The Mercury News

Grand Princess finally docks

Arrival: Thousands begin disembarki­ng as first death in Bay Area reported

- By Fiona Kelliher, Maggie Angst and Annie Sciacca Staff writers

After days at sea and amid rising panic over coronaviru­s, the Grand Princess cruise ship finally docked at the Port of Oakland on Monday.

The arrival marks the end of days of anxious limbo — and the beginning of an extensive operation to remove the more than 2,500 passengers from the coronaviru­s-stricken ship and transfer them to quarantine facilities to be tested for the virus.

“It’s kind of like the end of one chapter, the beginning of the next,” said passenger Kristian Riese, a 47-year-old pilot who lives in Guam. “You don’t know how it’s going to end up.”

The ship’s arrival came as public health officials warned that the spread of disease was unlikely to slow in the United

States. Shortly after the ship finally came to rest, the Bay Area reported its first death from the illness, raising the number of coronaviru­s-related deaths in California to two.

The patient — a Santa Clara County woman in her 60s who had been hospitaliz­ed for several weeks before dying Monday morning at El Camino Hospital — had been the county’s third confirmed coronaviru­s case and its first patient thought to have contracted the illness from

“community spread” — meaning that she had not recently traveled internatio­nally nor been in contact with a person who had a confirmed case of the virus.

“This is a tragic developmen­t,” Sara Cody, the county’s health officer, said. “We are facing a historic public health challenge and know this is a very difficult time. Our top priority continues to be protecting the health of our community.”

State officials said Monday that the number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases in California has reached 133, including five newly discovered cases each in San Francisco, Santa Clara and Contra Costa counties. Nationwide, there are now 605 confirmed coronaviru­s cases in the U.S., and 22 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

As the number of cases grows and fears continue to mount, the impact of the virus on day-to-day life in the Bay Area has deepened. On Monday night, Santa Clara County announced that it would implement a mandatory ban on all large gatherings beginning Wednesday.

The ban is set to last through March, officials said, and applies to any event with more than 1,000 attendees.

Cruise ship arrives

Meanwhile, the Grand Princess was finally allowed to dock Monday after days of sailing in circles off the coast of Northern California

while state and local officials tried to find a suitable port to offload the more than 2,500 passengers and test them for the coronaviru­s. Twenty-one people on the ship, including 19 crew members and two passengers, have tested positive for the virus, which killed a 71-year-old passenger who had been on the ship’s previous trip.

That man’s death, California’s first recorded coronaviru­s fatality, had prompted the cancellati­on of the Grand Princess’ final stop in Ensenada, Mexico, and sparked the beginning of the high-stakes disembarka­tion operation that culminated its first stage Monday.

As the ship finally entered the Port of Oakland at about noon Monday, cheers could be heard from the balconies, as passengers celebrated their anticipate­d return home. One person walked along the top deck, waving what appeared to be a white handkerchi­ef.

Workers in full hazmat suits were seen preparing the docking area in front of beige tents nearby, along with what appeared to be tour buses. Authoritie­s had fenced in an 11-acre site in the port Sunday that would serve as the center of operations, sealing off the location in an effort to prevent the potential spread of the virus in the surroundin­g community.

Passengers in need of medical support or hospitaliz­ation were scheduled to disembark first, along with those who are symptomati­c or tested positive for coronaviru­s. By about 2 p.m. Monday, about a half-dozen ambulances pulled into the fenced-off area of the port and were loaded with passengers apparently in need of medical treatment.

“Of the people who contracted the virus, 21 in all, we are dealing with them in proper isolation,” Vice President Mike Pence said in a Monday afternoon news conference.

By the early evening, busloads of passengers began to arrive at Oakland’s North Field air strip, where they were set to board chartered planes. It was not clear where the planes Monday were headed. A Customs and Border Patrol spokespers­on said Monday that all planned flights servicing Grand Princess passengers were traveling domestical­ly.

State officials have said that California residents who were on the cruise will be taken to Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield and Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego, while those from outside of the state will be quarantine­d at U.S. military bases in Texas and Georgia.

The U.S. is also making arrangemen­ts with Canada, the United Kingdom and other nations to repatriate foreign nationals who were on the cruise, Pence said. The ship is expected to leave the Port of Oakland after disembarki­ng all of the passengers, which officials anticipate­d would take up to three days.

Crew members will remain quarantine­d on the vessel, public health officials said, though it is not clear where the ship will go once it leaves the San Francisco Bay. Plans for the crew quarantine were “still being determined” as of late Sunday, according to cruise operator Princess Cruises.

Port officials weren’t expecting any impact on port operations, Port of Oakland spokespers­on Mike Zampa said Monday, noting that the area surroundin­g the offloading site is mostly used for short-term cargo storage and truck parking.

Bill Aboudi, president of the transport company Oakland Port Services Corporatio­n, said business at the port has already been slow, so he hasn’t witnessed a logistical impact from the arrival or preparatio­n of the ship. But, he added truck drivers are operating just a few hundred yards from the dock, and some have been concerned by what he described as a lack of communicat­ion about the Grand Princess operation.

“We haven’t heard anything or received any informatio­n,” Aboudi said. “We want more info.”

Without direction from the port about how to handle — or avoid — the ship, he said, “drivers get scared.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Passengers disembark from the Grand Princess cruise ship while docked at the Port of Oakland on Monday. The coronaviru­s-stricken ship arrived at the port after remaining in a holding pattern outside the Golden Gate for several days.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Passengers disembark from the Grand Princess cruise ship while docked at the Port of Oakland on Monday. The coronaviru­s-stricken ship arrived at the port after remaining in a holding pattern outside the Golden Gate for several days.
 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Passengers from the coronaviru­s-stricken Grand Princess cruise ship board a charter plane at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport’s North Field on Monday.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Passengers from the coronaviru­s-stricken Grand Princess cruise ship board a charter plane at Oakland Internatio­nal Airport’s North Field on Monday.

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