Cuba to Get More US Visitors & USD

By Circles Robinson

Havana Street. Photo: Caridad

HAVANA TIMES, Jan. 14 — The White House announced on Friday that President Obama plans to allow students and organized groups to go to Cuba as “purposeful travel” similar to what took place under the Clinton administration.

The possibility of traveling to Cuba on cultural and academic exchanges will also increase, after having all but disappeared under George W. Bush.

While the travel ban on visiting Cuba will remain in effect for the general public, the greater flow of US citizens who can get a license to visit the Caribbean neighbor will boost the country’s key tourist industry and facilitate exchanges.

To accommodate the increased demand for flights, Obama made it possible for all international airports in the US to offer charters services to Cuba.

In another move that will bring more US dollars into Cuba, Obama will allow any US citizen to send up to $500 every three months to any Cuban as long as they are not senior government or Communist Party members.

Obama expressed his hope that the loosened travel ban while maintaining the half century economic embargo on Cuba would force the changes the US would like to see on the island.

“The President believes these actions, combined with the continuation of the embargo, are important steps in reaching the widely shared goal of a Cuba that respects the basic rights of all its citizens,” states the press release.

The following is the complete White House press release:

The White House Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release

January 14, 2011

Reaching Out to the Cuban People

Today, President Obama has directed the Secretaries of State, Treasury, and Homeland Security to take a series of steps to continue efforts to reach out to the Cuban people in support of their desire to freely determine their country’s future.

The President has directed that changes be made to regulations and policies governing:  (1) purposeful travel; (2) non-family remittances; and (3) U.S. airports supporting licensed charter flights to and from Cuba.  These measures will increase people-to-people contact; support civil society in Cuba; enhance the free flow of information to, from, and among the Cuban people; and help promote their independence from Cuban authorities.

The President believes these actions, combined with the continuation of the embargo, are important steps in reaching the widely shared goal of a Cuba that respects the basic rights of all its citizens.  These steps build upon the President’s April 2009 actions to help reunite divided Cuban families; to facilitate greater telecommunications with the Cuban people; and to increase humanitarian flows to Cuba.

The directed changes described below will be enacted through modifications to existing Cuban Assets Control and Customs and Border Protection regulations and policies and will take effect upon publication of modified regulations in the Federal Register within 2 weeks.

Purposeful Travel.  To enhance contact with the Cuban people and support civil society through purposeful travel, including religious, cultural, and educational travel, the President has directed that regulations and policies governing purposeful travel be modified to:

·         Allow religious organizations to sponsor religious travel to Cuba under a general license.

·         Facilitate educational exchanges by:  allowing accredited institutions of higher education to sponsor travel to Cuba for course work for academic credit under a general license; allowing students to participate through academic institutions other than their own; and facilitating instructor support to include support from adjunct and part-time staff.

·         Restore specific licensing of educational exchanges not involving academic study pursuant to a degree program under the auspices of an organization that sponsors and organizes people-to-people programs.

·         Modify requirements for licensing academic exchanges to require that the proposed course of study be accepted for academic credit toward their undergraduate or graduate degree (rather than regulating the length of the academic exchange in Cuba).

·         Allow specifically licensed academic institutions to sponsor or cosponsor academic seminars, conferences, and workshops related to Cuba and allow faculty, staff, and students to attend.

·         Allow specific licensing to organize or conduct non-academic clinics and workshops in Cuba for the Cuban people.

·         Allow specific licensing for a greater scope of journalistic activities.

Remittances.  To help expand the economic independence of the Cuban people and to support a more vibrant Cuban civil society, the President has directed the regulations governing non-family remittances be modified to:

·         Restore a general license category for any U.S. person to send remittances (up to $500 per quarter) to non-family members in Cuba to support private economic activity, among other purposes, subject to the limitation that they cannot be provided to senior Cuban government officials or senior members of the Cuban Communist Party.

·         Create a general license for remittances to religious institutions in Cuba in support of religious activities.

No change will be made to the general license for family remittances.

6 thoughts on “Cuba to Get More US Visitors & USD

  • Michael, is hard to let go of inertia. It has been a long time. Of frozen relations. To defrost them correctly I think this is the right approach. Can’t go too fast otherwise it may sour.
    Each side is taking steps and this is good for all of us. Let us hope they continue on this path.

  • Although a step in the right direction, why not open up unrestricted travel to ALL Americans, not just Cuban-Amiericans, licensed students and the religious? What does Obama owe the Cuban-American dynosaurs of Miami and West New York who are against him, anyway? (I’m not including most younger Cuban-Americans, who want an end to the embargo.) In any event, most knowledgable, non-licensed, American travelers have been going to Cuba, without incident, through “gateways,” such as Cancun, Nassau, Toronto, Montreal, etc. these last two decades; furthermore, since later in the Bush II regime, O.F.A.C. has not been prosecuting cases against tourists. It is not worth their while. Those who have been wanting to visit Cuba, but were afraid of running afoul of the U.S. authorities, might want to do it now, before it is inundated by tens-of-thousands of American college students on spring break!

  • I am very grateful for any improvement in US Cuban relationship that will help the Cuban People.
    I am a healthy 82. Sometime I would like to join a group that will legally visit Cuba.

  • were sorry for the imperfections but im not using my reading glasses today please fix the mistakes?
    thanks
    twinflames 2011

  • hi folks
    well it looks like the u s a is finally getting ready to tear down the walls of despare.
    but as usual it will take time and these good faith jestors are just that but they are designed to help both sides of the border and in doing so it may help reslove some of the issues we all read about in this form.
    the idea that also gives the cuban people a well deserved second chance in life is also about to take place in cuba this summer when a very intresting and planned miracle of sorts that will allow the cuban people the freedom they have long waited for and is far to late in its own arrival.
    a new government is bound to happen very soon within the year or so! “yes you are reading this right!
    the castro family is about to take a very long well needed vacation .. maybe fidel can remember his dream now of a man , a women, and a very special book and it all happens at the end of thje cuban summer this year
    a miracle “yes” we think so! becauase we wrote the true story and its truth will be comming to cuba sooner than the castros think

  • These are good steps its time to change status quo. Hopefully more steps will come in the future from both sides.

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