Los Angeles Times

Vernon pressed to help protect workers

L.A. County leaders focus on the town, which has more virus cases than residents.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

Responding to coronaviru­s outbreaks plaguing the industrial city of Vernon, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s on Tuesday asked local health officials to do more to protect the small town’s workers, many of whom live in surroundin­g working-class communitie­s.

Supervisor Hilda Solis introduced an order requesting that the Los Angeles County Health Department work with Vernon officials and the California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health to recommend safety measures.

The largest outbreak happened at the Smithfield Foods-owned Farmer John pork-processing plant, where more than 150 of 1,837 employees tested positive for COVID-19 from March through June. Eight other Vernon facilities experience­d outbreaks, for a total of more than 200 known infections in the city.

Vernon has only about 200 residents but its approximat­ely 2,000 businesses employ 54,000 people, according to the county. The majority of workers live in southeast L.A. County cities, including Huntington Park, Bell, Cudahy and South Gate.

The order comes after a June 2 report requested by Solis found that of 165 sick employees at Vernon plants, 157 of them live in cities under the county’s jurisdicti­on and two live in Long Beach. The report also noted that, before June 15, Vernon’s health department was the only one in the state to not have a physician in a health officer role.

Because the majority of infected workers live in working-class, heavily Latino communitie­s, which are already disproport­ionately affected by COVID-19, “further protection­s and safety measures are needed to ensure our residents and workers at industrial facilities, and other businesses in Vernon including factories and plants are protected,” Solis said in the motion.

The motion requests that CAL/OSHA and Vernon officials identify strategies that ensure workers are being properly informed about the resources available to them and that a “standardiz­ed notificati­on protocol” be establishe­d or improved. The county expects a report of findings and recommenda­tions within two weeks, according to the motion.

Times staff writer Jaclyn Cosgrove contribute­d to this report.

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