The Prague Post - Cruise ships at center of dispute in Florida's idyllic Key West

EUR -
AED 4.249608
AFN 76.410168
ALL 96.743483
AMD 443.130821
ANG 2.071265
AOA 1061.100093
ARS 1559.949984
AUD 1.776678
AWG 2.082858
AZN 1.975625
BAM 1.955054
BBD 2.33222
BDT 140.976178
BGN 1.955468
BHD 0.436209
BIF 3412.28251
BMD 1.157143
BND 1.503294
BOB 8.029934
BRL 6.327262
BSD 1.157963
BTN 102.609269
BWP 15.496151
BYN 3.939413
BYR 22680.007197
BZD 2.328821
CAD 1.623755
CDF 2759.786164
CHF 0.929999
CLF 0.02823
CLP 1107.444338
CNY 8.232785
CNH 8.258086
COP 4544.964817
CRC 582.672511
CUC 1.157143
CUP 30.664295
CVE 110.222919
CZK 24.310536
DJF 205.647815
DKK 7.467621
DOP 72.811573
DZD 150.763808
EGP 55.188677
ERN 17.357148
ETB 169.929855
FJD 2.631749
FKP 0.864854
GBP 0.867554
GEL 3.13618
GGP 0.864854
GHS 13.836717
GIP 0.864854
GMD 83.314257
GNF 10048.120398
GTQ 8.869614
GYD 242.257511
HKD 9.003211
HNL 30.411127
HRK 7.535305
HTG 151.511501
HUF 391.653654
IDR 19156.506079
ILS 3.804109
IMP 0.864854
INR 102.597815
IQD 1516.907764
IRR 48672.334558
ISK 141.622746
JEP 0.864854
JMD 186.087347
JOD 0.820412
JPY 176.129935
KES 149.537829
KGS 101.192108
KHR 4655.202616
KMF 491.786186
KPW 1041.421751
KRW 1651.151235
KWD 0.355173
KYD 0.964923
KZT 622.107115
LAK 25132.513473
LBP 103692.260286
LKR 350.357754
LRD 211.900016
LSL 20.050132
LTL 3.416743
LVL 0.699944
LYD 6.294624
MAD 10.60715
MDL 19.597603
MGA 5189.973713
MKD 61.634613
MMK 2429.707981
MNT 4159.883846
MOP 9.275379
MRU 46.246944
MUR 52.422218
MVR 17.715773
MWK 2007.916063
MXN 21.367348
MYR 4.891259
MZN 73.939566
NAD 20.049872
NGN 1690.32022
NIO 42.613547
NOK 11.671623
NPR 164.172903
NZD 2.021423
OMR 0.444929
PAB 1.157958
PEN 3.978164
PGK 4.864101
PHP 67.310895
PKR 327.837654
PLN 4.259525
PYG 8159.919954
QAR 4.233684
RON 5.086454
RSD 117.183856
RUB 93.883137
RWF 1680.743798
SAR 4.339562
SBD 9.523916
SCR 16.49116
SDG 696.024185
SEK 11.016721
SGD 1.50278
SHP 0.868157
SLE 26.848762
SLL 24264.714298
SOS 661.741641
SRD 44.891399
STD 23950.528481
STN 24.490438
SVC 10.132044
SYP 15045.098879
SZL 20.038436
THB 37.726105
TJS 10.635448
TMT 4.050001
TND 3.4045
TOP 2.710144
TRY 48.371688
TTD 7.859931
TWD 35.526692
TZS 2841.838429
UAH 48.20438
UGX 3971.483762
USD 1.157143
UYU 46.402284
UZS 14058.51123
VES 223.395797
VND 30484.938245
VUV 140.956122
WST 3.218715
XAF 655.700999
XAG 0.022111
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.127238
XCG 2.086885
XDR 0.815482
XOF 655.709496
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.499782
ZAR 20.02997
ZMK 10415.6824
ZMW 26.314067
ZWL 372.599646
  • RBGPF

    0.4500

    76

    +0.59%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • NGG

    -1.2200

    73.3

    -1.66%

  • BCC

    -0.2400

    72.08

    -0.33%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    16.49

    +1.21%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    43.69

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    2.7200

    68.16

    +3.99%

  • CMSC

    0.2600

    23.9

    +1.09%

  • JRI

    0.2800

    14.05

    +1.99%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    45.13

    +0.69%

  • BCE

    0.3000

    24.2

    +1.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.1

    -0.66%

  • AZN

    -0.0200

    84.51

    -0.02%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    11.17

    -1.16%

  • BTI

    -0.7300

    50.81

    -1.44%

  • BP

    0.2100

    33.7

    +0.62%

Cruise ships at center of dispute in Florida's idyllic Key West
Cruise ships at center of dispute in Florida's idyllic Key West / Photo: CHANDAN KHANNA - AFP

Cruise ships at center of dispute in Florida's idyllic Key West

The island-city of Key West off the southern tip of Florida invites visitors to stroll slowly, enjoy turquoise waters and take in the sunset. But according to some residents, that idyllic peace is endangered -- by lumbering, tourist-filled cruise ships.

Text size:

The huge vessels bring thousands of visitors every day to the small city of 26,000 inhabitants, whose quaint, often pastel-colored Victorian homes line leafy, walkable streets.

Following a drawn-out local battle, the cruise tourist numbers are now down, but many residents say more still needs to be done.

While many businesses depend on the tourist throngs, residents such as Arlo Haskell find the ships to be a nuisance and believe they cause environmental harm. As a result, he founded the Safer Cleaner Ships non-profit.

"These cruise ships are an extraction industry that is profiting off of the beauty in Key West while harming that beauty and degrading the experience for everyone else," Haskell said.

In 2020, his association put forth three local referendums: one to limit the size of cruise ships, another to allow no more than 1,500 people a day to disembark and a third to be able to prohibit boats that do the most damage to the environment.

The three proposals, each approved by between 60 to 80 percent of voters, were ratified by the city council. It was a victory for Haskell -- or so he thought.

Then in June 2021, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a law suspending the measures, arguing that voters could not meddle in matters of maritime trade.

Local businesses, including ones also owned by the owner of Pier B -- a huge beneficiary of the cruise ships as one of the city's main docking locations -- had donated almost $1 million to a political campaign committee supporting the governor, according to the Miami Herald.

- Public docks closed -

Relying on a bit of unexpected economic data, Safer Cleaner Ships returned to battle following DeSantis' move.

The info showed that cruise ship suspensions during the pandemic did not sink local finances.

To the contrary, in 2021, the city collected 25 percent more sales taxes than in 2019, before Covid.

Hotels and restaurants seem to have taken advantage of the fact that Florida promoted its open businesses in the middle of the pandemic while other states imposed rules and closings.

The city administration last month decided that since Key West cannot limit the number of cruise ships, it would close its two public docks.

Now cruises can only park at private Pier B, which welcomes only one cruise ship per day. The era of two to three ships arriving daily is over.

The move has been a blow to some businesses.

Although cruise tourists spend only a few hours in the city and usually eat before disembarking -- generating little income for restaurants and hotels -- they do buy souvenirs and snacks.

The visitors support the likes of tchotchke shops, ice cream parlors and tourist destinations, such as the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum where the US writer lived between 1931 and 1939, according to Mayor Teri Johnston.

- Finding balance -

One morning this week, the streets of Key West were nearly deserted. Vanessa Wilder manned her downtown bike rental stand, waiting for the first passengers to disembark from a newly arrived cruise.

"The main shops and the bars down here, we thrive off of these cruise ships," she said.

"If we didn't have them, a lot of businesses around here would have to shut."

Despite his victories, Haskell maintains that things should move one step further, with cruise ships at the private dock not allowed to exceed a size specified by residents.

The boats, according to Haskell "do tremendous damage to our ecosystem" by clouding the water, which endangers the survival of corals.

But Scott Atwell, spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Key West, said the evidence wasn't so clear.

"We do not have specific studies on whether the cruise ship turbidity is any different than natural turbidity and whether turbidity from the ships' channel reaches our coral reefs in a detrimental way," he said.

In the meantime, Key West's city council has decided to monitor water quality and also support coral restoration under an initiative that charges a fee to Pier B for disembarking passengers.

"We don't want to get rid of the cruise ships but bring them into a moderate level so that we have good economic conditions and we also have good quality of life for our residents," Johnston, the mayor, said.

K.Dudek--TPP