East Bay Times

Vaccinatio­n victories in state’s vegetable valleys

- By Joe Mathews Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

If demography really was COVID-19 destiny, then Gonzales — a small, working-class town with a young, Latino population in rural California — would be a pandemic disaster.

Instead, Gonzales is among California’s most vaccinated places. In this Salinas Valley town of 9,000, 98% of eligible residents have received at least one dose.

Gonzales is part of a larger, unexpected success story around vaccinatio­n in the state’s two leading agricultur­al areas for lettuce and green vegetables — the Salinas and Imperial valleys.

North of Gonzales, the city of Salinas also boasts a vaccinatio­n rate above 90%, well above the statewide average. Down on the U.S.-Mexico border, Imperial County is the most vaccinated place in the state’s southern half. Imperial boasts an 86% vaccinatio­n rate.

The contrast is even more dramatic when you compare heavily vaccinated Salinas and Imperial with the slow-to-vaccinate rural regions — the San Joaquin Valley and the North State — that have seen coronaviru­s surges.

So, what explains the success of these two valleys in inoculatin­g younger Latinos working in essential industries?

The answers start with vegetables. Salinas and Imperial valleys share networks of growers, and workers who operate in Salinas through summer, and Imperial (and neighborin­g Yuma, Arizona) in winter. These workers were among the hardest hit by the first wave of COVID-19 last spring. But, after the early months of the pandemic, agricultur­al networks in the two valleys rallied in a big way.

Tight collaborat­ion among entities that can be at odds — growers, local government­s, community advocates, health clinics — was crucial. In the Salinas Valley, the Grower Shipper Associatio­n, an agricultur­al industry group, and Clinica de Salud, a community health clinic, shared an award for their joint efforts to protect workers, with quarantine housing and mass vaccinatio­n campaigns. The Salinas Valley collaborat­ors obtained their own supply of vaccines directly from the federal government. The vaccinatio­n collaborat­ions also benefited from prepandemi­c organizing campaigns around farmworker health and the 2020 census count.

Down in Imperial, similar collaborat­ion between county health officials, community nonprofits, the Imperial Valley Vegetable Growers Associatio­n, and health providers brought vaccinatio­ns to even the smallest settlement­s of the sprawling valley. Imperial officials and institutio­ns even vaccinated people who live south of the border but work in Imperial.

Participan­ts in these efforts say the aggressive early spread of COVID-19 in the community meant there was little vaccine resistance — too many people knew the virus was deadly. Some also attribute the vaccinatio­n success to a more robust local health infrastruc­ture since the passage of Obamacare.

But in vaccinatio­n, there’s no substitute for skillful local work. Gonzales exemplifie­s how to do it.

Community health workers were central to the approach. By January 2021, Gonzales had hired six such workers, who went door to door, building trust and bringing food boxes to quarantine­d residents. They also became certified COVID-19 testers. This helped them reach vaccine holdouts, who, after testing negative for COVID-19, were quickly registered for vaccine appointmen­ts.

The city’s vaccinatio­n campaign has been relentless — with many organizati­ons partnering to host over 20 mass vaccinatio­n clinics since February, at the high school, the small and independen­t Gonzales RX Pharmacy, and the local Catholic church. To staff the vaccinatio­n sites, the city had five Gonzales firefighte­rs certified in administer­ing COVID-19 jabs. In addition to these emergency personnel, nursing students from nearby Hartnell College and local pharmacy staff also performed inoculatio­ns.

When so many different people are working together to get you vaccinated, it doesn’t matter who you are or how small or rural your community is. Because resistance is futile.

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