Before the pandemic struck, Galveston saw 1.09 million passengers sail out of the island in 2019, according to leaders. Once the pandemic began, those numbers were way down as the virus forced the shutdown of cruises out of U.S. ports last spring.
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SEE ALSO: 2 Royal Caribbean lines to resume cruises in June; Crews, guests must be vaccinated
Now, leaders are hoping to have ships sailing from the Port of Galveston as early as July.
On Monday, the Port of Galveston director, Rodger Rees, issued a letter to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott asking for his backing in pressuring the CDC to lift the moratorium. Rees claimed the cruise industry is being unfairly singled out.
"We're ready," Rees said. "We're the only cruise port in Texas. But this business has been growing. We have a lot of things going on this."
SEE ALSO: Fully vaccinated people can travel again, says new CDC guidance
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This comes a week after the state of Florida filed a lawsuit against the federal government to demand cruise ships be allowed to start sailing immediately.
SEE ALSO: Florida sues federal government to allow cruises to sail
According to Galveston leaders, the suspension of cruise ships resulted in a $1.2 billion loss in direct spending. The suspension also caused a reduction of 23,000 jobs and $1.6 billion in wages statewide.
SEE ALSO: Royal Caribbean plans first fully vaccinated cruises from Israel
Claire Johnson, co-owner of GalvestonCruises.com, said there is a demand to set sail again and that most of her clients wouldn't mind if there was a requirement to be vaccinated.
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"People are ready to go," Johnson said.
Galveston County Health authorities, Dr. Philip Keiser also added he would be among the first on a ship that required everyone to be vaccinated.
"I'd get on that ship. I really would. That's how much confidence I have on the vaccines," Keiser said. "I think particularly for cruise lines, that's probably what they're going to have to do."
The video above is from a previous story.
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