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After spending weeks in quarantine, they now appreciate home and family more than ever. Author: Jenny Dean Updated: 7:24 AM EST March 1, 2021
CITRUS COUNTY, Fla. — Exactly one year ago, Florida confirmed its first COVID-19 cases.
But, before it spread quickly here in the U.S., it was a cruise ship off the coast of Japan that became the focus of the outbreak.
The Diamond Princess was out for a two week voyage with more than 3,700 passengers. Among them, a couple from Crystal River in Citrus County. What happened on board that ship and several others would change the cruise industry and many lives for good.
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As 2020 draws to a close, we round up some of Travel Weekly Asia's best news stories that might have slipped your attention in the past 12 months. Photo Credit: Getty Images/ Iam Anupong
It’s been an incredibly tough year as the Covid-19 pandemic turned the global travel industry upside down.
But it's not all gloom and doom. Amid the uncertainty, there have been some bright spots, positive learnings and transformational challenges, which keep the travel business community bound together.
As 2020 draws to a close, we round up some of Travel Weekly Asia's best news stories that might have slipped your attention in the past 12 months.
How COVID-19 Exposes America’s Addiction to Incarceration
A new COVID-19 surge has hit the United States and once again, the 2.1 million Americans held in prisons and jails are at imminent risk of contracting and dying of the virus.
Though new vaccines on the horizon appear promising, policymakers need to redouble their efforts to reduce incarcerated populations and help protect the vulnerable if we are to truly get this virus under control.
President-elect Joe Biden can lead the way when it comes to reducing the number of vulnerable people incarcerated in federal prisons. His actions can serve as a model for state governors who have been slow to act in the face of a growing public health catastrophe.