Officials say two crew members aboard the Matansuka tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend after the state ferry left Bellingham for ports in Southeast Alaska. 

The Alaska Department of Transportation released a statement Monday that said a member of the ship’s crew began showing symptoms of the illness on Saturday after leaving Bellingham. The crewmember quarantined in their cabin and tested positive when the ship reached Ketchikan the following day. 

Additional testing revealed one other case of COVID-19 among the engineering crew. Contact tracers with the state and Ketchikan’s Emergency Operations Center found that no passengers had been in close contact with the positive cases. 

According to the Alaska Marine Highway System, the two crewmembers who tested positive will  isolate for at least 10 days. One is quarantined in a Ketchikan hotel and the second quarantined aboard the Matanuska until returning to Juneau to isolate at home. The rest of the Matanuska’s crew will receive follow-up COVID-19 tests in Ketchikan on Wednesday. 

The response to the COVID-19 cases on the ship delayed its itinerary by about 11 hours. The mainliner ferry resumed sailings to ports in Southeast Alaska.

On Monday afternoon, DOT officials reported that 42 passengers and 32 vehicles had disembarked in Ketchikan, Petersburg and Wrangell. 24 Passengers and 31 Vehicles departed the ship in Juneau. 27 vehicles and 56 passengers departed the ship in Haines, and 6 vehicles and 12 passengers departed in Skagway. 

This story has been updated with information about the number of vehicles and passengers that disembarked the ship in Southeast Alaska communities.