Mission to Seafarers brings Christmas joy to workers stuck on ships at anchor in Metro Vancouver
Pandemic restrictions have forced many workers to stay on board for months
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Workers on vessels in the Port of Vancouver face a ship-bound Christmas this year as COVID-19 restrictions mean they won't be able come ashore this holiday season.
In a typical year, the Metro Vancouver branches of the Mission to Seafarers would host Christmas services for freight workers; however this year due to the pandemic, many of those workers have been unable to leave their vessels for as many as 10 months at a time.
"We visit many of the vessels that come into the port and let them know about the centre, chat with the guys [and] just get a feel for how things are going on board the ship," Seafarers Mission chaplain Rev. Gary Roosma told Stephen Quinn on CBC's The Early Edition.
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When the pandemic hit, Roosma said the two centres — located near Vancouver's Centerm Terminal on East Waterfront Road and Roberts Bank near Tsawwassen — were forced to close for four months and visits to ships were limited to standing at the top of the gangway.
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The pandemic has also brought other challenges, including how to safely repatriate employees and how long a worker can stay on board before they have to be granted shore leave, according to Roosma. He said he recently met a man who had been on a ship for 17 months straight, without a single day off.
"The Maritime Labour Convention stipulates 11 months is the limit," Roosma explained, "however, with COVID ... those rules were relaxed for a time," he said, adding the situation has become a "bit better in the last few months."
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With many of the workers still forced to stay on board and the Christmas service cancelled, the organization's annual Christmas gift delivery will be extra special this holiday season.
"[On Christmas Eve] we go out to English Bay [and] into the Inner Harbour [to] deliver gifts to all the various ships that are out there," he said. "They look forward to these gifts ... and it's a chance for them to celebrate and to experience the joy of the Christmas season."