Los Angeles Times

ARE JET CLEANERS AT RISK?

LAX workers say they lack training, protection­s from virus

- By Hugo Martín

Some workers at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport say they lack the training and protection­s to clean planes amid the virus outbreak.

Terrified about the coronaviru­s outbreak, airline worker Barbara Gomez refused her supervisor’s order to clean the interior of an American Airlines plane when it arrived from China at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

Gomez, a cabin attendant for JetStream Ground Services, said she was given no gloves or mask before being told to help wipe down the interior of the plane.

“Everybody is concerned about the virus,” she said of the incident in late

January. “We don’t have anything to protect us.”

With the outbreak claiming more than 3,000 lives around the globe, the risk of being infected is on everybody’s mind, especially airline and airport workers such as Gomez and her colleagues, who say they have been forced to choose between their jobs and possibly being exposed to the virus.

Over the weekend, an American Airlines flight from New York’s John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport to Milan, Italy, was canceled because the flight crew refused to fly to the region that had recently reported an outbreak of the virus.

After the cancellati­on, American Airlines suspended its two daily flights to Milan from New York and Miami until April 25.

An LAX screener of incoming f lights from China and surroundin­g countries tested positive for the COVID-19 virus March 3. The screener so far has a mild case and is isolated at home.

The plight of the LAX workers was raised during a discussion of the coronaviru­s outbreak at a meeting of the Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday. Airport executives told the council that they were

aware of the complaints from the cabin cleaners but did not have the authority to require airport contractor­s to provide workers gloves or other equipment.

“We do not dictate how they mandate the cleaning of the planes,” said Justin Erbacci, interim chief executive of Los Angeles World Airports.

But Councilman Mike Bonin said he was not satisfied and instructed airport officials to report back to the council on ways to ensure that airport contractor­s comply with worker training requiremen­ts.

“We can’t just take their word on it,” he said.

A 2017 Los Angeles ordinance requires all airport employees, including those who work for a contractor at LAX, to undergo 16 hour of emergency response training to teach workers the definition and effects of “hazardous materials” and “infectious

diseases,” among other subjects.

Gomez and several of her co-workers said they don’t recall undergoing such training.

Bonin asked Muntu Davis, the Los Angeles County health officer, if the cabin cleaners could have been exposed to the virus. “That’s a possibilit­y,” he replied.

Several JetStream employees also took their grievances to the city’s Bureau of Contract Administra­tion on Feb. 19, but an agency spokeswoma­n said the bureau has jurisdicti­on to investigat­e only wage disputes.

The Florida company cleans airplanes and handles cargo at 20 of the nation’s busiest airports, working for American, Delta, United and Southwest airlines.

“We were just being thrown out there without the tools we needed,” said

Miguel Covarrubia­s, who has worked for JetStream for 10 months.

Calls and emails to JetStream were not returned. In an interview with NPR, JetStream President Marc Desnoyers said his employees have been given the proper equipment and training to do the job.

“Provisions of cleaning solutions, gloves and all necessary safety equipment, including masks when requested, are closely monitored and replenishe­d when needed,” he told NPR.

A spokesman for LAX said the airport was not aware of the complaints.

In a statement, American Airlines said: “American Airlines’ vendor management team works in close partnershi­p with all of our vendors, including JetStream, to ensure the health and safety of everyone in the airport environmen­t.”

Before the outbreak, Los Angeles was one of the nation’s top ports of entry for Chinese tourists and business executives, drawing 1.2 million visitors from China in 2018.

That all changed after most of the country’s largest carriers suspended flights from China, Hong Kong and Macao and the Trump administra­tion barred entry of most foreign nationals who had recently visited China.

Before the flights from China were halted, Gomez and her co-workers said, they were ordered to clean several inbound American Airlines planes without adequate training or equipment.

Workers, who said they could not refuse to clean several flights from China, worried later that they could be infected with the virus.

“We told our managers and one of them said, ‘Don’t even worry about it. That’s in China, not in L.A.,’ ” said Jose Hidalgo, a JetStream employee from Gardena.

 ?? Nhac Nguyen AFP/Getty Images ??
Nhac Nguyen AFP/Getty Images
 ?? Daniel Slim AFP via Getty Images ?? A CABIN attendant said she was given no gloves or mask before being told to help clean the interior of a plane that arrived at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport from China. Above, a China Eastern plane at LAX in 2018.
Daniel Slim AFP via Getty Images A CABIN attendant said she was given no gloves or mask before being told to help clean the interior of a plane that arrived at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport from China. Above, a China Eastern plane at LAX in 2018.

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