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Before booking a cruise destined for international waters, many veteran travelers check out the vessel’s latest sanitation score. Under a long-standing voluntary program administered by the
federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, ships are rated and the scores are disseminated by travel agents, the Internet and the CDC. Booking on a cruise ship with consistently
high scores can minimize your chances of encountering contaminated food or dirty hot tubs. But what if you are planning a cruise in domestic waters? What if you want to take a weeklong float
down the Mississippi on a paddle-wheeler? Or a five-night barge trip through the Erie Canal? Or fly to Hawaii and then cruise around the islands? The job of monitoring passenger vessels
such as these does not fall to the CDC. Instead, their safety and sanitation regulation is the responsibility of the federal Food and Drug Administration, the U.S. Coast Guard and various
state agencies, depending on the routes traveled. Boats and ships that travel interstate routes are subject to sanitation regulations of the FDA, says Brad Stone, an agency spokesman. But
the FDA does not use a numerical rating. The vessels pass, fail or get provisional status pending correction of problems by a deadline. If a boat fails the FDA inspection, it is taken out of
service. The FDA inspections are unannounced and are done once or twice a year at varying intervals, Stone says. They cover food, water, waste systems, swimming pools and spas on vessels.
Inspectors look out for insect and rodent infestations too. Safety on interstate vessels is regulated by the Coast Guard. For instance, vessels must have one personal flotation device, such
as a life jacket, for each passenger and each crew member, says Chief Warrant Officer Jack Gaskill the U.S. Coast Guard marine safety office in Los Angeles. Vessels also must have lifesaving
apparatus, such as life rafts, and emergency signaling devices that activate if the boat begins to sink. The Coast Guard conducts its inspections annually. Depending on itineraries, state
agencies might also get involved in sanitation and safety on boats. For instance, the Alaska Marine Highway System, which operates nine passenger vessels on routes that include stops in
Washington state, is regulated not only by the Coast Guard and the FDA but also by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, says Norm Edwards, operations officer for the system.
How can consumers find out if the vessel they’re planning to vacation on has met safety and sanitation requirements? Ask the booking agent, contact the operating line directly (some lines
state their compliance on their Web sites) or check the CDC’s ship inspection Internet site, https://www2.cdc.gov/nceh/vsp/vspmain.asp. Some vessels that ply interstate routes in summer also
sail U.S.-foreign itineraries in winter, which makes them subject to CDC inspection. Healthy Traveler appears on the second and fourth Sundays of the month. Kathleen Doheny can be reached
at [email protected]. MORE TO READ