Sunday, May 31, 2020

100 Members Of A Fighter Squadron Taken Off USS Gerald Ford After Sailor Tests Positive For Coronavirus

The Fighting Blacklions flies F/A-18F Super Hornets (pictured) and is based out of Virginia's Naval Air Station Oceana. They were on the USS Ford doing carrier pilot qualifications

Daily Mail: More than 100 members of a fighter jet squadron are taken off USS Gerald R. Ford as 'precautionary measure' the same day a sailor tests positive for coronavirus

* The sailor is a member of Strike Fighter Squadron 213, the 'Fighting Blacklions'
* The sailor tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday after being in isolation since the previous week
* More than 100 members of the sailor's squadron boarded the USS Ford Tuesday
* They were medically screened and none had displayed flu-like symptoms then
* They were taken off the carrier Wednesday as a precautionary measure
* The sailor had not been aboard the ship but had contact with the squadron

About 100 members of a fighter jet squadron were forced to leave the USS Gerald R. Ford after one of its members tested positive for coronavirus, US Navy officials said.

The sailor tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday, the day before the aircraft carrier departed from Virginia's Naval Station Norfolk, a Navy spokesperson told Stars & Stripes.

The sailor, who has not been named, is a member of the Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 213 - the 'Fighting Blacklions' - which flies F/A-18F Super Hornets and is based out of Virginia's Naval Air Station Oceana.

Read more ....

More News On 100 Members Of A Fighter Squadron Taken Off The USS Gerald Ford After Sailor Tests Positive For Coronavirus

Navy fighter squadron pulled off USS Gerald R. Ford after sailor tests positive for COVID-19 -- Task & Purpose/Virginia Pilot
Fighter squadron taken off USS Gerald Ford after sailor tests positive for coronavirus -- NYPost
Fighter squadron is pulled from USS Gerald R. Ford after sailor tests positive for coronavirus -- Stars and Stripes
Squadron Removed from Gerald R. Ford Due to COVID-19 Scare -- Maritime Executive

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Those 100 being taken off might be warranted not because it will stop the spread or because they might die. None of that is true.

A carrier is a realm of artificial light and close quarters. The air is not bad, but ...

I think they would recover faster in bright sunshine and outdoor air. They will also have fewer complications although I do not think there is much risk of that given age and fitness levels. It would be good for morale.

Jac said...

Well, that's the case of every country....except China, of course.

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