San Diego Union-Tribune

MARINE GRADUATION­S OPEN UP

After more than a year of closed ceremonies, Corps announces San Diego recruits can begin inviting two guests

- BY ANDREW DYER

One year after closing boot camp graduation­s to the public, the Marines are ready to welcome some members of the public back onto the recruit depot in San Diego to watch recruits graduate, the Marines said in a statement Monday.

Beginning April 22, each graduating Marine will be able to invite two guests to attend graduation and tour facilities at the base, the statement said. The Marines hold about 40 graduation­s per year in San Diego.

The announceme­nt comes 13 months after the Corps suspended public graduation­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We are extremely proud to have families return to the depot for graduation­s,” said Brig. Gen. Ryan P. Heritage, the commanding general of Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego. “We look forward to welcoming more families in the near future, as more individual­s receive the vaccinatio­n each day.”

Guests will be screened for COVID-19 upon arrival at the base and will have access to base facilities such as restaurant­s, the Marine Corps Exchange and the command museum, the Marines said.

Capt. Martin Harris, a depot spokesman, said everyone on the depot will be required to wear a mask at all times.

The pandemic changed how recruits are trained at the depot.

The Marines closed recruit

graduation­s to the public on March 12, 2020, just as life for much of the world began to change in light of the coronaviru­s’s spread. Just weeks later, after dozens of recruits tested positive, the Marine Corps altered how it trains recruits in what many Marines described as a “COVID environmen­t.”

Recruits now endure a two-week quarantine at an area hotel to prevent the virus from being introduced to other recruits on the base. During that quarantine, recruits are housed with a roommate but not allowed to leave their rooms. Meals, exercise and recruit studies are all done within the confines of those rooms.

It’s only after this quarantine that recruits are issued uniforms, are given haircuts and begin boot camp. Recruits wear masks while in training, except during certain training exercises.

Recruit graduation traditions haven’t fully returned to pre-pandemic norms, Harris said. Graduation­s have shifted from Fridays to Thursdays, and “Family Day,” which was held the day before graduation, remains suspended, Harris said.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Graduates of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot march past a platoon of recruits in an earlier phase of boot camp on Sept. 11, 2020. The Marine Corps announced Monday that graduation ceremonies would be reopened on a limited basis.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Graduates of the Marine Corps Recruit Depot march past a platoon of recruits in an earlier phase of boot camp on Sept. 11, 2020. The Marine Corps announced Monday that graduation ceremonies would be reopened on a limited basis.

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