From thebahamasweekly.com -
Bahamas Celebration Moving to Freeport, Grand Bahama
Jan 26, 2010 - 9:59:05 AM

The Bahamas Celebration moves slowly through the Port of Palm Beach during a maneuverability test Sunday morning.
Cruise ship passes Port of Palm Beach test; one step closer to offering trips to Bahamas.
By Mitra Malek
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
WELLINGTON — It fit.
The largest
passenger ship to ever dock at the Port of Palm Beach cruised in easily
this morning, passing a maneuverability test crucial to allowing
Celebration Cruise Lines to start service to the Bahamas on March 1.
"It just came in so perfectly," said port Commissioner Ed Oppel. "The boat showed absolutely no problem."
The
500-cabin Bahama Celebration is expected to offer two-, four- and
six-day cruises to Grand Bahama Island — the first vacation cruise to
operate out of the port since 1996.
The deal with Celebration
Cruise Line is expected to bring the port $2 to $2.5 million a year,
Oppel said. The port has been trying to strike a deal with a vacation
cruise line for more than a decade.
"It's a great addition to the port," Oppel said.
The port's governing board must still approve a contract with the cruise operator.
Celebration
Cruise Lines is working through minor details to tie up the contract
and must sort out a few small things with the Bahamian government, said
Daniel Lambert, a principal with the company.
"Once that's worked out we're all set to go," Lambert said.
The
Bahama Celebration isn't the first cruise ship to travel
internationally from the port. At one time several ships went back and
forth to the Bahamas, Oppel said.
Despite 20-knot winds, the
ship slipped in cleanly at about 9:30 a.m. this morning. Workers
checked loading ramps, among other things, before the vessel went back
out around 11 a.m. The cruise line's president, Charles Kinnear, was on
board.
The port's channel is much narrower than Port Everglades,
where Bahama Celebration had been docking since March. If commissioners
approve the contract with Celebration Cruise Lines, the Port of Palm
Beach will become Bahama Celebration's new home.
Ship could find home in Port of Palm Beach
Reported by:
Sean Balewski, wptv.com
RIVIERA BEACH -- The Bahamas Celebration Cruise Line is one step closer
to making its home here in Palm Beach. It would be the first cruise
line in almost a decade to use the Port of Palm Beach. The cruise line
company and the port conducted a docking test-run Sunday, and by all
accounts, the ship proves to be the right "fit." Manny Almira,
Executive Director of the Port of Palm Beach, was happy with Sunday's
exercise.
"I think things couldn't have gone smoother," Almira
explains. "We were concerned about making the entrance to our port but
because of the navigational enhancements that the ship has, it had
absolutely no problem. Better off, we didn't need any tug assistance.
So that's a celebration...no pun intended."
A long overdue
celebration for many in Palm Beach County...who's only option for
cruise-style travel has been the Palm Beach Princess Casino. Although
the two may soon be docked only feet apart, Blair Ciklin, Chairman of
the Port of Palm Beach, says this bahama-bound cruise ship will offer
far more amenities.
"I think the people in Palm Beach County
overwhelmingly have told the port commissioners that they want a ship
that goes out and spends 2 or 3 nights," Ciklin says. "And this is what
we've been dreaming of...so we're really close."
Port
commissioners are hoping to finalize the details of the tenative 5 year
deal, for a maiden voyage of March 1st. If all goes as planned, the
cruise ship, that can accommodate up to 1200 passengers, will make
trips every two days to Port Lucaya in the Bahamas. The travel deals
will involve hotel stays at the Our Lucaya Beach & Golf Resort, a
trip itinerary that is very appealing to Lynn Hansen, who brought her
son to watch the ship come into port.
"I think its a good alternative for folks to have little vacation on the weekend and get over to the Bahamas," Hansen says.
If
the deal works out, the Port hopes that the Bahamas Celebration Cruise
Line will be the big money-maker. Almira says that the effects of this
ship's arrival will be far-sweeping.
"This is not only good for
the port but is also good for the community," Almira explains. "It's an
economic engine. A ship like this can bring hundreds of jobs to the
local community."
The ship's arrival will be a win-win for the
Palm Beach area and for the cruise line as well. Dan Lambert of the
Bahamas Celebration Cruise Line says that the Port of Palm Beach seems
to be the right fit for the ship.
"It's our desire to be here
and offer our cruises here and to become a household name in the Palm
Beach area and offer these cruises for quite some time to come,"
Lambert says.
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