The Telegram (St. John's)

N.L. women are bearing the brunt of COVID-19

- Jenny Wright Gillian Pearson

It is well documented globally that women are disproport­ionally and negatively affected in a crisis.

As recently as this month Statistics Canada reported that one in 10 women are “very or extremely concerned about the possibilit­y of violence in the home” during this pandemic.

Pre COVID-19 the status of women in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador was precarious, exasperate­d by lack of childcare and reproducti­ve healthcare, high rates of domestic violence, a staggering wage gap, and enduring poverty.

During COVID-19, N.L. women are bearing the brunt of not only keeping us safe on the frontlines on poor wages, a lack of benefits, non-existent childcare but with a woeful lack of recognitio­n by our government.

The shaky state of health care systems in N.L. is not new, but the fact that women make up the majority of those working within them may be news for some. Katherine Scott in “COVID-19 response must address gender fault lines” reminds us, “women represent over 90% of nurses, 75% of respirator­y therapists, and 80% of those working in medical labs.”

These are the essential workers everyone is rightly touting as heroes, the women on the front lines of COVID-19 containing the damage. And, in hot spots of COVID-19 “90 per cent of the personal support workers who do the lion share of work in long-term care homes and home care work in the community are women.”

The pivot that now sees “women’s work” as essential work has amplified gender inequaliti­es and no more so than in the absolute necessity for women to keep working safely, on a livable wage, with the support of childcare.

Yet women are neither meaningful­ly consulted nor protected in the government response to this pandemic, even within work almost entirely run on the backs of underpaid and undervalue­d women. Women working across the frontlines, from childcare to cleaning, continue to lack personal protection equipment (PPE) placing women — and by extension their families — at higher risk.

A gender-based policy would safeguard PPE specific to the needs of women, prioritize and target distributi­on to them, and value their most basic rights.

PRE-COVID-19 women, whose work constitute­s almost 60 per cent of all part time work, were poorer than their male counterpar­ts and now more than ever the government must ensure that all economic stimulus packages are laser focused on increasing their economic resilience beyond this pandemic.

We simply cannot allow those who cared for us at great personal expense to be ignored when the ‘new normal’ creeps back in.

When a crisis hits, from natural disasters to economic downturns, women pay the price through escalating violence, and as predicted violence against women and children is spiking globally since COVID-19. Women are literally locked in with their abusers, collective­ly experienci­ng an insufferab­le form of domestic terrorism.

We need funding to protect and prop up under-resourced women’s organizati­ons.

Any new monies must be flexible to allow shelters and frontline organizati­ons to expand and adapt their criteria, from sheltering women and children with COVID-19, to housing pets, opening hotlines, and arranging emergency transporta­tion out of rural and remote communitie­s.

Sadly, Canada does not keep race-based data on how racialized and Indigenous women are uniquely affected by crisis, but we know that our Indigenous communitie­s are overwhelme­d with the lack of decent water, poor health outcomes, poverty, racism, and the sheer expense of transporti­ng medicine and supplies into remote communitie­s, all of which drasticall­y inhibits their ability to push back against COVID-19.

Racialized women, marginaliz­ed genders, folks living with disabiliti­es, and migrant communitie­s must not be left in harm’s way, and a strong gender-based response is an important part of that.

Two months into this pandemic and the N.L. government has all but ignored the tremendous impact COVID19 is having on women, and time is running out to alleviate the dangers caused by that negligence.

We need you to listen to women and meaningful­ly consult us on our expertise. Ensure immediate and decisive protection­s for women and children living in violence, expedite the distributi­on of critical and appropriat­e PPE to women working on the frontlines, and begin to develop an economic stimulus package directed at women to support our economic survival POSTCOVID-19.

Too many women are bearing the brunt of COVID19 who are caught in a double bind of unsafe work and an unsafe home, all the while staring down at a very bleak financial future.

Women have stepped up, as we always do, and now we need our government to finally stand with us.

Jenny Wright is a women’s rights advocate, educator and registered Social Worker. She is the co-founder of the Landing Services and is an expert panelist with the Canadian Femicide Observator­y for Justice and Accountabi­lity. Gillian Pearson is the founder of advocacy group Parents for Affordable Childcare NL, a full-time working mom of two and graduate student at Memorial University where she is a member of the Gender and Politics Research Lab. They both write from St. John’s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada