Home World Port of Long Beach Seafarer COVID-19 vaccine program draws to a close

Port of Long Beach Seafarer COVID-19 vaccine program draws to a close

Photo Caption: Mariner is vaccinated aboard a cargo ship docked at the Port of Long Beach.

Nearly 12,000 mariners at San Pedro Bay ports vaccinated
Port of Long Beach COVID-19 vaccination program for mariners aboard cargo vessels calling in the San Pedro Bay will wind down by year’s end after delivering nearly 12,000 shots to sailors.

The successful program operated by the Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services in partnership with the Port and the National Guard offered free, onboard COVID-19 vaccinations beginning in the spring of 2021 for any cargo ships’ crews berthing in San Pedro Bay.

During the program’s 1½-year run, 11,766 crew members on 1,275 ships voluntarily received the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine at no charge. In the Port of Long Beach alone, 5,971 crew members on 684 ships received vaccines. The program will come to an end on Dec. 31.

The innovative program helped protect the health of workers throughout the supply chain, helping to ensure the delivery of essential goods during the pandemic. Long Beach Health and Human Services dispatched mobile COVID-19 vaccination units to visit ships’ crews aboard docked vessels at both the Port of Long Beach and the Port of Los Angeles. The Long Beach Fire Department also helped administer vaccinations when health officials were needed elsewhere.

“We are proud to have sponsored free vaccines for sailors visiting the port. The Port is about more than just moving cargo, it’s about the people who move the cargo and keeping them healthy and safe,” said Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero. “We’d also like to thank our Port of Long Beach staff, the Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services, the Long Beach Fire Department and former Mayor and Congressman-elect Robert Garcia for the collaboration and leadership on the ship vaccination program.”

“We are so pleased to have vaccinated so many international seafarers, many of whom had no opportunity to be vaccinated in their home countries,” said Long Beach Harbor Commission President Sharon L. Weissman. “The Long Beach community – the Port, the City, terminal operators and dockworkers – were able to help mariners coming to both our Port and the Port of Los Angeles. Together, we had a global impact in fighting the spread of COVID.”

The Port of Long Beach is one of the world’s premier seaports, a gateway for trans-Pacific trade and a trailblazer in goods movement and environmental stewardship. As the second-busiest container seaport in the United States, the Port handles trade valued at more than $200 billion annually and supports 2.6 million trade-related jobs across the nation, including 575,000 in Southern California.

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