U.S. Cuba tour operators
gird for Trump travel crackdown
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[July 24, 2017]
By Marc Frank and Sophia Kunthara
HAVANA/NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. tour
operators that send Americans to Cuba are banding together to try to
limit damage to business from tighter restrictions on travel to the
communist-run island expected in September from the Trump
administration.
U.S. President Donald Trump in June rolled back parts of Barack Obama's
historic opening to Cuba, saying his predecessor negotiated a “terrible
and misguided deal.”
The revised approach includes stricter enforcement of a longtime ban on
Americans going to Cuba as tourists. Among changes are limiting visits
to 12 existing categories of non-tourist travel and a ban on the use of
hotels and other facilities owned by Cuba's military.
Cruise ships are permitted, the administration said, but not independent
visits by solo travelers and families under the popular people-to-people
travel category which Trump charged was being used to violate the
tourist ban.
Many Americans took Trump's message to mean travel to Cuba, except on
cruise ships, was again off limits, U.S. tour operators said. It is a
misconception they hope to change with a trade group formed in the last
month to influence the debate on Cuba and help would-be visitors
navigate new rules.
“We need to share information and speak as a united voice on issues that
are important to us,” said Cuba Cultural Travel's Michael Sykes, who
founded the group American Tour Operators in Cuba (ATOC) that now counts
more than 30 U.S. companies.
"PALL" OVER CUBA
Trump's move to roll back Obama policies introduced after the 2014
U.S.-Cuban detente has yet to have a significant impact on the number of
U.S. travelers visiting the island, according to a survey of a dozen
U.S. tour operators by Reuters.
But travel companies fear a hit on future demand from Trump's combative
tone and regulations, with some concerned it could even spook U.S. banks
that help them do business with Cuba.
“We can work with the new rules with minimal changes, but a pall has
been cast over the business and that has me worried going forward,” said
Steven Cox, president of Alabama-based tour operator International
Expeditions, an ATOC member.
“Many American travelers are not so well informed and believe that
travel to Cuba is being shut off and that just isn’t true,” he added.
Some 300,000 Americans, excluding those of Cuban descent, visited Cuba
in the first six months of 2017, more than twice last year's number
during the same period, according to the Cuban government. Of those,
40,000 traveled outside organized groups using online booking, tour
companies estimated, the majority under the people-to-people category.
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Tourists visit Revolution Square in Havana January 15, 2015.
REUTERS/Stringer
Operators said they had been inundated with inquiries from clients worried about
future travel and are revising itineraries to avoid Cuban hotels operated by the
military.
“We are receiving requests from a lot of small groups, families, couples’ trips,
birthday parties and the like, that were already planning on going to Cuba but
don’t know what to make of the new rules and how to ensure they are in
compliance,” said Collin Laverty, who runs Cuba Educational Travel, another
member of the trade group.
Priceline Group Inc, which agreed in March 2016 to make hotel rooms in Cuba
available to U.S. customers through its subsidiary Booking.com, is still taking
reservations "within the allowable guidelines and categories," spokeswoman
Leslie Cafferty said in an emailed statement.
Online travel agent Expedia Inc declined to comment.
AIRLINES AND BANKS
Janet Moore, owner of California-based operator Distant Horizons, said new rules
could make it difficult for individual travelers to visit Cuba and force
airlines to cancel flights, making her tour scheduling more complicated.
Carriers such as American Airlines Group Inc announced moves late last year to
cut the frequency of Cuba flights as demand lagged initially high expectations.
Moore also expressed concern about transferring payments to Cuba.
The trade embargo has always made U.S. banks nervous they could be held
responsible if a client was not operating within Treasury Department rules.
Operators said a more hostile Trump administration might raise pressure on banks
to ensure clients were in compliance and increase the number of regulations they
had to check.
"What concerns me is if the regulations become even more complicated, the banks
are going to be really, really holding on and making sure everything's
legitimate. And they may decide 'this isn't worth it to us,'" Moore said.
(Reporting by Marc Frank; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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