Kuwait Times

Push for healthier nail salons in California finding success

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It was the swagbags that convinced community health organizer Julia Liou to redraw the battle plan in a fight to reduce the hazardous chemical exposures of nail-salon workers, most of them low-paid Asian immigrant women. In 2005, Liou watched at California’s state Capitol as dozens of lobbyists gave away bags of lipsticks and other beauty goodies to excited legislativ­e staffers. It was part of the beauty and chemical industries’ effort to defeat a bill to ban one of the thousands of industrial compounds used to make manicure and pedicures prettier and longer lasting.

Liou and her colleagues lost on that bill. But the state Capitol cluster-swag emerged as a defining lesson for Liou, underscori­ng how hard it would always be to go lobbyist-for-lobbyist against the US beauty industry, with its $62 billion in estimated revenue last year. That episode has given rise to a San Francisco Bay Area grassroots campaign of salon workers, health workers and local officials that has taken hold in California and is gaining increasing national support and recognitio­n from the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Harvard’s John F Kennedy School of Government and others.

“I realized we need to bring the voices of the community there ... to really articulate what was really happening, what workers were experienci­ng on the health side,” said Liou, developmen­t director of Asian Health Services, a clinic and outreach program in Oakland’s Chinatown where staffers first took note more than a decade ago of how many nail-salon workers were dealing with cancer, headaches, miscarriag­es and other health problems.

Since then, the California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborat­ive that Liou cofounded has spearheade­d a California effort to reduce the toxicants that salon workers touch and breathe. Cities and counties taking part in the program certify salon owners who voluntaril­y ban suspect ingredient­s and nail products and who provide proper ventilatio­n, gloves and masks for workers. Last year, California lawmakers passed legislatio­n supporting the certificat­ion program.

The health complaints voiced by the country’s more than 400,000 nail-salon workers, mostly immigrants from Vietnam, the Philippine­s, South Korea and other Asian countries and many with limited English or political experience, have gotten more attention over the last decade. In New York, Gov Andrew Cuomo has mandated ventilatio­n systems and other measures to reduce chemical exposure in nail salons. Some businesses and local groups around the US have tried self-certifying healthy nail salons.

But California’s voluntary program stands out for the local government certificat­ion and for giving salon owners and workers the say on what health measures salons could best afford, as well as the training and encouragem­ent to speak out on their health concerns. One morning this winter, TV crews, state and federal officials, and salon workers crowded inside a storefront nail salon in the San Francisco suburb of Alameda. The gathering celebrated the salon as one of the newest of 143 in the Bay Area and the Southern California city of Santa Monica to win local government certificat­ion as a healthy salon.

On the sidewalk outside, the owner of another salon, Van Nguyen, stood and cried. In support of the program, Nguyen had told California policymake­rs of miscarriag­es she suffered and the debilitati­ng skin ailments that plagued a son she carried to full term. Having earlier won certificat­ion for her own San Francisco nail parlor, Nguyen, 46, was proud she had spoken out to protect other workers. But she mourned the harm she believes she did to her offspring through long days working with glues, removers and polishes. “I had misfortune, but I did the best I can,” Nguyen said. “I don’t want anyone else to suffer like me.” —AP

 ??  ?? ALAMEDA, California: In this Nov 30, 2016 photo, Lan-Anh Truong performs a manicure at her Leann’s Nails salon. —AP
ALAMEDA, California: In this Nov 30, 2016 photo, Lan-Anh Truong performs a manicure at her Leann’s Nails salon. —AP

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