Chattanooga Times Free Press

Latino groups ask Gov. Lee for robust plan

- BY ANITA WADHWANA

A coalition of Latino-serving organizati­ons from across Tennessee is urging Gov. Bill Lee and local government leaders to take specific and immediate steps to address the increasing spread of COVID-19 among the state’s Hispanic residents.

In an open letter to Lee and local officials, 18 groups, among them La Paz Chattanoog­a, the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition and Latino Memphis, called growing infection rates a “state of emergency in Latino communitie­s.”

“We need a robust plan and response from our elected leaders to curb the rate of infections and save lives,” the letter said.

The letter went on to outline seven immediate steps necessary to address the crisis.

As of Wednesday, Latinos accounted for 35% of all COVID-19 positive individual­s in Tennessee, a figure that excludes pending cases in which ethnicity is still being verified. Fewer than six percent of the state’s residents are Hispanic. In both Nashville and Knoxville, 1 in 3 of all positive cases are Latino.

In the Chattanoog­a area, Latinos account for 68% of current cases in a county that is less than six percent Hispanic.

The outsized impact of the pandemic on Latinos has alarmed advocates, who have criticized state and city leaders for failing to deploy resources, education and aid, and in some cases failing to share or collect

data that would provide a clearer measure of the crisis.

On Tuesday, the Hamilton County Health Department announced that a girl under the age of 10, who was Hispanic and had no underlying health conditions, died from the disease, which underscore­d for advocates the need for urgent action.

The coalition of Latino groups is asking for more Spanish-speaking community health and case managers.

The groups are asking for state and local government­s to provide alternativ­e housing, such as hotels, while people recover. Latino families often live in multigener­ational households, making it difficult to self-isolate.

They are also asking public agencies to enter into more partnershi­ps with immigrant-serving organizati­ons, including Spanish language media, to promote targeted testing in well-known, central and accessible areas and for stronger state enforcemen­t and oversight of health and safety protection­s at workplaces.

Because undocument­ed immigrants are ineligible for most state and federal COVID-19 aid, such as money set aside to feed children and economic stimulus dollars, the groups are also urging the state to provide additional sources of direct aid “to help families make ends meet without putting themselves or their communitie­s at risk.”

The letter also asks state and local officials to clarify publicly to immigrants that getting tested or seeking out medical care won’t result in immigratio­n enforcemen­t measures against them. A state policy, ended May 31 after public pushback, allowed for the sharing of names and addresses of any Tennessean who tested positive for COVID-19 to law enforcemen­t agencies.

In response to questions from reporters on Tuesday, Gov. Bill Lee said his administra­tion has “made a specific target toward the Hispanic population.”

Lee said that the state was running public service announceme­nts in Hispanic media and trying other ways to reach that community.

The state’s department of health has partnered with 18 Spanish radio stations and newspapers across Tennessee, according to a list provided by the department of health.

The department declined to provide a specific number of contact tracers who speak Spanish, saying the number of staff members doing the work constantly changes. All of the state’s 700 contact tracers, who perform the work of tracking down and contacting any individual­s a positive patient has encountere­d and possibly infected, have access to Spanish language lines that offer interpreta­tion services over the phone, officials said.

“We have specifical­ly asked our contractin­g companies to recruit Spanish-speaking staff members, and they are working to recruit a number of Spanish-speaking residents in our population,” said Shelley Walker, a spokeswoma­n.

The department also recently finalized a contract with Medasource, which is recruiting both English and foreign language-speaking workers to aid in contract tracing, Walker said.

Advocates said they are frustrated by a lack of data to pinpoint specific neighborho­ods or ZIP codes with large outbreaks among Latino residents.

Walker said this week that ZIP code-level data has been provided to local public health officials. The state’s health department is working to add that informatio­n to its website, where it will be available more broadly, she said.

Lily Sanchez, communicat­ions coordinato­r for La Paz Chattanoog­a, said her nonprofit has since March offered relief services and financial aid to Latinos in the area affected by twin crises: the pandemic, then a destructiv­e tornado that tore through Latino residentia­l neighborho­ods on Easter Sunday.

Sanchez said she and her colleagues had been keeping a close watch on how the pandemic had, early on, disproport­ionately hit Latino residents in other states before it infected so many Tennessean­s.

“We kind of were just waiting for the pen to drop here,” she said.

Latinos in Tennessee, like other states, tend to work essential jobs with little opportunit­y to work from home or social distance, she said.

Chattanoog­a and Hamilton County officials appeared caught by surprise at the speed with which the virus infected large numbers of Latinos, she said.

“To them it was very shocking, and it was us who came to the table to say it was inevitable,” Sanchez said.

As Tennessee reopens, with record new numbers of positive COVID-19 cases occurring over the past week, Sanchez said even greater numbers of positive cases in the Latino community remain, as before, inevitable.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT ?? Brothers Romeo and Anthony Perez play as their father Gilber moves stacks of wood at Garcia Tree Service on 37th street earlier this month. Their 37407 ZIP code has been hit disproport­ionately hard by COVID-19.
STAFF PHOTO BY TROY STOLT Brothers Romeo and Anthony Perez play as their father Gilber moves stacks of wood at Garcia Tree Service on 37th street earlier this month. Their 37407 ZIP code has been hit disproport­ionately hard by COVID-19.

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