Lodi News-Sentinel

Sonoma County ag workers receive financial support after fires

- By Bill Swindell

SANTA ROSA — More than 150 agricultur­al workers who were displaced from their homes as a result of October’s wildfires started to receive financial support Monday from a charity backed by two local groups.

The workers and their families will receive more than $430,000 in support in the form of rent payments paid directly to their landlords and gift cards to replace household items. The Sonoma County Grape Growers Foundation and the Sonoma County Farm Bureau teamed up to support the special fund in the aftermath of the fires. It has raised more than $550,000.

The effort comes as the wine industry — the dominant agricultur­al industry in the county — is finding that worker housing has emerged as the biggest challenge in the aftermath of the fires that destroyed more than 5,000 homes in Sonoma County. Only about a dozen wineries suffered significan­t damage during the blazes in the entire North Coast and the vineyards in the path of the blazes were relatively unscathed. Tasting rooms, however, suffered a tremendous drop in visitors in October near the end of the tourist season.

The foundation, relaunched last year as a nonprofit by the Sonoma County Winegrower­s trade group, had been working prior to the fires on social issues affecting the local 5,000 full-time vineyard workers, almost all of whom are Latino. It had previously covered a funding gap that would have delayed constructi­on of Ortiz Plaza, a 30-unit complex for farmworker­s west of Larkfield.

The natural disaster created more of an onus to act quickly given the emergency plight of the workers, said Karissa Kruse, president of the Winegrower­s, which represents 1,800 grape growers in the county.

Contributi­ons to funds ranged from $50,000 checks to small donations of $25 with all of the monies going directly to workers.

“Last week, we had a family being evicted in December. They were displaced for a couple weeks and couldn’t make the December rent. We came in and paid it for them,” Kruse said.

 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Wine making equipment sits in ruins after a wildfire destroyed Paradise Ridge Winery in Santa Rosa on Oct. 11.
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Wine making equipment sits in ruins after a wildfire destroyed Paradise Ridge Winery in Santa Rosa on Oct. 11.

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