Showing posts with label OFAC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OFAC. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2011

OFAC Stiffs Third Party Providers of Study Abroad


October 11, 2011

Study-Abroad Providers Remain in Limbo Over Cuba Programs
By Karin Fischer
Nine months after President Obama announced he was lifting an embargo on academic travel to Cuba, independent study-abroad providers are still waiting for permission to organize academic programs in the Caribbean country.
Sixty licenses have been issued to groups running travel and humanitarian programs to Cuba since rules regulating American trips there were published in April, according to the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, which enforces and administers international economic and trade sanctions.
But study-abroad groups say they know of no provider organization that has received a permit to take students to Cuba. And they say the explanations they have been given for the delay by the Treasury Department and the State Department, which must also sign off on licenses, are confusing and, at times, contradictory.
"We are clearly receiving mixed messages regarding provider organizations," says Brian J. Whalen, president of the Forum on Education Abroad, a membership association of American and overseas colleges and independent education-abroad providers. He says he knows of at least a half-dozen study-abroad groups waiting for licenses. "The impact is that fewer students will have the opportunity to study abroad in Cuba, which does not advance the policy goal of opening up and encouraging academic and cultural programming in Cuba."
Colleges that operate their own Cuba programs have been able to move forward because, under the new regulations, accredited institutions can travel to Cuba under a "general" license, which does not require permission or prior governmental approval for travel. (Instead, students and faculty members must carry letters on official university letterhead authorizing travel, and the college must keep records of all trips for five years.)
In fact, the new rules have made it easier for American college-run programs in Cuba, which, prior to the sanctions imposed in 2004 by President Bush, faced more extensive licensing requirements. The regulations were issued without a comment period in April.
Outside study-abroad groups, however, must apply for specific, "people-to-people" licenses. Because many colleges cannot afford to run their own programs, many Americans who study abroad do so with outside academic providers.
Jerry Guidera, U.S. director for the Center for Cross-Cultural Study, which runs Spanish-language programs around the world, submitted his organization's application immediately after Mr. Obama's announcement in January, even before the travel rules were published. In August, he says, he was told to expect approval "in a matter of days."
"Nothing came of it," Mr. Guidera says.
The Institute for Study Abroad, Butler University sent more than 250 students to Cuba prior to the embargo and had begun making plans to restart its program with its local partner, the University of Havana. (The nonprofit group is separate from Butler.) But two weeks ago, Mark Scheid, IFSA-Butler's president and chief executive, says he was told by Treasury officials that the group might not qualify for a people-to-people license.
Contacted by The Chronicle about the study-abroad providers' problem, an OFAC spokeswoman said there is "no licensing category that speaks to what they do." Of the two educational licensing classes, one applies to educational travel for seminars, conferences, and workshops. The other permits travel for "educational exchanges not involving academic study pursuant to a degree program." Study-abroad programming, of course, is for academic credit.
The OFAC spokeswoman declined to comment on the status of the educational groups' license applications and referred questions regarding foreign-policy decisions, including the licensing categories, to the State Department. A State Department spokesman referred questions back to OFAC, saying the department does not issue licenses, so it cannot comment on specific licenses or requests.
For their part, the study-abroad groups say they were initially told by Treasury officials that they would qualify for people-to-people licenses and are bewildered by the holdup.
Mr. Guidera says at least one college that had planned to send students to Cuba through the Center for Cross-Cultural Study has instead turned to a nonacademic group that has already been given a license to take students to Cuba this January. Meanwhile, Mr. Scheid says, IFSA-Butler is considering the possibility of running a customized program with an American university, using that institution's general license.
The provider groups say they plan to continue to press for licenses to be awarded. "We're trying to be the squeaky wheel," says Luke Jones, chief of staff for Semester at Sea.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Arthur Frommer Critique of OFAC Implementation


Treasury constricts Cuba travel plans


In January, exceptions to the 50-year-old embargo against travel to Cuba were announced by the Obama administration, raising hopes that this totally counterproductive policy finally would be phased out.

And yet this past month, those exceptions have been narrowly defined by government officials as to quash the hopes of most Americans that they could finally make such trips. What were the exceptions designed to permit? That travel to Cuba would be permitted for educational, religious or cultural purposes.

Licenses would be issued to U.S. tour operators who submitted plans for tours involving people-to-people contacts in Cuba. Numerous well-known, reputable American travel companies — long-established firms, such as Abercrombie & Kent — applied for the right to bring thousands of American tourists to that country.

And then the U.S. Treasury Department (supervisor of the embargo and the exceptions to it) issued a statement July 25 that "the amended regulations still contain significant travel restrictions, permitting only people-to-people groups that certify that all participants will have a full-time schedule of educational activities between the travelers and Cubans."
In other words, tours to Cuba would be permitted only if participants moved continuously in a group, and met throughout each day as a group with various Cuban counterparts, on a schedule that would be meticulously planned to stay active from morning till night.

Americans touring Cuba would be bused from one meeting to another, from one event and conference to another, unable to interact with Cubans as individuals.

Almost immediately, Abercrombie & Kent canceled its program to Cuba. Having previously announced that virtually every departure was sold out, it now issued news releases about its unwillingness or inability to meet the Treasury Department's requirements.

Other tour operators announced radically increased prices for its tour programs to Cuba, given the need to operate constant activities and meetings for which it would need to pay heavy fees to the Cubans who would actually operate such programs.

The National Geographic Society announced that its 10-day tour program to Cuba would cost $5,000 a person, double occupancy, plus $500 a person for a round-trip charter flights between Miami and Havana.

Each of a couple traveling together would thus pay $5,500 (a total of $11,000 for the two of them) plus the cost of getting to Miami.

Almost as bad, the well-regarded Insight Cuba, a division of the long-established Cross Cultural Solutions, announced that its seven-night programs to Cuba would have to cost a minimum of $2,500 a person in off-season, $2,800 in winter, for its least-expensive program, and $400 to $500 a person more for its next most expensive program, all plus the cost of round-trip charter air transportation between Miami and Havana.

Assuming a $500 price for those flights from Miami, the average participant would pay at least $3,200 to $3,600 a person this winter for a seven-night tour of Cuba, plus the cost of traveling to Miami.

And almost as bad as the cost is the transformation that the Treasury Department's rules bring about in the nature of travel to Cuba. Participants will have no opportunity to interact with Cubans. They will travel everywhere in a group — and no individual Cubans will strike up a conversation with a group. The rewards of travel — experiencing the authentic life of the community, meeting with individuals one-on-one, discussing issues — will be totally lost if the various tour operators feel compelled to obey the Treasury Department's strictures.

I earlier referred to the travel embargo against Cuba as counterproductive. It angers many Cubans. It feeds into the Castro brothers' constant reference to an alleged American animus toward the Cuban people. It keeps the Castros in power.
Cuba today is thronged with tourists from Canada, Great Britain, France, Germany and Spain — from everywhere except America. This cannot help but color the Cuban attitude toward the United States. It's unfortunate that Treasury Department officials, reacting to pressures from Florida interest groups, should halt what otherwise began as an intelligent reversal of a counterproductive policy.

Arthur Frommer is the pioneering founder of the Frommer's Travel Guide book series. He co-hosts the radio program, "The Travel Show," with his travel correspondent daughter Pauline Frommer.

Read more: http://www.kansas.com/2011/09/18/2021512/treasury-constricts-cuba-travel.html#ixzz1YMv8usQi

Thursday, August 11, 2011

OFAC Clarifies Guidelines


CUBA TRAVEL ADVISORY

ISSUED: July 25, 2011

SUBJECT: Travel to Cuba and People-to-People Groups

The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) is aware of misstatements in the media suggesting that U.S. foreign policy, as implemented by OFAC, now allows for virtually unrestricted group travel to Cuba by persons subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.

Although OFAC amended the Cuban Assets Control Regulations, 31 C.F.R. Part 515 (the “Regulations”), in January 2011 to expand licensing of travel to Cuba for certain specific purposes, the amended Regulations still contain significant travel restrictions.

OFAC now specifically licenses organizations that sponsor and organize certain educational exchange programs to promote contact with the Cuban people (“People-to-People Groups”), provided that the requirements set forth in section 515.565(b)(2) of the Regulations and OFAC’s licensing guidelines are met. Anyone interested in traveling to Cuba should review the Regulations and OFAC’s Comprehensive Guidelines for License Applications to Engage in Travel-Related Transactions Involving Cuba (“Application Guidelines”)
 (available at www.treasury.gov/resourcecenter/sanctions/Programs/Documents/cuba_tr_app.pdf)
 to determine whether his or her proposed travel related transactions are or could be authorized under this or any other travel license category. As stated in the Application Guidelines, OFAC only licenses People-to-People Groups that certify that all participants will have a full-time schedule of educational exchange activities that will result in meaningful interaction between the travelers and individuals in Cuba.  Authorized activities by People-to-People Groups are not “tourist activities” under the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000, which prohibits OFAC from licensing travel-related transactions for tourist activities.

Potential travelers should know that a People-to-People Group licensed by OFAC will possess and is
required to make available to its participants information concerning its specific license. A People-to-People Group using another entity to make its travel arrangements may only use an OFAC-authorized Travel Service Provider (listed at http://www.treasury.gov/resourcecenter/
sanctions/Programs/Documents/cuba_tsp.pdf) or an entity outside the United States that is not
subject to U.S. jurisdiction. Travel agents and tour operators in the United States that do not hold an OFAC Travel Service Provider authorization cannot organize trips, collect funds, make travel
arrangements, or engage in any other Cuba travel-related transactions for People-to-People Groups or any other licensed travelers.


Authorized travelers to Cuba are subject to daily spending limits and are prohibited from bringing any Cuban “souvenirs” or other goods into the United States, with the exception of information and informational materials.

Civil and criminal penalties may result from a violation of the Regulations.

For additional information about OFAC sanctions involving Cuba, you may contact:

OFFICE OF FOREIGN ASSETS CONTROL
U.S. Department of the Treasury
Washington, D.C. 202/622-2490
Miami, FL 786/845-2828 (Travel Service Providers)
www.treasury.gov/ofac

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emphasis added


For full guidelines about new licensing regulations, go to  http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/Documents/cuba_tr_app.pdf

Saturday, July 9, 2011

NY Times Reports on Legal Travel, with comment

PRACTICAL TRAVELER

New Ways to Visit Cuba — Legally



By MICHELLE HIGGINS
Published: June 30, 2011

ALWAYS wanted to visit Cuba? Well now you can — legally.
Cuba Travel Guide

Thanks to policy changes by President Obama earlier this year designed to encourage more contact between Americans and citizens of the Communist-ruled island, the Treasury Department is once again granting so-called “people-to-people” licenses, which greatly expand travel opportunities for Cuba-bound visitors.

The licenses, created under President Bill Clinton in 1999, stopped being issued in 2003 under travel restrictions imposed by President George W. Bush. Subsequently, the number of travelers from the United States visiting Cuba legally dropped from more than 200,000 in 2003 to less than 50,000 in 2004, according to estimates by Bob Guild, vice president of Marazul Charters in North Bergen, N.J., among the largest United States organizers of trips to Cuba. The new changes, which come on top of loosened restrictions for Cubans and Cuban-Americans visiting relatives in Cuba, are expected to push the number of travelers visiting Cuba this year to 450,000 this year. “We estimate 375,000 to 400,000 Cuban Americans will visit this year and another 50,000 in other categories of legal travel,” said Mr. Guild of Marazul.

To be clear, it is still illegal for ordinary American vacationers to hop on a plane bound for Cuba, which has been under a United States economic embargo for nearly 50 years. True, plenty have dodged the restrictions — and continue to do so — by flying there from another country like Mexico or Canada (for Americans, traveling to Cuba is technically not illegal, but it might as well be since the United States prohibits its citizens from spending money in Cuba, with exceptions for students, journalists, Cuban-Americans and others with legal reasons to travel there). And while Washington has also expanded licensing for educational groups traveling to Cuba by loosening requirements, travelers joining an educational trip must still receive credit toward a degree.

But the new people-to-people measures make it easier for United States citizens who do not have special status as working journalists or scholars to visit Cuba legally, so long as they go with a licensed operator.

“All a U.S. citizen has to do is sign up for an authorized program and they can go to Cuba. It’s as simple as that,” said Tom Popper, director of Insight Cuba, a travel company that took more than 3,000 Americans to Cuba between 1999 and 2003, and was among the tour operators to apply for a license under the new rules earlier this year. It received its license at the end of June, and has planned 135 trips of three, seven or eight nights over the next year.

But other organizations, including Collette Vacations, the National Geographic Society and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, are still waiting to hear from Washington. “They are not issuing them with any kind of speed,” said Janet Moore, owner of Distant Horizons, an authorized travel service provider to Cuba, who has been helping organizations apply for people-to-people licenses. For example, Harvard University, which is offering an alumni trip under the new rules, was among the first to receive the special people-to-people license, Ms. Moore said, while the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, which operated four trips to Cuba between 2001 and 2003, has yet to receive theirs. “The bottom line is yes, they have issued some licenses, but they are doing it at a snail’s pace,” she said.

In all, only eight companies had been issued people-to-people licenses by the end of June, according to the Treasury Department. Thirty-five applications were still pending.

The trips aren’t your typical Caribbean vacation. Rather, the focus is on meeting local citizens and learning about the culture, not beach hopping and mojito-swilling. Days are filled with busy itineraries that may include visiting orphanages or speaking with musicians or community leaders. Guidelines published by the Treasury Department say the tours must “have a full-time schedule of educational exchange activities that will result in meaningful interaction between the travelers and individuals in Cuba.” But besides the mingling, the trips — which can range from $1,800 for a long weekend in Havana to more than $4,000 for a week — usually include opportunities to visit historic sites like Old Havana, or, for longer itineraries, a visit to Cienfuegos, a picturesque city in the South.

In terms of hotels, “service may not be quite as good and the Internet connection is incredibly slow and frustrating,” said Ms. Moore of Distant Horizons. But, she said, “they have all the facilities you’d expect: swimming pools, little gyms. And there are a lot of very good private restaurants.”

Don’t expect to stock up on those coveted Cuban cigars, however. Travelers aren’t allowed to bring cigars or rum back to the States, according to the Treasury Department.

Demand for Cuba is so strong that tour operators say that many of the trips already have long waiting lists. Learning in Retirement, an educational program associated with the University of Wisconsin in La Crosse, which is offering a 10-day people-to-people trip in April, said more than 65 people have already expressed interest for its 35 spots. “That’s just through word of mouth,” said Burt Altman, a retired professor who organized the trip. “We haven’t even put out the itinerary.”

“It’s the forbidden fruit,” said Mr. Popper of Insight Cuba. “It’s 50 years of pent-up demand for a country that 75 percent of Americans really, really want to travel to.”


Following is a list of planned people-to-people trips to Cuba.

HARVARD UNIVERSITY’S ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, alumni.harvard.edu, will take a group of 35 to Havana for five days in late October, led by Julio Cesar Pérez Hernández, the Cuban Loeb Fellow at Harvard University Graduate School of Design, to explore the city and meet professionals, including local artists and enjoy a private concert at the Ceramics Museum with guitarist Luis Manuel Molina. Cost: $3,880 a person based on double occupancy, including airfare from Miami.

INSIGHT CUBA, insightcuba.org, is offering several trips that include a weekend in Havana that costs $1,795 and visits an orphanage; Callejon de Hammel, a community project promoting art, music and culture; the Instituto de Cubano de Amistad con los Pueblos (Cuban Institute of Friendship With the People), an international Cuban organization that promotes cultural relations between the United States and Cuba; and an eight-night Cuban Music and Art Experience ($4,095), where visitors meet the staff at Egrem, the Cuban state record company, participate in a percussion and dance workshop, visit local music schools and talk to musicians during rehearsal at a famous Havana jazz club.

LEARNING IN RETIREMENT, uwlax.edu/conted/lir/index.html, is offering a 10-day trip in April 2012 visiting a range of professionals from Santiago de Cuba to Trinidad including a violin maker and a dairy farm operator. Cost: $4,300 for members who pay a $35 annual fee.

CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART AND COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN, corcoran.org, plans to offer an eight-day trip in November, pending a license. The trip, led by Mario Ascencio, the museum’s library director, will explore the art scenes of Havana and Trinidad, a Unesco World Heritage Site. Guests will attend a cocktail reception at the Ludwig Foundation, which promotes Cuban contemporary artists, and meet local curators, artists and gallery owners. Cost: $3,700 a person, including round-trip airfare from Miami for guests who pay $60 for a museum membership.

  


 My comment:

The very slow pace of licensing from OFAC means either that its four Cuba staff members are hopelessly overwhelmed, or it is deliberately slow walking decisions and picking and choosing whom to license for unknown reasons.

I am skeptical of the second part of this statement:

"In all, only eight companies had been issued people-to-people licenses by the end of June, according to the Treasury Department. Thirty-five applications were still pending."

In between our license application in late February to send Irish American musicians to participate in a Celtic festival that was denied, and our most recent application in late May for a people to people license, the gap in consecutive numbers was nearly 3500.

Certainly some of those were resubmissions related to meeting bureaucratic requirements and perhaps even OFAC's listing system is too opaque to understand. 

The reason we were just given for our second "denial without prejudice" for a people to people license relates to format not substance. But at least that puts us ahead of colleagues who have heard nothing.  

Ultimately,  the White House not OFAC is at fault.  The President could have provided to recognized not-for-profits the same kind of general license which does not require an application that he granted to Cuban Americans, universities and religious organizations.

However, his political advisers appear more concerned with appeasing hard liners in Florida, most of whom will never support Obama, than fulfilling the promise of his January announcement.

A fuller list of potential travel providers, most of whom are still awaiting licenses, can be found at
http://cubapeopletopeople.blogspot.com/2011/04/list-of-travel-providers.html

John McAuliff
Fund for Reconciliation and Development
Dobbs Ferry, NY




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July 8, 2011

In Cuba, Yes, but Only With a Purpose

LINDA SLEZAK stood over a bed of delicate bean plants, tearing out tiny weeds and mounding loose, rust-colored earth around the stems.
A hot June sun glared over the Arroyo Arenas organic vegetable garden at the edge of Havana where Ms. Slezak, a 68-year-old retired social worker from Long Island, and 16 other Americans were visiting as part of a “food sovereignty” program organized by Global Exchange, a human rights organization, and Food First, a policy institute.
She and the beans were partly shaded by netting slung over the long trough-shaped beds, but it was hot, damp and sticky. She paused now and then to wipe her forehead.
Sweating in a Cuban field is not everyone’s idea of relaxation, and it is a far cry from the decadent gaiety that drew Americans to Havana before Fidel Castro came to power in 1959. But trips like this are one way of getting to see Cuba, and have just become accessible to most Americans.
After President George W. Bush clamped down on travel to Cuba in 2003, groups of American professionals continued to visit to research topics like agriculture, artmusic, literature or health care. Under President Obama, the United States Treasury Department is again issuing licenses for “people-to-people” trips, intended to encourage contact between Americans and Cubans.
Tour sponsors said that with the new licenses, many of the trips being offered as research programs would be available to everybody, not just professionals. (Many already include a lot of interaction with Cubans.) Two recent research programs — one involving green farming, the other art — give a taste of what visitors can expect. 
Certainly they can expect to be busy. Tourism is still prohibited by the embargo, and American travel to Cuba must be “purposeful” to be legal. Those applying to join research tours must attest to having a professional link to the subject matter. (For people-to-people travel, this requirement doesn’t apply.)
These strictures translate into packed itineraries that leave little time for sunbathing. Depending on the trip’s focus, visitors attend lectures on topics ranging from seeds to santería. They might take cooking classes, visit clinics, go to art studios or meet marine biologists. Some groups stay at Havana’s grand old hotels; others stay at guesthouses and even rural campgrounds.
“It’s always frustrated me that Cuba is such an incredibly beautiful place, and we can’t go,” said Ms. Slezak, who heard about the food sovereignty trip through her work as a leader of the slow-food movement. “This was a way to go.” (Food sovereignty is a development term for people’s right to define their own sustainable food systems.)
Erna Brout, a 73-year-old painter from Hartsdale, N.Y., was in Cuba on an art tour organized by the New York-based Center for Cuban Studies. She said she found her trip exhilarating, if exhausting.
“It’s like boot camp,” she said, resting on a bench at the loft-style studio of the sculptor William Pérez and the mixed-media artist Marlys Fuego in central Havana. “We don’t get lunch. We put hard-boiled eggs and cheese in our bags from breakfast and bring it along.”
The six members of her group visited three dozen artists during a weeklong program that took them from Havana to  Cienfuegos, on a sparkling bay on the south coast, and to Trinidad, the colonial gem that is the birthplace of Benito Ortiz, one of Cuba’s foremost primitivist artists.
The group drank mango juice as Mabel Poblet, an artist, explained how she composes images from tiny acetate tiles at her Havana home, and talked to students and professors at the Instituto Superior de Arte, with its complex of voluptuous Catalan-vaulted terra-cotta domes.
“Hearing the younger artists speaking about their art with such passion and such brilliance — to me, it was just wonderful,” Ms. Brout said by phone after returning home. “I felt very privileged.”
Despite the intense schedule, Ms. Brout and the group found time in Varadero, in the northwestern province of Matanzas, to wade in the sea and sip mojitos at Xanadu, the grand former mansion of Irénée du Pont, now part of a golf course. At the house of an artist in Cienfuegos, they listened to an impromptu recital of traditional trova music.
Ms. Slezak and her group were just as busy. They visited urban vegetable gardens in and around Havana (part of Cuba’s effort to grow food efficiently near cities), a center for herbal medicine and a food conservation project.
 From Havana, they headed to Las Terrazas, an ecotourism complex nestled in a biosphere reserve, and then to Pinar del Río and the Viñales Valley, where limestone hills, or mogotes, rise from the farmland like great green molars.
This group squeezed in some leisure time, too, touring Havana’s carefully restored old city, catching some jazz at La Zorra y el Cuervo and dining at La Guarida, a bohemian restaurant tucked at the top of a crumbling central Havana mansion.
Delegations of Americans are good public relations and a promising source of income for Cuba. (That makes trips like these a point of fierce contention for those in the United States who oppose greater contact between the two countries.)
While visitors are shuttled around on a tight schedule, their evenings are often free, and several said they felt they had time to draw their own conclusions, both positive and negative.
“I’m satisfied that I can go home and be clear on certain things,” said Nesbitt Blaisdell, an 82-year-old actor who used to run the compost heap at the community garden at Sixth Street and Avenue B in New York. “There are good things and things that are unresolved.” He was blown away by the organic farms, he said, but troubled by the lack of freedom of expression. 
Sandra Levinson, executive director of the Center for Cuban Studies who was in Havana with Ms. Brout’s group, said the center would add variety to existing programs to appeal to people-to-people travelers. The new rules, she said, opened the way for other trips focusing on things like gender politics, film or Cuba in transition.
“You spend a day in a dance class, and then in the evening, you can go to a club and dance with Cubans. And you’re not breaking any rules,” she said. “That’s great.”
Several visitors said they would like to come back on people-to-people trips exploring different aspects of Cuban life.
Al Chiodi, 50, from Eustis, Fla., who came for the food sovereignty program, said he would like to return to look at art and architecture. “Would I want to explore more?” asked Mr. Chiodi, who runs a business center that includes several green business initiatives. “Yes, I certainly would. There are so many aspects I would like to see.”
These trips vary in cost, but Global Exchange offers 10- to 12-day visits to Cuba for $2,400 to $2,875, including a round-trip flight fromCancúnMexico, to Havana, visa costs and three-star accommodations.
The Center For Cuban Studies does not publish prices for trips, but Ms. Levinson said a one-week trip, including accommodations, a round-trip flight from Miami, visa costs and a donation to the center, runs $2,200 to $2,800.
For the travelers, Cuba, like most destinations, surpassed expectations on some fronts and disappointed on others. Ms. Slezak was baffled by meals of soggy vegetables, processed meat and powdered egg, especially after all the organic farms she saw, while Ms. Brout, who had been warned there might be no soap, was surprised to find shampoo and a hair dryer in her bathroom at the Hotel Nacional in Havana.
By the last day, Ms. Brout was dying to relax by the pool, she said. But she did not regret seeing so much art.
“I don’t think I would have traded it for the world,” she said. “I don’t think I know Havana very well for the squares and things tourists get to see, but I think I am much richer for what I saw.”

Monday, June 6, 2011

ATI Plans People to People Programs


AmericanTours International Offers Educational “People to People” Travel to Cuba

Thursday June 2, 2011, 12:36 pm EDT
ORLANDO, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- AmericanTours International (ATI) Chairman and CEO Noel Irwin Hentschel announced Wednesday (1) that “ATI-Study Cuba in Cuba” is now available at www.CubaATI.com. “The recent opening of academic travel to Cuba by the Obama administration allows universities to immediately activate study abroad programs with CubaATI,” stated CEO Hentschel, who is completing her thesis research in Havana and Santiago de Cuba.
CubaATI travel specialists work closely with American universities and students to custom design academic travel programs that meet their specifications and are within the legal guidelines of the U.S. Treasury Department (OFAC). Students enrolled for credit in U.S. higher education institutions are now able to participate in “ATI-Study Cuba in Cuba” and may be accompanied by faculty and staff on programs facilitated by CubaATI.
“ATI arranged the first group program in America for MBA students from Vietnam at UCLA. We are pleased with the many academic opportunities ATI offers us,” stated Mr. Nguyen Trung Chinh, Director of ITEC, Vietnam.
The key element in the Cuba travel experience is to work with a licensed, established and reputable travel company with superior destination knowledge and a trusted, reliable network on the ground in Cuba. ATI’s expertise in creating specialized itineraries for the visitors’ precise area of interest and budget, with a focus on “people to people” exchanges, enables individuals or groups to maximize their Cuba experience.
New OFAC rules defining legal travel increases opportunities for Americans to experience Cuba’s historical and cultural venues while participating in programs that currently include educational exchange, religious activities and humanitarian projects. ATI provides all of these travel services through www.CubaATI.com including air, car, coach, hotel and guides across the entire island.
“Since October 2010, it is estimated that 222,000 Cubans have bought licenses to open businesses that include travel related industries such as restaurants and lodging in private homes. Travel to Cuba with AmericanTours International helps to support their entrepreneurial endeavors,” stated Hentschel.
Founded in 1977, AmericanTours International (ATI) (www.americantoursinternational.us) is the largest privately held American-owned inbound/outbound and domestic travel organization and partner of AAA/CAA clubs, annually serving one million visitors from 70 countries and generating $3 billion into the U.S. economy. ATI is headquartered in Los Angeles and Orlando with offices in New York, San Francisco, Miami, Honolulu and Beijing.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

New Rules Opening Door for Serious Travel to Cuba


May 21, 12:15 PM EDT

New US rules promise legal Cuba travel for many


HAVANA (AP) -- The forbidden fruit of American travel is once again within reach. New rules issued by the Obama administration will allow Americans wide access to communist-led Cuba, already a mecca for tourists from other nations.

Within months or even weeks, thousands of people from Seattle to Sarasota could be shaking their hips in tropical nightclubs and sampling the famous stogies, without having to sneak in through a third country and risk the Treasury Department's wrath.

"This is travel to Cuba for literally any American," said Tom Popper, director of Insight Cuba, which took thousands of Americans to Cuba before such programs were put into a deep freeze seven years ago.

But it won't all be a day at the beach or a night at the bar. U.S. visitors may find themselves tramping through sweltering farms or attending history lectures to justify the trips, which are meant, under U.S. policy, to bring regular Cubans and Americans together.

So-called people-to-people contacts were approved in 1999 under the Clinton administration, but disappeared in 2004 as the Bush administration clamped down what many saw as thinly veiled attempts to evade a ban on tourism that is part of the 49-year-old U.S. embargo.

Some familiar voices on Capitol Hill are already sounding the alarm about the new policy.

"President Obama and the administration continuously say they don't want more tourism and that's not what they're trying to do. But that's exactly what's happening," said Miami Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, who was born in Ft. Lauderdale to a prominent Cuban-exile family. He argued that more travel does nothing to promote democracy on the island.

"The only thing it does is provide hard currency for a totalitarian regime," he said.

Insight Cuba is one of at least a dozen travel groups that have applied for a license to operate on the island since details of the change were issued in April. If permission comes from Washington, it could begin trips in as little as six weeks, Popper said. Based on previous numbers, he believes he could take 5,000 to 7,000 Americans each year.

In the past, people-to-people travel has included jazz tours, where participants meet with musicians during the day and take in jam sessions at night. Art connoisseurs could visit studios, galleries and museums. Architecture aficionados could explore Havana's stately, but crumbling cityscape.

"Soon Americans can go salsa dancing in Cuba - legally!" trumpeted a recent press release for one would-be tour operator.

"You can go on forever," said Robert Muse, a Washington lawyer who represents several groups that have applied for licenses to operate the trips. "The subject matter is virtually limitless."

Many approved tours will likely be run by museums, university alumni associations and other institutions. They will target wealthy, educated Americans who can afford to spend thousands of dollars on a 10-day tour.
Tens of thousands went each year under people-to-people licenses from 2000 to 2003. Anyone is eligible if they go with an authorized group.

Cuban officials say privately they expect as many as 500,000 visitors from the United States annually, though most are expected to be Cuban-Americans visiting relatives under rules relaxed in 2009. That makes travelers from the United States the second biggest group visiting Cuba after Canadians, with Italians and Germans next on the list.

Academic and religious travel from the U.S. is also increasing.

The guidelines published by the U.S. Treasury Department say people-to-people tours must guarantee a "full-time schedule of educational activities that will result in meaningful interaction" with Cubans.
But a previous requirement to file itineraries ahead of time is gone, possibly making it difficult to police whether tours will follow the spirit of the law.

"It's more liberal than in 2000-2003 in a lot of senses," Popper said.

Still, it's a far cry from the pre-revolution days when Havana's mob-controlled nightclubs and casinos were a playground for the likes of Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr. and Greta Garbo. Back then, cheap ferries and flights from Florida meant tourists could party through the night and leave in the morning without bothering to rent a room.

Academic visits already under way give an idea of what may be allowed.

A recent group of Iowa State University students who came to study sustainable food and development had an itinerary packed with activities like visits to farms, a coffee plantation and an environmental reserve. They also managed to stroll Old Havana on a guided tour, visit an art museum and take in a performance of "Swan Lake" by Cuba's acclaimed National Ballet.

Agronomy professor Mary Wiedenhoeft said the cultural experiences were key for students to understand Cubans and therefore an integral part of their study.

"We didn't come here to be on a Caribbean beach; we came to be on farms," Wiedenhoeft said. "I didn't even pack a bathing suit."

When the Bush administration shut down people-to-people visits in 2004, it cited allegations the rules were being abused.

"You had these groups going down and they would miraculously end up in Varadero (a popular beach resort) or at Hemingway's home, or they'd end up at cigar factories," said John Kavulich, senior policy adviser to the nonpartisan U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council. "It wasn't something that was easy to defend when the State Department made inquiries."

The Obama administration would almost certainly come under pressure from anti-Castro members of Congress if a rash of Americans start posting Facebook photos of themselves smoking Cohibas and sipping Havana Club on the beach, Kavulich said.

So college kids looking for a bacchanalian spring break should probably stick to standbys like Cancun and Daytona Beach.

U.S. officials vow to weed out frivolous trips.

"If it is simply salsa dancing and mojitos, no. That doesn't pass the purposeful-travel criteria," a State Department official involved with the policy said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

If the new travel rules are politically sustainable, they have the potential to be "a big business opportunity," said Bob Guild, vice president of Marazul Charters, which offers licensed flights between Miami and Cuba and is expanding in anticipation of a surge of travelers.

"Hopefully (the U.S. government) will be issuing the licenses in a timely way and processing them quickly, and people will be able to begin going down. And we hope we can help them," Guild said. "It's a significant change."
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Associated Press writers Paul Haven in Havana and Laura Wides-Munoz in Miami contributed to this report.