Los Angeles

ShipMonk Closing San Bernardino Warehouse, 124 Jobs Cut

AI Assisted Icon
Published on April 01, 2026
ShipMonk Closing San Bernardino Warehouse, 124 Jobs CutSource: Google Street View

Florida-based logistics firm ShipMonk is pulling out of San Bernardino, with plans to permanently close its fulfillment center at 6010 Cajon Blvd. A state WARN filing lists 124 employees as affected, with a June 30, 2026, shutdown date that was processed by state officials in late March.

The closure surfaced through a California WARN notice, according to Edhat. The outlet reports the filing was issued on March 24 and processed on March 25, naming Bedabox LLC (doing business as ShipMonk) as the employer. The posting notes that the WARN document was circulated online by the account WhatLayoff and lists June 30 as the effective layoff date for the San Bernardino staff.

What the San Bernardino site does

On its locations page, ShipMonk describes the San Bernardino operation as a 332,000-square-foot fulfillment center with automated systems, roughly 42 dock doors, and more than 170 on-site workers handling picking, packing, and shipping. The company labels the facility as “CA1” and promotes it as supporting expedited two-day shipping for many customers across the United States.

Company footprint and history

ShipMonk started life as BedaBox in 2014, then rebranded in 2016 as it shifted from basic package forwarding into broader e-commerce fulfillment. Materials from Summit Partners and the company show ShipMonk has since expanded through acquisitions and now runs a multi-state fulfillment network with thousands of employees worldwide.

What workers can expect

The California Employment Development Department explains that WARN notices generally require at least 60 calendar days of advance notice for plant closures or mass layoffs, and the agency guides employers and local partners on Rapid Response and layoff assistance. The EDD also forwards WARN filings to local workforce development boards, so support services can ramp up quickly.

Local support and next steps

San Bernardino County’s Workforce Development Board says its Rapid Response team activates when WARN notices hit and can provide on-site orientations, referrals to America’s Job Centers of California, hiring events, and training assistance. The county operates AJCC locations in San Bernardino and Rancho Cucamonga. Documents from the San Bernardino County Workforce Development Board outline how staff and partners work with employers and affected employees during closures.

The WARN filing does not include a public explanation for ShipMonk’s decision to close the facility, and Edhat simply reports the filing and timeline. With a June 30 layoff date on the books, affected employees are urged to contact local AJCC offices or the county workforce board to tap Rapid Response services and explore retraining options before the doors close for good.