Houston Chronicle

Essential workers at risk

COVID-19 is rampant among constructi­on workers mainly because of a lack of protection­s, UT-Austin researcher­s find

- By Dom DiFurio

Constructi­on workers are five times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 than their peers in other profession­s, a study from University of Texas at Austin researcher­s indicates.

“Allowing unrestrict­ed constructi­on work was associated with an increase of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ation rates through mid-August 2020,” the study’s authors note in their findings.

They analyzed five months of hospitaliz­ation data in Austin.

The study also highlights the disproport­ionate representa­tion of Hispanic workers in the constructi­on industry in the United States, including in Texas, and the compounded risks facing that growing demographi­c.

About 30 percent of constructi­on workers nationally are Latino — almost twice the percentage they comprise in the overall labor force.

The Hispanic population is known to experience more underlying health conditions linked to severe cases ofCOVID-19. Its members also are more likely to have more people living in the same house, and feel pressure to continue working even when sick, according to the authors.

Although Hispanics account for 40 percent of Texas’ population, they represent 56 percent of the state’s COVID-19 deaths, the latest data from the Texas Department of State Health Services show.

The study was performed by UT-Austin’s COVID-19 Modeling Consortium, an effort by social scientists and engineers to model and study trends around the pandemic.

It was published in the peer-reviewed journal JAMA Network Open, a subsidiary of the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health also had a part in supporting the study.

When officials enacted lockdowns in cities across Texas in the spring, Austin city leaders asked UT to model the risks associated with allowing unrestrict­ed work at constructi­on sites. The study results bore out what they suspected.

“The rise in COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations among constructi­on workers suggest that the virus has been spreading at work sites, and more should be done to protect the health and safety of the workers,” said Remy Pasco, one of the study’s authors.

Constructi­on work was deemed essential during the lockdowns. After some local leaders placed stricter regulation­s on parts of the constructi­on industry, Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order at the end of March that allowed commercial and residentia­l building to continue.

Another of the study’s authors, professor Lauren Ancel Meyers, said the findings don’t necessaril­y mean constructi­on work needs to stop.

“It means we need to go to great lengths to ensure the health and safety of workers when they do go to work,” she said in a statement.

The study’s authors also raise concerns about how to measure the spread of the virus from worksites to the general public, given limited contact tracing. A previous study requested by Austin suggested spread at worksites could have larger repercussi­ons for communitie­s where workers live.

In a statement, Workers Defense Project cofounder and coexecutiv­e director Emily Timm called the findings “a clear call to action to elected officials” to create a “real enforcemen­t mechanism.”

“COVID-19 will continue to disproport­ionately impact the LatinX community and constructi­on workers in particular until our leadership acts,” Timm said. “The state must act now to put in place safety standards such as enforcing physical distancing, and requiring employers to provide basic PPE and offer paid sick leave.”

The study also recommends testing at worksites and “effective tracing and isolation of detected cases” to minimize virus spread.

In April, the Associated General Contractor­s of America, an organizati­on that represents contractor­s across the U.S., issued recommende­d practices and COVID-19 exposure protocols for the industry. The guidance includes social distancing on work sites, screening for symptoms before work and encouragin­g sick employees to stay home.

The Dallas-Fort Worth area ranked second among the country’s largest building markets in September, behind only New York. More than 155,000 people work in the local building sector, according to AGC. Dallas had one of the largest year-over-year constructi­on job gains in the U.S., despite the pandemic.

 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? Workers construct a storefront in March in Montgomery County as the pandemic began.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er Workers construct a storefront in March in Montgomery County as the pandemic began.

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