USNS Comfort Begins Race to Provide Relief in Haiti

By Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service

It’s pretty amazing that the USNS Comfort is able to do what it does. This ship, now going to Haiti to provide relief for a ravaged country, has a caretaker crew most of the time. About 80 sailors and another 60 civilian mariners maintain the ship between deployments.

The Comfort deploys for scheduled operations about once every two years. The ship came back from a deployment providing humanitarian aid last year. But the earthquake in Haiti – one of the poorest countries in the world – meant that the ship had to deploy. The ship needed a full crew. They needed to get the dining facility running and they needed to turn on the water all over the ship. And they needed to ensure there were berths for the medical detachments that poured in from around the Navy.

The scheduled deployments are planned to the Nth degree. There are site visits and exchanges with the U.S. embassies and non-governmental agencies. This deployment is just grab it and go. And the medical staff and crew are doing it. Most of the medical staff comes from the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., and Portsmouth Naval Hospital in Virginia.

But there are force protection sailors and corpsmen from more distant bases. The aviation detachment is from Norfolk, Va. In many cases, this trip is the first time these sailors have met each other. There is confusion. The first night, sailors were wandering the passageways – that’s what the Navy calls halls – looking for their bunks. Cargo handlers stacked supplies on the flight deck, knowing it was more important to get underway than it was to have everything perfectly stowed.

Just learning everyone’s name took time. But there has been amazing cooperation among the crew and the medical staff. They understand they have a mission to save lives and everything else is secondary. That they can work together at all is a testament to their dedication. That they work together so well is a tribute to their military and professional training. This will be a long deployment, and it will be tough. But it’s been a good beginning.

To read more coverage from Jim Garamone, visit Defense.gov, here.

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  • George Gore

    I am tracking Comfort this afternoon with AIS from my home on the Chesapeake. I noted her coming by at about 14 knt at about 1460. Just South of the Patomac, she slowed to 1 knt for about 40 minutes and now is back up to 3 knts. Wonder if something is wrong? Long trip to Haiti at 3 knts!!!!

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  • George Gore

    I should update that after slowing in the Chesapeake for a couple hours, she was back up to 13 knts as she entered the Alantic and on her way.

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