From Military.com:
“Fully Vaccinated Sailors Can
Make Some Port Calls, Ditch Masks and Cut Quarantines”
After more than a year of
grueling Navy deployments that left ships at sea for months on end with no port
visits, leaders announced that some of the strict restrictions put in place
during the pandemic will be lifted for immunized personnel. Sailors
who've been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or had the illness caused by the
novel coronavirus in the past three months will no longer be required to
quarantine before deployments, Vice Adm. Phillip Sawyer, deputy chief of naval
operations for operations, plans and strategy, wrote in a new force-wide
message issued Monday. The change applies to personnel on ships, submarines and
aircraft, he said. Anyone who has declined the vaccine and hasn't built
up antibodies for COVID-19 through an infection in the last three months will
still be required to sequester for 14 days before deployments. Those personnel
will also be required to take COVID-19 tests before deploying.
Immunized sailors will also get
the OK to make port calls in some spots with U.S. military facilities,
including Guam, Bahrain and Japan, where they can use gyms, commissaries and
other base services, Sawyer said. Fully immunized sailors can also stop wearing
face masks and social distancing from others in most situations, his message
states. "With more than a year operating in the COVID environment, we have
gained significant expertise in mitigating and preventing the spread of
COVID-19," he said in a news release announcing the changes. "Now
with vaccines and [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] scientific data,
we are able to relax many of the procedures we put in place and still provide
for the health protection of the force."
The coronavirus pandemic wreaked
havoc on military operations, particularly missions on ships and submarines,
where social distancing in tight quarters is nearly impossible. Early in the
pandemic, a massive COVID-19 outbreak on the aircraft carrier Theodore
Roosevelt left the ship stuck in Guam for weeks as nearly the entire crew was
moved ashore to quarantine. More than 1,200 sailors on that ship tested
positive for the virus, and one died. Since then, crews have been required to
stretch time away from their families by boarding ships early for quarantine
periods ahead of deployments. Deployed crews also stopped making most port
calls, leaving some at sea for about 300 consecutive days.
Sawyer said the Navy is now
seeing the military's highest vaccination rate and the lowest number of
COVID-19 cases. He credited sailors, Navy civilians and contractors for
assuming "personal responsibility" to stop the spread of COVID-19,
which has killed 26 service members and infected nearly 39,000 Navy personnel. So
far, more than 230,000 Navy and Marine Corps personnel have been fully
immunized, the message states. Marines, who routinely deploy on Navy ships,
have shown some resistance to the shots, though. As of April, nearly 40% of the
123,000 Marines who had the chance to receive the COVID-19 vaccine had turned
it down. "We must continue to pursue full vaccination and apply best
health protection measures both at home and at work to sustain and improve upon
this performance," Sawyer said. "The science is pretty clear,"
he added. "Vaccinations are key to best protecting our sailors. The more
sailors that are vaccinated, the better for them, their families, the Navy and
the nation."
^ Vaccinated Americans everywhere
(in the Military or Civilians) should be able to enjoy the freedom from the
majority of Covid Restrictions. It must be extremely more difficult to be stuck
on a ship for long periods of time with no prospect of Shore Leave. I have seen
people here (on land) that freaked-out just by staying in their homes a few
extra hours everyday and many were allowed to leave for things like groceries,
work, etc. ^
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