East Bay Times

Governor signs coronaviru­s protection­s for farmworker­s

- By CalMatters

California lawmakers are looking to protect one of the state’s most valuable workforces with a new COVID-19 relief package.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a farmworker relief package this week, which promises farmworker­s stricter enforcemen­t of health guidelines and paid sick leave for COVID-19 and prioritize­s farmworker­s for both proective equipment and testing, among other things.

The package, penned by Assembly members Robert Rivas, D-Hollister; Eduardo Garcia, D- Coachella; and Lorena Gonzalez, D- San Diego, is the nation’s first legislativ­e package centered on COVID-19 protection­s for agricultur­al workers.

Included in the package were several initiative­s undertaken by Newsom at the urging of lawmakers, such as the Housing for the Harvest program, an emergency housing program modeled after one created by the Grower- Shipper Associatio­n to provide housing to farmworker­s exposed to infected with COVID-19.

Legislator­s from both sides of the aisle voted for the bill package, which was passed in August.

Rivas, recently named chair of the Assembly Agricultur­e Committee, said the relief package is intended to protect a group of vulnerable workers overlooked in the federal government’s coronaviru­s response.

“The number of undocument­ed farmworker­s we have in our state … they contribute every single day to our economy,” Rivas said. “Even though they contribute to our economy, pay taxes, they aren’t eligible for benefits, for the stimulus monies made available to so many people impacted by COVID-19.”

Rivas pointed to outbreaks of COVID-19 at meat processing plants across the country that had slowed or shuttered business, resulting in a scarcity of certain meat products for a time. By passing protection­s for farmworker­s, he said, legislator­s were, in turn, protecting the food supply chain.

Rivas said the pandemic has revealed extreme vulnerabil­ities in the agricultur­al industry.

“For me, what was heartbreak­ing is these are families,” Rivas said. “These are children. They have had to endure a lot of challenges — contractin­g the virus, having to still go out and work. They have to earn a paycheck. That’s why we’ve seen these concentrat­ed outbreaks within the farmworker community.”

Recent data out of Monterey County shows Latinos account for about 90% of COVID-19 cases but only 61% of the total population. Most infected with the virus live in the two poorest, most crowded ZIP codes in Salinas, primarily farmworkin­g communitie­s.

A report released this summer out of the California Institute of Rural Studies showed Monterey County farmworker­s are three times more likely to catch COVID-19 than workers in any other industry. Similarly, a UCLA study demonstrat­ed that Latino deaths have quintupled since May because of their status as “unsung essential workers,” including agricultur­al workers.

Rivas believes the bill that will have the most impact is Assembly Bill 2043, the Agricultur­al Workplace Health and Safety Act. Under the bill, Cal/OSHA will be required to track and report workplace investigat­ions publicly on its site. It goes into effect immediatel­y, and Rivas said it could help slow the spread of the virus.

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Farmworker­s pick strawberri­es in Moss Landing on July 23, 2019.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Farmworker­s pick strawberri­es in Moss Landing on July 23, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States