
Stuck for days in L.A.'s biggest traffic jam
Sailors on cargo ships spend months at sea. Usually ports offer a break. But now there's a shipping bottleneck, and without access to COVID vaccines, the sailors aren't allowed ashore.
Headlines From The Times · Ronald D. White, Shani Hilton, Melissa Kaplan, Gustavo Arellano, Ashlea Brown, Lauren Raab, Denise Guerra, Mario Diaz, Shannon Lin
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Show Notes
Hundreds of thousands of sailors worldwide are stuck on cargo ships far longer than they’d intended, with few chances to contact the outside. Usually ports offer opportunities for a break, but most of these sailors haven’t had access to COVID-19 vaccines, so they’re not allowed to set foot in the United States.
Today, L.A. Times Business reporter Ronald D. White takes us to the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the nation’s largest. A huge backlog of cargo ships is waiting offshore for a turn to unload merchandise. Meanwhile, the crews aboard are going nowhere fast — and there’s basically no internet access, no visitors, no nice restaurant food delivery. They’re trapped.
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