Just heard on the news that FEMA has chartered 3 Carnival ships to house refugees, the Ecstasy, Sensation and Holiday. They'll be able to provide shelter for about 7,000. Good to see that some people will finally get relief.
mommasita
09-03-2005, 05:33 PM
This is good news..I had heard speculation about this..
Great job, hope those folks can have a little break in this.. :goodvibes
pppiglet
09-03-2005, 06:09 PM
You're suppose to call them "evacuees" now. They are not "refugees". Just something I heard this morning. I also just read this on Carnival's website about the 3 ships.
aprilgail2
09-03-2005, 07:02 PM
All the cruise lines should be helping out in this!!
Carnival Sending Three Ships for Refugees
By TRAVIS REED, AP
(Sept. 3) - Federal officials are chartering three of Carnival Cruise Lines' ships for six months, part of a plan to provide shelter for as many as 7,000 people displaced by devastating Hurricane Katrina.
The three ships - the Ecstasy, Sensation and Holiday - will be pulled from regular use starting Monday.
AP
Carnival's cruise ship Holiday can hold about 1,800 passengers.
Ecstasy, normally ported at Galveston for four-and five-day cruises, and Sensation, normally in New Orleans for similar trips, will both be pulled Monday and are scheduled to dock and house Katrina refugees in Galveston, Texas.
The Holiday, which normally sails four and five-day Mexico cruises out of Mobile, Ala., will be pulled Thursday and likely docked in Mobile.
Approximately 920 crew members will staff the 70,367 gross-ton Ecstasy and Sensation, with about 660 running the 46,052-ton Holiday. The Ecstasy and Sensation can each take 2,606 total passengers, while the Holiday can hold 1,800.
"We sincerely apologize to those guests whose vacations have been impacted by these voyage cancellations," Carnival CEO Bob Dickinson said in a news release. "This inconvenience ... will provide desperately needed housing for thousands of individuals affected by this tragedy."
Federal officials asked Carnival, the world's largest cruise line, shortly after Katrina slammed into the Gulf coast if their ships could be used as emergency shelters.
Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen said Saturday from Miami, where the corporation is based, that it does not disclose the price of charter contracts, and it's virtually impossible to tell precisely how many trips will be canceled.
"I can't put a number on it, but we are displacing people to accommodate the FEMA charter," he said. "You're looking at tens of thousands."
A FEMA spokeswoman did not immediately return a telephone message Saturday seeking comment.
All guests with canceled bookings will get full refunds and the opportunity to re-book on any Carnival ship with a $100-per-person shipboard credit.
Because of the deployments, The Elation, which operates seven-day cruises from Galveston, will offer a one-time six-day voyage departing Sept. 4, then take over the Ecstasy's four and five-day Galveston program starting next Saturday. Guests will receive a 15 percent refund and a $50-per-person shipboard credit. The ship's five-day cruise, scheduled to leave Monday, has been canceled.
markey
09-03-2005, 08:52 PM
Read that the government is paying Carnival $249 million.
txaggie94gigem
09-03-2005, 10:35 PM
are the employees for carnival salary or by tip like disney? If they are by tip i hope carnival will be compensating them equivalent to what they earn from passengers....
Lisa loves Pooh
09-03-2005, 10:48 PM
You're suppose to call them "evacuees" now. They are not "refugees". Just something I heard this morning. I also just read this on Carnival's website about the 3 ships.
curious of the semantics....
they were refugees when they were stuck--and now that they left the area they are evacuees?
(not sarcasm--really asking as with the entire situation.....I didn't know that they switched terminology).
BuckNaked
09-03-2005, 10:57 PM
curious of the semantics....
they were refugees when they were stuck--and now that they left the area they are evacuees?
(not sarcasm--really asking as with the entire situation.....I didn't know that they switched terminology).
I just heard Al Sharpton :rolleyes: giving the reasons why they shouldn't be called refugees. His take is that calling them refugees makes it sounds like they aren't taxpaying citizens that are simply being relocated.
aprilgail2
09-03-2005, 11:17 PM
I just heard Al Sharpton :rolleyes: giving the reasons why they shouldn't be called refugees. His take is that calling them refugees makes it sounds like they aren't taxpaying citizens that are simply being relocated.
Well whatever the "rev" al sharpton says to call them I will call them the exact opposite.....I knew he would have to get involved sooner or later in all this!! :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
hemispheredancer
09-03-2005, 11:59 PM
Maybe the black community misconstrues the word "refugee" and considers it a derogitory comment. They wouldn't be "refugees" if they would have followed instructions and evacuated. Regardless if they had a car or not....free transportation was provided for them to get out.
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